Section One:
Modern Philosophy in its First Statement
B. JACOB BOEHME.
WE now pass on from this English Lord
Chancellor,
the leader of the external, sensuous
method
in Philosophy, to the philosophus teutonicus,
as he is called — to the German cobbler
of
Lusatia, of whom we have no reason
to be
ashamed. It was, in fact, through him
that
Philosophy first appeared in Germany
with
a character peculiar to itself: Boehme
stands
in exact antithesis to Bacon. He was
also
called theosophus teutonicus, just
as even
before this philosophia teutonica was
the
name given to mysticism.(1) This Jacob
Boehme
was for long forgotten and decried
as being
simply a pious visionary; the so-called
period
of enlightenment, more particularly,
helped
to render his public extremely limited.
Leibnitz
thought very highly of him, but it
is in
modern times that his profundity has
for
the first time been recognized, and
that
he has been once more restored to honour.
It is certain, on the one hand, that
he did
not merit the disdain accorded him;
on the
other, however, he did not deserve
the high
honour into which he was elevated.
To call
him an enthusiast signifies nothing
at all.
For if we will, all philosophers may
be so
termed, even the Epicureans and Bacon;
for
they all have held that man finds his
truth
in something else than eating and drinking,
or in the common-sense every-day life
of
wood-cutting, tailoring, trading, or
other
business, private or official. But
Boehme
has to attribute the high honour to
which
he was raised mainly to the garb of
sensuous
feeling and perception which he adopted;
for ordinary sensuous perception and
inward
feeling, praying and yearning, and
the pictorial
element in thought, allegories and
such like,
are in some measure held to be essential
in Philosophy. But it is only in the
Notion,
in thought, that Philosophy can find
its
truth, and that the Absolute can be
expressed
and likewise is as it is in itself.
Looked
at from this point of view, Boehme
is a complete
barbarian, and yet he is a man who,
along
with his rude method of presentation,
possesses
a deep, concrete heart. But because
no method
or order is to be found in him, it
is difficult
to give an account of his philosophy.
Jacob Boehme was born in 1575 of poor
parents,
at Altseidenburg, near Görlitz, in
Upper
Lusatia. In his youth he was a peasant
boy
who tended the cattle. He was brought
up
as a Lutheran, and always remained
such.
The account of his life which is given
with
his works was drawn up by a clergyman
who
knew him personally, from information
given
by Boehme himself. Much is there related
as to how he attained to more profound
knowledge
and wisdom by means of certain experiences
through which he passed. Even when
a herd
tending the cattle, as he tells of
himself,
he had these wonderful manifestations.
The
first marvellous awakening that occurred
to him took place in a thicket in which
he
saw a cavern and a vessel of gold.
Startled
by the splendour of this sight he was
inwardly
awakened from a dull stupor, but afterwards
he found it was impossible for him
to discover
the objects of his vision. Subsequently
he
was bound apprentice to a shoemaker.
More
especially “was he spiritually awakened
by
the words: 'Your heavenly Father will
give
the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him'
(Luke
xi. 13), so that, desiring to come
to a knowledge
of the truth, and yet retaining the
simplicity
of his mind, he prayed and sought,
and knocked,
fervently and earnestly, until, while
travelling
about with his master, he was, through
the
influence of the Father in the Son,
spiritually
transported into the glorious pence
and the
Sabbath of the soul, and thus his request
was granted. According to his own account,
he was then surrounded with divine
light,
and for seven days he remained in the
supremest
divine contemplation and joy.” His
master
for this dismissed him, saying he could
not
keep in his service “house-prophets
such
as he was.” After that he lived at
Görlitz.
In 1594 he rose in his trade to be
master,
and married. Later on, “in the year
1600,
and in the twenty-fifth year of his
age,
once more” the light broke upon him
in a
second vision of the same kind. He
tells
that he saw a brightly scoured pewter
dish
in the room, and “by the sudden sight
of
this shining metal with its brilliant
radiance”
he was brought (into a meditation and
a breaking
free of his astral mind) “into the
central
point of secret nature,” and into the
light
of divine essence. “He went out into
the
open air in order that he might rid
his brain
of this hallucination, and none the
less
did he continue all the more clearly
as time
went on to experience the vision in
this
way received. Thus by means of the
signatures
or figures, lineaments, and colours
which
were depicted, he could, so to speak,
look
into the heart and inmost nature of
all creatures
(in his book De signatura rerum this
reason
which was impressed upon him is found
and
fully explained); and for this he was
overwhelmed
with joy, thanked God, and went peacefully
about his affairs.” Later on he wrote
several
works. He continued to pursue his handicraft
at Görlitz, and died at the same place
in
1624, being then a master shoemaker.(2)
His works are especially popular with
the
Dutch, and for that reason most of
the editions
are issued from Amsterdam, though they
were
also surreptitiously printed in Hamburg.
His first writing is the “Aurora” or
“Morgenröthe
im Aufgange,” and this was followed
by others;
the work “Von den drei Principien,”
and another
“Vom dreifachen Leben des Menschen,”
are,
along with several others, the most
noteworthy.
Boehme constantly read the Bible, but
what
other works he read is not known. A
number
of passages in his works, however,
prove
that he read much — evidently mystical,
theosophic,
and alchemistic writings for the most
part,
and he must certainly have included
in his
reading the works of Theophrastus Bombastus
von Hohenheim, known as Paracelsus,
a philosopher
of a somewhat similar calibre, but
much more
confused, and without Boehme's profundity
of mind. He met with much persecution
at
the hands of the clergy, but he aroused
less
attention in Germany than in Holland
and
England, where his writings have been
often
printed.(3) In reading his works we
are struck
with wonder, and one must be familiar
with
his ideas in order to discover the
truth
in this most confused method of expression.
The matter of Jacob Boehme's philosophy
is genuinely German; for what marks
him out
and makes him noteworthy is the Protestant
principle already mentioned of placing
the
intellectual world within one's own
mind
and heart, and of experiencing and
knowing
and feeling in one's own self-consciousness
all that formerly was conceived as
a Beyond.
Boehme's general conceptions thus on
the
one hand reveal themselves as both
deep and
sound, but on the other, with all his
need
for and struggle after determination
and
distinction in the development of his
divine
intuitions of the universe, he does
not attain
either to clearness or order. There
is no
systematic connection but the greatest
confusion
in his divisions — and this exists
even in
his tables,(4) in which three numbers
are
made use of.
I. What God is beside nature and Creation.
II. Separability God in Love Mysterium
magnum
The first Principium. God in Wrath.
III.
God in wrath and love.
