fbpx
Wikipedia

Jakob Böhme

Jakob Böhme (/ˈbmə, ˈb-/;[2] German: [ˈbøːmə]; 24 April 1575 – 17 November 1624) was a German philosopher, Christian mystic, and Lutheran Protestant theologian. He was considered an original thinker by many of his contemporaries within the Lutheran tradition, and his first book, commonly known as Aurora, caused a great scandal. In contemporary English, his name may be spelled Jacob Boehme (retaining the older German spelling); in seventeenth-century England it was also spelled Behmen, approximating the contemporary English pronunciation of the German Böhme.

Jakob Böhme
Jakob Böhme (anonymous portrait)
Born24 April 1575
Died17 November 1624
Other namesJacob Boehme, Jacob Behmen
(English spellings)
EraEarly modern philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolChristian mysticism
Notable ideas
Boehmian theosophy
The mystical being of the deity as the Ungrund ("unground", the ground without a ground)[1]

Böhme had a profound influence on later philosophical movements such as German idealism and German Romanticism.[3] Hegel described Böhme as "the first German philosopher".

Biography

Böhme was born on 24 April 1575[4][5] at Alt Seidenberg (now Stary Zawidów, Poland), a village near Görlitz in Upper Lusatia, a territory of the Kingdom of Bohemia. His father, George Wissen, was Lutheran, reasonably wealthy, but a peasant nonetheless. Böhme was the fourth of five children. Böhme's first job was that of a herd boy. He was deemed to be not strong enough for husbandry. When he was 14 years old, he was sent to Seidenberg, as an apprentice to become a shoemaker.[6] His apprenticeship for shoemaking was hard; he lived with a family who were not Christians, which exposed him to the controversies of the time. He regularly prayed and read the Bible as well as works by visionaries such as Paracelsus, Weigel and Schwenckfeld, although he received no formal education.[7] After three years as an apprentice, Böhme left to travel. Although it is unknown just how far he went, he at least made it to Görlitz.[6] In 1592 Böhme returned from his journeyman years. By 1599, Böhme was master of his craft with his own premises in Görlitz. That same year he married Katharina, daughter of Hans Kuntzschmann, a butcher in Görlitz, and together he and Katharina had four sons and two daughters.[7][8]

Böhme's mentor was Abraham Behem who corresponded with Valentin Weigel. Böhme joined the "Conventicle of God's Real Servants" - a parochial study group organized by Martin Moller. Böhme had a number of mystical experiences throughout his youth, culminating in a vision in 1600 as one day he focused his attention onto the exquisite beauty of a beam of sunlight reflected in a pewter dish. He believed this vision revealed to him the spiritual structure of the world, as well as the relationship between God and man, and good and evil. At the time he chose not to speak of this experience openly, preferring instead to continue his work and raise a family.[citation needed]

In 1610 Böhme experienced another inner vision in which he further understood the unity of the cosmos and that he had received a special vocation from God.[citation needed]

The shop in Görlitz, which was sold in 1613, had allowed Böhme to buy a house in 1610 and to finish paying for it in 1618. Having given up shoemaking in 1613, Böhme sold woollen gloves for a while, which caused him to regularly visit Prague to sell his wares.[6]

Aurora and writings

There are as many blasphemies in this shoemaker's book as there are lines; it smells of shoemaker's pitch and filthy blacking. May this insufferable stench be far from us. The Arian poison was not so deadly as this shoemaker's poison.
— Gregorius Richter following the publication of Aurora.[9]
 
Joseph Mulder (Amsterdam 1686): Depiction of a possibly legendary episode in the life of Jakob Böhme. The Dutch caption reads: "Jakob Böhme with the preacher Gregor Richter in Görlitz, who was hostile to him in front of everyone, putting in a good word for a certain young baker from his followers. The gentleman became very angry about this, showed him the chamber door and threw one of his slippers at his head. But the good man meekly picked up the slipper, put it back on the foot of the angry preacher, and went on his way, wishing him every blessing."

Twelve years after the vision in 1600, Böhme began to write his first book, Morgenröte im Aufgang ("Dawn of the Day in the East"). The book was given the name Aurora (sometimes translated into English as "The Day-spring") by a friend. Böhme originally wrote the book for himself and it was never completed.[10] A manuscript copy of the unfinished work was lent to Karl von Ender, a nobleman, who had copies made and began to circulate them. A copy fell into the hands of Gregorius Richter [de], the chief pastor of Görlitz, who attacked it as being heretical,[why?] speaking against it from the pulpit, and threatened Böhme with exile if he continued working on it. Richter also wrote a pamphlet denouncing Böhme and his work.[11]

As a result, Böhme did not write anything for several years; however, at the insistence of friends who had read Aurora, he started writing again in 1618. In 1619 Böhme wrote De Tribus Principiis or The Three Principles of the Divine Essence. It took him two years to finish his second book, which was followed by many other treatises, all of which were copied by hand and circulated only among friends.[12]} In 1620 Böhme wrote The Threefold Life of Man, Answers to Forty Questions on the Soul, The Incarnation of Jesus Christ, The Six Theosophical Points, The Six Mystical Points, the Mysterium Pansophicum and Informatorium novissimorum (Of the Last Times). In 1621 Böhme wrote De Signatura Rerum (relying in part on the doctrine of signatures). In 1623 Böhme wrote On Election to Grace, On Christ's Testaments, Mysterium Magnum, Clavis ("Key"). The year 1622 saw Böhme write some short works all of which were subsequently included in his first published book on New Year's Day 1624, under the title Weg zu Christo (The Way to Christ).[8]

The publication caused another scandal and following complaints by the clergy, Böhme was summoned to the Town Council on 26 March 1624. The report of the meeting was that:

Jacob Boehme, the shoemaker and rabid enthusiast, declares that he has written his book To Eternal Life, but did not cause the same to be printed. A nobleman, Sigismund von Schweinitz, did that. The Council gave him warning to leave the town; otherwise the Prince Elector would be apprised of the facts. He thereupon promised that he would shortly take himself off.[13]

I must tell you, sir, that yesterday the pharisaical devil was let loose, cursed me and my little book, and condemned the book to the fire. He charged me with shocking vices; with being a scorner of both Church and Sacraments, and with getting drunk daily on brandy, wine, and beer; all of which is untrue; while he himself is a drunken man."
— Jacob Böhme writing about Gregorius Richter on 2 April 1624.[14]

Böhme left for Dresden on 8 or 9 May 1624, where he stayed with the court physician for two months. In Dresden he was accepted by the nobility and high clergy. His intellect was also recognized by the professors of Dresden, who in a hearing in May 1624, encouraged Böhme to go home to his family in Görlitz.[7] During Böhme's absence his family had suffered due to the Thirty Years' War.[7]

Once home, Böhme accepted an invitation to stay with Herr von Schweinitz, who had a country-seat. While there Böhme began to write his last book, the 177 Theosophic Questions. Böhme fell terminally ill with a bowel complaint forcing him to travel home on 7 November. Gregorius Richter, Böhme's adversary from Görlitz, had died in August 1624, while Böhme was away. The new clergy, still wary of Böhme, forced him to answer a long list of questions when he wanted to receive the sacrament. He died on 17 November 1624.[15]

In this short period, Böhme produced an enormous amount of writing, including his major works De Signatura Rerum (The Signature of All Things) and Mysterium Magnum. He also developed a following throughout Europe, where his followers were known as Behmenists.

The son of Böhme's chief antagonist, the pastor primarius of Görlitz Gregorius Richter, edited a collection of extracts from his writings, which were afterwards published complete at Amsterdam with the help of Coenraad van Beuningen in the year 1682. Böhme's full works were first printed in 1730.

