Rudolf Steiner - Eleven European Mystics
Rudolf Steiner - Eleven European Mystics
Rudolf Steiner - Eleven European Mystics
by
Rudolf Steiner
Copyright © 1960
This e.Text edition is provided through the wonderful work of:
The Rudolf Steiner Publications, Inc.
New York
CONTENTS
About the Author, the People, and the Background of This Book
Introduction
Meister Eckhart
Epilogue
1. Meister Eckhart
In year 1260 while Marco Polo was on his way to China thus giving
birth to new East–West relationships, and Niccolo Pisano was calling
deathless beauty to life in his sculpture in Pisa, Johannes Eckhart was
born in the little Thuringian village of Hochheim near Gotha, in
Germany. His father was a steward in a knight's castle, hence Johannes'
boyhood was passed in the midst of the then fading pageantry of
medieval life.
Eckhart was born in the time of transition between the end of the
Hohenstaufen rule and the beginning of the reign of the Austrian
Hapsburgs in Germany. The one hundred and sixteen years of
Hohenstaufen rule (1138–1254) was probably the most interesting
period in medieval Germany, and its influence was still active during
Eckhart's boyhood, though the last Hohenstaufen had died six years
before Eckhart's birth.
This was an age of great contrasts. On the one hand were men of
strong, vigorous mind, filled with love for all that the world contained
of beauty and adventure. On the other were men whose character was
equally strong, but whose lives were spent in a continual struggle of
rejection of the world and all its gifts. These were the years when these
two opposed attitudes toward the world began a conflict which was to
lead to the Renaissance in Germany, and at last to the Reformation
Typical of the Hohenstaufen rulers was Frederick II, considered the
most brilliant of all German kings. He was a lover of poetry, art,
literature, and was a most capable ruler as well. Crowned at Aix-la-
Chapelle in July, 1215, Frederick combined the traditional knightly
ideals with worldly activity. The rule of the Hohenstaufens
corresponded with the golden age of the German Minnesinger, and was
a time of architectural development, which included many beautiful
churches as well as the famous castle of the Wartburg.
At about the age of fifteen, around the year 1275, Eckhart entered the
Dominican monastery at Erfurt, where he remained for nine years in
preparation for the priesthood. He completed his studies in the year
that Philip IV, known as “the Fair” began his fateful reign in France.
From Erfurt, Eckhart went to Cologne to take the studium generale at
the Dominican institution where the eminent scholastic, Albertus
Magnus was a leading teacher until his death in 1280. Through his
instructors at Cologne, Eckhart came under the influence of Albertus
Magnus' ideas, as well as those of Thomas Aquinas, whose work had
advanced Scholasticism to a place of first importance within the
Dominican Order.
The year 1300 was famous as the Year of Jubilee proclaimed by
Boniface VIII, whom Dante criticized by placing him in the Inferno
during the Pope's lifetime. In this same year Eckhart is mentioned as
“Brother Eckhart, Prior of Erfurt, Vicar of Thuringia” in Dominican
records. He was now in his fortieth year, and about this time he
produced a little book which bears the charming title, Daz sint die rede
der unterscheidunge, die der Vicarius von Düringen, der prior von
Erfort, bruoder Eckehart predier ordens mit solichen kinden hete, diu
in dirre rede frâgten vil dinges, dô sie sâzen in collationibus mit
einander, These are the Instructions which the Vicar of Thuringia,
Prior of Erfurt, Brother Eckhart of the Preaching Order, gave for those
of his flock who asked him about many things as they sat together at
the evening meal.
At this time Eckhart was sent to one of the colleges in Paris, where he
frequently entered into disputation with Franciscans in defense of
Dominican points of view in theology. In his disputations he had to
defend the writings of Thomas Aquinas and Albertus Magnus against
any charges of heresy which the Franciscans chose to bring forward
against them.
Thirteenth century Paris was a place of great attraction for scholars,
and was the center of European cultural life. Over one hundred fifty
years before, Pierre Abèlard had written of his intense desire to visit
Paris, the city where logical argumentation, beloved by the medieval
scholarly mind, had been raised to the level of a fine art. John of
Salisbury, Bishop of Chartres, eminent as a humanist long before the
Renaissance, the secretary and counsellor of Thomas Becket of
Canterbury, whose assassination he witnessed and whose life he
recorded, loved Paris for its generous supply of food, the gaiety of its
inhabitants, their appreciation of culture and religion, and the
atmosphere of scholarship he found there. He summed up his feelings
about Paris in the exclamation, “Indeed the Lord is in this place, and I
did not know it!”
