Jacob Boehme - The Clavis
Jacob Boehme - The Clavis
Jacob Boehme - The Clavis
or An Exposition of some Principal Matters and Words in the Writings of Jacob Boehme. Written in the Germane Language in March and April, ANNO, 1624. Printed in the yeare 1647.
The Clavis or 'Key' of Jacob Boehme, the seventeenth-century German theosopher, is a condensed version of the principal points of his mystical philosophy. Boehme, an unschooled shoemaker, experienced while young an intense vision of the spiritual world - a vision of the origin of the universe, the struggle of polarities in creation, and the role of Sophia or Divine Wisdom in the world. This vision inspired his writings and left him with a deep sense of the spiritual all his life. In trying to find a language to communicate his mystical perceptions, he turned to alchemical ideas and Hermetic imagery. The main period of his writings, 1612-1624, coincided with the Rosicrucian publications, and while no definite historical link can be established, Boehme certainly worked within the spirit of the Rosicrucian movement. Reviews and Comments: "An excellent starting point for delving into the works of this remarkable author, so central for the Christian theosophic and mystical traditions." - Arthur Versluis, author of Wisdom's Children and Theosophia.
John Sparrow - An Exposition of Some Principal Matters and Words in the Writings of Jacob Boehme. "But since the lovers desire a Clavis, or key of my writings, I am ready and willing to pleasure them in it, and will set down a short description of the ground of those strange words; some of which are taken from nature and sense, and some are the words of strange masters, which I have tried according to sense, and found them good and fit. I will write but a short description of the divine manifestation, yet as much as I can comprehend in brief; and expound the strange words for the better understanding of our books for the consideration and help of beginners.
Following is a brief, modern interpretation of the "Threefold Structure" and the "Sevenfold SelfOrganization of Reality". It is taken from the book: "Science, Meaning, and Evolution", written by Basarab Nicolescu, a physicist working with "Quantum Physics". To skip this, and go directly to "The Key", CLICK Here.
A: THE THREEFOLD STRUCTURE In the cosmology of Boehme, reality is structured in three parts, determined by the action of three principles: "Now thus the eternal light, and the virtue of the light, or the heavenly paradise, moveth in the eternal darkness; and the darkness cannot comprehend the light; for they are two several Principles; and the darkness longeth after the light, because that the spirit beholdeth itself therein, and because the divine virtue is manifested in it. But though it hath not comprehended the divine virtue and light, yet it hath continually with great lust lifted up itself towards it, till it hath kindled the root of the fire in itself, from the beams of the light of God; and there arose the third Principle: And it hath its original out of the first Principle, out of the dark matrix, by the speculating of the virtue [or power] of God." These three principles are independent, but at the same time they all three interact at once: they engender each other, while each remaining distinct. The dynamic of their interaction is a dynamic of contradiction: one could speak of a negative force corresponding to the darkness, a positive force corresponding to the light, and a reconciling force corresponding to what Boehme called "extra-generation." It is a question of a contradiction among three poles, of three polarities radically opposed but nevertheless linked, in the sense that none of the three can exist without the other two. The three principles have a virtual quality, for they exist outside our space-time continuum. As a result they are, in themselves, invisible, untouchable, immeasurable: "We understand, then, that the divine Essence in threefoldness in the * unground dwells in itself, but generates to itself a ground within itself . . . though this is not to be understood as to being, but as to a threefold spirit, where each is the cause of the birth of the other. And this threefold spirit is not measurable, divisible or fathomable; for there is no place found for it, and it is at the same time the unground of eternity, which gives birth to itself within itself in a ground." The foundation of the Trinity is "subject to no locality, nor limit [number], nor place. It hath no place of its rest. * TRANSLATOR'S NOTE: Boehme's term "unground" - Ungrund in German and sans-fond in French - refers to this mysterious "bottomless state" which at the same time serves as the base or foundation or ground where the Trinity dwells. It is important to stress that it is exactly this process of contradiction which allows manifestation. The hidden God (Deus absconditus) is not pure transcendence. Through the two other poles of
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this ternary contradiction, he can show himself, he can manifest, he can respond to the wish to understand himself. Thus the three forces corresponding to the three principles will be present in every phenomenon of reality: "And no place or position can be conceived or found where the spirit of the tri-unity is not present, and in every being; but hidden to the being, dwelling in itself, as an essence that at once fills all and yet dwells not in being, but itself has a being in itself. . . ." God hidden thus becomes God manifest (Deus revelatus). In this context, it is extremely interesting to remark the role that Boehme attributes to our own world. The three principles engender three different worlds which moreover are overlapping - the world of fire, the world of light, and the exterior world: "And we are thus to understand a threefold Being, or three worlds in one another. The first is the fire-world, which takes its rise from the centrum naturae. . . . And the second is the light-world which dwells in freedom in the unground, out of Nature, but proceeds from the fire-world. . . . It dwells in fire, and the fire apprehends it not. And this is the middle world. . . . The third world is the outer, in which we dwell by the outer body with the external works and beings. It was created from the dark world and also from the light-world. . . . The exterior world, our world, appears as if it were a world of true reconciliation. It is not the world of the Fall, the world of man's guilt, of his downfall into matter. As Pierre Deghaye remarks pertinently, our world is a world of reparation: "The body of Lucifer is set on fire and it is destroyed. But this body was the universe before ours. It is the result of this catastrophe and in order to repair it that our world was created. Our world is the third principle." All the grandeur of our world resides in the incarnation of these three principles. First of all, the threefold structure of reality is inscribed in man himself. Man is the actualization of this threefold structure:" . . . so also in like manner is every mass or seed of the Ternary or Trinity in every man," Boehme tells us. Human nature, merging the three principles, "understands therefore, at least potentially, the totality of divine manifestation." What man makes of this human nature is, of course, a whole other story. In our modern world, man has forgotten that he is potentially the incarnation of three principles. The very words "three principles," not to mention their meaning, seem to us strange and absurd. We are, evidently, far from the work of spiritual alchemy, based on the balance of our own threefoldness, a work to which Boehme invites us, and which alone could give this world a real meaning. Otherwise our world is dead, absurd, accidental. What interests us here in the first place is the manifestation of the threefold structure of all the phenomena of Nature. Of course, one must not confuse "nature" and "threefoldness": "Nature and the Ternary are not one and the same; they are distinct, though the Ternary dwelleth in nature, but unapprehended, and yet is an eternal band. ""' But in every phenomenon of Nature threefoldness perpetually appears. The Trinity, this "triumphing, springing, moveable being" is the "eternal mother of nature." Even if the three principles are enclosed "in no time nor place," they manifest themselves nonetheless in space and time. The third principle has a crucial role in this manifestation; it is what "contains the fiat, the creative word of God."' Everything becomes a trace, a sign of threefoldness: man, the planets, the stars, the elements. The alliance between nature and threefoldness is eternal, but man has the choice between discovering and living this alliance or forgetting, ignoring, and therefore disrupting it.
One thus understands the deep relationship between the thought of Boehme and that of Galileo, even if it is implicit and surprising, for their languages are very different. When Galileo points out the importance of experimental observation, separating experiment from sentient evidence (that furnished by the sense organs), he is very close to Boehme, for whom nature is a manifestation of divinity, and insofar as it is a manifestation, is measurable and observable. Both of them, like Kepler as well, are haunted by the idea of laws and invariance. The idea that it must be possible to reproduce phenomena, fundamental for the methodology of modern science, comes in here. The "new science" does not concern itself with singular phenomena but with those which are repeatable and which submit to a mathematic formalization. Galileo, like Boehme, did not identify human reason with divine reason. Maurice Clavelin points out that the position of Galileo "is lucid: created by an infinite being, the world is on the scale of his reason, not human reason, which understands it only within the limitations of its capacities, that is, through what it has in common with divine reason; mathematics is precisely in this position." The difference between the two approaches, that of Galileo and that of Boehme, is also of paramount importance. For Galileo, every divine "cause" must be excluded in the formulation of a scientific theory, while for Boehme the comprehension of reality must take into account the participation of the divine in the processes of our world. The mathematics of Galileo is strictly quantitative, while that of Boehme is qualitative, of a symbolic order. Since Nature has a double nature, so also does modern science. Modern science has been developing itself for several centuries on the path traced by Galileo instead of the far more obscure and complex one implicit in the works of Boehme. Galileo's success was staggering, as much on the level of experiment as on that of theory. His technological applications, demonstrating the mastery of man over nature, seemed to show the indisputable accuracy of this approach. Founded on binary logic, that of "Yes" or "No," modern science reached its peak in the nineteenth century, in a scientistic ideology proclaiming that science alone, human reason alone, had the exclusive right-of-way to truth and reality (though the position of Galileo was, as we have seen, quite different: non-positivist and nonscientistic). The scientistic ideology began to fall apart at the birth of quantum physics, with the discovery of a level of reality that clearly differs from our own; this, in order to be understood, seemed to demand a threefold logic, that of the included middle.' Moreover, an unexpected encounter seems to be coming about just now between modern physics and traditional symbolic thought. I have analyzed these aspects at length in my book, Nous, la particule et le monde and I ask the reader to refer to that in order to avoid too many annoying repetitions here. In any case, the resurgence of * meaning in modern physics,' is the sign of the double nature of modern science: by excluding meaning from its domain, modern science rediscovered it, by means of its own internal dynamic, on its own road. * AUTHOR'S NOTE: The French word "le sens" ("meaning") has to be understood here in a very general philosophical, metaphysical, and experiential way. At its most basic, "meaning" refers to the fact that many processes which initially seem chaotic or disordered may, if properly studied, be seen to have a significance or direction that reveals the presence of order. In this sense, "meaning" and "laws" are intimately correlated. In a deeper way, and especially in Boehme's writings, "meaning" refers to the unitive interaction between different levels of reality, in a harmonious, evolutionary movement. More precisely, "meaning" is the contradictory encounter between presence and absence, things sacred and profane. In our physical universe, since consciousness is thought to be present only on the planet Earth, the individual and mankind have a cosmic role: to simultaneously discover and produce "meaning." Through his body, senses, and sensations, man becomes the cosmic instrument of "meaning." Experiences and experiments are two facets of discovering "meaning." This is why the study of the universe and the study of man are complementary