Here nothing definite to hold the moments
asunder is shown, and we have the sense
of
merely doing it by effort; now these
and
now other distinctions are set forth,
and
as they are laid down disconnectedly,
they
again come into confusion.
The manner and system which Boehme
adopts
must accordingly be termed barbarous;
the
expressions used in his works prove
this,
as when, for example, he speaks of
the divine
Salitter, Marcurius, &c. As Boehme
places
the life, the movement of absolute
existence
in the heart, so does he regard all
conceptions
as being in a condition of actuality;
or
he makes use of actuality as Notion,
that
is to say he forcibly takes natural
things
and sensuous qualities to express his
ideas
rather than the determinations of the
Notion.
For instance, sulphur and suchlike
are not
to him the things that we so name,
but their
essence; or the Notion has this form
of actuality.
Boehme's profoundest interest is in
the Idea
and he struggles hard to express it.
The
speculative truth which he desires
to expound
really requires, in order to be comprehended,
thought and the form of thought. Only
in
thought can this unity be comprehended,
in
the central point of which his mind
has its
place; but it is just the form of thought
that is lacking to him. The forms that
he
employs are really no longer determinations
of the Notion at all. They are on the
one
hand sensuous, chemical determinations,
such
qualities as acid, sweet, sour, fierce;
and,
on the other, emotions such as wrath
and
love; and, further, tincture, essence,
anguish,
&c. For him these sensuous forms
do not,
however, possess the sensuous significance
which belongs to them, but he uses
them in
order to find expression for his thought.
It is, however, at once clear to us
how the
form of manifestation must necessarily
appear
forced, since thought alone is capable
of
unity. It thus appears strange to read
of
the bitterness of God, of the Flagrat,
and
of lightning; we first require to have
the
Idea, and then we certainly discern
its presence
here. But the other side is that Boehme
utilizes
the Christian form which lies nearest
to
him, and more especially that of the
Trinity,
as the form of the Idea: he intermingles
the sensuous mode and the mode of popularly
conceived religion, sensuous images
and conceptions.
However rude and barbarous this may
on the
one hand be, and however impossible
it is
to read Boehme continuously, or to
take a
firm grasp of his thoughts (for all
these
qualities, spirits and angels make
one's
head swim), we must on the other hand
recognize
that he speaks of everything as it
is in
its actuality, and that he does this
from
his heart. This solid, deep, German
mind
which has intercourse with what is
most inward,
thus really exercises an immense power
and
force in order to make use of actuality
as
Notion, and to have what takes place
in heaven
around and within it. Just as Hans
Sachs
represented God, Christ and the Holy
Ghost,
as well as patriarchs and angels, in
his
own particular manner and as ordinary
people
like himself, not looking upon them
as past
and historic, so was it with Boehme.
To faith spirit has truth, but in this
truth
the moment of certainty of self is
lacking.
We have seen that the object of Christianity
is the truth, the Spirit; it is given
to
faith as immediate truth. Faith possesses
the truth, but unconsciously, without
knowledge,
without knowing it as its self-consciousness;
and seeing that thought, the Notion,
is necessarily
in self-consciousness — the unity of
opposites
with Bruno — this unity is what is
pre-eminently
lacking to faith. Its moments as particular
forms fall apart, more especially the
highest
moments — good and evil, or God and
the Devil.
God is, and the Devil likewise; both
exist
for themselves. But if God is absolute
existence,
the question may be asked, What absolute
existence is this which has not all
actuality,
and more particularly evil within it?
Boehme
is hence on one side intent on leading
the
soul of man to the divine life, on
inducing
the soul to pay attention to the strife
within
itself, and make this the object of
all its
work and efforts; and then in respect
of
this content he strives to make out
how evil
is present in good — a question of
the present
day. But because Boehme does not possess
the Notion and is so far back in intellectual
culture, there ensues a most frightful
and
painful struggle between his mind and
consciousness
and his powers of expression, and the
import
of this struggle is the profoundest
Idea
of God which seeks to bring the most
absolute
opposites into unity, and to bind them
together
— but not for thinking reason. Thus
if we
would comprehend the matter, Boehme's
great
struggle has been — since to him God
is everything
— to grasp the negative, evil, the
devil,
in and from God, to grasp God as absolute;
and this struggle characterizes all
his writings
and brings about the torture of his
mind.
It requires a great and severe mental
effort
to bring together in one what in shape
and
form lie so far asunder; with all the
strength
that he possesses Boehme brings the
two together,
and therein shatters all the immediate
significance
of actuality possessed by both. But
when
thus he grasps this movement, this
essence
of spirit in himself, in his inward
nature,
the determination of the moments simply
approaches
more nearly to the form of self-consciousness,
to the formless, or to the Notion.
In the
background, indeed, there stands the
purest
speculative thought, but it does not
attain
to an adequate representation. Homely,
popular
modes of conception likewise appear,
a free
outspokenness which to us seems too
familiar.
With the devil, particularly, he has
great
dealings, and him he frequently addresses.
“Come here,” he says, “thou black wretch,
what dost thou want? I will give thee
a potion.”(5)
As Prospero in Shakespeare's “Tempest”(6)
threatens Ariel that he will “rend
an oak
and peg him in his knotty entrails
. . .
twelve winters,” Boehme's great mind
is confined
in the hard knotty oak of the senses
— in
the gnarled concretion of the ordinary
conception
— and is not able to arrive at a free
presentation
of the Idea.
I shall shortly give Boehme's main
conceptions,
and then several particular forms which
he
in turn adopts; for he does not remain
at
one form, because neither the sensuous
nor
the religious can suffice. Now even
though
this brings about the result that he
frequently
repeats himself, the forms of his main
conceptions
are still in every respect very different,
and he who would try to give a consistent
explanation of Boehme's ideas, particularly
when they pass into further developments,
would only delude himself in making
the attempt.
Hence we must neither expect to find
in Boehme
a systematic presentation nor a true
method
of passing over into the individual.
Of his
thoughts we cannot say much without
adopting
his manner of expression, and quoting
the
particular passages themselves, for
they
cannot otherwise be expressed. The
fundamental
idea in Jacob Boehme is the effort
to comprise
everything in an absolute unity, for
he desires
to demonstrate the absolute divine
unity
and the union of all opposites in God.
Boehme's
chief, and one may even say, his only
thought
— the thought that permeates all his
works
— is that of perceiving the holy Trinity
in everything, and recognizing everything
as its revelation and manifestation,
so that
it is the universal principle in which
and
through which everything exists; in
such
a way, moreover, that all things have
this
divine Trinity in themselves, not as
a Trinity
pertaining to the ordinary conception,
but
as the real Trinity of the absolute
Idea.