Years later Eckhart described his Paris activities in terms which
perhaps explain why the Franciscans cherished no particular liking for
him. With regard to his disputations with the Franciscans, Eckhart
said, “When I preached at Paris, I said, and I dare repeat it now, that
with all their learning the men of Paris are not able to conceive that
God is in the very least of creatures, even in a fly!”
Words like these help one to understand Eckhart's popularity with the
public of his time. For above all, Eckhart wished to reach the man in
the street, the humble peasant, the shepherd from the mountains, the
charcoal burner from the forest, the simplest of the simple, rather than
the scholar in the cloister. Therefore he used colloquial German in all
his writings and discourses rather than the usual theological Latin.
Thus the German language was enhanced by the writings of this
Dominican, just as the Italian language was enriched by his
contemporary, Dante Alighieri.
Eckhart was always conscious of his indebtedness to the other great
Dominicans who had preceded him, and although he did not follow
their learned forms in his sermons and books, he never failed to
recognize their superiority in learning. For example, his frequent
quotations in his oral and written discourse were invariably introduced
by the words, “A Master says,” and the “Master” almost always meant
Thomas Aquinas, whom he looked upon as a spiritual father. Though
his genius for adapting learned, subtle arguments to simple, aphoristic
form resulted in his being understood by the every-day mind,
nevertheless this ultimately led to the condemnation of his teaching as
heretical.
In 1302, the year after the famous Duns Scotus became professor of
theology at Oxford, Eckhart received the Licentiate and Master's degree
from the University of Paris. Ever since then he has been known as
Meister Eckhart.
At this time Boniface VIII, who had been informed of the brilliant
preaching of this Thuringian Dominican, invited Eckhart to Rome to
defend the cause of the papacy against the attacks of the French king,
Philip the Fair, which were soon to result in the “Babylonian Captivity”
of the Popes at Avignon.
In 1304, the year of the birth of Petrarch, Eckhart was appointed
provincial of the Dominicans for Saxony. Three years later he was
appointed vicar-general for Bohemia, at the moment the arrest and
terrible persecution of the Order of the Knights Templar began in
France under the direction of Philip the Fair, and with the passive
agreement of the French-born Pope, Clement V, who in the meanwhile
had succeeded Boniface VIII in the papacy.
This was a busy period in the life of Meister Eckhart. His burden of
administrative work in the service of the Church and of his Order was
increased by his activity as a writer. At this time he composed one of his
best-known works, Das Büch der Göttlichen Tröstung, The Book of
Divine Comfort, supposedly written to bring consolation to Agnes,
daughter of the King of Hungary, whose mother and sister-in-law died
and whose father was murdered — all within the space of a few years.
The Book of Divine Comfort opens with an enumeration of the three
kinds of tribulation Eckhart conceives may happen to one: damage to
external goods, to friends near one, to oneself, bringing “disgrace,
privation, physical suffering, and mental anguish” in their train. As
“comfort” in the midst of such tribulation, Eckhart sets forth “certain
doctrines” from which he derives “thirty teachings, any one of which
should be enough to comfort.” Whether the suffering of the Queen of
Hungary was assuaged by Eckhart's effort in her behalf is not known,
but the book brought Eckhart himself considerable tribulation, for it is
his one work most strenuously attacked by the Inquisition. This book is
evidence of Eckhart's careful study of the famous classic born in the
twilight of the ancient Roman world, De Consolatione Philosophiae,
The Consolations of Philosophy, by Boethius, loved by Alfred the Great,
who translated it into Anglo-Saxon; by Chaucer, who was to translate it
into English before 1382; by Queen Elizabeth, who rendered it in the
English of her time, and by many others. Aside from its theological
teachings, his Book of Divine Comfort shows Eckhart's appreciation of
Boethius and other classical writers.
The constant travel necessitated by his administrative work brought
Eckhart into contact with people and events in central, southern and
western Germany, in France, and in Italy. As a result, it is natural that
the heads of the Order felt that Meister Eckhart was the ideal man to
assume the post of Superior of the entire Dominican Province in
Germany. However, a certain conservatism within the Order itself,
apparently based on fear of Eckhart's skill as an orator and disputant,
his broad knowledge of places, and familiarity with the ways o men in
all walks of life prevailed, and his nomination was never finalized.