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Will there then be a return to the ideas of Boehme? It would be hazardous to formulate any such affirmation. But what seems certain to me is the current necessity for formulating a new Philosophy of Nature. Understanding Boehme's work thus has a real immediacy in this context today. A comparison between his idea of threefoldness and that of modern thinkers such as Stphane Lupasco or Charles Sanders Peirce would thus be highly instructive but it goes beyond the framework of this book. It is sufficient to say here that astonishing correspondences can be established between the threefoldness of Boehme, the triad of Lupasco (actualization, potentialization, and the T-state, the "included middle"), and the triad of Peirce ("firstness, secondness, and thirdness," as he calls them). Boehme speaks of "three worlds," Lupasco of "three matters," and Peirce of "three universes." Indeed, the different triads evoked are far from identical. The source of threefold thinking in Boehme, Lupasco, and Peirce is equally different: an inner experience on Boehme's part, quantum physics for Lupasco, and mathematical graph theory for Peirce. But one and the same law seems to manifest itself, under different facets, in all who think in threes, and it is that which produces the threefold structure of reality, in all its manifestations. We are left to understand how a virtual structure can set in motion the different processes of reality. B: THE SEVENFOLD SELF-ORGANIZATION OF REALITY If threefoldness concerns the inner dynamics of all systems, sevenfoldness is, according to Boehme, the basis, in its inexhaustible richness, for the manifestation of all processes. Sevenfoldness functions in continual interaction with threefoldness: it is precisely this interaction which furnishes the key to a full comprehension of reality, at least in the view which Boehme proposes to us. First of all, why choose the number seven? In the beginning it is difficult to understand why any number, even on the level of symbolic thought, should be more important than any other, in an absolute and definitive way. Why, for example, should the number 7 exclude all interest in the numbers 4 or 9 or 137 or 1010? Of course, the mystic, theological, or symbolic value of the number seven is well known. Alexander Koyr's thesis provides an almost exhaustive list of the different meanings of the number seven which could be applied, more or less, to Boehme's sevenfoldness: the seven lights and the seven angels of the Apocalypse, the seven lower sephiroth of the Kabbalah, the seven alchemical processes, the seven planets (a favorite hypothesis of Koyre), and so forth. Personally, I think one can demonstrate that all these are false trails. Correspondences between the different meanings of sevenfoldness could certainly be found, but I believe, for reasons I will explain later, that Boehme had no exterior source of inspiration for his concept of sevenfoldness other than his own vision. Moreover, sevenfoldness asserts itself in the philosophy of Boehme as a relentlessly logical consequence (following symbolic logic, of course) of one of the keystones of his thinking: that the basis of all manifestation must be in perpetual interaction with threefoldness. It is amusing to ascertain that it is precisely this interaction which has plunged many of Boehme's commentators, as Koyr told us, "into the most cruel difficulty." Koyr himself speaks of the "unhappy diagram of seven spirits that Boehme maintains against all odds." He also says: "it would not be easy to classify these seven powers into three principles and to coordinate them to the three persons of the Trinity, but Boehme was never able to abandon this sevenfold framework." Very fortunately, I would be tempted to add.
I do not pretend to offer a unique and definitive solution to this enigma, but I believe I can give a perfectly coherent reading of it, on the level of symbolic logic, from Boehme's own texts alone. For Boehme, "God is the God of order . . . Now as there are in him chiefly seven qualities, whereby the whole divine being is driven on, and sheweth itself infinitely in these seven qualities, and yet these seven qualities are the chief or prime in the infiniteness, whereby the divine birth or geniture stands eternally in its order unchangeably." Every process of reality thus will be ruled by seven * qualities, seven spirit-sources, seven stages, seven patterns. * AUTHOR'S NOTE: Since "quality" is a key word in the cosmology of Boehme, it cannot be understood through any dictionary-type definition. Boehme's seven qualities are the intermediate, active, informational energies which give shape to all the various levels of reality. It is important to stress that the seven qualities are each generated by a particular interaction of the Three Principles. This explains a paradoxical and crucial property of these seven qualities: they are always the same, even though they adapt to the given level of materiality on which they are acting. Different levels of materiality do not imply different levels of the seven qualities. It is precisely this property of their always remaining the same which allows the possibility of cosmic unity, through the interaction of all levels of reality. Evolution itself - cosmic evolution, evolution of the individual, or evolution of mankind- therefore becomes possible. The names which Boehme attributes to these seven qualities are poetic and highly evocative, but they can appear somewhat naive and to the modern reader: Sourness, Sweetness, Bitterness, Heat, Love, Tone or Sound, and Body. But what interests us here are not the names, but the meanings which Boehme attributes to them in the context of sevenfoldness. Restricted by everyday language, Boehme first adopts a linear, chronological description of how these seven qualities are linked in the sevenfold cycle, but understanding them comes through a simultaneous consideration of their actions. The spirit-sources all give birth to each other, yet each remains distinct. Again, only a logic of contradictions gives us access to the meaning of Boehme's sevenfoldness. To begin with, let us proceed, like Boehme, by stages. The three first qualities proceed from the first principle. The God of the first principle is, for us, a God who is impenetrable and unknowable. He appears to us like a God of darkness, a God of terrifying night, because he is unfathomable. One cannot even truly call him God. An intense and bitter struggle takes place among the first three qualities to permit this God of darkness to know himself in his potentiality. Why does this struggle begin among three qualities and not four or six? According to Boehme, the God of darkness, once started on the road to selfknowledge, must submit to his own threefold nature. The first quality will thus correspond to a negative force, to resistance, to a cold fire , responding to the desire of the God of darkness to remain what he is, independent of all manifestation. The second quality will correspond to a positive, fluid force, inclined towards manifestation and thus radically opposed to the first quality: it is like what Boehme called a "furious goad." Then the third quality appears like a reconciling force without which no opening towards manifestation would be possible. The God of the first principle therefore will engage himself in a gigantic struggle with himself. Nicolas Berdiaeff speaks rightly of a "divine tragedy" in the mystery of creation. It is quite simply a question of the death of God to himself inasmuch as he is the God of pure transcendence: "Boehme's God dies before he
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is born," writes Pierre Deghaye. This is an idea which by itself was enough to horrify the dogmatic theologians of the day and allow them to classify Boehme easily as a heretic. The merciless struggle among the first three qualities produces a true "wheel of anguish." The world of the first triad of sevenfoldness is a "dark valley," a virtual hell. Boehme speaks of "an anxious horrible quaking, a trembling, and a sharp, opposite, contentious generating." Something must happen to allow the "childbirth," the passage to life, to manifestation. It is precisely at this point, when the wheel of anguish turns frantically on itself, in a chaotic, infernal whirlwind, that a principle of discontinuity must be manifested, to open the way for true evolutionary movement. This principle of discontinuity is none other than the third principle, which appears as the fiat of manifestation, the creative word of God. Boehme calls this discontinuity a "flash": "Behold, without the flash all the seven spirits were a dark valley. " The insane movement of the wheel of anguish stops in order to transform itself into harmonious movement. It is now that life can be born, that God is born. The fiat of manifestation, generated by the third principle, becomes an integral part (although merely virtual, because it corresponds to an invisible interruption on the level of manifestation) of the second triad of the sevenfold cycle, which equally includes the fourth and fifth qualities: "Now these four spirits move themselves in the flash, for all the four become living therein, and so now the power of these four riseth up in the flash, as if the life did rise up, and the power which is risen up in the flash is the love, which is the fifth spirit. That power moveth so very pleasantly and amiably in the flash, as if a dead spirit did become living, and was suddenly in a moment set into great clarity or brightness." The fact that the fourth and the fifth qualities are intimately linked to the lightning flash, and therefore to the third principle, is thus clearly affirmed. The cold fire of the first triad thus transforms itself into a hot fire from which light can burst forth: "The fourth property thus plays the role of a turntable or pivot of transmutation for the whole system, Jean-Francois Marquet has written. I would be tempted to say rather that the turntable is located in the interval between the third and the fourth quality, for it is there that the action of the fiat of life, of manifestation, takes place. "Birth" does not mean a complete manifestation of the light. With the second triad, God is born, he becomes conscious of himself, but he does not yet manifest himself fully. A second principle of discontinuity must intervene so that the evolutionary movement can continue. The fiat of affirmation, of the light fully revealed, the heavenly fiat is necessarily the action of the second principle. "The second fiat is found at the fifth degree," Pierre Deghaye correctly affirms. More precisely, it is found in the interval between the fifth and the sixth quality.