Theology

 
Böhme's cosmogony: The Philosophical Sphere or the Wonder Eye of Eternity (1620).

The chief concern of Böhme's writing was the nature of sin, evil and redemption. Consistent with Lutheran theology, Böhme preached that humanity had fallen from a state of divine grace to a state of sin and suffering, that the forces of evil included fallen angels who had rebelled against God, and that God's goal was to restore the world to a state of grace.[citation needed]

There are some serious departures from accepted Lutheran theology, such as his rejection of justification by faith alone, as in this passage from The Way to Christ:

For he that will say, I have a Will, and would willingly do Good, but the earthly Flesh which I carry about me, keepeth me back, so that I cannot; yet I shall be saved by Grace, for the Merits of Christ. I comfort myself with his Merit and Sufferings; who will receive me of mere Grace, without any Merits of my own, and forgive me my Sins. Such a one, I say, is like a Man that knoweth what Food is good for his Health, yet will not eat of it, but eateth Poison instead thereof, from whence Sickness and Death, will certainly follow.[16]

Another place where Böhme may depart from accepted theology (though this was open to question due to his somewhat obscure, oracular style) was in his description of the Fall as a necessary stage in the evolution of the Universe.[17] A difficulty with his theology is the fact that he had a mystical vision, which he reinterpreted and reformulated.[17] According to F. von Ingen, to Böhme, in order to reach God, man has to go through hell first. God exists without time or space, he regenerates himself through eternity. Böhme restates the trinity as truly existing but with a novel interpretation. God, the Father is fire, who gives birth to his son, whom Böhme calls light. The Holy Spirit is the living principle, or the divine life.[18]

It is clear that Böhme never claimed that God sees evil as desirable, necessary or as part of divine will to bring forth good. In his Threefold Life, Böhme states: "[I]n the order of nature, an evil thing cannot produce a good thing out of itself, but one evil thing generates another." Böhme did not believe that there is any "divine mandate or metaphysically inherent necessity for evil and its effects in the scheme of things."[19] Dr. John Pordage, a commentator on Böhme, wrote that Böhme "whensoever he attributes evil to eternal nature considers it in its fallen state, as it became infected by the fall of Lucifer... ."[19] Evil is seen as "the disorder, rebellion, perversion of making spirit nature's servant",[20] which is to say a perversion of initial Divine order.

 
Jakob Böhme's House in what was Görlitz but is now in a Polish town of Zgorzelec, where he lived from 1590 to 1610

Böhme's correspondences in Aurora of the seven qualities, planets and humoral-elemental associations:

  1. Dry - Saturn - melancholy, power of death;
  2. Sweet - Jupiter - sanguine, gentle source of life;
  3. Bitter - Mars - choleric, destructive source of life;
  4. Fire - Sun/Moon - night/day; evil/good; sin/virtue; Moon, later = phlegmatic, watery;
  5. Love - Venus - love of life, spiritual rebirth;
  6. Sound - Mercury - keen spirit, illumination, expression;
  7. Corpus - Earth - totality of forces awaiting rebirth.

In "De Tribus Principiis" or "On the Three Principles of Divine Being" Böhme subsumed the seven principles into the Trinity:

  1. The "dark world" of the Father (Qualities 1-2-3);
  2. The "light world" of the Holy Spirit (Qualities 5-6-7);
  3. "This world" of Satan and Christ (Quality 4).

Cosmology

In one interpretation of Böhme's cosmology, it was necessary for humanity to return to God, and for all original unities to undergo differentiation, desire and conflict—as in the rebellion of Satan, the separation of Eve from Adam and their acquisition of the knowledge of good and evil—in order for creation to evolve to a new state of redeemed harmony that would be more perfect than the original state of innocence, allowing God to achieve a new self-awareness by interacting with a creation that was both part of, and distinct from, Himself. Free will becomes the most important gift God gives to humanity, allowing us to seek divine grace as a deliberate choice while still allowing us to remain individuals.[citation needed]

Marian views

Böhme believed that the Son of God became human through the Virgin Mary. Before the birth of Christ, God recognized himself as a virgin. This virgin is therefore a mirror of God's wisdom and knowledge.[18] Böhme follows Luther in that he views Mary within the context of Christ. Unlike Luther, he does not address himself to dogmatic issues very much, but to the human side of Mary. Like all other women, she was human and therefore subject to sin. Only after God elected her with his grace to become the mother of his son, did she inherit the status of sinlessness.[18] Mary did not move the Word, the Word moved Mary, so Böhme, explaining that all her grace came from Christ. Mary is "blessed among women" but not because of her qualifications, but because of her humility. Mary is an instrument of God; an example of what God can do: It shall not be forgotten in all eternity, that God became human in her.[21]

Böhme, unlike Luther, did not believe that Mary was the Ever Virgin. Her virginity after the birth of Jesus is unrealistic to Böhme. The true salvation is Christ, not Mary. The importance of Mary, a human like every one of us, is that she gave birth to Jesus Christ as a human being. If Mary had not been human, according to Böhme, Christ would be a stranger and not our brother. Christ must grow in us as he did in Mary. She became blessed by accepting Christ. In a reborn Christian, as in Mary, all that is temporal disappears and only the heavenly part remains for all eternity. Böhme's peculiar theological language, involving fire, light and spirit, which permeates his theology and Marian views, does not distract much from the fact that his basic positions are Lutheran.[21]

Influences

 
Idealized portrait of Böhme from Theosophia Revelata (1730)

Böhme's writing shows the influence of Neoplatonist and alchemical[a] writers such as Paracelsus, while remaining firmly within a Christian tradition. He has in turn greatly influenced many anti-authoritarian and mystical movements, such as Radical Pietism[22][23][24][25][26][27] (including the Ephrata Cloister[28] and Society of the Woman in the Wilderness), the Religious Society of Friends, the Philadelphians, the Gichtelians, the Harmony Society, the Zoarite Separatists, Rosicrucianism, Martinism and Christian theosophy. Böhme's disciple and mentor, the Liegnitz physician Balthasar Walther, who had travelled to the Holy Land in search of magical, kabbalistic and alchemical wisdom, also introduced kabbalistic ideas into Böhme's thought.[29] Böhme was also an important source of German Romantic philosophy, influencing Schelling in particular.[30] In Richard Bucke's 1901 treatise Cosmic Consciousness, special attention was given to the profundity of Böhme's spiritual enlightenment, which seemed to reveal to Böhme an ultimate nondifference, or nonduality, between human beings and God. Jakob Böhme's writings also had some influence on the modern theosophical movement of the Theosophical Society. Blavatsky and W.Q. Judge wrote about Jakob Böhme's philosophy.[31][32] Böhme was also an important influence on the ideas of Franz Hartmann, the founder in 1886 of the German branch of the Theosophical Society. Hartmann described the writings of Böhme as “the most valuable and useful treasure in spiritual literature.”[33]

Behmenism

I do not write in the pagan manner, but in the theosophical.

— Jacob Boehme[34]

 
18th-century illustration by Dionysius Andreas Freher for the book The Works of Jacob Behmen

Behmenism, also Behemenism or Boehmenism, is the English-language designation for a 17th-century European Christian movement based on the teachings of German mystic and theosopher Jakob Böhme (1575-1624). The term was not usually applied by followers of Böhme's theosophy to themselves, but rather was used by some opponents of Böhme's thought as a polemical term. The origins of the term date back to the German literature of the 1620s, when opponents of Böhme's thought, such as the Thuringian antinomian Esajas Stiefel, the Lutheran theologian Peter Widmann and others denounced the writings of Böhme and the Böhmisten. When his writings began to appear in England in the 1640s, Böhme's surname was irretrievably corrupted to the form "Behmen" or "Behemen", whence the term "Behmenism" developed.[b] A follower of Böhme's theosophy is a "Behmenist".