Everything that exists is, according
to Boehme,
this three-fold alone, and this three-fold
is everything.(7) To him the universe
is
thus one divine life and revelation
of God
in all things, so that when examined
more
closely, from the one reality of God,
the
sum and substance of all powers and
qualities,
the Son who shines forth from these
powers
is eternally born; the inward unity
of this
light with the substance of the powers
is
Spirit. Sometimes the presentation
is vague,
and then again it is clearer. What
comes
next is the explanation of this Trinity,
and here the different forms which
he uses
to indicate the difference becoming
evident
in the same, more especially appear.
In the Aurora, the “Root or Mother
of Philosophy,
Astrology and Theology,” he gives a
method
of division in which he places these
sciences
in proximity, and yet appears merely
to pass
from one to the other without any clear
definition
or determination.” (1) In Philosophy
divine
power is treated of, what God is, and
how
in the Being of God, nature, stars,
and Elementa
are constituted; whence all things
have their
origin, what is the nature of heaven
and
earth, as also of angels, men and devils,
heaven and hell and all that is creaturely,
likewise what the two qualities in
nature
are, and this is dealt with out of
a right
ground in the knowledge of spirit,
by the
impulse and motion of God.
(2) In astrology the powers of nature,
of
the stars and elements, are treated
of, and
how all creatures proceed from them,
how
evil and good are through them effected
in
men and animals. (3) In theology the
kingdom
of Christ is dealt with, as also its
nature,
and how it is set in opposition to
hell,
and how in nature it wars with the
kingdom
of darkness.”(8)
1. What comes first is God the Father;
this
first is at once divided in itself
and the
unity of both its parts. “God is all,”
he
says, “He is the Darkness and the Light,
Love and Anger, Fire and Light, but
He calls
Himself God only as to the light of
His love.
There is an eternal Contrarium between
darkness
and light; neither comprehends the
other
and neither is the other, and yet there
is
but one essence or substance, though
separated
by pain; it is likewise so with the
will,
and yet there is no separable essence.
One
single principle is divided in this
way,
that one is in the other as a nothing
which
yet exists; but it is not manifest
in the
property of that thing in which it
is.”(9)
By anguish is expressed that which
we know
as the absolute negativity — that is
the
self-conscious, self-experienced, the
self-relating
negativity which is therefore absolute
affirmation.
All Boehme's efforts were directed
towards
this point; the principle of the Notion
is
living in him, only he cannot express
it
in the form of thought. That is to
say, all
depends on thinking of the negative
as simple,
since it is at the same time an opposite;
thus anguish [Qual] is the inward tearing
asunder and yet likewise the simple.
From
this Boehme derives sources or springs
[Quellen],
a good play on the words. For pain
[die Qual],
this negativity, passes into life,
activity,
and thus lie likewise connects it with
quality,
[Qualität], which he makes into Quallity.(10)
The absolute identity of difference
is all
through present to him.
a. Boehme thus represents God not as
the
empty unity, but as this self-separating
unity of absolute opposites; one must
not,
however, here expect a clearly defined
distinction.
The first, the one, the Father, has
likewise
the mode of natural existence; thus,
like
Proclus, he speaks of this God being
simple
essence. This simple essence he calls
the
hidden; and he therefore names it the
Temperamentum,
this unity of what is different, in
which
all is tempered. We find him also calling
it the great Salitter — now the divine
and
now the natural Salitter — as well
as Salniter.
When he talks of this great salitter
as of
something known to us, we cannot first
of
all conceive what it means. But it
is a vulgar
corruption of the word sal nitri, saltpetre
(which is still called salniter in
Austria),
i. e. just the neutral and in truth
universal
existence. The divine pomp and state
is this,
that in God a more glorious nature
dwells,
trees, plants, &c. “In the divine
pomp
or state two things have principally
to be
considered; salitter or the divine
power,
which brings forth all fruits, and
marcurius
or the sound.”(11) This great salitter
is
the unrevealed existence, just as the
Neo-Platonic
unity is without knowledge of itself
and
likewise unrecognized.
b. This first substance contains all
powers
or qualities as not yet separated;
thus this
salitter likewise appears as the body
of
God, who embraces all qualities in
Himself.
Quality thus becomes an important conception,
the first determination with Boehme;
and
he begins with qualities in his work
“Morgenröthe
im Aufgang.” He afterwards associates
with
this the conferring of quality, and
in the
same place says: “Quality is the mobility,
boiling, springing, and driving of
a thing.”
These qualities he then tries to define,
but the account he gives of them is
vague.
“As for example heat which burns, consumes
and drives forth all whatsoever comes
into
it which is not of the same property;
and
again it enlightens and warms all cold,
wet,
and dark things; it compacts and hardens
soft things. It contains likewise two
other
kinds in it, namely Light and Fierceness”
(Negativity); “of which the light or
the
heart of the heat is in itself a pleasant,
joyful glance or lustre, a power of
life
. . . and a source of the heavenly
kingdom
of joy. For it makes all things in
this world
living and moving; all flesh, trees,
leaves,
and grass grow in this world, as in
the power
of the light, and have their light
therein,
viz. in the good. Again, it contains
also
a fierceness or wrath which burns,
consumes
and spoils. This wrath or fierceness
springs,
drives, and elevates itself in the
light,
and makes the light movable. It wrestles
and fights together in its two-fold
source.
The light subsists in God without heat,
but
it does not subsist so in nature. For
all
qualities in nature are one in another,
in
the same manner as God is all. For
God” (the
Father) “is the Heart.” On another
occasion
(Vom dreifachen Leben des Menschen,
chap.
iv. § 68, p. 881) the Son is the heart
of
God; and yet again the Spirit is called
the
heart (Morgenröthe, chap. ii. § 13,
p. 29)
“or fountain of nature, and from Him
comes
all. Now heat reigns and predominates
in
all powers in nature and warms all,
and is
one source or spring in all. But the
light
in the heat gives power to all qualities,
for that all grow pleasant and joyful.”
Boehme
goes over quite a list of qualities:
cold,
hot, bitter, sweet, fierce, acid, hard,
dense,
soft qualities, sound, etc. “The bitter
quality
is in God also, but not in that manner
as
the gall is in man, but it is an everlasting
power, in an elevating, triumphing
spring
or source of joy. All the creatures
are made
from these qualities, and live therein
as
in their mother.”(12)
“The virtues of the stars are nature
itself.
Everything in this world proceeds from
the
stars. That I shall prove to you if
you are
not a blockhead and have a little reason.