In 1318, the year that Dante completed his Divina Commedia, Eckhart
seems to have reached the summit of his development as a preacher.
He was in Strassburg at this time, where he served as a preacher and
prior. Two years later, in 1320, at the age of sixty, Eckhart received a
most important honor: he was called by the Franciscan. Heinrich von
Virneberg, Archbishop of Cologne, to assume a professorship in the
college there. However, the brightness of this distinction was not long
to remain undimmed. Already in the shadows the agents of the
Inquisition waited, listening, watching, preparing for the day when this
eloquent preacher of the Gospel, this scholar and author, so beloved by
the common people who flocked to his sermons, would overstep the
limits of prescribed dogma. And it was not long before they believed
that they had evidence sufficient to convict him of heresy.
By 1325 several charges had been brought against Meister Eckhart in
letters addressed to the Superiors of the Dominican Order at its
headquarters in Venice. A few months later, the Archbishop of Cologne
who already had had sufficient trouble with so-called “mystical
societies” which had sprung up along the Rhine in areas under his
jurisdiction, decided that heresy certainly could not be allowed to set
foot within the precincts of the college itself. Therefore he agreed that
the moment had arrived when charges against this too-popular
preacher should be laid before the Inquisition. However, a Dominican
managed to obtain the task of investigating Meister Eckhart, and
naturally it did not take long for the former to report that he found his
fellow-Dominican entirely without guilt or taint of heresy.
But the matter did not stop there. Perhaps sensing that if Franciscans
had undertaken the examination things might have turned out
differently, the Archbishop called in two experts in heresy, the
Franciscans Benherus Friso and Peter de Estate. They were given the
task to thoroughly examine Eckhart's writings and the reports of his
sermons. It was not long before an extensive list of “errors” in doctrine
had been assembled, and Eckhart in turn replied by means of his
famous Rechtferigungsschrift, Defense.
On January 24, 1327 Eckhart was required to answer the charges
brought against him before the court of the Archbishop of Cologne.
About three weeks later he preached in a Cologne church in defense of
his ideas, and said that if there were any errors of faith in his writings
or sermons, he would retract them gladly, for he certainly considered
himself no heretic, and he appealed to Rome, as he was entitled to do
under the rights of his Order. However, on February 22, Eckhart was
informed that his application to Rome had been refused.
On March 27, 1329 Pope John XXII issued a bull describing certain of
Meister Eckhart's teachings as contrary to church dogma. But Eckhart
was no longer alive to know of his condemnation as one who had been
led astray “by the father of lies, who often appears as an angel of light.”
This official fiat would doubtless have seriously shaken the soul of one
whose life had been devoted to a defense and practise of the tenets
from which that organized power had drawn its life-breath.
2. Johannes Tauler
When Meister Eckhart was forty years of age, Johannes Tauler was
born in the city of Strassburg in the Papal Jubilee year of 1300, two
years before the death of the painter, Cimabue. At the age of fifteen he
entered the Dominican monastery where Eckhart was professor of
theology. One can imagine the effect of the older Dominican teacher
upon the impressionable mind of the young student, who well may
have listened to those evening mealtime conversations Eckhart brought
together in the little book mentioned above. Eventually Tauler entered
the Dominican college in Cologne not long before Eckhart was named
professor in that institution.
The year 1324 saw the climax of a struggle between Louis IV, king of
Germany, and Pope John XXII, which had been increasing steadily for
nearly a decade. Fearing that the German king's policy of personal
ambition would lead to a weakening of the papal position in France as
well as Germany, the Pope called upon the German ruler to abdicate,
saying that no one could rightfully wear the German crown who did not
have the Pope's express approval to do so. Louis angrily refused, with
the result that the Pope declared him deposed and excommunicate.
Therefore, in this year 1324, Strassburg, along with other cities and
towns of Germany, was placed under a papal interdict.
But the times were against the Pope and his French ally, Charles IV,
whom he hoped to see on the German throne. The German princes
condemned in no uncertain terms the papal interference in German
affairs, and the Electors sided with the princes. This attitude was also
shared by many of the clergy in Germany, for despite the papal ban,
church services continued in some places, and the sacraments were
administered to the people.
Johannes Tauler was among those in Strassburg who refused to
discontinue their priestly functions of celebrating the Mass and
preaching to their congregations. With great courage, in defiance of
both papal ban and agents of the Inquisition, he said, “While the
Church can refuse us the sacrament externally, nobody can take away
the spiritual joy of our oneness with God, and nobody can rob us of the
privilege of taking the sacrament spiritually.”