Behmenism does not describe the beliefs of any single formal religious sect, but instead designates a more general description of Böhme's interpretation of Christianity, when used as a source of devotional inspiration by a variety of groups. Böhme's views greatly influenced many anti-authoritarian and Christian mystical movements, such as the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), the Philadelphians,[35] the Gichtelians, the Society of the Woman in the Wilderness (led by Johannes Kelpius), the Ephrata Cloister, the Harmony Society, Martinism, and Christian theosophy. Böhme was also an important source of German Romantic philosophy, influencing Schelling and Franz von Baader in particular.[30] In Richard Bucke's 1901 treatise Cosmic Consciousness, special attention was given to the profundity of Böhme's spiritual enlightenment, which seemed to reveal to Böhme an ultimate nondifference, or nonduality, between human beings and God. Böhme is also an important influence on the ideas of the English Romantic poet, artist and mystic William Blake. After having seen the William Law edition of the works of Jakob Böhme, published between 1764 and 1781, in which some illustrations had been included by the German early Böhme exegetist Dionysius Andreas Freher (1649–1728), William Blake said during a dinner party in 1825 "Michel Angelo could not have surpassed them".[36]

Despite being based on a corrupted form of Böhme's surname, the term Behmenism has retained a certain utility in modern English-language historiography, where it is still occasionally employed, although often to designate specifically English followers of Böhme's theosophy.[c] Given the transnational nature of Böhme's influence, the term at least implies manifold international connections between Behmenists.[37] In any case, the term is preferred to clumsier variants such as "Böhmeianism" or "Böhmism", although these may also be encountered.

Reaction

In addition to the scientific revolution, the 17th century was a time of mystical revolution in Catholicism, Protestantism and Judaism. The Protestant revolution developed from Böhme and some medieval mystics. Böhme became important in intellectual circles in Protestant Europe, following from the publication of his books in England, Holland and Germany in the 1640s and 1650s.[38] Böhme was especially important for the Millenarians and was taken seriously by the Cambridge Platonists and Dutch Collegiants. Henry More was critical of Böhme and claimed he was not a real prophet, and had no exceptional insight into metaphysical questions. Overall, although his writings did not influence political or religious debates in England, his influence can be seen in more esoteric forms such as on alchemical experimentation, metaphysical speculation and spiritual contemplation, as well as utopian literature and the development of neologisms.[d] More, for example, dismissed Opera Posthuma by Spinoza as a return to Behmenism.[40]

While Böhme was famous in Holland, England, France, Denmark and America during the 17th century, he became less influential during the 18th century. A revival occurred late in that century with interest from German Romantics, who considered Böhme a forerunner to the movement. Poets such as John Milton, Ludwig Tieck, Novalis, William Blake[41] and W. B. Yeats[42] found inspiration in Böhme's writings. Coleridge, in his Biographia Literaria, speaks of Böhme with admiration. Böhme was highly thought of by the German philosophers Baader, Schelling and Schopenhauer. Hegel went as far as to say that Böhme was "the first German philosopher".[43] Danish Bishop Hans Lassen Martensen published a book about Böhme.[44]

Several authors have found Boehme's description of the three original Principles and the seven Spirits to be similar to the Law of Three and the Law of Seven described in the works of Boris Mouravieff and George Gurdjieff.[45][46]

Works

  • Aurora: Die Morgenröte im Aufgang (unfinished) (1612)
  • De Tribus Principiis (The Three Principles of the Divine Essence, 1618–1619)
  • The Threefold Life of Man (1620)
  • Answers to Forty Questions Concerning the Soul (1620)
  • The Treatise of the Incarnations: (1620)
    • I. Of the Incarnation of Jesus Christ
    • II. Of the Suffering, Dying, Death and Resurrection of Christ
    • III. Of the Tree of Faith
  • The Great Six Points (1620)
  • Of the Earthly and of the Heavenly Mystery (1620)
  • Of the Last Times (1620)
  • De Signatura Rerum (The Signature of All Things, 1621)
  • The Four Complexions (1621)
  • Of True Repentance (1622)
  • Of True Resignation (1622)
  • Of Regeneration (1622)
  • Of Predestination (1623)
  • A Short Compendium of Repentance (1623)
  • The Mysterium Magnum (1623)
  • A Table of the Divine Manifestation, or an Exposition of the Threefold World (1623)
  • The Supersensual Life (1624)
  • Of Divine Contemplation or Vision (unfinished) (1624)
  • Of Christ's Testaments (1624)
    • I. Baptism
    • II. The Supper
  • Of Illumination (1624)
  • 177 Theosophic Questions, with Answers to Thirteen of Them (unfinished) (1624)
  • An Epitome of the Mysterium Magnum (1624)
  • The Holy Week or a Prayer Book (unfinished) (1624)
  • A Table of the Three Principles (1624)
  • Of the Last Judgement (lost) (1624)
  • The Clavis (1624)
  • Sixty-two Theosophic Epistles (1618–1624)

Books in print

  • The Way to Christ (inc. True Repentance, True Resignation, Regeneration or the New Birth, The Supersensual Life, Of Heaven & Hell, The Way from Darkness to True Illumination) edited by William Law, Diggory Press ISBN 978-1-84685-791-1
  • Of the Incarnation of Jesus Christ, translated from the German by John Rolleston Earle, London, Constable and Company LTD, 1934.

Veneration

In 2022, Jacob Boehme was officially added to the Episcopal Church liturgical calendar along with Johann Arndt with a feast day on 11 May.[47]

In popular culture

Literature

Cormac McCarthy's 1985 novel Blood Meridian includes three epigraphs, the second of which comes from Jacob Boehme: "It is not to be thought that the life of darkness is sunk in misery and lost as if in sorrowing. There is no sorrowing. For sorrow is a thing that is swallowed up in death, and death and dying are the very life of the darkness."[48]

Film

The Life and Legacy of Jacob Boehme. A documentary directed by Łukasz Chwałko. Premiered: June 2016, Zgorzelec (Poland).[49]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Calian 2010, p. 184: "In several works he used alchemical principles and symbols without hesitation to demonstrate theological realities. Borrowing alchemical terminology in order to explain religious and mystical frameworks, Böhme assumed that alchemical language is not only a metaphor for laboratory research. Alchemy is a metaphysical science because he understood that matter is contaminated with spirit."
  2. ^ An early English language example is provided in Anderdon, John.[full citation needed] "One blow at Babel, in those of the People called Behmenites, Whose foundation is...upon their own cardinal conception, begotten in their imaginations upon Jacob Behmen's writings." London: 1662.
  3. ^ See for example Gibbons 1996.
  4. ^ All of Böhme’s treatises and most of his letters were translated into English (as well as two pamphlets that were translated into Welsh by the Parliamentarian evangelist Morgan Llwyd) between 1645 and 1662.[39]