If the whole Curriculum or the whole
circumference
of the stars is considered, we soon
find
that this is the mother of all things,
or
the nature from which all things have
arisen
and in which all things stand and live,
and
through which all things move. And
all things
are formed from these same powers and
remain
eternally therein.” Thus it is said
that
God is the reality of all realities.
Boehme
continues: “You must, however, elevate
your
mind in the Spirit, and consider how
the
whole of nature, with all the powers
which
are in nature, also extension, depth
and
height, also heaven and earth and all
whatsoever
is therein, and all that is above the
heavens,
is together the Body and Corporeity
of God;
and the powers of the stars are the
fountain
veins in the natural Body of God, in
this
world. You must not conceive that in
the
Body of the stars is the whole triumphing
Holy Trinity, God the Father, Son,
and Holy
Ghost. But we must not so conceive
as if
God was not at all in the Corpus or
Body
of the stars, and in this world. .
. . Here
now the question is, From whence has
heaven,
or whence borrows it this power, that
it
causes such mobility in nature? Here
you
must lift up your eyes beyond nature
into
the light, holy, triumphing, divine
power,
into the unchangeable holy Trinity,
which
is a triumphing, springing, movable
Being,
and all powers are therein, as in nature:
of this heaven, earth, stars, elements,
devils,
angels, men, beasts, and all have their
Being;
and therein all stands. When we nominate
heaven and earth, stars and elements,
and
all that is therein, and all whatsoever
is
above the heaven, then thereby is nominated
the total God, who has made Himself
creaturely
in these abovementioned” many “Beings,
in
His power which proceedeth forth from
Him.”(13)
c. Boehme further defines God the Father
as follows: “When we consider the whole
nature
and its property, then we see the Father:
when we behold heaven and the stars,
then
we behold His eternal power and wisdom.
So
many stars as stand in the whole heaven,
which are innumerable, so manifold
and various
is the power and wisdom of God the
Father.
Every star differs in its quality.”
But “you
must not conceive here that every power
which
is in the Father stands in a peculiar
severed
or divided part and place in the Father,
as the stars do in heaven. No, but
the Spirit
shows that all the powers in the Father,”
as the fountainhead, “are one in another
as one power.” This whole is the universal
power which exists as God the Father,
wherein
all differences are united; “creaturely”
it, however, exists as the totality
of stars,
and thus as separation into the different
qualities. “You must not think that
God who
is in heaven and above the heaven does
there
stand and hover like a power and quality
which has in it neither reason nor
knowledge,
as the sun which turns round in its
circle
and shoots forth from itself heat and
light,
whether it be for benefit or hurt to
the
earth and creatures. No, the Father
is not
so, but He is an All-mighty, All-wise,
All-knowing,
All-seeing, All-hearing, All-smelling,
All-tasting
God, who in Himself is meek, friendly,
gracious,
merciful, and full of joy, yea Joy
itself.”(14)
Since Boehme calls the Father all power,
he again distinguishes these as the
seven
first originating spirits.(15) But
there
is a certain confusion in this and
no thought-determination,
no definite reason for there being
exactly
seven — such precision and certainty
is not
to be found in Boehme. These seven
qualities
are likewise the seven planets which
move
and work in the great Salitter of God;
“the
seven planets signify the seven spirits
of
God or the princes of the angels.”
But they
are in the Father as one unity, and
this
unity is an inward spring and fermentation.
“In God all spirits triumph as one
spirit,
and a spirit ever calms and loves the
others,
and nothing exists excepting mere joy
and
rapture. One spirit does not stand
alongside
the others like stars in heaven, for
all
seven are contained within one another
as
one spirit. Each spirit in the seven
spirits
of God is pregnant with all seven spirits
of God;” thus each is in God itself
a totality.
“One brings forth the other in and
through
itself;” this is the flashing forth
of the
life of all qualities.(16)
2. As what came first was the source
and
germ of all powers and qualities, what
comes
second is process. This second principle
is a very important conception, which
with
Boehme appears under very many aspects
and
forms, viz. as the Word, the Separator,
Revelation
— speaking generally the “I,” the source
of all difference, and of the will
and implicit
Being which are in the powers of natural
things; but in such a way that the
light
therein likewise breaks forth which
leads
them back to rest.
a. God as the simple absolute existence
is not God absolutely; in Him nothing
can
be known. What we know is something
different
— but this “different” is itself contained
in God as the perception and knowledge
of
God. Hence of the second step Boehme
says
that a separation must have taken place
in
this temperament. “No thing can become
manifest
to itself without opposition; for if
it has
nothing to withstand it, it always
goes forward
on its own account and does not go
back within
itself. But if it does not go back
into itself
as into that from which it originally
arose,
it knows nothing of its original state.”
Original state [Urstand] he makes use
of
for substance; and it is a pity that
we cannot
use this and many other striking expressions.
“Without adversity life would have
no sensibility
nor will nor efficacy, neither understanding
nor science. Had the hidden God who
is one
solitary existence and will not of
His own
will brought Himself out of Himself,
out
of the eternal knowledge in the Temperamento,
into divisibility of will, and introduced
this same element of divisibility into
an
inclusiveness” (Identity) “so as to
constitute
it a natural and creaturely life, and
had
this element of separation in life
not come
into warfare, how was the will of God
which
is only one to be revealed to Himself?
How
could a knowledge of itself be present
in
a solitary will?”(17) We see that Boehme
is elevated infinitely above the empty
abstraction
of the highest reality, etc.
Boehme continues: “The commencement
of all
Beings is the Word as the breath of
God,
and God has become the eternal One
of eternity
and likewise remains so in eternity.
The
Word is the eternal beginning and remains
so eternally, for it is the revelation
of
the eternal One through and by which
the
divine power is brought into one knowledge
of somewhat. By the Word we understand
the
revealed will of God: by the Word we
mean
God the hidden God, from whom the Word
eternally
springs forth. The Word is the efflux
of
the divine One, and yet God Himself
as His
revelation.” is more definite than
Word,
and there is a, delightful double significance
in the Greek expression indicating
as it
does both reason and speech. For speech
is
the pure existence of spirit; it is
a thing
which when once heard goes back within
itself.
“What has flowed out is wisdom, beginning
and cause of all powers, colours, virtue
and qualities.”(18)
Of the Son Boehme says: “The Son is”
of
the Father and “in the Father, the
heart
of the Father or light, and the Father
beareth
him ever, from eternity to eternity.”