In 1339, the year before the birth of Geoffrey Chaucer in London,
Tauler left Strassburg for a journey which was to have important results
for his life work. On his travels he came into contact — particularly in
Basel — with Swiss and German members of the famous group of
mystics called the Gottesfreunde, The Friends of God.
The struggle for power between rival rulers in Germany, together with
the interdict of the Pope, brought great hardship to the people. Some
areas of the country were not freed from the papal ban for as much as
twenty-six years, and the people were in great distress for lack of
spiritual help and consolation.
Abnormal natural phenomena also began to appear, as though the
forces of Nature had joined with spiritual and temporal rulers to make
the lot of men as hard as possible. Torrential rains repeatedly destroyed
the crops, just before harvest time. The rivers rose in devastating floods
several years in succession, making spring planting difficult if not
impossible. The winters were severely cold, so that men and animals
suffered exceedingly. As a consequence, a series of famines swept the
countryside, taking, dreadful toll of human life.
Convinced that they were living in the “last days” of the earth, men saw
in all the events around them the fulfillment of prophecies of the
Apocalypse of John. During these years southern Germany and
Switzerland were visited by repeated earthquakes, one of which shook
Basel with such force that the city was reduced to a heap of ruins. In the
heavens appeared “signs and wonders” prophesied by the Scriptures:
mysterious lights flashed upon the skies, men reported strange
conditions of cloud and mist, and the stars seemed about to cast
themselves upon the earth.
Visited by these dire external events, harassed by doubt and insecurity
on every side, men withdrew more and more into themselves, seeking
the sources of piety and devotion in their hearts. Lacking spiritual
consolation from the church, suffering the desolation wrought by food
and famine, sword and fire, the people sought the essential truths of life
in their personal experience. And in their search for the verities of
existence, men reached out to one another in fraternal love and a spirit
of true humanity.
Thus the Friends of God came into being. It was a free association of
human beings in the sense that it was not a sect, had no dogma, no
common form of religious devotion or practice, no common political
outlook. The only desire the Friends of God shared in common was to
strengthen one another in their living relationship with God and the
spiritual world. They established “brotherhood houses” as retreat
centers in certain areas where a number of the Friends of God were
living.
One of the outstanding figures among the Friends of God was the
wealthy banker of Strassburg, Rulman Merswin. His story is somewhat
typical of that of many another layman who found himself drawn to the
Friends of God. Born of a good family of Strassburg in 1307, Rulman
Merswin was a man of business and high moral and ethical principles.
By the time he was forty, due to his business acumen he had amassed a
considerable fortune, and had married the daughter of one of the
leading families of Strassburg. But although he had everything to give
him pleasure, he was far from happy, and just after his fortieth birthday
he decided that the time had come for him to take leave of the world, to
devote himself and his wealth to the service of God, and to live as a
celebate. His wife joined him on his mystical path. A few months later,
on the day of Saint Martin, November 1l, 1347, Merswin was walking in
his garden in the evening, meditating on the way he and his wife had
chosen, when suddenly he experienced a tremendous feeling of
exaltation so that, as he later described it, it was as though he was
whirled round and round his garden for sheer joy. But as quickly as the
mood of exaltation came upon him, it left, and he slipped into a
condition of despondency bordering upon despair. He began severe
ascetic disciplines with the thought that these might relieve his inner
struggle, but no light came.
At this time Johannes Tauler became his confessor, and Merswin told
him of his suffering and his ascetic practices. Tauler at once forbade
him to continue his self-imposed tortures, saying, “We are told to kill
our passions, not our flesh and blood.” Merswin obeyed, and only a
short while later a Friend of God came to him and led him forward on
the road to the spirit. He learned to depend quietly upon the guidance
of the spirit alone, to subject himself to no code or rule of conduct, but
to cultivate true humility, to seek anonymity, to cease self-assertion, to
regard himself as a “captive of the Lord,” to preserve the calmness of
his soul like a stainless mirror, to attach less and less importance to
himself in a worldly sense, and to think of himself only as “a hidden
child of God.”