Citations

Works cited

  • Aubrey, Bryan (1981). The influence of Jacob Boehme on the work of William Blake. Durham theses (Thesis). Durham University. Retrieved 2022-12-13.
  • Bourgeault, Cynthia (2013). The Holy Trinity and the Law of Three: Discovering the Radical Truth at the Heart of Christianity. Shambhala. ISBN 978-0-8348-2894-0.
  • Brown, Dale W. (1996). Understanding Pietism. Evangel Publishing House. ISBN 978-0916035648.
  • Brumbaugh, Martin Grove (1899). A History of the German Baptist Brethren in Europe and America. Brethren publishing house. ISBN 9780404084257.
  • Calian, George-Florin (2010). Alkimia Operativa and Alkimia Speculativa: Some Modern Controversies on the Historiography of Alchemy. Annual of Medieval Studies at CEU.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Boehme, Jakob" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 114.
  •   Debelius, F. W. (1908). "Boehme, Jakob". In Jackson, Samuel Macauley (ed.). New Schaff–Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge. Vol. 2 (third ed.). London and New York: Funk and Wagnalls. pp. 209–211.
  • Deussen, Paul (1910). "Introduction". In Boehme, Jacob (ed.). Concerning the three principles of the divine essence. London: John M. Watkins.
  • Durnbaugh, Donald F. (2001). "Pennsylvania's Crazy Quilt of German Religious Groups". Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies. 68 (1): 8–30.
  • Edwards, Timothy (5 April 2004). Jacob Böhme: The Teutonic Philosopher. 24th Convocation of Ontario College.
  • Ensign, Chauncey David (1955). Radical German Pietism (c. 1675-c. 1760) (Thesis). Boston University. hdl:2144/8771.
  • Episcopal Church (2022). "General Convention Virtual Binder: Resolution A007: Authorize Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2022". www.vbinder.net. Retrieved 2022-07-22.
  • Faivre, Antoine (2000). Theosophy, Imagination, Tradition: Studies in Western Esotericism. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-4435-X. OCLC 41944660.
  • Gibbons, B. J. (1996). Gender in Mystical and Occult Thought: Behmenism and its Development in England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Hessayon, Ariel (2013). "Jacob Boehme's writings during the English Revolution and afterwards: their publication, dissemination and influence". In Hessayon, Ariel; Apetrei, Sarah (eds.). An Introduction to Jacob Boehme: Four Centuries of Thought and Reception. Routledge. pp. 77–97.
  • Hirsch, Emanuel (1951). Geschichte der Neueren Evangelischen Theologie in Zusammenhang mit den allgemeinen Bewegungen des europaischen Denkens (in German). Vol. II. Gutersloh: c. Bertelsmann Verlag. pp. 209, 255, 256.
  • Hutin, Serge (Autumn 1953). "The Behmenists and the Philadelphian Society". The Jacob Boehme Society Quarterly. 1 (5): 5–11.
  • Jaqua, Mark (1984). "The Illumination of Jacob Boehme" (PDF). TAT Journal. TAT Foundation. 13. Retrieved 2022-12-13.
  • Joling-van der Sar, Gerda J. (2003). The Spiritual Side of Samuel Richardson: Mysticism, Behmenism and Millenarianism in an Eighteenth-Century English Novelist – via home.hccnet.nl.
  • Judge, William Q. (1985). "Jacob Boehme and the Secret Doctrine". Theosophical Articles and Notes. Vol. 1. Los Angeles: Theosophy Company. p. 271ff. ISBN 978-0938998297.
  • Kneavel, Ann Callanan (1978). Affinities between William Butler Yeats and Jacob Boehme (PDF) (PhD dissertation). Ottawa, Canada: University of Ottawa. Retrieved 2022-12-13.
  • Magill, Frank N., ed. (2013). The 17th and 18th Centuries: Dictionary of World Biography. Vol. 4. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1135924140.
  • Mills, Jon (2002). The Unconscious Abyss: Hegel's Anticipation of Psychoanalysis. Albany: State University of New York Press.
  • Martensen, Hans Lassen (1885). Jacob Boehme: His Life and Teaching, or Studies in Theosophy. Translated by T. Rhys Evans. London: Hodder and Stoughton.
  • Martin, Michael (24 June 2020). "The Life and Legacy of Jacob Boehme: Review". The Center for Sophiological Studies. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
  • Mundik, Petra (2016). A Bloody and Barbarous God: The Metaphysics of Cormac McCarthy. University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 978-0826356710.
  • Musès, Charles A. (1951). Illumination on Jakob Böhme. New York: King's Crown Press.
  • Nicolescu, Basarab (1998). "Gurdjieff's philosophy of nature". In Needleman, J.; Baker, G. (eds.). Gurdjieff: Essays and Reflections on the Man and His Teachings. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 37–69. ISBN 978-1-4411-1084-8. A revised version is available: "Gurdjieff's philosophy of nature" (PDF). 2003. p. 12. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
  • Penman, Leigh T. I. (2008). "A Second Christian Rosenkreuz? Jakob Boehme's Disciple Balthasar Walther (1558– c.1630) and the Kabbalah: With a Bibliography of Walther's Printed Works". In Ahlbäck, T. (ed.). Scripta institute donneriani Aboensis. Vol. XX. Åbo, Finland: Donner Institute. pp. 154–172.
  • Popkin, Richard (1998). "The religious background of seventeenth-century philosophy". In Garber, Daniel; Ayers, Michael (eds.). The Cambridge History of Seventeenth-Century Philosophy. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-53720-9.
  • Schopenhauer, Arthur (1903). On the Fourfold Root of the Principle of Sufficient Reason. Translated by Mme. Karl Hillebrand. London: George Bell and Sons.
  • Stoeffler, F. Ernest (1965). The Rise of Evangelical Pietism. Leiden: E. J. Brill.
  • Stoeffler, F. Ernest (1973). German Pietism During the Eighteenth Century. Leiden: E. J. Brill.
  • Stoudt, John Joseph (1968). Jakob Böhme: His Life and Thought. New York: The Seabury Press.
  • Stoudt, John J. (November 17, 2022). "Jakob Böhme: German mystic". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2022-12-13.
  • Thune, Nils (1948). The Behemenists and the Philadelphians: A contribution to the study of English mysticism in the 17th and 18th centuries. Uppsala: Almquist and Wiksells.
  • Versluis, Arthur (2007). Magic and Mysticism: An Introduction to Western Esotericism. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 978-0742558366.
  • von Ingen, F. (1988). Jacob Böhme in Marienlexikon. Eos: St. Ottilien.
  • Weeks, Andrew (1991). Boehme: An Intellectual Biography of the Seventeenth-Century Philosopher and Mystic. State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-0596-3.

Further reading

  • Bailey, Margaret Lewis (1914). Milton and Jakob Boehme; a study of German mysticism in seventeenth-century England. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Berdyaev, Nikolai (February 1930). "Studies Concerning Jacob Boehme: Etude I. The Teaching about the Ungrund and Freedom". Journal Put' (20): 47–79.
  • Berdyaev, Nikolai (April 1930). "Studies Concerning Jacob Boehme: Etude II. The Teaching about Sophia and the Androgyne. J. Boehme and the Russian Sophiological Current". Journal Put' (21): 34–62.
  • Carus, Paul (1900). "A Modern Gnostic". History of the Devil. pp. 151ff.
  • Hartmann, Franz (1891). The Life and the Doctrines of Jacob Boehme, the God-Taught Philosopher: An Introduction to the Study of His Works – via UniversalTheosophy.com.
  • Swainson, William Perkes (1921). Jacob Boehme; the Teutonic philosopher. London: William Rider & Son, Ltd.