Thus
“the Son is” indeed “another Person
from
the Father, though no other,” but the
same
“God as the Father,” whose image he
is.(19)
“The Son is the Heart” or the pulsating
element
“in the Father; all the powers which
are
in the Father are the propriety of
the Father;
and the Son is the heart or the kernel
in
all the powers in the whole Father,
and he
is the cause of the springing joy in
all
powers in the whole Father. From the
Son
the eternal joy rises and springs in
all
the powers of the Father, as the sun
does
in the heart of the stars. It signifies
the
Son, as the circle of the stars signifies
the manifold powers of the Father;
it lightens
the heavens, the stars and the deep
above
the earth, working in all things that
are
in this world; it enlightens and gives
power
to all the stars and tempers their
power.
The Son of God is continually generated
from
all the powers of his Father from eternity,
just as the sun is born of the stars;
He
is ever born and is not made, and is
the
heart and lustre shining forth from
all powers.
He shines in all powers of the Father,
and
his power is the moving, springing
joy in
all the powers of the Father, and shines
in the whole Father as the sun does
in the
whole world. For if the Son did not
shine
in the Father, the Father would be
a dark
valley; for the Father's power would
not
rise from eternity to eternity, and
so the
divine Being would not subsist.”(20)
This
life of the Son is an important matter;
and
in regard to this issuing forth and
manifestation
Boehme has likewise brought forward
the most
important assertions.
b. “From such a revelation of powers
in
which the will of the eternal One contemplates
itself, flows the understanding and
the knowledge
of the something [Ichts], since the
eternal
will contemplates itself in the something
[Ichts].” “Ichts” is a play upon the
word
“Nichts” (nothing), for it is simply
the
negative; yet it is at the same time
the
opposite of nothing, since the Ich
(Ego)
of self-consciousness is contained
in it.
The Son, the something, is thus “I,”
consciousness,
self-consciousness: God is not only
the abstract
neutral but likewise the gathering
together
of Himself into the point of Being-for-self.
The “other” of God is thus the image
of God.
“This similitude is the Mysterium magnum,
viz. the creator of all beings and
creatures;
for it is the separator” (of the whole)
“in
the efflux of the will which makes
the will
of the eternal One separable — the
separability
in the will from which powers and qualities
take their rise.” This separator is
“constituted
the steward of nature, by whom the
eternal
will rules, makes, forms and constitutes
all things.” The separator is effectuating
and self-differentiating, and Boehme
calls
this “Ichts,” likewise Lucifer, the
first-born
Son of God, the creaturely first-born
angel
who was one of the seven spirits.”
But this
Lucifer has fallen and Christ has come
in
his place.”(21) This is the connection
of
the devil with God, namely other-Being
and
then Being-for-self or Being-for-one,
in
such a way that the other is for one;
and
this is the origin of evil in God and
out
of God. This is the furthest point
of thought
reached by Jacob Boehme. He represents
this
Fall of Lucifer as that the “Ichts,”
i. e.
self-knowledge, the “I” [Ichheit] (a
word
which we find used by him), the inward
imagining
of self, the inward fashioning, of
self (the
being-for-self), is the fire which
absorbs
all things. This is the negative side
in
the separator, the anguish; or it is
the
wrath of God. This divine wrath is
hell and
the devil, who through himself imagines
himself
into himself. This is very bold and
speculative;
Boehme here seeks to show in God Himself
the sources of the divine anger. He
also
calls the will of the something [“Ichts”]
self-hood; it is the passing over of
the
something [“Ichts”] into the nothing
[Nichts],
the “I” imagining itself within itself.
He
says: “Heaven and hell are as far removed
from one another as day and night,
as something
and nothing.” Boehme has really here
penetrated
into the utmost depths of divine essence;
evil, matter, or whatever it has been
called,
is the I = I, the Being-for-self, the
true
negativity. Before this it was the
nonens
which is itself positive, the darkness;
but
the true negativity is the “I.” It
is not
anything bad because it is called the
evil;
it is in mind alone that evil exists,
because
it is conceived therein as it is in
itself.
“Where the will of God willeth in anything,
there God is manifested, and in that
manifestation
the angels also dwell; but where God
in any
thing willeth not with the will of
the thing,
there God is not manifested to it,
but dwelleth”
(there) “in Himself without the co-operating
of the thing;” in that case that thing
is
its own will, and there the devil dwelleth
and all whatever is without God.”(22)
Boehme in his own way sets forth the
form
assumed in this process in a pictorial
manner.
This “Separator deduces qualities from
itself,
from which the infinite manifold arises,
and through which the eternal One makes
itself
perceptible “ (so that it is for others)
“not according to the unity, but in
accordance
with the efflux of the unity.” Implicit
Being
and the manifold are absolutely opposed
through
the Notion, which Boehme did not have:
Being-for-self
implies Being-for-another and retrogression
into the opposite. Boehme sways backwards
and forwards in apparent contradictions,
and does not well know how to find
a way
out of the difficulty. “But the efflux
is
carried on to the greatest extreme
possible,
to the generation of fire” — dark fire
without
light, darkness, the hidden, the self;(23)
— “in which fiery nature,” however,
since
this fire rises and shoots up, “the
eternal
One becomes majestic and a light,”
and this
light which there breaks forth is the
form
which the other principle assumes.
This is
the return to the One. “Thereby” (through
fire) “the eternal power becomes desirous
and effectual and” (fire) “is the original
condition” (essence) “of the sensitive”
(feeling)
“life, where in the Word of power an
eternal
sensitive life first takes its origin.
For
if life had no sensitiveness, it would
have
no will nor efficacy; but pain” — anguish,
suffering — first “makes it” (all life)
“effectual
and endows it with will. And the light
of
such kindling through fire makes it
joyous,
for it is an anointment,” joy and loveliness
“of painfulness.”(24)
Boehme turns this round in many ways
in
order to grasp the something [Ichts],
the
Separator, as it “rises”(25) from the
Father.
The qualities rise in the great Salitter,
stir, raise, and move [rügen] themselves.
Boehme has there the quality of astringency
in the Father, and he then represents
the
process of the something [Ichts] as
a sharpness,
a drawing together, as a flash of lightning
that breaks forth. This light is Lucifer.
The Being-for-self, the self-perception,
is by Boehme called the drawing together
into a point. That is astringency,
sharpness,
penetration, fierceness; to this pertains
the wrath of God, and here Boehme in
this
manner grasps the “other” of God in
God Himself.
“This source can be kindled through
great
motion or elevation. Through the contraction
the creaturely Being is formed so that
a
heavenly Corpus may be” intelligibly
“formed.