The intervention of the second principle generates a new triad of manifestation ("triad, " for each principle must submit itself to its own threefold structure). This next triad is composed of three elements: one virtual element (the interruption generated by the second principle) and two qualities: Tone or Sound, and Body. The sixth quality is that of heavenly joy, like a joyful sound which runs through the whole manifestation: "Now the sixth generating in God is when the spirits, in their birth or geniture, thus taste one of another. . . . whereby and wherein the rising joy generateth itself, from whence the tone or tune existeth. For from the touching and moving the living spirit generateth itself, and that same spirit presseth through all births or generatings, very inconceivably and incomprehensibly to the birth or geniture, and is a very richly joyful, pleasant, lovely sharpness, like melodious, sweet music. And now when the birth generateth, then it conceiveth or apprehendeth the light, and speaketh or inspireth the light again into the birth or geniture through the moving spirit." It is at the level of the sixth quality that Boehme placed language, discernment, and beauty. As for the seventh quality, it corresponds to full manifestation, to the "body" of God, which is none other than nature itself: "Now the seventh form, or the seventh spirit in the divine power, is nature, or the issue or exit from the other six. . . . [This seventh spirit] is the body of all the spirits, wherein they generate themselves as in a body: Also out of this spirit all figures, shapes and forms are imaged or fashioned." The seventh spirit "encompasseth the other six, and generateth them again: for the corporeal and natural being consisteth in the seventh." The loop is thus closed: the seventh quality rejoins the first, but on another level, that of manifestation. The line changes into a circle: paradoxically, in the philosophy of Jacob Boehme, the Son gives birth to the Father. I confess I do not understand the perplexity of Boehme's interpreters regarding the interaction between threefoldness and sevenfoldness, but the interpretation that I propose seems to me coherent, rational, and completely conforming to Boehme's texts. The cycle of manifestation ought to demonstrate the full power of threefoldness. This full power obtains when each of the three principles manifests its own threefold structure, a structure which results from the perpetual interaction between each principle and the other two principles. If each principle does not have a threefold structure, the interaction between the three principles will be mutilated or annihilated. As a result, the cycle of manifestation must include nine elements (3 x 3 = 9). But two of the elements are virtual, invisible - they correspond to two interruptions. Therefore on the visible, natural level, the manifestation cycle would have to be a sevenfold structure (9 - 2 = 7). Taken in its entirety (including therefore the two intervals where the interruptions take place that are produced by the action of the second and third principles), this cycle has a ninefold structure. One sees therefore the fundamental importance that Boehme accorded to the number nine, associating it with what he called the Tincture: "Boehme saw the temporal Universe as permeated by an immense current of life (Tincture), which, born of the Principium or Centrum (Separator) of Divinity, discharges itself upon the world, penetrates it, incarnates itself in it, and vivifying it, brings it back to God. . . The Tincture, which is the number nine, is the pure element, the divine element." Two supplementary remarks need to be mentioned for the clarification of certain aspects of the cycle of manifestation.
First, we have spoken of two interruptions, of two fiats, linked to the second and third principles. Why not speak of a third interruption, linked to the first principle? Certainly "in every will the flash standeth again to [make an] opening," as Boehme has written. But, the God of the first principle is completely ungraspable by himself. To speak of a fiat bound to his will would be pure verbiage. On the other hand, this God makes himself concrete in the first triad of the sevenfold cycle. Secondly, the inversion between the action of the third principle and that of the second principle in the course of the sevenfold cycle seems very significant to me: again, the third principle, that which rules our own world, acts as a reconciling force between the first and the second. It also might be instructive to make a comparative study between the cosmology of Boehme and that of G. I. Gurdjieff (1877-1949). As with Boehme, the fundamental laws of the universe are, in the cosmology of Gurdjieff, a Law of Three and a Law of Seven, and their interaction is expressed as a Law of Nine. The threefoldness, sevenfoldness, and ninefoldness of Gurdjieff are not, indeed, the same as those of Boehme; but their comparative study could reveal interesting sidelights. We cannot attempt such a study here. But it is surprising to remark that not one of the numerous analysts of Gurdjieff's ideas speaks of the striking analogy between his laws and those of Boehme. Even his most informed biographer, James Webb, cites Boehme only casually. Boehme's sevenfold structure penetrates all levels of reality. The birth of God is repeated endlessly throughout all these levels, in "signatures" or "traces." He writes: "The seven spirits of God, in the circumference and space, contain or comprehend heaven and this world; also the wide breadth and depth without and beyond the heavens, even above and beneath the world, and in the world. . . . They contain also all the creatures both in heaven and in this world. . . Out of and from the same body of the seven spirits of God are all things made and produced, all angels, all devils, the heaven, the earth, the stars, the elements, men, beasts, fowls, fishes; all worms, wood, trees, also stones, herbs and grass, and all whatsoever is." At a certain level of reality, the sevenfold cycle can develop fully, can stop, or can even involve; the different systems belong to a level of reality that enjoys the freedom of self-organization. The divine Nature and its evolution is predetermined insofar as potentiality is concerned. But the interruption characterizing the sevenfold cycle introduces an element of indeterminacy, of liberty, of choice. As Koyr remarks: "The lightning flash is that of freedom introducing itself into Nature, which is the opposite of freedom." In Boehme's universe, determinism and indeterminacy, constraint and freedom coexist contradictorily. Is not the God of darkness, the magical source of all reality, in himself, the Great Indeterminacy? But his "hunger and desire is after substance," and he is obliged to accept a certain determinism, a certain "contraction." As Deghaye points out, "In the Kabbalah of Isaac Luria, there is a similar phenomenon: at the origin of all worlds, the Infinite contracts itself and thus begins the true drama, in the bosom of Divinity." It is on this "divine tragedy" that the greatness of our own world is founded: that of the full evolution of man. The self-knowledge of God thus rejoins the self-knowledge of man.
[1] ex sensu [2] artists or mystical authors 10. Reason will stumble, when it seeth heathenish terms and words used in the explanation of natural things, supposing we should use none but Scripture phrase (or words borrowed from the Bible); but such words will not always ply and square themselves to the fundamental exposition of the properties of nature, neither can a man express the ground with them: Also the wise Heathen and Jews have hidden the deep ground of nature under such words, as having well understood that the knowledge of [1] nature is not for every one, but it belongeth to those only, whom God 'by nature hath chosen for it. [1] naturally inclined to it 11. But none need stumble at it; for when God revealeth his Mysteries to any man, he then also bringeth him into a mind and faculty how to express them, as God knoweth to be most necessary and profitable in every [1] age, for the setting of the confused tongues and opinions upon the true ground again: Men must not think that it cometh by chance, or is done by human reason. [1] or seculum 12. The [1] revelations of divine things are opened by the inward ground of the spiritual world, and brought into visible forms, just as the Creator will manifest them. [1] or manifestations 13. I will write but a short description of the divine [1] manifestation, yet as much as I can comprehend in brief; and expound the strange words for the better understanding of our books; and set down here the sum of those writings, or a model or epitome of them, for the consideration and help of beginners: The further exposition of [2] it is to be found in the other books. or revelation. [1] or revelations [2] the divine manifestation or revelation
to it, or take anything away from it, or from which this Unity could have its original: There is neither * ground, time, nor place, but there is the only eternal God, or that only Good, which a man cannot express. * "ground, time nor place," lit., "ground, limit nor place." A further Consideration, How this one God is Threefold. 17. The Holy Scripture sheweth us that this only God is threefold, viz. one only [1] threefold essence, having three manners of workings, and yet is but one only essence, as may be seen in the outflown power and virtue which is in all things, if any do but observe it: but it is especially represented to us in fire, light, and air; which are three several [2] sorts of workings, and yet but in one only ground and substance. [1] or triune [2] subsistent forms 18. And as we see that fire, light, and air, arise from a candle (though the candle is none of the three, but a cause of them), so likewise the eternal Unity is the cause and ground of the eternal [1] Trinity, which manifesteth itself from the Unity, and bringeth forth itself, First, in desire, or will; Secondly, pleasure, or delight; Thirdly, proceeding, or outgoing. [1] Father, Son, Holy Spirit 19. The desire, or will is the Father; that is, the stirring or manifestation of the Unity, whereby the Unity willeth or desireth itself 20. The pleasure, or delight is the Son; and is that which the will willeth and desireth, viz, his love and pleasure, as may be seen at the baptism of our Lord Jesus Christ, when the Father witnessed, saying, This is my [1] beloved Son, in whom I [2] am well pleased; hear ye him. [1] or love [2] have pleasure 21. The delight is the [1] compressure in the will, whereby the will in the Unity bringeth itself a place and working, wherewith the will willeth and worketh; and it is the [2] feelingness and virtue of the will. [1] or impressure of the will [2] or perception 22. The will is the Father, that is, the stirring desire; and the delight is the Son, that is, the virtue and the working in the will, with which the will worketh; and the Holy Ghost is the proceeding will, through the delight of the virtue, that is, a life of the will and of the virtue and delight. 23. Thus there are three sorts of workings in the eternal Unity, viz, the Unity is the will and desire of itself: the delight is the working substance of the will, and an eternal joy of perceptibility in the will; and the Holy Ghost is the proceeding of the power: the similitude of which may be seen in a [1] plant. [1] or herb 24. The [1] magnet, viz. the essential desire of nature, that is, the will of the desire of nature, [2] compresseth itself into an ens or substance, to become a plant, and in this compression of the desire becometh feeling, that is, working; and in that working the power and virtue ariseth, wherein the magnetical desire of nature, viz, the outflown will of God, worketh in a natural way. [1] or loadstone [2] or formeth 25. In this working perceptibility the magnetical desiring will is elevated and made joyful, and goeth forth from the working power and virtue; and hence cometh the growing and smell of the plant: and thus we see a representation of the Trinity of God in all [1] growing and living things. [1] vegetables and animate things 26. If there were not such a desiring perceptibility, and outgoing operation of the Trinity in the eternal Unity, the Unity were but an eternal stillness, a Nothing; and there would be * no nature, nor any color, shape, or figure; likewise there would be nothing in this world; without this threefold working there could be no world at all. * "no nature," lit., "no nature nor creature."
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Of the Eternal Word of God. 27. The Holy Scripture saith, God hath made all things by his eternal Word; also it saith, That Word is God, John 1, which we understand thus: 28. The Word is nothing else but the [1] out-breathing will, from the power and virtue; a various dividing of the power into a multitude of powers; a distributing and outflowing of the Unity, whence knowledge ariseth. [1] or out-speaking 29. For in one only substance, wherein there is no variation or division, but is only one, there can be no knowledge; and if there were knowledge, it could know but one thing, viz, itself: but if it parteth itself, then the dividing will goeth into multiplicity and variety; and each parting worketh in itself. 30. Yet because Unity cannot be divided and parted asunder, therefore the separating consisteth and remaineth in the outbreathing will in the Unity; and the separation of the breathing giveth the different variety, whereby the eternal [1] Will, together with the [2] Delight and [3] Proceeding, entereth into the [4] knowledge or understanding of infinite forms, viz, into an eternal, perceptible, working, sensual 'knowledge of the powers; where always in the division of the will, in the separation, one sense or form of the will seeth, feeleth, tasteth, smelleth, and heareth the other; and yet it is but one sensual working, viz, the great joyous band of love, and the most pleasant only eternal [5] Being. [1] Father [2] Son [3] Holy Ghost [4] or science [5] essence or substance Of the Holy Name .........