External links

  • Works by Jakob Böhme at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Jakob Böhme at Internet Archive
  • Works by Jakob Böhme at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Jacob Boehme Online
  • The Correspondence of Jakob Böhme in EMLO
  • Large electronic text archive of Jacob Boehme in English

jakob, böhme, german, ˈbøːmə, april, 1575, november, 1624, german, philosopher, christian, mystic, lutheran, protestant, theologian, considered, original, thinker, many, contemporaries, within, lutheran, tradition, first, book, commonly, known, aurora, caused,. Jakob Bohme ˈ b eɪ m e ˈ b oʊ 2 German ˈboːme 24 April 1575 17 November 1624 was a German philosopher Christian mystic and Lutheran Protestant theologian He was considered an original thinker by many of his contemporaries within the Lutheran tradition and his first book commonly known as Aurora caused a great scandal In contemporary English his name may be spelled Jacob Boehme retaining the older German spelling in seventeenth century England it was also spelled Behmen approximating the contemporary English pronunciation of the German Bohme Jakob BohmeJakob Bohme anonymous portrait Born24 April 1575Alt Seidenberg now Stary Zawidow Poland near Gorlitz Upper Lusatia Lands of the Bohemian Crown Holy Roman Empire now split between Gorlitz Germany and Zgorzelec Poland Died17 November 1624Gorlitz Upper Lusatia Lands of the Bohemian Crown Holy Roman Empire now split between Gorlitz Germany and Zgorzelec Poland Other namesJacob Boehme Jacob Behmen English spellings EraEarly modern philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolChristian mysticismNotable ideasBoehmian theosophyThe mystical being of the deity as the Ungrund unground the ground without a ground 1 Influences Paracelsus Kaspar von Schwenkfeld Valentine WeigelInfluenced Nikolai Berdyaev Hegel John Pordage John Amos Comenius Louis Claude de Saint Martin Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling Schopenhauer Paul TillichBohme had a profound influence on later philosophical movements such as German idealism and German Romanticism 3 Hegel described Bohme as the first German philosopher Contents 1 Biography 2 Aurora and writings 3 Theology 3 1 Cosmology 3 2 Marian views 3 3 Influences 4 Behmenism 5 Reaction 6 Works 6 1 Books in print 7 Veneration 8 In popular culture 8 1 Literature 8 2 Film 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Citations 10 3 Works cited 11 Further reading 12 External linksBiography EditBohme was born on 24 April 1575 4 5 at Alt Seidenberg now Stary Zawidow Poland a village near Gorlitz in Upper Lusatia a territory of the Kingdom of Bohemia His father George Wissen was Lutheran reasonably wealthy but a peasant nonetheless Bohme was the fourth of five children Bohme s first job was that of a herd boy He was deemed to be not strong enough for husbandry When he was 14 years old he was sent to Seidenberg as an apprentice to become a shoemaker 6 His apprenticeship for shoemaking was hard he lived with a family who were not Christians which exposed him to the controversies of the time He regularly prayed and read the Bible as well as works by visionaries such as Paracelsus Weigel and Schwenckfeld although he received no formal education 7 After three years as an apprentice Bohme left to travel Although it is unknown just how far he went he at least made it to Gorlitz 6 In 1592 Bohme returned from his journeyman years By 1599 Bohme was master of his craft with his own premises in Gorlitz That same year he married Katharina daughter of Hans Kuntzschmann a butcher in Gorlitz and together he and Katharina had four sons and two daughters 7 8 Bohme s mentor was Abraham Behem who corresponded with Valentin Weigel Bohme joined the Conventicle of God s Real Servants a parochial study group organized by Martin Moller Bohme had a number of mystical experiences throughout his youth culminating in a vision in 1600 as one day he focused his attention onto the exquisite beauty of a beam of sunlight reflected in a pewter dish He believed this vision revealed to him the spiritual structure of the world as well as the relationship between God and man and good and evil At the time he chose not to speak of this experience openly preferring instead to continue his work and raise a family citation needed In 1610 Bohme experienced another inner vision in which he further understood the unity of the cosmos and that he had received a special vocation from God citation needed The shop in Gorlitz which was sold in 1613 had allowed Bohme to buy a house in 1610 and to finish paying for it in 1618 Having given up shoemaking in 1613 Bohme sold woollen gloves for a while which caused him to regularly visit Prague to sell his wares 6 Aurora and writings EditThere are as many blasphemies in this shoemaker s book as there are lines it smells of shoemaker s pitch and filthy blacking May this insufferable stench be far from us The Arian poison was not so deadly as this shoemaker s poison Gregorius Richter following the publication of Aurora 9 Joseph Mulder Amsterdam 1686 Depiction of a possibly legendary episode in the life of Jakob Bohme The Dutch caption reads Jakob Bohme with the preacher Gregor Richter in Gorlitz who was hostile to him in front of everyone putting in a good word for a certain young baker from his followers The gentleman became very angry about this showed him the chamber door and threw one of his slippers at his head But the good man meekly picked up the slipper put it back on the foot of the angry preacher and went on his way wishing him every blessing Twelve years after the vision in 1600 Bohme began to write his first book Morgenrote im Aufgang Dawn of the Day in the East The book was given the name Aurora sometimes translated into English as The Day spring by a friend Bohme originally wrote the book for himself and it was never completed 10 A manuscript copy of the unfinished work was lent to Karl von Ender a nobleman who had copies made and began to circulate them A copy fell into the hands of Gregorius Richter de the chief pastor of Gorlitz who attacked it as being heretical why speaking against it from the pulpit and threatened Bohme with exile if he continued working on it Richter also wrote a pamphlet denouncing Bohme and his work 11 As a result Bohme did not write anything for several years however at the insistence of friends who had read Aurora he started writing again in 1618 In 1619 Bohme wrote De Tribus Principiis or The Three Principles of the Divine Essence It took him two years to finish his second book which was followed by many other treatises all of which were copied by hand and circulated only among friends 12 In 1620 Bohme wrote The Threefold Life of Man Answers to Forty Questions on the Soul The Incarnation of Jesus Christ The Six Theosophical Points The Six Mystical Points the Mysterium Pansophicum and Informatorium novissimorum Of the Last Times In 1621 Bohme wrote De Signatura Rerum relying in part on the doctrine of signatures In 1623 Bohme wrote On Election to Grace On Christ s Testaments Mysterium Magnum Clavis Key The year 1622 saw Bohme write some short works all of which were subsequently included in his first published book on New Year s Day 1624 under the title Weg zu Christo The Way to Christ 8 The publication caused another scandal and following complaints by the clergy Bohme was summoned to the Town Council on 26 March 1624 The report of the meeting was that Jacob Boehme the shoemaker and rabid enthusiast declares that he has written his book To Eternal Life but did not cause the same to be printed A nobleman Sigismund von Schweinitz did that The Council gave him warning to leave the town otherwise the Prince Elector would be apprised of the facts He thereupon promised that he would shortly take himself off 13 I must tell you sir that yesterday the pharisaical devil was let loose cursed me and my little book and condemned the book to the fire He charged me with shocking vices with being a scorner of both Church and Sacraments and with getting drunk daily on brandy wine and beer all of which is untrue while he himself is a drunken man Jacob Bohme writing about Gregorius Richter on 2 April 1624 14 Bohme left for Dresden on 8 or 9 May 1624 where he stayed with the court physician for two months In Dresden he was