But if it” — the sharpness — “be kindled
through elevation, which those creatures
only can do which are created out of
the
divine Salitter, then it is a burning
source-vein
of the wrath of God. The flash is the
mother
of light; for the flash generates the
light,
and is the Father of the fierceness;
for
the fierceness abides in the flash
as a seed
in the father, and that flash generates
also
the tone or sound” — the flash is,
speaking
generally, the absolute generator.
The flash
is still connected with pain; light
is what
brings intelligence. The divine birth
is
the going forth of the flash, of the
life
of all qualities.(26) This is all from
the
Aurora.
In the Quæstionibus theosophicis Boehme
makes particular use of the form of
Yes and
No for the separator, for this opposition.
He says: “The reader must know that
in Yes
and No all things consist, whether
divine,
devilish, earthly, or what they may
be called.
The One as the Yes is pure power and
life,
and it is the truth of God or God Himself.
He would be unknowable in Himself,
and in
Him there would be no joy nor elevation,
nor feeling” — life — “without the
No. The
No is a counter-stroke of the Yes,
or of
the truth”
(this negativity is the principle of
all
knowledge, comprehension), “that the
truth
may be manifest and be a something
wherein
there is a contrarium in which there
is the
eternal love, moving, feeling, and
willing,
and demanding to be loved. And yet
we cannot
say that the Yes is separated from
the No,
and that they are two things in proximity;
for they are only one thing, but they
separate
themselves into two beginnings and
make two
centra, where each works and wills
in itself.
Without those two, which are continually
in strife, all things would be a nothing,
and would stand still without movement.
If
the eternal will did not itself flow
from
itself and introduce itself into receptibility,
there would be no form nor distinction,
for
all powers would” then “be one power.
Neither
could there be understanding in that
case,
for the understanding arises” (has
its substance)
“in the differentiation of the manifold,
where one property sees, proves and
wills
the others. The will which has flowed
out
wills dissimilarity, so that it may
be distinguished
from similarity and be its own something
— and that something may exist, that
the
eternal seeing may see and feel. And
from
the individual will arises the No,
for it
brings itself into ownness, i. e. receptivity
of self. It desires to be something
and does
not make itself in accordance with
unity;
for unity is a Yes which flows forth,
which
ever stands thus in the breathing forth
of
itself, being imperceptible; for it
has nothing
in which it can find itself excepting
in
the receptivity of the dissentient
will,
as in the No which is counterstroke
to the
Yes, in which the Yes is indeed revealed,
and in which it possesses something
which
it can will. And the No is therefore
called
a No, because it is a desire turned
inwards
on itself, as if it were a shutting
up into
negativity. The emanated seeking will
is
absorbent and comprehends itself within
itself,
from it come forms and qualities. (1)
Sharpness,
(2) Motion, (3) Feeling. (4) The fourth
property
is Fire as the flash of light; this
rises
in the bringing together of the great
and
terrible sharpness and the unity. Thus
in
the contact a Flagrat [Schrack] results,
and in this Flagrat [Schrack] unity
is apprehended
as being a Flash or Gleam, an exulting
joy.”
That is the bursting forth of the unity.
“For thus the light arises in the midst
of
the darkness, for the unity becomes
a light,
and the receptivity of the carnal will
in
the qualities becomes a Spirit-fire
which
has its source and origin out of the
sharp,
cold astringency. And according to
that,
God is an angry” and “jealous God,”
and in
this we have evil. “(a) The first quality
of the absorption is the No; (b) Sharpness;
(c) Hardness; (d) Feeling; (e) the
source
of fire, hell or hollowness, Hiddenness.
(5) The fifth quality, Love, makes
in the
fire, as in pain, another Principium
as a
great fire of love.”(27) These are
the main
points under the second head. In such
depths
Boehme keeps struggling on, for to
him conceptions
are lacking, and there are only religious
and chemical forms to be found; and
because
he uses these in a forced sense in
order
to express his ideas, not only does
barbarism
of expression result, but incomprehensibility
as well.
c. “From this eternal operation of
the sensation
the visible world sprang; the world
is the
Word which has flowed forth and has
disposed
itself into qualities, since in qualities
the particular will has arisen. The
Separator
has made it a will of its own after
such
a fashion.”(28) The world is none other
than
the essence of God made creaturely.(29)
Hence
“if thou beholdest the Deep” of the
heavens,
“the Stars, the Elements and the Earth,”
and what they have brought forth, “then
thou”
certainly “comprehendest not with thy
eyes
the bright and clear Deity, though
indeed
it is” likewise “there and in them.”
Thou
seest only their creaturely manifestation.
“But if thou raisest thy thoughts and
considerest
. . . God who rules in holiness in
this government
or dominion, then thou breakest through
the
heaven of heavens and apprehendest
God at
His holy heart. The powers of heaven
ever
operate in images, growths and colours,
in
order to reveal the holy God, so that
He
may be in all things known.”(30)
3. Finally what comes third in these
threefold
forms is the unity of the light, of
the separator
and power: this is the spirit, which
is already
partially implied in what has preceded.
“All
the stars signify the power of the
Father,
and from them issues the sun” (they
make
themselves a counterstroke to unity).
“And
from all the stars there goes forth
the power
which is in every star, into the Deep,
and
the power, beat and shining of the
sun goes
likewise into the Deep” — back to the
stars,
into the power of the Father. “And
in the
Deep the power of all stars, together
with
the heat and lustre of the sun, are
all but
one thing, a moving, boiling Hovering,
like
a spirit or matter. Now in the whole
deep
of the Father, externally without the
Son,
there is nothing but the manifold and
unmeasurable
or unsearchable power of the Father
and the
Light of the Son. The Light of the
Son is
in the Deep of the Father a living,
all-powerful,
all-knowing, all-hearing, all-seeing,
all-smelling,
all-tasting, all-feeling Spirit, wherein
is all power, splendour, and wisdom,
as in
the Father and the Son.”(31) That is
Love,
the softener of all powers through
the light
of the Son. We see that the sensuous
element
thus pertains to this.
Boehme really has the idea that “God's
essence”
(which has proceeded from the eternal
deep
as world) “is thus not something far
away
which possesses a particular position
or
place, for” essence, “the abyss of
nature
and creation, is God Himself. Thou
must not
think that in heaven there was some
manner
of Corpus” — the seven spirits generate
this
Corpus or heart — “which above all
other
things is called God. No; but the whole
divine
power which itself is heaven and the
heaven
of all heavens, is so generated, and
that
is called God the Father; of whom all
the
holy angels are generated, in like
manner
also the spirit of all men. Thou canst
name
no place, either in heaven or in this
world,
where the divine birth is not. The
birth
of the divine Trinity likewise takes
place
in thine own heart; all three persons
are
generated in thy heart, God the Father,
Son
and Holy Ghost. In the divine power
everywhere
we find the fountain spring of the
divine
birth; and there already are all the
seven
qualifying or fountain spirits of God,
as
if thou wouldst make a spacious creaturely
circumscribed circle and hadst the
deity
therein.”(32) In every spirit all are
contained.