JEHOVA
31. The ancient Rabbins among the Jews have partly understood it; for they have said that this name is the highest, and most holy name of God [1] by which they understand the working Deity in sense : and it is true, for in this working sense lieth the true life of all things in time and eternity, in the ground and abyss; and it is God himself, viz, the divine working perceptibility, sensation, * [2] invention, science, and love; that is, the true knowledge, understanding in the working Unity, from which spring the five senses of the true life. [1] or Jehova is the sensual name of the working Deity [2] finding knowledge * "invention, science" ( Wissenschaft), "knowledge." 32. Each letter in this name intimateth to us a peculiar virtue and working, that is, a [1] form in the working power. [1] difference or distinction
J
33. For I is the effluence of the eternal, indivisible Unity, or the * sweet gracefulness of the ground of the divine power of becoming ** [1] somethingness. [1] I, I-hood, self, or selfness * "sweet gracefulness" (Heiligkeit), "holiness." Both. 1682 and 1730 editions have the latter word, but the 1730 has also, in brackets, "Huldigkeit," "grace," or "graciousness." ** "somethingness" (Ichlheit), "I-ness," or own-ness; the same applies to the following pars. where the word "somethingness" is used.
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E
34. E is a threefold I, where the Trinity shutteth itself up in the Unity; for the I goeth into E, and joineth I E, which is an outbreathing of the Unity in itself.
H
35. H is the Word, or [1] breathing of the Trinity of God. [1] or speaking
O
36. 0 is the circumference, or the Son of God, through which the I E and the H, or breathing, outspeaketh; from the compressed delight of the power and virtue.
V
37. V is the joyful effluence from the [1] breathing, that is, the proceeding spirit of God. [1] or speaking
A
38. A is that which is proceeded from the power and virtue, viz the wisdom; a subject of the Trinity; wherein the Trinity worketh, and wherein the Trinity is also manifest. 39. This name is nothing else but an out-speaking, or expression of the threefold working of the holy Trinity in the Unity of God. Read further of this in the Exposition of the Table of the three Principles of the Divine Manifestation. Of the Divine Wisdom. 40. The Holy Scripture saith, The wisdom is the breathing of the divine power, a ray and breath of the Almighty; also it saith, God hath made all things by his wisdom; which we understand as followeth. 41. The wisdom is the outflown Word of the divine power, virtue, knowledge, and holiness; * a subject and resemblance of the infinite and unsearchable Unity; a substance wherein the Holy Ghost worketh, formeth, and modelleth; I mean, he formeth and modelleth the divine understanding in the wisdom; for the wisdom is the passive, and the spirit of God is the active, or life in her, as the soul in the body. * "a subject and resemblance" (Gegenwurf), lit., "a counter-throw." Reflection or reproduction, counter-effluence. 42. The wisdom is the great Mystery of the divine nature; for in her the powers, colors, and virtues are made manifest; in her is the variation of the power and virtue, viz, the understanding: she is the divine understanding, that is, the divine [1] vision, wherein the Unity is manifest. [1] or contemplation 43. She is the true divine chaos, wherein all things lie, viz, a divine imagination, in which the [1] ideas of angels and souls have been seen from eternity, in a divine type and resemblance; yet not then as creatures, but in resemblance, as when a man beholdeth his face in a glass: therefore the angelical and human idea did flow forth from the wisdom, and was formed into an image, as Moses saith, 'God created man in his image; that is, he created the body, and breathed into it the
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breath of the divine effluence, of divine knowledge, from all the three Principles of the divine manifestation. [1] forms or images Of the Mysterium Magnum 44. The [1] Mysterium Magnum is a subject of the wisdom, where the breathing word, or the working willing power of the divine understanding, floweth forth through the wisdom, wherein also the Unity of God together floweth out, to its manifestation. [1] or Great Mystery 45. For in the Mysterium Magnum the eternal nature ariseth; and two [1] substances and wills are always understood to be in the Mysterium Magnum: the first substance is the Unity of God, that is, the divine power and virtue, the outflowing wisdom. [1] essences or beings 46. The second substance is the separable will, which ariseth through the breathing and outspeaking word; which will hath not its ground in the Unity, but in the mobility of the effluence and out-breathing, which bringeth itself into one will, and into a desire to nature, viz. into the properties as far as fire and light: in the fire the natural life is understood; and in the light the holy life, that is, a manifestation of the Unity, whereby the Unity becometh a love-fire, or light. 47. And in this place or working God calleth himself a loving, merciful God, according to the sharpened fiery burning love of the Unity; and an angry [1] jealous God, according to the fiery ground, according to the eternal nature. [1] or zealous 48. The Mysterium Magnum is that chaos, out of which light and darkness, that is, the foundation of heaven and hell is flown, from eternity, and made manifest; for that foundation which we now call hell (being a Principle of itself), is the ground and cause of the fire in the eternal nature; which fire, in God, is only a burning love; and where God is not manifested in a thing, according to the Unity, there is an anguishing, painful, burning fire. 49. This burning fire is but a manifestation of the life, and of the divine love; by which the divine love, viz, the Unity, [1] kindleth up, and sharpeneth itself for the fiery working of the power of God. [1] or over-inflameth 50. This ground is called Mysterium magnum, or a chaos, because good and evil arise out of it, viz. light and darkness, life and death, joy and grief, salvation and damnation. 51. For it is the ground of souls and angels, and of all eternal creatures, evil as well as good; it is a ground of heaven and hell, also of the visible world, and all that is therein: therein have lain all things in one only ground, as an image lieth hid in a piece of wood before the artificer doth carve it out and fashion it. 52. Yet we cannot say that the spiritual world hath had any beginning, but hath been manifested from eternity out of that chaos; for the light hath shone from eternity in the darkness, and the darkness hath not comprehended it; as day and night are in one another, and are two, though in one. 53. I must write distinctly as if it had a beginning, for the better consideration and apprehension of the divine ground of the divine manifestation; and the better to distinguish nature from the Deity; also for the better understanding, from whence evil and good are come, and what the [1] Being of all beings is. [1] or Essence of all essences Of the Center of the Eternal Nature.
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54. By the word [1] center, we understand the first beginning to nature, viz, the most inward ground, wherein the [2] self-raised will bringeth itself, by a reception, into [3] somethingness, viz, into a natural working; for nature is but a tool and instrument of God, which God's power and virtue worketh with, and yet it hath its own [4] motion from the outflown will of God: thus the center is the point or ground of the own receivingness to somethingness; from whence something cometh to be, and from thence the seven properties proceed. [1] Centrum [2] or own arisen [3] I-hood, or I-ness, or own-ness [4] or mobility Of the Eternal Nature, and its Seven Properties. 55. Nature is nothing but the properties of the receivingness of the own arisen desire; which desire ariseth in the [1] variation of the breathing word (that is, of the breathing power and virtue), wherein the properties bring themselves into substance; and this substance is called a natural substance, and is not God himself. [1] or separation 56. For though God dwelleth [1] through. and through nature, yet nature comprehendeth him but so far as the Unity of God yieldeth itself into, and communicateth itself with, a natural substance, and maketh itself substantial, viz, a substance of light, which worketh by itself in nature, and pierceth and penetrateth nature; or else the Unity of God is incomprehensible to nature, that is, to the desirous receivingness. [1] or thoroughly inhabiteth, totaliter 57. Nature [1] ariseth in the outflown word of the divine perception and knowledge; and it is a continual framing and forming of sciences and perception: whatsoever the word worketh by the wisdom, that nature frameth and formeth into properties: Nature is like a carpenter, who buildeth a house, which the mind figured and. contrived before in itself; so it is here also to be understood. [1] or consisteth 58. Whatsoever the eternal mind [1] figureth in the eternal wisdom of God in. the divine power, and bringeth into an idea, that, nature frameth into a property. [1] or modeleth 59. Nature, in its first ground, consisteth in seven properties; and these seven divide themselves into infinite. The First Property. 60. The First property is the desire which causeth and maketh [1] harshness, sharpness, hardness, cold, and substance. [1] or astringency The Second Property. 61. The Second property is the stirring or attraction of the desire; it maketh [1] stinging, breaking, and dividing of the hardness; it cutteth asunder the attracted desire, and bringeth it into multiplicity and variety; it is a ground of the bitter pain, and also the true root of life; it is the [2] Vulcan that striketh fire. [1] or pricking [2] faber or smith The Third Property. 62. The Third property is the perceptibility and feelingness in the breaking of the harsh hardness; and it is the ground of anguish, and of the natural will, wherein the eternal will desireth to be manifested; that is, it will be a fire or light, viz, a flash or shining, wherein the powers, colors,
16
and virtues of the wisdom may appear: in these three first properties consisteth the foundation of anger, and of hell, and of all that is [1] wrathful. [1] grim, fierce, cruel, odious, or evil The Fourth Property. 63. The Fourth property is the fire, in. which the Unity appeareth, and is seen in the light, that is, in a burning love; and the wrath in the [1] essence of fire. [1] operation or property The Fifth Property. 64. The Fifth property is the light, with its virtue of love, in. and with which the Unity worketh in a natural substance. The Sixth Property. 65. The Sixth property is the sound, voice, or natural understanding, wherein the five senses work spiritually, that is, in an understanding natural life. The Seventh Property. 66. The Seventh property is the subject, or the [1] contence of the other six properties, in which they work, as the life doth in the flesh; and this seventh property is rightly and truly called the ground or place of nature, wherein the properties stand in one only ground. [1] compass, conclusion, comprising, or continent The First SUBSTANCE in the Seven Properties. 67. We must always understand two substances in the seven properties: we understand the first, according to the abyss of these properties, to be the divine [1] Being; that is, the divine will with the outflowing Unity of God, which together floweth forth through nature, and bringeth itself into the receivingness to sharpness, that the eternal love may become working and sensible thereby, and that it may have something which is passive, wherein it may manifest itself, and be known; and of which also it might be desired and beloved again, viz. the [2] aching passive nature, which in the love is changed into an eternal joyfulness: and when the love in the fire manifesteth itself in the light, then it * inflameth nature, as the sun a plant, and the fire [3] iron. [1] essence or substance [2] or painful [3] a red-hot iron * "inflameth nature," lit., "inflameth nature and penetrateth it." The Second SUBSTANCE. 68. The Second substance is nature's own substance, which is [1] aching and passive, and is the tool and instrument of the agent; for where no passiveness is, there is also no desire of deliverance, or of something better; and where there is no desire of something better, there a thing resteth within itself. [1] painful 69. And therefore the eternal Unity bringeth itself by its effluence and separation into nature, that it may have an object, in. which it may manifest itself, and that it may love something, and be again beloved by something, that so there may be a perceiving, or sensible working and will.