accepted by the nobility and high clergy His intellect was also recognized by the professors of Dresden who in a hearing in May 1624 encouraged Bohme to go home to his family in Gorlitz 7 During Bohme s absence his family had suffered due to the Thirty Years War 7 Once home Bohme accepted an invitation to stay with Herr von Schweinitz who had a country seat While there Bohme began to write his last book the 177 Theosophic Questions Bohme fell terminally ill with a bowel complaint forcing him to travel home on 7 November Gregorius Richter Bohme s adversary from Gorlitz had died in August 1624 while Bohme was away The new clergy still wary of Bohme forced him to answer a long list of questions when he wanted to receive the sacrament He died on 17 November 1624 15 In this short period Bohme produced an enormous amount of writing including his major works De Signatura Rerum The Signature of All Things and Mysterium Magnum He also developed a following throughout Europe where his followers were known as Behmenists The son of Bohme s chief antagonist the pastor primarius of Gorlitz Gregorius Richter edited a collection of extracts from his writings which were afterwards published complete at Amsterdam with the help of Coenraad van Beuningen in the year 1682 Bohme s full works were first printed in 1730 Theology Edit Bohme s cosmogony The Philosophical Sphere or the Wonder Eye of Eternity 1620 The chief concern of Bohme s writing was the nature of sin evil and redemption Consistent with Lutheran theology Bohme preached that humanity had fallen from a state of divine grace to a state of sin and suffering that the forces of evil included fallen angels who had rebelled against God and that God s goal was to restore the world to a state of grace citation needed There are some serious departures from accepted Lutheran theology such as his rejection of justification by faith alone as in this passage from The Way to Christ For he that will say I have a Will and would willingly do Good but the earthly Flesh which I carry about me keepeth me back so that I cannot yet I shall be saved by Grace for the Merits of Christ I comfort myself with his Merit and Sufferings who will receive me of mere Grace without any Merits of my own and forgive me my Sins Such a one I say is like a Man that knoweth what Food is good for his Health yet will not eat of it but eateth Poison instead thereof from whence Sickness and Death will certainly follow 16 Another place where Bohme may depart from accepted theology though this was open to question due to his somewhat obscure oracular style was in his description of the Fall as a necessary stage in the evolution of the Universe 17 A difficulty with his theology is the fact that he had a mystical vision which he reinterpreted and reformulated 17 According to F von Ingen to Bohme in order to reach God man has to go through hell first God exists without time or space he regenerates himself through eternity Bohme restates the trinity as truly existing but with a novel interpretation God the Father is fire who gives birth to his son whom Bohme calls light The Holy Spirit is the living principle or the divine life 18 It is clear that Bohme never claimed that God sees evil as desirable necessary or as part of divine will to bring forth good In his Threefold Life Bohme states I n the order of nature an evil thing cannot produce a good thing out of itself but one evil thing generates another Bohme did not believe that there is any divine mandate or metaphysically inherent necessity for evil and its effects in the scheme of things 19 Dr John Pordage a commentator on Bohme wrote that Bohme whensoever he attributes evil to eternal nature considers it in its fallen state as it became infected by the fall of Lucifer 19 Evil is seen as the disorder rebellion perversion of making spirit nature s servant 20 which is to say a perversion of initial Divine order Jakob Bohme s House in what was Gorlitz but is now in a Polish town of Zgorzelec where he lived from 1590 to 1610 Bohme s correspondences in Aurora of the seven qualities planets and humoral elemental associations Dry Saturn melancholy power of death Sweet Jupiter sanguine gentle source of life Bitter Mars choleric destructive source of life Fire Sun Moon night day evil good sin virtue Moon later phlegmatic watery Love Venus love of life spiritual rebirth Sound Mercury keen spirit illumination expression Corpus Earth totality of forces awaiting rebirth In De Tribus Principiis or On the Three Principles of Divine Being Bohme subsumed the seven principles into the Trinity The dark world of the Father Qualities 1 2 3 The light world of the Holy Spirit Qualities 5 6 7 This world of Satan and Christ Quality 4 Cosmology Edit In one interpretation of Bohme s cosmology it was necessary for humanity to return to God and for all original unities to undergo differentiation desire and conflict as in the rebellion of Satan the separation of Eve from Adam and their acquisition of the knowledge of good and evil in order for creation to evolve to a new state of redeemed harmony that would be more perfect than the original state of innocence allowing God to achieve a new self awareness by interacting with a creation that was both part of and distinct from Himself Free will becomes the most important gift God gives to humanity allowing us to seek divine grace as a deliberate choice while still allowing us to remain individuals citation needed Marian views Edit Bohme believed that the Son of God became human through the Virgin Mary Before the birth of Christ God recognized himself as a virgin This virgin is therefore a mirror of God s wisdom and knowledge 18 Bohme follows Luther in that he views Mary within the context of Christ Unlike Luther he does not address himself to dogmatic issues very much but to the human side of Mary Like all other women she was human and therefore subject to sin Only after God elected her with his grace to become the mother of his son did she inherit the status of sinlessness 18 Mary did not move the Word the Word moved Mary so Bohme explaining that all her grace came from Christ Mary is blessed among women but not because of her qualifications but because of her humility Mary is an instrument of God an example of what God can do It shall not be forgotten in all eternity that God became human in her 21 Bohme unlike Luther did not believe that Mary was the Ever Virgin Her virginity after the birth of Jesus is unrealistic to Bohme The true salvation is Christ not Mary The importance of Mary a human like every one of us is that she gave birth to Jesus Christ as a human being If Mary had not been human according to Bohme Christ would be a stranger and not our brother Christ must grow in us as he did in Mary She became blessed by accepting Christ In a reborn Christian as in Mary all that is temporal disappears and only the heavenly part remains for all eternity Bohme s peculiar theological language involving fire light and spirit which permeates his theology and Marian views does not distract much from the fact that his basic positions are Lutheran 21 Influences Edit Idealized portrait of Bohme from Theosophia Revelata 1730 Bohme s writing shows the influence of Neoplatonist and alchemical a writers such as Paracelsus while remaining firmly within a Christian tradition He has in turn greatly influenced many anti authoritarian and mystical movements such as Radical Pietism 22 23 24 25 26 27 including the Ephrata Cloister 28 and Society of the Woman in the Wilderness the Religious Society of Friends the Philadelphians the Gichtelians the Harmony Society the Zoarite Separatists Rosicrucianism Martinism and Christian theosophy Bohme s disciple and mentor the Liegnitz physician Balthasar Walther who had travelled to the Holy Land in search of magical kabbalistic and alchemical wisdom also introduced kabbalistic ideas into Bohme s thought 29 Bohme was also an important source of German Romantic philosophy influencing Schelling in particular 30 In Richard Bucke s 1901 treatise Cosmic Consciousness special attention was given to the profundity of Bohme s spiritual enlightenment which seemed to reveal to Bohme an ultimate nondifference or nonduality between human beings and God Jakob Bohme s writings also had some influence on the modern theosophical movement of the Theosophical