To Boehme this trinity is the complete
universal
life in each individual, it is absolute
substance.
He says: “All things in this world
are according
to the similitude of this ternary.
Ye blind
Jews, Turks, and Heathens, open wide
the
eyes of your mind: I will show you,
in your
body, and in every natural thing, in
men,
beasts, fowls, and worms, also in wood,
stone,
leaves, and grass, the likeness of
the holy
ternary in God. You say, there is but
one
Being in God, and that God has no Son.
Open
your eyes and consider your selves:
man is
made according to the similitude and
out
of the power of God in his ternary.
Behold
thy inward man, and then thou wilt
see it
most plainly and clearly, if thou art
not
a fool and an irrational beast. Therefore
observe, in thy heart, in thy veins,
and
in thy brain, thou hast thy spirit;
and all
the powers which move in thy heart,
in thy
veins, and in thy brain, wherein thy
life
consists, signify God the Father. From
that
power springs up [gebäret] thy light,
so
that thou seest, understandest, and
knowest
in the same power what thou art to
do; for
that light glimmers in thy whole body;
and
the whole body moves in the power and
knowledge
of the light; this is the Son which
is born
in thee.” This light, this seeing and
understanding,
is the second determination; it is
the relationship
to itself. “Out of thy light goes forth
into
the same power, reason, understanding,
skill,
and wisdom, to govern the whole body,
and
to distinguish all whatsoever is externally
without the body. And both these are
but
one in the government of thy mind,
viz. thy
spirit, which signifies God the Holy
Ghost.
And the Holy Ghost from God rules in
this
spirit in thee, if thou art a child
of light
and not of darkness. Now observe: in
either
wood, stone, or herbs there are three
things
contained, neither can anything be
generated
or grow, if but one of the three should
be
left out. First, there is the power,
from
which a body comes to be, whether wood,
stone,
or herbs; after that there is in that”
thing
“a sap which is the heart of the thing.
And
thirdly there is in it a springing,
flowing
power, smell, or taste, which is the
spirit
of the thing whereby it grows and increases.
Now if any of these three fail, the
thing
cannot subsist.”(33) Thus Boehme regards
everything as this ternary.
When he comes into particulars we see
that
he is obscure; from his detailed explanations
there is therefore not much to be derived.
As showing his manner of apprehending
natural
things I shall give one more example
of the
manner in which, in the further working
out
of the existence of nature as a counterstroke
to the divine knowledge, he makes use
of
what we call things as Notions (supra,
p.
192). The creaturely, he says, has
“three
kinds of powers or Spiritus in different
Centis, but in one Corpore. The first
and
external Spiritus is the coarse sulphur,
salt and Mercurius, which is a substance
of four elements” (fire, water, earth,
air)
“or of the stars. It forms the visible
Corpus
according to the constellation of the
stars
or property of the planets and now
enkindled
elements — the greatest power of the
Spiritus
mundi. The Separator makes the signature
or sign” — the self. The salt, the
salitter,
is approximately the neutral: mercury
[Merk
or Mark] the operating, unrest as against
nourishment; the coarse sulphur, the
negative
unity. “The other Spiritus is found
in the
oil of sulphur, the fifth essence,
viz. a
root of the four elements. That is
the softening
and joy of the coarse, painful spirit
of
sulphur and salt; the real cause of
growing
life, a joy of nature as is the sun
in the
element” - the direct principle of
life.
“In the inward ground of that coarse
spirit
we see a beautiful, clear Corpus in
which
the ideal light of nature shines from
the
divine efflux.” The outward separator
signs
what is taken up with the shape and
form
of the plant which receives into itself
this
coarse nourishment. “What comes third
is
the tincture, a spiritual fire and
light;
the highest reason for which the first
separation
of qualities takes place in the existence
of this world. Fiat is the Word of
each thing
and belongs according to its peculiar
quality
to eternity. Its origin is the holy
power
of God. Smell [Ruch] is the sensation
of
this tincture. The elements are only
a mansion
and counterstroke of the inward power,
a
cause of the movement of the tincture.”(34)
Sensuous things entirely lose the force
of
sensuous conceptions. Boehme uses them,
though
not as such, as thought-determinations;
that
constitutes the hard and barbarous
element
in Boehme's representations, yet at
the same
time this unity with actuality and
this present
of infinite existence.
Boehme describes the opposition in
creation
in the following way. If nature is
the first
efflux of the Separator, two kinds
of life
must yet be understood as in the counterstroke
of the divine essence; beyond that
temporal
one there is an eternal, to which the
divine
understanding is given. It stands at
the
basis of the eternal, spiritual world,
in
the Mysterium Magnum of the divine
counterstroke
(personality) — a mansion of divine
will
through which it reveals itself and
is revealed
to no peculiarity of personal will.
In this
centrum man has both lives in himself,
he
belongs to time and eternity. He is
universal
in the “eternal understanding of the
one
good will which is a temperament; the
original
will of nature, viz. the comprehensibility
of the Centra, where each centrum in
the
divisibility shuts itself in one place
to
egotism and self-will as a personal
Mysterium
or mind. The former only requires a
counterstroke
to its similarity; this latter, the
self-generated
natural will also requires in the place
of
the egotism of the dark impression
a likeness,
that is a counterstroke through its
own comprehensibility;
through which comprehension it requires
nothing
but its corporality as a natural ground.”
Now it is this “I,” the dark, pain,
fire,
the wrath of God, implicitude, self-comprehension,
which is broken up in regeneration;
the I
is shattered, painfulness brought into
true
rest — just as the dark fire breaks
into
light.(35)
Now these are the principal ideas found
in Boehme; those most profound are
the generating
of Light as the Son of God from qualities,
through the most living dialectic;
God's
diremption of Himself. Barbarism in
the working
out of his system can no more fail
to be
recognized than can the great depths
into
which he has plunged by the union of
the
most absolute opposites. Boehme grasps
the
opposites in the crudest, harshest
way, but
he does not allow himself through their
unworkableness
to be prevented from asserting the
unity.
This rude and barbarous depth which
is devoid
of Notion, is always a present, something
which speaks from itself, which has
and knows
everything in itself. We have still
to mention
Boehme's piety, the element of edification,
the way in which the soul is guided
in his
writings. This is in the highest degree
deep
and inward, and if one is familiar
with his
form these depths and this inwardness
will
be found. But it is a form with which
we
cannot reconcile ourselves, and which
permits
no definite conception of details,
although
we cannot fail to see the profound
craving
for speculation which existed within
this
man.
