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Böhme, Jakob
(b. 1575, Altseidenberg, near Görlitz, Saxony [Germany]--d. Nov. 21, 1624,
Görlitz), German philosophical mystic who had a profound influence on such
later intellectual movements as idealism and Romanticism. Erklärung
über das erste Buch Mosis, better known as Mysterium
Magnum (1623; The Great Mystery),
is his synthesis of Renaissance nature mysticism and biblical doctrine. His Von
der Gnadenwahl ( On the Election of
Grace), written the same year, examines the problem of freedom, made acute
at the time by the spread of Calvinism.
Early
life.
Böhme was born at the end of the
Protestant Reformation period. After receiving a
rudimentary education, he went, in 1594 or 1595, to nearby Görlitz, a town
where controversies over Reformation issues seethed. Here crypto-Calvinists
(Lutherans charged with maintaining Calvinist views), Anabaptists (radical
Protestants), Schwenkfeldians (followers of the Reformer Schwenkfeld),
Paracelsian physicians (followers of the occultic physician Paracelsus), and
humanists vied with orthodox Lutherans. Martin Möller, the Lutheran pastor
of Görlitz, was "awakening" many in the conventicles that he had
established.
In 1600, newly married and just
established with a shoemaker's bench of his own, Böhme, probably stimulated
by Möller, had a religious experience within the period of a quarter hour
wherein he gained an empirical and speculative insight that helped him to
resolve the tensions of his age. The strain between medieval and Renaissance
cosmologies (dealing with the order of the universe), the perennial problem of
evil, the collapse of feudal hierarchies, and the political and religious
bifurcation of the time found resolution in Böhme's rediscovery, as he
said, of the dialectical principle that "in Yes and No all things
consist." Basically Lutheran ("we shall fear and love God," as
Luther's Small Catechism states), this principle became with Böhme a Realdialektik
("real dialectic"), a wide-ranging polarization of empirical or
natural reality.
Writings.
Germinating for several years, the
insight led him to commit his thoughts to paper, at first for his own use. The
manuscript was entitled Aurora, oder
Morgenröthe im Aufgang (1612; Aurora)
and was written in stages. Called by Böhme a "childlike
beginning," it was a conglomeration of theology, philosophy, and what then
passed for astrology, all bound together by a common devotional theme.
Circulating among Böhme's friends, a copy of Aurora
fell into the hands of Gregory Richter, successor to Martin Möller as
pastor, who condemned the shoemaker's pretensions to theology. Richter brought
the matter up with the Görlitz town council, which forbade further writing
on Böhme's part.
A period of silence ensued during which
Böhme's ideas matured and his outer affairs prospered. He read the
"high masters" as well as other unnamed books that were lent to him by
the circle of neighbours and friends who were awed by the book-writing
intellectual cobbler. These friends--some physicians, and others of the
nobility--introduced Böhme to speculative alchemy, especially to the
writings of the Swiss physician Paracelsus which
were then quite popular. The alchemical and mystical views of Paracelsus further
inspired Böhme's interest in nature mysticism
and gave him the terminology that, in a partly integrated way, dominated his
next period.
Although he never worked in a laboratory
himself, Böhme did use its alchemical terms to describe both his nature
mysticism and his subjective experiences, which he sought to integrate into a
common framework. During this period Böhme wrote at least six tracts that
were circulated guardedly among his friends, creating an influential and
respected reputation for him. This second period of writing activity began in
1619, the year when the Thirty Years' War (1618-48) was beginning to gain
momentum; in fact, Böhme himself was in Prague when the Winter King,
Frederick V of the Rhine Palatinate, entered. The various strident controversies
of the age forced Böhme into a period of religious apologetics wherein he
had to protest his orthodoxy against accusations, more implied than actual, of
Calvinism (Reformed views), chiliasm (belief in the 1,000-year reign of God's
people at the end of history), and rabid sectarianism. Reconstructing his
theological views, he wrote a series of devotional tracts dealing with
penitence, resignation, regeneration--traditional themes of German mysticism. In
1622 his friends had several of these devotional tracts printed in Görlitz
under the title Der Weg zu Christo ( The
Way to Christ), a small work joining nature mysticism with devotional
fervour. Publication of this tract brought about the intense displeasure of
Richter, who incited the populace against Böhme.
In 1623, the year of his maturity, he
wrote two major works: The Great Mystery and
On the Election of Grace. The former
explained the creation of the universe as told in Genesis in terms of the
Paracelsian three principles (including the mystical elements "salt,"
"sulfur," and "mercury"), thus joining Renaissance nature
mysticism with biblical religion. The latter, more philosophical, gave
exposition in terms of dialectical insight to the problem of freedom that
Calvinist predestination (the view that man's destiny is foreknown by God) was
then making acute. This theme later was taken up by the idealist philosopher
Friedrich Schelling and by a German theologian, Franz
von Baader, whose commentary for On
the Election of Grace is still held in high regard by scholars.
Böhme continued his writing at
hectic pace, perhaps freed from business obligations by financial help from his
friends. Between 1619, when he defiantly renewed his writing, and 1624, when he
died, he produced at least 30 works. His defiance of the town council of Görlitz
brought him further difficulty, and he was banished, being cited to the
elector's court in Dresden, where, to all appearances, he found vindication
because he returned to his home. Although vindicated by the theologians who had
examined his views, he was not free from the rancorous moods of his neighbours
who were instigated in their attacks by Richter. Esteemed by his friends among
the nobility, physicians, and intellectuals, he fled to one of the neighbouring
castles where he clearly was the central figure in some kind of secretive group.
There he fell sick, and, sensing that his end was near, he was taken back home
to Görlitz where, attended by his wife and sons, he began to weaken. He was
examined by ecclesiastical authorities and found orthodox enough to be given the
sacrament, and in a mood of charismatic expectancy, he died. (J.J.S.)
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
The 17th-century translation of Böhme into English
by J. Ellistone and J. Sparrow, The Works
of Jacob Behmen, 4 vol., reprinted in the 20th century, is considered to
have more grace and elegance than modern translations of some tracts by J.R.
Earle and J.J. Stoudt. The 1730 German edition of the collected works, edited by
J.W. Ueberfeld and reprinted in facsimile during the 1950s by W.E. Peuckert,
remains the best text, although in modernized German. The most serviceable
English biography utilizing modern materials is J.J. Stoudt, Jacob Boehme: His Life and Thought (1968), based on the standard
German biographical works by W.E. Peuckert, Das
Leben Jakob Böhmes (1924); and R. Jecht, Jakob Böhme, Gedenkgabe der Stadt Görlitz (1924). The best
modern interpretation is A. Koyre, La
Philosophie de Jacob Boehme (1929). |