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property tasteth and feeleth the other. 79. It is also the ground and cause of the senses, in that one property penetrateth into the other, and kindleth the other, so that the will knoweth whence the passiveness cometh; for if feeling were not, the will could know nothing of the properties, for it were alone: and thus the will receiveth nature into it, by feeling the sharp motion in itself. 80. This motion is in itself like a turning wheel; not that there is such a turning and winding, but it is so in the properties; for the desire attracteth into itself, and the motion thrusteth forwards out of itself, and so the will, being in this anguish, can neither get inwards nor outwards, and yet is drawn both out of itself and into itself; and so it remaineth in such a [1] posture as would go into itself and out of itself, that is, over itself and under itself, and yet can go no whither, but is an anguish, and the true foundation of hell, and of God's anger; for this anguish standeth in the dark sharp motion. [1] form, manner, or condition 81. In the creation of the world the sulphurspirit, with the matter of the sulphureous [1] nature was produced out of this ground; which sulphurspirit is the natural life of the earthly and elementary creatures. [1] or property 82. The wise heathen have in some measure understood this ground, for they say, that in [1] Sulphur, [2] Mercury, and [3] Sal, all things in this world consist; wherein they have not looked upon the matter only, but upon the spirit, from which such matter proceedeth: for the ground of it consisteth not * in salt, quicksilver, and brimstone, they mean not so, but they mean the spirit of such properties; in that, everything indeed consisteth, whatsoever liveth and groweth and hath being in this world, whether it be spiritual or material. [1] Spiritual corporeality [2] the Word or speaking [3] the gross palpable corporeality * "in salt" (im groben sale), "in gross salt." 83. For they understand by Salt, the sharp magnetical desire of nature; and by Mercury, they mean the motion and separation of nature, by which everything is [1] figured with its own signature; and by Sulphur, they mean the perceiving [sensible] [2] willing and growing life. [1] or marked with its own image or shape [2] desiring vegetable life 84. For in the sulphur-spirit, wherein the fiery life burneth, the oil lieth; and the quintessence lieth in the oil, viz, the fiery Mercury, which is the true life of nature, and which is an effluence from the word of the divine power and motion, wherein the ground of heaven is understood; and in the quintessence there lieth the tincture, viz, the paradisical ground, the outflown word of the divine power and virtue, wherein the properties lie in [1] equality. [1] temperature or harmony 85. Thus, by the Third property of nature, which is the anguish, we mean the sharpness and painfulness of the fire, viz, the burning and consuming; for when the will is put into such a sharpness it will always consume the cause of that sharpness; for it always * [1] striveth to get to the Unity of God again, which is the rest; and the Unity thrusteth itself with its effluence to this motion and sharpness; and so there is a continual conjoining for the manifestation of the divine will, as we always find in these three, viz. in salt, brimstone, and oil, a heavenly in the earthly; and whosoever doth but truly understand it, and considereth the spirit, shall find it so. [1] or throngeth after * "striveth," "throngeth after," "thrusteth itself"; these are renderings of the one word "dringen," which implies an urge, a forceful penetration. 86. For the soul of a thing lieth in the sharpness, and the true life of the sensual nature and property lieth in the motion, and the powerful spirit which ariseth from the tincture lieth in the oil of the Sulphur: Thus a heavenly always lieth hidden in the earthly, for the invisible [1] spiritual world came forth with and in the creation. [1] viz., the light and dark world; God's love and wrath
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The Fourth Property. 87. The Fourth property of the eternal nature is the spiritual fire, wherein the light, that is, the Unity, is made manifest; for the [1] glance of the fire ariseth and proceedeth from the outflown Unity, which hath incorporated and united itself with the natural desire; and the burning property of fire, viz, the heat proceedeth from the sharp devouringness of the first three properties; which cometh to be so as followeth. [1] shinning luster or brightness 88. The eternal Unity (which I also in some of my writings call the liberty) is the soft and still tranquillity, being amiable, and as a soft comfortable ease, and it cannot be expressed how soft a tranquillity there is without nature in the Unity of God; but the three properties (in order) to nature are sharp, painful, and horrible. 89. In these three painful properties the outflown will * consisteth, and is produced by the Word or divine breathing, and the Unity also is therein; therefore the will longeth earnestly for the Unity, and the Unity longeth for the sensibility, viz, for the fiery ground: thus the one longeth to get into the other; and when this longing is, there is as it were a [1] cracking noise or flash of lightning, as when we strike steel and a stone together, or pour water into fire: this we speak by way of similitude. [1] crashing * "consisteth" (stehet), "stands," or "is" 90. In that flash the Unity feeleth the sensibility, and the will receiveth the soft tranquil Unity; and so the Unity becomes a shining glance of fire, and the fire becometh a burning love, for it receiveth the [1] ens and power from the soft Unity : in this kindling the darkness of the magnetical' compressure is * pierced through with the light, so that it is no more known or discerned, although it remaineth in itself eternally in the compressure. [1] or entity * "pierced through" (durchdrungen), "penetrated," or "permeated." 91. Now two eternal Principles arise here, viz. the darkness, harshness, sharpness, and pain dwelling in itself; and the feeling, power and virtue of the Unity in the light; upon which the scripture saith, that God (that is, the eternal Unity) dwelleth in a light to which none can [1] come. [1] or approach 92. For so the eternal Unity of God manifesteth itself through the spiritual fire, in the light, and this light is called Majesty; and God (that is, the supernatural Unity) is the power and virtue of it. 93. For the spirit of this fire receiveth ens [or virtue] to shine, from the Unity, or else this fiery [1] ground would be but a painful, horrible hunger, and pricking desire; and it is so indeed, when the will breaketh itself off from the Unity, and will live after its own desire, as the devils have done, and the false soul still doth. [1] or spirit 94. And thus you may here perceive two Principles: the first is the ground of the burning of the fire, viz. the sharp, moving, perceivable, painful darkness in itself; and the second is the light of the fire, wherein the Unity cometh into mobility and joy; for the fire is * an object of the great love of God's Unity. * "an object" (ein Gegenwurf); see *, p. 8. 95. For so the eternal delight becometh perceivable, and this perceiving of the Unity is called love, and is a burning or life in the Unity of God; and according to this burning of love, God calleth himself a merciful loving God; for the Unity of God loveth and pierceth through the [1] painful will of the fire (which at the beginning arose in the breathing of the word, or outgoing of the divine delight), and changeth it into great joy. [1] aching 96. And in this fiery will of the eternal nature standeth the soul of man, and also the angels; this is
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their ground and center; therefore, if any soul breaketh itself off from the light and love of God, and entereth into its own natural desire, then the ground of this darkness and painful [1] property will be manifest in it; and this is the hellish fire, and the anger of God, when it is made manifest, as may be seen in Lucifer; and whatsoever can be thought to have a being [2] anywhere in the creature, the same is likewise without the creature everywhere; for the creature is nothing else but an image and figure of the separable and various power and virtue of the universal Being. [1] or source [2] or everywhere 97. Now understand aright what the ground of fire is, viz, cold from the compressure, and heat from the anguish; and the motion is the [1] Vulcan ; in these three the fire consisteth, but the shining of the light ariseth and proceedeth from the conjunction of the Unity in the ground of fire, and yet the whole ground is but the outflown will [1] or striker of fire 98. Therefore in fire and light consisteth the life of all things, viz, in the will thereof, let them be [1] insensible, * vegetable, or rational things; everything, as the fire, hath its ground, either from the eternal, as the soul, or from the temporary, as astral elementary things; for the eternal is one fire, and the temporary is another, as shall be shown hereafter. [1] or inanimate, or dumb * "vegetable" (wachsenden), "growing The Fifth Property. 99. Now the Fifth property is the fire of love, or the [1] world of power and light; which in the darkness dwelleth in itself, and the darkness comprehendeth it not, as it is written, John i. The light shineth in the darkness, and the darkness comprehendeth it not: Also, the Word is in the light, and in the Word is the true understanding life of man, viz, the true spirit. [1] power and light world 100. But this fire is the true soul of man, viz. the true spirit, which God breathed into man for a creaturely life. 101. You must understand, in the spiritual fire of the will, the true desirous soul out of the eternal ground; and in the power and virtue of the light, the true understanding spirit, in which the Unity of God dwelleth and is manifest, as our Lord Christ saith, [1] 'The kingdom of God is within you; and Paul saith, [2] You are the temple of the Holy Ghost, who dwelleth in you; this is the place of the divine inhabiting and revelation. [1] Luke 17:21 [2] 1 Cor. 6:19 102. Also the soul cometh to be damned thus: when the fiery will breaketh itself off from the love and Unity of God, and entereth into its own natural propriety, that is, into its evil properties. This ought further to be considered. 103. 0 Zion, observe this ground, and thou art freed from Babel! 104. The second Principle (viz, the angelical world and the thrones) is meant by the fifth property: for it is the motion of the Unity, wherein all the properties of the fiery nature burn in love. 105. An example or similitude of this [1] ground may be seen in a candle that is lighted. The properties lie in one another in the candle, and none of them is more manifested than another, till the candle be lighted; and then we find fire, oil, light, air, and water from the air: all the four elements become manifest in it, which lay hidden before in one only ground. [1] or thing 106. And so likewise it must be conceived to be in the eternal ground; for the temporary substance is flown forth from the eternal, therefore they are both of the same quality; but with this difference, that one is eternal and the other transitory, one spiritual and the other corporeal. 107. When the spiritual fire and light shall be kindled, which hath indeed burned from eternity [in itself], then shall also the Mystery of the divine power and knowledge be always made manifest