Notes:
1. Jacob Böhme's Leben und Schriften
(in
his Works, Hamburg, 1715, 4), No. I.
§ 18,
pp. 11, 12; No. V., § 2, p. 54 and
the title-page;
No. I. § 57, pp. 27, 28.
2. Jacob Böhme's Leben und Schriften,
No.
I. 2-4, pp. 3, 4; § 6, 7, p. 5; § 10,
11,
pp. 7, 8; § 28, 29, pp. 17, 18.
3. Jacob Böhme's Leben und Schriften,
No.
VI. § 3-8, pp. 81-87; No. I. § 12-17,
pp.
8-11.
4. Theosophische Sendbriefe, 47th Letter
(Werke, Hamburg, 1715, 4), p. 3879.
5. Trostschrift von vier Complexionen,
§
43-63, pp. 1602-1607.
6. Act I. Scene 2.
7. Von Christi Testament der heiligen
Taufe,
Book II. chap. i. § 4-5, pp. 2653,
2654.
8. Morgenröthe im Aufgang, Preface,
§ 84,
85, 88, p. 18.
9. Von wahrer Gelassenheit, chap. ii.
§
9, 10, p. 1673.
10. Von den drei Principien göttlichen
Wesens,
chap. x. § 42, p. 470.
11. Von der Gnadenwahl, chap. i. §
3-10,
pp. 2408-2410; chap. ii. § 9, p. 2418;
§
19, 20, p. 2420; Schlüssel der vornehmsten
Puncten und Wörter, § 2, p. 3668; §
145,
146, pp.
3696, 3697; Morgenröthe, chap. iv.
§ 9-21,
pp. 49-51; chap. xi. § 47, pp. 126,
127,
etc.
12. Morgenröthe, chap. i. § 3-7, 9-24,
pp.
23-27; chap. ii. § 38-40, pp. 34, 35;
§ i.
p. 28 [see Law's translation].
13. Morgenröthe, chap. ii. § 8, 14-18,
31-33,
pp. 29-34 [see Laws' translation].
14. Morgenröthe, chap. iii. § 2, 8-11,
pp.
36-38.
15. Morgenröthe, chap. iv. § 5, 6,
p. 48;
chap. viii. § 15-chap. xi. 46, pp.
78-126.
16. Morgenröthe, chap. iii. § 18, p.
40;
chap. x. § 54, p. 115; § 39, 40, p.
112;
chap. xi. § 7-12, pp. 119, 120.
17. Von göttlicher Beschaulichkeit,
chap.
i. § 8-10, p. 1739
18. Von göttlicher Beschaulichkeit,
chap.
iii. § 1-3, pp. 1755, 1756
19. Morgenröthe, chap. iii § 33-35,
p. 44
(cf. Rixner: Handbuch d. Gesch. D.
Philos.
Vol. II. Appendix, p. 106, § 7).
20. Morgenröthe, chap. iii. § 15, 18-22,
pp. 39-41.
21. Von göttlicher Beschaulichkeit,
chap.
iii, § 4, 5, p. 1756, § 12, p. 1758;
Morgenröthe,
chap. xii. § 99-107, p. 149, 150; chap.
xiii.
§ 92-104, 31-52, pp. 166-168, 157-160;
chap.
xiv. § 36, p. 178; Von den drei Principien
göttlichen Wesens, chap. iv. § 69,
p. 406;
chap. xv. § 5, 543, 544.
22. Morgenröthe, chap. xiii. § 53-64,
pp.
160-162; Vierzig Fragen von der Seele,
XII.
§ 4, p. 1201; Von sechs theosophischen
Puncten,
V. 7, § 3, p. 1537; Von wahrer Gelassenheit,
chap. i. § 1-7, pp. 1661-1663; Von
göttlicher
Beschaulichkeit, chap. i. § 23-26,
pp. 1742,
1743; Von der Geburt und Bezeichnung
allor
Wesen, chap. xvi. § 49, p.
2391; Vom übersinnlichen Leben, § 41,
42,
p. 1696 [see Law's translation].
23. Von der Menschwerdung Jesu Christi,
Pt. I. chap. v. § 14 p. 1323; Von den
drei
Principien göttlichen Wesens, chap.
x. §
43, p. 470.
24. Von göttlicher Beschaulichkeit,
chap.
iii. § 11, p. 1757.
25. Infra, p. 213.
26. Morgenröthe, chap. viii. § 15-20,
pp.
78, 79; chap. x. § 38, p. 112; chap.
xiii.
§ 69-91, pp. 162-166; chap xi. § 5-13,
pp.
119, 120.
27. 177 Fragen von göttlicher Offenbarung,
III. § 2-5, 10-16, pp. 3591-3595.
28. Von göttlicher Beschaulichkeit,
chap.
iii. § 12, 14, pp. 1757, 1758
29. Rixner: Handbuch d. Gesch. d. Philos.
Vol. II. Appendix, p. 108, § 5 (from
Boehme's
Morgenröthe, chap. ii. § 16, pp. 30,
31;
§ 33, p. 34).
30. Morgenröthe, chap. xxiii. § 11,
12,
pp. 307, 308 (cf. Rixner: Handb. d.
Gesch.
d. Philos. Vol. II. Appendix, p. 108,
§ 5);
Theosophische Sendbriefe, I. § 5, p.
3710.
31. Morgenröthe, chap. iii. § 29, 30,
p.
43 [see Law's translation].
32. Von göttlicher Beschaulichkeit,
chap.
iii. § 13, p. 1758; Morgenröthe, chap.
x.
§ 55, 60, 58, pp. 115, 116 (chap. xi.
§ 4,
p. 118).
33. Morgenröthe, chap. iii. § 36-38,
47,
pp. 44-46 [see Law's translation].
34. Von göttlicher Beschaulichkeit,
chap.
i. § 33, p. 1745; chap. ii. § 29, p.
1754;
chap. iii. § 15, 18-24, 27, 29, pp.
1758-1761;
Von den drei Principien göttlichen
Wesens,
chap. viii. § 5, p. 433; Mysterium
Magnum,
oder Erklärung des ersten Buchs Mosis,
chap.
xix. § 28, pp. 2830, 2831.
35. Von göttlicher Beschaulichkeit,
chap.
i. § 23-39, pp. 1742-1746; chap. ii.
§ 1-13,
15-30, pp. 1747-1754.
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