Society Blavatsky and W Q Judge wrote about Jakob Bohme s philosophy 31 32 Bohme was also an important influence on the ideas of Franz Hartmann the founder in 1886 of the German branch of the Theosophical Society Hartmann described the writings of Bohme as the most valuable and useful treasure in spiritual literature 33 Behmenism EditSee also Boehmian theosophy I do not write in the pagan manner but in the theosophical Jacob Boehme 34 18th century illustration by Dionysius Andreas Freher for the book The Works of Jacob Behmen Behmenism also Behemenism or Boehmenism is the English language designation for a 17th century European Christian movement based on the teachings of German mystic and theosopher Jakob Bohme 1575 1624 The term was not usually applied by followers of Bohme s theosophy to themselves but rather was used by some opponents of Bohme s thought as a polemical term The origins of the term date back to the German literature of the 1620s when opponents of Bohme s thought such as the Thuringian antinomian Esajas Stiefel the Lutheran theologian Peter Widmann and others denounced the writings of Bohme and the Bohmisten When his writings began to appear in England in the 1640s Bohme s surname was irretrievably corrupted to the form Behmen or Behemen whence the term Behmenism developed b A follower of Bohme s theosophy is a Behmenist Behmenism does not describe the beliefs of any single formal religious sect but instead designates a more general description of Bohme s interpretation of Christianity when used as a source of devotional inspiration by a variety of groups Bohme s views greatly influenced many anti authoritarian and Christian mystical movements such as the Religious Society of Friends Quakers the Philadelphians 35 the Gichtelians the Society of the Woman in the Wilderness led by Johannes Kelpius the Ephrata Cloister the Harmony Society Martinism and Christian theosophy Bohme was also an important source of German Romantic philosophy influencing Schelling and Franz von Baader in particular 30 In Richard Bucke s 1901 treatise Cosmic Consciousness special attention was given to the profundity of Bohme s spiritual enlightenment which seemed to reveal to Bohme an ultimate nondifference or nonduality between human beings and God Bohme is also an important influence on the ideas of the English Romantic poet artist and mystic William Blake After having seen the William Law edition of the works of Jakob Bohme published between 1764 and 1781 in which some illustrations had been included by the German early Bohme exegetist Dionysius Andreas Freher 1649 1728 William Blake said during a dinner party in 1825 Michel Angelo could not have surpassed them 36 Despite being based on a corrupted form of Bohme s surname the term Behmenism has retained a certain utility in modern English language historiography where it is still occasionally employed although often to designate specifically English followers of Bohme s theosophy c Given the transnational nature of Bohme s influence the term at least implies manifold international connections between Behmenists 37 In any case the term is preferred to clumsier variants such as Bohmeianism or Bohmism although these may also be encountered Reaction EditIn addition to the scientific revolution the 17th century was a time of mystical revolution in Catholicism Protestantism and Judaism The Protestant revolution developed from Bohme and some medieval mystics Bohme became important in intellectual circles in Protestant Europe following from the publication of his books in England Holland and Germany in the 1640s and 1650s 38 Bohme was especially important for the Millenarians and was taken seriously by the Cambridge Platonists and Dutch Collegiants Henry More was critical of Bohme and claimed he was not a real prophet and had no exceptional insight into metaphysical questions Overall although his writings did not influence political or religious debates in England his influence can be seen in more esoteric forms such as on alchemical experimentation metaphysical speculation and spiritual contemplation as well as utopian literature and the development of neologisms d More for example dismissed Opera Posthuma by Spinoza as a return to Behmenism 40 While Bohme was famous in Holland England France Denmark and America during the 17th century he became less influential during the 18th century A revival occurred late in that century with interest from German Romantics who considered Bohme a forerunner to the movement Poets such as John Milton Ludwig Tieck Novalis William Blake 41 and W B Yeats 42 found inspiration in Bohme s writings Coleridge in his Biographia Literaria speaks of Bohme with admiration Bohme was highly thought of by the German philosophers Baader Schelling and Schopenhauer Hegel went as far as to say that Bohme was the first German philosopher 43 Danish Bishop Hans Lassen Martensen published a book about Bohme 44 Several authors have found Boehme s description of the three original Principles and the seven Spirits to be similar to the Law of Three and the Law of Seven described in the works of Boris Mouravieff and George Gurdjieff 45 46 Works EditAurora Die Morgenrote im Aufgang unfinished 1612 De Tribus Principiis The Three Principles of the Divine Essence 1618 1619 The Threefold Life of Man 1620 Answers to Forty Questions Concerning the Soul 1620 The Treatise of the Incarnations 1620 I Of the Incarnation of Jesus Christ II Of the Suffering Dying Death and Resurrection of Christ III Of the Tree of Faith The Great Six Points 1620 Of the Earthly and of the Heavenly Mystery 1620 Of the Last Times 1620 De Signatura Rerum The Signature of All Things 1621 The Four Complexions 1621 Of True Repentance 1622 Of True Resignation 1622 Of Regeneration 1622 Of Predestination 1623 A Short Compendium of Repentance 1623 The Mysterium Magnum 1623 A Table of the Divine Manifestation or an Exposition of the Threefold World 1623 The Supersensual Life 1624 Of Divine Contemplation or Vision unfinished 1624 Of Christ s Testaments 1624 I Baptism II The Supper Of Illumination 1624 177 Theosophic Questions with Answers to Thirteen of Them unfinished 1624 An Epitome of the Mysterium Magnum 1624 The Holy Week or a Prayer Book unfinished 1624 A Table of the Three Principles 1624 Of the Last Judgement lost 1624 The Clavis 1624 Sixty two Theosophic Epistles 1618 1624 Books in print Edit The Way to Christ inc True Repentance True Resignation Regeneration or the New Birth The Supersensual Life Of Heaven amp Hell The Way from Darkness to True Illumination edited by William Law Diggory Press ISBN 978 1 84685 791 1 Of the Incarnation of Jesus Christ translated from the German by John Rolleston Earle London Constable and Company LTD 1934 Veneration EditIn 2022 Jacob Boehme was officially added to the Episcopal Church liturgical calendar along with Johann Arndt with a feast day on 11 May 47 In popular culture EditLiterature Edit Cormac McCarthy s 1985 novel Blood Meridian includes three epigraphs the second of which comes from Jacob Boehme It is not to be thought that the life of darkness is sunk in misery and lost as if in sorrowing There is no sorrowing For sorrow is a thing that is swallowed up in death and death and dying are the very life of the darkness 48 Film Edit The Life and Legacy of Jacob Boehme A documentary directed by Lukasz Chwalko Premiered June 2016 Zgorzelec Poland 49 See also EditAugoeides Hermetic starfire body Christian mysticism Christian mystical practices Friends of God Medieval mystical group Jane Lead English dissenter 1624 1704 Sophia Personification of wisdom in philosophy and religionReferences EditNotes Edit Calian 2010 p 184 In several works he used alchemical principles and symbols without hesitation to demonstrate theological realities Borrowing alchemical terminology in order to explain religious and mystical frameworks Bohme assumed that alchemical language is not only a metaphor for laboratory research Alchemy is a metaphysical science because he understood that matter is contaminated with spirit An early English language example is provided in Anderdon John full citation needed One blow at Babel in those of the People called Behmenites Whose foundation is upon their own cardinal conception begotten in their imaginations upon Jacob Behmen s writings London 1662 See for