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therein; for all the properties of the eternal nature become spiritual in the fire, and yet nature remaineth as it is, inwardly in itself; and the going forth of the will becometh spiritual. 108. For in the [1] crack or flash of the fire the dark receptibiity is consumed; and in that consuming, the pure bright fire-spirit, which is pierced through with the glance of the light, goeth forth; in which going forth we find three several properties. [1] hissing or noise 109. The first is the going upwards of the fiery will; the second is the going downwards, or sinking of the watery spirit, viz, the meekness; and the third is the going out forwards of the oily spirit, in the midst, in the center of the fiery spirit of the will; which oily spirit is the ens of the Unity of God, which is become a substance in the desire of nature; yet all is but spirit and power: but so it appears in the figure of the manifestation, not as if there were any severing or division, but it appears so in the manifestation. 110. This threefold manifestation is according to the Trinity; for the center wherein it is, is the only God according to his manifestation: the fiery flaming spirit of love is that which goeth upwards, and the meekness which proceedeth from the love is that which goeth downwards, and in the midst there is the center ([2] of) the circumference, which is the Father, or whole God, according to his manifestation. [1] or 111. And as this is to be known in the divine manifestation, so it is also in the eternal nature, according to nature's property; for nature is but a * [1] resemblance of the Deity. [1] picture, representation, or shadow * "resemblance" (Gegenwurf); see *, p. 8. 112. Nature may be further considered thus the flash of the original of fire is a crack, and salnitrous ground, whence nature goeth forth into infinite divisions, that is, into multitudes or varieties of powers and virtues; from which the multitude of angels and spirits, and their colors and operations proceeded, also the four elements in the beginning of time. 113. For the [1] temperature of fire and light is the holy element, viz, the motion in the light of the Unity; and from this salnitrous ground (we mean spiritual, not earthly salnitre) the four elements proceed, viz, in the [2] compressure of the fiery Mercury, earth and stones are produced; and in the quintessence of the fiery Mercury, the fire and heaven; and in the motion or going forth, the air; and in the disruption or rending of the desire by the fire, the water is produced. [1] temperament or harmony [2] compressure or impressure. In every place where that word is used following: 114. The fiery Mercury is a dry water, that hath brought forth metals and stones; but the broken or divided Mercury hath brought forth wet water, by the mortification in the fire; and the compressure hath brought the gross rawness into the earth, which is a gross salnitrous Saturnine Mercury. 115. By the word Mercury, you must understand here, in the spirit, always the outflown natural working Word of God, which hath been the separator, divider, and former of every substance; and by the word Saturn, we mean the compressure. 116. In the fifth property, that is, in the light, the eternal Unity is substantial; that is, a holy spiritual fire, a holy light, a holy air, which is nothing else but spirit, also a holy water, which is the outflowing love of the Unity of God, and a [1] holy earth, which is all-powerful virtue and working. [1] Ternarium Sanctum 117. This fifth property is the true spiritual angelical world of the divine joy, which is hidden in this visible world.
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The Sixth Property. 118. The Sixth property of the eternal nature is the sound, noise, voice, or understanding; for when the fire flasheth, all the properties together sound: the fire is the mouth of the essence, the light is the spirit, and the sound is the understanding wherein all the properties understand one another. 119. According to the manifestation of the holy Trinity, by the effluence of the Unity, this sound or voice is the divine working word, viz. the understanding in the eternal nature, by which the supernatural knowledge manifesteth itself; but according to nature and creature, this sound or voice is the knowledge of God, wherein the natural understanding knoweth God; for the natural understanding is * a platform, resemblance, and effluence from the divine understanding. * "a platform," etc. (Gegenwurf); see *, p. 8. 120. The five senses lie in the natural understanding, in a spiritual manner, and in the second property (viz, in the motion in the fiery Mercury) they lie in a natural manner. 121. The sixth property giveth understanding in the voice or sound, viz, in the [1] speaking of the word; and the second property of nature is the producer, and also the house, tool, or instrument of the speech or voice: in the second property the power and virtue is painful; but in the sixth property it is joyful and pleasant; and the difference between the second and sixth property is in light and darkness, which are in one another, as fire and light; there is no other difference between them. [1] articulation The Seventh Property. 122. The Seventh property is the substance, that is, the subjectum or house of the other six, in which they all are substantially as the soul in the body: by this we understand especially, as to the light-world, the paradise or budding of the working power. 123. For every property maketh unto itself a * subject, or [1] object, by its own effluence; and in the seventh all the properties are in a temperature, as in one only substance: and as they all did proceed from the Unity, so they all return again into one ground. [1] or resemblance * "subject or object" (Gegenwurf); see *, p. 8. 124. And though they work in different kinds and manners, yet here there is but one only substance, whose power and virtue is called tincture; that is, a holy penetrating, growing or springing * bud. * "bud" ( Wesen), essence or being 125. Not that the seventh property is the tincture, but it is the [1] body of it; the power and virtue of the fire and light is the tincture [2] in the substantial body: but the seventh property is the substance which the tincture * penetrateth and sanctifieth; we mean, that it is thus according to the power and virtue of the divine manifestation; ** but as it is a property of nature, it is the substance of the attracted desire of all properties. [1] corpus aut substantia [2] or with * "penetrateth and sanctifieth." The original proceeds: "therefore paradise is [consists in] a spiritual budding in the seventh property." ** "but as it is," etc., lit., "but, as a property of nature, it is," etc. 126. It is especially to be [1] observed, that always following the First and the Seventh property are accounted for one; and the Second and Sixth; also the Third and Fifth; and the Fourth is only the dividing mark or [2] bound. [1] See the table following [2] or limit 127. For according to the manifestation of the Trinity of God, there are but three properties of nature: the first is the desire which belongeth to God the Father, yet it is only a spirit; but in the
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seventh property the desire is substantial. 128. The second is the divine power and virtue, and belongeth to God the Son; in the second number it is only a spirit; but in the sixth it is the substantial power and virtue. 129. The third belongeth to the Holy Ghost; and in the beginning of the third property it is only a fiery spirit; but in the fifth property the great love is manifested therein. 130. Thus the effluence of the divine manifestation, as to the three properties in the first Principle before the light, [1] is natural; but in the second Principle in the light it is spiritual. [1] appeareth 131. Now these are the seven properties in one only ground; and all seven are equally eternal without beginning; none of them can be accounted the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, or last; for they are equally eternal without beginning, and have also one eternal beginning from the Unity of God. 132. We must represent this in a typical way, that it may be understood how the one is born out of the other, the better to conceive what the Creator is, and what the life and substance of this world is.
Of the Third Principle, viz. The Visible World; whence that proceeded; and what the Creator is. 133. This visible world is sprung from the spiritual world before mentioned, viz. from the outflown divine power and virtue; and it is a * subject or object resembling the spiritual world: the spiritual world is the inward ground of the visible world; the visible subsisteth in the spiritual. * "subject or object" (Gegenwurf); see *, p. 8. 134. The visible world is only an effluence of the seven properties, for it proceeded out of the six working properties; but in the seventh (that is, in paradise) it is in rest: and that is the eternal Sabbath of rest, wherein the divine power and virtue resteth. 135. Moses saith, God created heaven and earth, and all creatures, in six days, and rested on the seventh day, and also commanded [1] it to be kept for a rest.
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[1] or to rest on it 136. The understanding lieth hidden and secret in those words. Could not he have made all his works in one day? Neither can we properly say there was any day before the sun was; for in the deep there is but one day [in all]. 137. But the understanding lieth hidden in those words. He understandeth by each day's working, the creation or manifestation of the seven properties; for he saith, In the beginning God created heaven and earth. The First Day 138. In the FIRST [1] motion, the magnetical desire compressed and compacted the fiery and watery Mercury with the other properties; and then the grossness separated itself from the spiritual nature: and the fiery became metals and stones, and partly salnitre, that is, earth: and the watery became water. Then the fiery Mercury of the working became clean, and Moses calleth it heaven; and the Scripture saith, God dwelleth in heaven: for this fiery Mercury is the power and virtue of the firmament, viz, an image and resemblance of the spiritual world, in which God is manifested. [1] the first day 139. When this was done, God said, Let there be light; then the inward thrust itself forth through the fiery heaven, from which a shining power and virtue arose in the fiery Mercury, and that was the light of the outward nature in the properties, wherein the [1] vegetable life consisteth. [1] or growing The Second Day. 140. In the SECOND day's work, God separated the watery and fiery Mercury from one another, and called the fiery the firmament of Heaven, which came out of the midst of the waters, viz. of Mercury, whence arose the male and female [1] kind, in the spirit of the outward world; that is, the male in the fiery Mercury, and the female in the watery. [1] or sex 141. This separation was made all over in everything, to the end that the fiery Mercury should desire and long for the watery, and the watery for the fiery; that so there might be a desire of love betwixt them in the light of nature, from which the conjunction ariseth therefore the fiery Mercury, viz, the outflown word, separated itself according both to the fiery and to the watery nature of the light, and thence comes both the male and female kind in all things, both animals and vegetables. The Third Day. 142. In the THIRD day's work, the fiery and watery Mercury entered again into conjunction or mixture, and embraced one another, wherein the salnitre, viz, the separator in the earth, brought forth grass, plants, and trees; and that was the first generation or production between male and female. The Fourth Day. 143. [n the FOURTH day's work the fiery Mercury brought forth its fruit, viz, the fifth essence, a higher power or virtue of life than the four elements, and yet it is in the elements.: of it the stars are made. 144. For as the compression of the desire brought the earth into a [1] mass, the compressure entering into itself, so the fiery Mercury thrust itself outwards by the compressure, and hath
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enclosed the place of this world with the [2] stars and starry heaven. [1] or lump [2] or constellations The Fifth Day. 145. In the FIFTH day's work the [1] spiritus mundi, that is, the [2] soul of the great world, opened itself in the fifth essence (we mean the life of the fiery and watery Mercury); therein God created all beasts, fishes, fowls, and worms; every one from its peculiar property of the divided Mercury. [1] spirit of the world [2] amima macrocosmi 146. Here we see how the eternal Principles have moved themselves according to evil and good, as to all the seven properties, and their effluence and mixture; for there are evil and good creatures created, everything as the Mercury (that is, the separator) hath figured and [1] framed himself into an ens, as may be seen in the evil and good creatures: And yet every kind of life hath its original in the light of nature, that is, in the love of nature; from which it is that all creatures, in their kind or property, love one another according to this outflown love [1] or imaged . The Sixth Day. 147. In the SIXTH day's work, God created man; for in the sixth day the understanding of life opened itself out of the fiery Mercury, that is, out of the inward ground. 148. God created him in his likeness, out of all the three Principles, and made him an image, and breathed into him the understanding fiery Mercury, according to both the inward and outward ground, that is, according to time and eternity, and so he became a living understanding soul: and in this ground of the soul, the manifestation of the divine holiness did move, viz. the living outflowing Word of God, together with * the eternal knowing idea, which was known from eternity in the divine wisdom, as a subject or form of the divine imagination. * "the eternal knowing idea," lit., "the eternally known idea." 149. This [1] idea becomes [2] clothed with the substance of the heavenly world, and so it becometh an understanding spirit and temple of God; an image of the divine [3] vision, which spirit is given to the soul for a spouse: as fire and light are espoused together, so it is here also to be understood. [1] or images [2] endued or invested [3] or contemplation 150. This divine ground budded and pierced through soul and body; and this was the true paradise in man, which he lost by sin, when the ground of the dark world, with the false desire, got the upper hand and dominion in him. The Seventh Day. 151. In the SEVENTH day God rested from all his works which he had made, saith Moses; yet God needeth no rest, for he hath wrought from eternity, and he is a mere working power and virtue; therefore the meaning and understanding here lieth hidden in the word, for Moses saith he hath commanded [us] to rest on the seventh day. 152. The seventh day was the true paradise (understand it spiritually), that is, the tincture of the divine power and virtue, which is a temperament; this pierced through all the properties, and wrought in the seventh, that is, in the substance of all the other. 153. The tincture pierced through the earth, and through all elements, and tinctured all; and then paradise was on earth, and in man; for evil was hidden: as the night is hidden in the day, so the [1] wrath of nature was also hidden in the first Principle, till the fall of man; and then the divine working, with the tincture, [2] fled into their own Principle, viz, into the inward ground of the
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light-world [1] or grim fierceness [2] or retired . 154. For the wrath arose aloft, and got the predominancy, and that is the curse, where it is said, God cursed the earth; for his cursing is to leave off and fly from his working: as when God's power and virtue in a thing worketh with the life and spirit of the thing, and afterwards withdraweth itself with its working; then the thing is cursed, for it worketh in its own will, and not in God's will. Of the Spiritus Mundi, and of the Four Elements. 155. We may very well observe and consider the hidden spiritual world by the visible world: for we see that fire, [1] light, and air, are continually begotten in the deep of this world; and that there is no rest or cessation from this begetting; and that it hath been so from the beginning of the world; and yet men can find no cause of it in the outward world, or tell what the ground of it should be: but reason saith, God hath so created it, and therefore it continueth so; which indeed is true in itself; but reason knoweth not the Creator, which doth thus create without ceasing; that is, the true [2] Archaeus, or separator, which is an effluence out of the invisible world, viz, the outflown Word of God; which I mean and understand by the word fiery Mercury. [1] or water [2] distinguisher or divider 156. For what the invisible world is, in a spiritual working, where light and darkness are in one another, and yet the one not comprehending the other, that the visible world is, in a substantial working; whatsoever powers and virtues in the outflown word are to be [1] understood in the inward spiritual world, the same we understand also in the visible world, in the stars and elements, yet in another Principle of a more holy [2] nature. [1] or conceived [2] kind, quality, or condition 157. The four elements flow from the Archaeus of the inward ground, that is, from the four properties of the eternal nature, and were in the beginning of time so outbreathed from the inward ground, and compressed and formed into a working substance and life; and therefore the outward world is called a Principle, and is a subject of the inward world, that is, a tool and instrument of the inward [1] master, which [1] master is the word and [3] power of God. [1] artificer or workman [2] or virtue 158. And as the inward divine world hath in it an [1] understanding life from the effluence of the divine knowledge, whereby the angels and souls are meant; so likewise the outward world hath a rational life in it, consisting in the outflown powers and virtues of the inward world; which outward [rational] life hath no higher understanding, and can teach no further than that thing wherein it dwelleth, viz, the stars and four elements. [1] or intellectual 159. The spiritius mundi is hidden in the four elements, as the soul is in the body, and is nothing else but an effluence and working power proceeding from the sun and stars; its dwelling wherein it worketh is spiritual, encompassed with the four elements. 160. The spiritual house is first a sharp magnetical power and virtue, from the effluence of the inward world, from the first property of the eternal nature; this is the ground of all salt and powerful 'virtue, also of all forming and substantiality. 161. Secondly, it is the effluence of the inward motion, which is outflown from the second [1] form of the eternal nature, and consisteth in a fiery nature, like a dry kind of water source, which is understood to be the ground of all metal and stones, for they were created of that. [1] species, kind, or property 162. I call it the fiery Mercury in the spirit of this world, for it is the mover of all things, and the separator of the powers and virtues; a former of all shapes, a ground of the outward life, as to the motion and sensibility. 163. The third ground is the perception in the motion and sharpness, which is a spiritual source of
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Sulfur, proceeding from the ground of the painful will in the inward ground: Hence the spirit with the five senses ariseth, viz. seeing, hearing, feeling, tasting, and smelling; and is the true essential life, whereby the fire, that is, the fourth form, is made manifest. 164. The ancient wise men have called these three properties Sulfur, Mercurius, and Sal, as to their materials which were produced thereby in the four elements, into which this spirit doth coagulate, or make itself substantial. 165. The four elements lie also in this ground, and are nothing different or several from it; they are only the manifestation of this spiritual ground, and are as a dwelling place of the spirit, in which this spirit worketh. 166. The earth is the grossest effluence from this subtle spirit; after the earth the water is the second; after the water the air is the third; and after the air the fire is the fourth: All these proceed from one only ground, viz, from the spiritus mundi, which hath its root in the inward world. 167. But reason will say, To what end hath the Creator made this manifestation? I answer, There is no other cause, but that the spiritual world might thereby bring itself into a visible form or image, that the inward powers and virtues might have a form and image: Now that this might be, the spiritual substance must needs bring itself into a material ground, wherein it may so figure and form itself; and there must be such a separation, as that this separated being might continually long for the first ground again, viz, the inward for the outward, and the outward for the inward. 168. So also the four elements, which are nothing else inwardly but one only ground, must long one for the other, and desire one another, and seek the inward ground in one another. 169. For the inward element in them is divided, and the four elements are but the properties of that divided element, and that causeth the great anxiety and desire betwixt them; they will continually [to get] into the first ground again, that is, into that one element in which they may rest; of which the Scripture speaketh, saying: Every creature groaneth with us, and earnestly longeth to be delivered from the vanity, which it is subject unto against its will. 170. In this anxiety and desire, the effluence of the divine power and virtue, by the working of nature, is together also formed and brought into figures, to the eternal glory and contemplation of angels and men, and all eternal creatures; as we may see clearly in all living things, and also in vegetables, how the divine power and virtue [1] imprinteth and formeth itself [1] fashioneth 171. For there is not anything substantial in this world, wherein the image, resemblance, and form of the inward spiritual world doth not stand; whether it be according to the [1] wrath of the inward ground, or according to the good virtue; and yet in the most [2] venomous virtue or quality, in the inward ground, many times there lieth the greatest virtue out of the inward world. [1] or fierceness [2] or poisonous 172. But where there is a dark life, that is, a dark oil, in a thing, there is little to be expected from it; for it is the foundation of the wrath, viz. a false, bad poison, to be utterly rejected. 173. Yet where life consisteth in [1] venom, and hath a light or brightness shining in the oil, viz. in the fifth essence, therein heaven is manifested in hell, and a great virtue lieth hidden in it: this is understood by those that are ours. [1] or pain 174. The whole visible world is a mere spermatical working ground; every [1] thing hath an inclination and longing towards another, the uppermost towards the undermost, and the undermost towards the uppermost, for they are separated one from the other; and in this hunger they embrace one another in the desire. [1] or substance 175. As we may know by the earth, which is so very hungry after the [influence and virtue of the] stars, and the spiritus mundi, viz. after the spirit from whence it proceeded in the beginning, that it hath no rest, for hunger; and this hunger of the earth consumeth bodies, that the spirit may be parted again from the gross elementary [1] condition, and return into its [2] Archaeus again.