example Gibbons 1996 All of Bohme s treatises and most of his letters were translated into English as well as two pamphlets that were translated into Welsh by the Parliamentarian evangelist Morgan Llwyd between 1645 and 1662 39 Citations Edit Mills 2002 p 16 Bohme Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Stoudt 2022 Jaqua 1984 Edwards 2004 a b c Deussen 1910 p xxxviii a b c d Debelius 1908 a b Chisholm 1911 Martensen 1885 p 13 Deussen 1910 pp xli xlii Magill 2013 p 155 Weeks 1991 p 2 Deussen 1910 p xlviii Deussen 1910 pp xlviii xlix Deussen 1910 pp xlix l The Way to Christ Pass the Word Services a b von Ingen 1988 p 517 a b c von Ingen 1988 p 518 a b Muses 1951 p page needed Stoudt 1968 p page needed a b von Ingen 1988 p 519 Brown 1996 Durnbaugh 2001 Ensign 1955 Hirsch 1951 Stoeffler 1965 Stoeffler 1973 Brumbaugh 1899 p 443 Penman 2008 a b Schopenhauer 1903 Ch II 8 Faivre 2000 p 28 Judge 1985 Versluis 2007 p page needed Faivre 2000 p 13 Hutin 1953 Joling van der Sar 2003 p 140 Thune 1948 p page needed Popkin 1998 pp 401 402 Hessayon 2013 Popkin 1998 p 402 Aubrey 1981 Kneavel 1978 Weeks 1991 pp 2 3 Martensen 1885 Nicolescu 1998 p 47 Bourgeault 2013 Episcopal Church 2022 Mundik 2016 p 32 Martin 2020 Works cited Edit Aubrey Bryan 1981 The influence of Jacob Boehme on the work of William Blake Durham theses Thesis Durham University Retrieved 2022 12 13 Bourgeault Cynthia 2013 The Holy Trinity and the Law of Three Discovering the Radical Truth at the Heart of Christianity Shambhala ISBN 978 0 8348 2894 0 Brown Dale W 1996 Understanding Pietism Evangel Publishing House ISBN 978 0916035648 Brumbaugh Martin Grove 1899 A History of the German Baptist Brethren in Europe and America Brethren publishing house ISBN 9780404084257 Calian George Florin 2010 Alkimia Operativa and Alkimia Speculativa Some Modern Controversies on the Historiography of Alchemy Annual of Medieval Studies at CEU Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Boehme Jakob Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 114 Debelius F W 1908 Boehme Jakob In Jackson Samuel Macauley ed New Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge Vol 2 third ed London and New York Funk and Wagnalls pp 209 211 Deussen Paul 1910 Introduction In Boehme Jacob ed Concerning the three principles of the divine essence London John M Watkins Durnbaugh Donald F 2001 Pennsylvania s Crazy Quilt of German Religious Groups Pennsylvania History A Journal of Mid Atlantic Studies 68 1 8 30 Edwards Timothy 5 April 2004 Jacob Bohme The Teutonic Philosopher 24th Convocation of Ontario College Ensign Chauncey David 1955 Radical German Pietism c 1675 c 1760 Thesis Boston University hdl 2144 8771 Episcopal Church 2022 General Convention Virtual Binder Resolution A007 Authorize Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2022 www vbinder net Retrieved 2022 07 22 Faivre Antoine 2000 Theosophy Imagination Tradition Studies in Western Esotericism Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 4435 X OCLC 41944660 Gibbons B J 1996 Gender in Mystical and Occult Thought Behmenism and its Development in England Cambridge Cambridge University Press Hessayon Ariel 2013 Jacob Boehme s writings during the English Revolution and afterwards their publication dissemination and influence In Hessayon Ariel Apetrei Sarah eds An Introduction to Jacob Boehme Four Centuries of Thought and Reception Routledge pp 77 97 Hirsch Emanuel 1951 Geschichte der Neueren Evangelischen Theologie in Zusammenhang mit den allgemeinen Bewegungen des europaischen Denkens in German Vol II Gutersloh c Bertelsmann Verlag pp 209 255 256 Hutin Serge Autumn 1953 The Behmenists and the Philadelphian Society The Jacob Boehme Society Quarterly 1 5 5 11 Jaqua Mark 1984 The Illumination of Jacob Boehme PDF TAT Journal TAT Foundation 13 Retrieved 2022 12 13 Joling van der Sar Gerda J 2003 The Spiritual Side of Samuel Richardson Mysticism Behmenism and Millenarianism in an Eighteenth Century English Novelist via home hccnet nl Judge William Q 1985 Jacob Boehme and the Secret Doctrine Theosophical Articles and Notes Vol 1 Los Angeles Theosophy Company p 271ff ISBN 978 0938998297 Kneavel Ann Callanan 1978 Affinities between William Butler Yeats and Jacob Boehme PDF PhD dissertation Ottawa Canada University of Ottawa Retrieved 2022 12 13 Magill Frank N ed 2013 The 17th and 18th Centuries Dictionary of World Biography Vol 4 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1135924140 Mills Jon 2002 The Unconscious Abyss Hegel s Anticipation of Psychoanalysis Albany State University of New York Press Martensen Hans Lassen 1885 Jacob Boehme His Life and Teaching or Studies in Theosophy Translated by T Rhys Evans London Hodder and Stoughton Martin Michael 24 June 2020 The Life and Legacy of Jacob Boehme Review The Center for Sophiological Studies Retrieved 2021 09 21 Mundik Petra 2016 A Bloody and Barbarous God The Metaphysics of Cormac McCarthy University of New Mexico Press ISBN 978 0826356710 Muses Charles A 1951 Illumination on Jakob Bohme New York King s Crown Press Nicolescu Basarab 1998 Gurdjieff s philosophy of nature In Needleman J Baker G eds Gurdjieff Essays and Reflections on the Man and His Teachings Bloomsbury Publishing pp 37 69 ISBN 978 1 4411 1084 8 A revised version is available Gurdjieff s philosophy of nature PDF 2003 p 12 Retrieved 23 July 2017 Penman Leigh T I 2008 A Second Christian Rosenkreuz Jakob Boehme s Disciple Balthasar Walther 1558 c 1630 and the Kabbalah With a Bibliography of Walther s Printed Works In Ahlback T ed Scripta institute donneriani Aboensis Vol XX Abo Finland Donner Institute pp 154 172 Popkin Richard 1998 The religious background of seventeenth century philosophy In Garber Daniel Ayers Michael eds The Cambridge History of Seventeenth Century Philosophy Vol 1 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 53720 9 Schopenhauer Arthur 1903 On the Fourfold Root of the Principle of Sufficient Reason Translated by Mme Karl Hillebrand London George Bell and Sons Stoeffler F Ernest 1965 The Rise of Evangelical Pietism Leiden E J Brill Stoeffler F Ernest 1973 German Pietism During the Eighteenth Century Leiden E J Brill Stoudt John Joseph 1968 Jakob Bohme His Life and Thought New York The Seabury Press Stoudt John J November 17 2022 Jakob Bohme German mystic Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2022 12 13 Thune Nils 1948 The Behemenists and the Philadelphians A contribution to the study of English mysticism in the 17th and 18th centuries Uppsala Almquist and Wiksells Versluis Arthur 2007 Magic and Mysticism An Introduction to Western Esotericism Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 0742558366 von Ingen F 1988 Jacob Bohme in Marienlexikon Eos St Ottilien Weeks Andrew 1991 Boehme An Intellectual Biography of the Seventeenth Century Philosopher and Mystic State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 0596 3 Further reading EditBailey Margaret Lewis 1914 Milton and Jakob Boehme a study of German mysticism in seventeenth century England New York Oxford University Press Berdyaev Nikolai February 1930 Studies Concerning Jacob Boehme Etude I The Teaching about the Ungrund and Freedom Journal Put 20 47 79 Berdyaev Nikolai April 1930 Studies Concerning Jacob Boehme Etude II The Teaching about Sophia and the Androgyne J Boehme and the Russian Sophiological Current Journal Put 21 34 62 Carus Paul 1900 A Modern Gnostic History of the Devil pp 151ff Hartmann Franz 1891 The Life and the Doctrines of Jacob Boehme the God Taught Philosopher An Introduction to the Study of His Works via UniversalTheosophy com Swainson William Perkes 1921 Jacob Boehme the Teutonic philosopher London William Rider amp Son Ltd External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Jakob Bohme Wikisource has original works by or about Jakob Bohme Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jakob Bohme Works by Jakob Bohme at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Jakob Bohme at Internet Archive Works by Jakob Bohme at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Jacob Boehme Online The Correspondence of Jakob Bohme in EMLO Jacob Boehme Resources Large electronic text archive of Jacob Boehme in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jakob Bohme amp oldid 1143394674, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.