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[1] or property [2] separator, divider, or salnitrous virtue 176. Also we see in this hunger the impregnation of the Archaeus, that is, of the separator, how the undermost Archaeus of the earth attracteth the outermost subtle Archaeus from the constellations above the earth; where this compacted ground from the uppermost Archaeus longeth for its ground again, and putteth itself forth towards the uppermost; in which putting forth, the growing of metals, plants and trees, hath its original. 177. For the Archaeus of the earth becometh thereby exceeding joyful, because it tasteth and feeleth its first ground in itself again, and in this joy all things [1] spring out of the earth, and therein also the growing of animals consisteth, viz. in a continual conjunction of the heavenly and earthly, in which the divine power and virtue also worketh, as may be known by the tincture of the vegetables in their inward ground. [1] or grow 178. Therefore man, who is so noble an image, having his ground in time and eternity, should well consider himself, and not run headlong in such blindness, seeking his native country afar off from himself, when it is within himself, though covered with the grossness of the elements by their strife. 179. Now when the strife of the elements ceaseth, by the death of the gross body, then the spiritual man will be made manifest, whether he be born in and to light, or darkness; which of these [two] beareth the sway, and hath the dominion in him, the spiritual man hath his being in it eternally, whether it be in the foundation of God's anger, or in his love. 180. For the outward visible man is not now the image of God, it is nothing but an image of the Archaeus, that is, a house [or husk] of the spiritual man, in which the spiritual man groweth, as gold doth in the [1] gross stone, and a plant from the wild earth; as the Scripture saith, [2] As we have a natural body, so we have also a spiritual body: such as the natural is, such also is the spiritual. [1] or drossy [2] 1 Cor 15:44 181. The outward gross body of the four elements shall not inherit the kingdom of God, but that. which is born out of that one element, viz. out of the divine manifestation and working. 182. For this body of the flesh and of the will of man is not it, but that which is wrought by the heavenly Archaeus in this gross body, unto which this gross [body] is a house, tool, and instrument. 183. But when the crust is taken sway, then it shall appear wherefore we have here been called men; and yet some of us have scarce been beasts; nay, some far worse than beasts. 184. For we should rightly consider what the spirit of the outward world is; it is a house, husk, and instrument of the inward spiritual world which is hidden therein, and worketh through it, and so bringeth itself into figures and images. 185. And thus human reason is but a [1] house of the true understanding of the divine knowledge: none should trust so much in his reason and sharp wit, for it is but the constellation of the outward stars, and doth rather seduce him, than lead him to the Unity of God. [1] or dwelling 186. Reason must wholly yield itself up to God, that the inward Archaeus may be revealed; and this shall work and bring forth a true spiritual understanding ground, uniform with God, in which God's spirit will be revealed, and will bring the understanding to God: and then, in this ground, [1] the spirit searcheth through all things, even the deep things of [2] God, as St. Paul saith. [1] 1 Cor 2:10 [2] or of the Deity 187. I thought good to set this down thus briefly of Mysteries. for the lovers, [1] for their further consideration. [1] of Mysteries Now followeth a short Explication, or [1] Description of the Divine Manifestation. [1] formula or model
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188. God is the eternal, * immense, incomprehensible Unity, which manifesteth itself in itself, from eternity in eternity, by the Trinity; and is Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, in a threefold working, as is before mentioned. * "immense" (unmessliche), "immeasurable." 189. The first effluence and manifestation of this Trinity is the eternal Word, or outspeaking of the divine power and virtue. 190. The first outspoken substance from that power is the divine wisdom; which is a substance wherein the power worketh. 191. Out of the wisdom floweth the power and virtue of the breathing forth, and goeth into separability and forming; and therein the divine power is manifest in its virtue. 192. These separable powers and virtues bring themselves * into the power of reception, to their own perceptibility; and out of the perceptibility ariseth own self-will and desire: this own will is the ground of the eternal nature, and it bringeth itself, with the desire, into the properties as far as fire. * "into the power of reception, to their own perceptibility" (Selbst-Empfindlichkeit), or "into receptibility to self-perceptibility." 193. In the desire is the original of darkness; and in the fire the eternal Unity is made manifest with the light, in the fiery nature. 194. Out of this fiery property, and the property of the light, the angels and souls have their original; which is a divine manifestation. 195. The power and virtue of fire and light is called tincture; and the motion of this virtue is called the holy and pure element. 196. The darkness becometh substantial in itself; and the light becometh also substantial in the fiery desire: these two make two Principles, viz. God's anger in the darkness, and God's love in the light; each of them worketh in itself, and there is only such a difference between them, as between day and night, and yet both of them have but one only ground; and the one is always a cause of the other, and that the other becometh manifest and known in it, as light from fire. 197. The visible world is the third Principle, that is, the third ground and beginning: this is outbreathed out of the inward ground, viz. out of both the first Principles, and brought into the nature and form of a creature. 198. The inward eternal working is hidden in the visible world; and it is in everything, and through everything, yet not to be comprehended by anything in the thing's own power; the outward powers and virtues are but passive, and the house in which the inward work. 199. [1] All the other worldly creatures are but the substance of the outward world, but man, who is created both out of time and eternity, out of the Being of all ,beings, and made an image of the divine manifestation. [1] the common creatures 200. The eternal manifestation of the divine light is called the kingdom of heaven, and the habitation of the holy angels and souls. 201. The fiery darkness is called hell, or God's anger, wherein the devils dwell, together with the damned souls. 202. In the place of this world, heaven and hell are present everywhere, but according to the inward ground. 203. Inwardly, the divine working is manifest in God's children; but in the wicked, the working of the painful darkness. 204. The place of the eternal paradise is hidden in this world, in the inward ground; but manifest in the inward man, in which God's power and virtue worketh. 205. There shall perish of this world only the four elements, together with the starry heaven, and the earthly creatures, viz. the outward gross life of all things. 206. The inward power and virtue of every substance remaineth eternally.
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Another Exposition of the Mysterium Magnum. 207. God hath manifested the [1] Mysterium Magnum out of the power and virtue of his Word; in which Mysterium Magnum the whole creation hath lain essentially without forming, in temperamento; and by which he hath outspoken the spiritual formings in separability [or variety]: in which formings, the sciences of the powers and virtues in the desire, that is, in the Fiat, have stood, wherein every science, in the desire to manifestation, hath brought itself into a corporeal substance. [1] The Great Mystery 208. Such a Mysterium Magnum lieth also in man, viz. in the image of God, and is the essential Word of the power of God, according to time and eternity, by which the living Word of God outspeaketh, or expresseth. itself, either in love or anger, or in fancy, all as the Mysterium standeth in a movable desire to evil or good; according to that saying, Such as the people is, such a God they also have. 209. For in whatsoever properties the Mysterium in man is awakened, such a word also uttereth itself from his powers: as we plainly see that nothing else but vanity is uttered by the wicked. Praise the Lord, all ye his works. Hallelujah. Of the Word SCIENCE [1] or SCIENTZ 210. The word Science is not so taken by me as. men understand the word scientia in the Latin tongue; for I understand therein even the true ground according to sense, which, both in the Latin. and all other languages is missed and neglected by ignorance; for every word in its impressure, forming, and expression, gives the true understanding of what that thing is that is so called. 211. You understand by Science some skill or knowledge, in which you say true, but do not fully express the meaning. 212. Science is the root to the understanding, as to the [1] sensibility; it is the root to the center of the [2] impressure of nothing into something; as when the will of the abyss attracteth. itself into itself, to a center of the impressure, viz. to the word, then ariseth the true understanding. [1] cogitation, consideration, or reasoning [2] or forming 213. The will is in the separability of the Science, and there separateth itself out from the impressed compaction; and men first of all understand the essence in that which is separated, in which the separability impresseth itself into a substance. 214. For [1] essence is a substantial power and virtue, but Science is a moving flitting one, like the senses; it is indeed the root of the senses. [1] ESSENTZ 215. Yet in the understanding, in which it is called Science, it is not the sensing, but a cause of the sensing, in that manner as when the understanding * impresseth itself in the mind, there must first be a cause which must ** give the mind, from which the understanding floweth forth into its contemplation: Now this Science is the root to the fiery mind, and it is in short the root of all spiritual beginnings; it is the true root of souls, and proceedeth through every life, for it is the ground from whence life cometh. * "impresseth itself" (fasset sich), or "concretes itself." ** "give the mind," or "produce," "give rise to the mind." 216. I could not give it any other better name, this doth so wholly accord and agree in the sense; for the Science is the cause that the divine abyssal will compacteth and impresseth itself into nature, to the separable [various], intelligible, and perceivable life of understanding and difference; for from the impressure of the Science, whereby the will attracteth it into itself * the natural life ariseth, and the word of every life originally. * "the natural life ariseth," etc., or, "originateth the natural life, and the word of every life [or all
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life]." 217. The distinction or separation out of the fire is to be understood as followeth: The eternal Science in the will of the Father draweth the will, which is called Father, into itself, and shutteth itself into a center of the divine generation of the Trinity, and by the Science speaketh itself forth into a word of understanding; and in the speaking is the separation in the Science; and in every separation there is the desire to the impressure of the [1] expression, the impressure is essential, and is called divine essence. [1] or out-speaking 218. From this essence the word expresseth itself in the second separation, that is, of nature, and in that expression (wherein the natural will separateth itself in its center, into a sensing), the separation out of the fiery [1] Science is understood; for thence cometh the soul and all angelical spirits. [1] one copy has essence 219. The third separation is according to the outward nature of the expressed formed word, wherein the bestial Science lieth, as may be seen in the treatise of the Election of Grace, which hath a [1] sharp understanding, and is one of the clearest of our writings. [1] acute or sublime
FINIS
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