On October 9, 1364 Rulman Merswin had a dream in which he was told
that a most important man would shortly visit him, and that in three
years he would purchase land which would make a home of peace and
rest for the Friends of God in Strassburg. Not long after this, Merswin
was visited by a mysterious man whose name is most intimately
connected with the whole story of the Friends of God. Called simply,
“The Friend of God from the Oberland,” he was long identified with the
famous Nicholas of Basel, a noted Friend of God, who suffered
martyrdom at the stake in Vienna for his convictions. Others have
identified him with Rulman Merswin himself, as a sort of “double,”
while others believe that he never lived at all, but was a kind of ideal
portrait of what the true Friend of God should be.
In any case, The Friend of God from the Oberland visited Merswin and
told him that he had had a dream that Merswin would establish a
retreat for the Friends of God at Strassburg. Merswin told him that he
himself had had the same dream, and the Friend of God from the
Oberland told him to wait quietly, to listen for the guidance of the Holy
Spirit, and that at the end of three years he would know what was to be
done.
In the Ill River near Strassburg was a little island called daz Grüne
Woerth, The Green Island. In the twelfth century a convent had been
established there, but had long since been deserted and had fallen into
ruins. Early in October, 1367, just three years after his dream and his
talk with the Friend of God from the Oberland, Merswin was walking
by the river and saw the little island. Suddenly the realization flashed
through him that this was the place he was to buy, that here he was to
establish a house for the Friends of God. He promptly sought out the
owner, paid him five hundred ten silver marks as the purchase price,
and soon the convent building was repaired and a little chapel was
constructed. Finally, on November 25, 1367 Merswin opened the house
of the Friends of God on the Green Island, which became the center of a
group of laymen who wished to live a purely mystical, religious life but
without subjecting themselves to any external rule or official religious
Order. Five years later Merswin completed arrangements whereby the
group was acknowledged as a branch of the Knights of Saint John of
Jerusalem, and the place became known as “The House of Saint John
of the Green Island.” Not long after this Merswin's wife died, and he
spent his remaining years on the Green Island, devoting himself to the
Friends of God who came there from far and near. Rulman Merswin
died in the House of St. John of the Green Island on July 18, 1382. Four
days after his death a sealed chest was opened which had been
discovered in his room. Inside was a collection of manuscripts and
letters, many of them in an unknown handwriting, giving details of
instructions and advice by the Friend of God from the Oberland.
One of these manuscripts contained The Story of the Master of Holy
Scripture, later included in a collection titled, The Great Memorial.
According to the Story of the Master of Holy Scripture, the Friend of
God from the Oberland one day arrived at a great city where a famous
preacher was expounding the Bible to crowded and enthusiastic
congregations. The Friend of God attended the sermons each day for
five days. At the conclusion of the fifth day, he sought out the preacher
and asked, “Reverend Sir, will you preach tomorrow on a theme I
would suggest to you?” The clergyman agreed, and asked what the
subject should be. The Friend of God from the Oberland replied, “How
to attain the highest degree of spiritual life.”
The preacher delivered a brilliant exposition the next morning. Starting
from the Gospels he branched out into the Church Fathers, dipped deep
into Dionysius, and concluded with a tremendous display of erudition.
The congregation was enthralled by his words, but at the end of the
service the theologian saw the Friend of God walk away silently and
alone, with head bowed as though in deep thought.
The next day the Friend of God went to the clergyman and gave him a
scathing criticism of the sermon, even saying that if that was the best he
could do, then he was not capable of teaching about the spiritual life at
all. The preacher's anger knew no bounds, but suddenly an inner voice
told him to calm himself and to listen to the stranger's words. Having
regained possession of himself once more, he quietly asked the Friend
of God what help he could give him. Then the layman gave the Master
of the Holy Scriptures twenty-three sentences, saying, “These are the
ABC of religion; master these, and events will show their worth.” The
theologian withdrew from active service and spent a long time in
meditation and prayer. His power of preaching left him, so that he
could hardly speak an intelligible sentence, let alone deliver a whole
sermon. His congregations deserted him; everywhere he was scorned
and ridiculed.
After two years he was led by an inner voice which told him to enter the
pulpit to preach during the service. Quietly he did so, noting the scorn
and derision on the faces of the people as he faced them. For a long
moment there was silence, then suddenly without any premeditation at
all he gave out as his text, “Behold the Bridegroom cometh; go ye out to
meet him!” And the spiritual power which flowed with his words was so
great that it is said that forty persons fainted from sheer excitement
and joy.
Tradition has long connected the “Master of Holy Scripture” with
Johannes Tauler, and indicates that this is the account of his meeting
with the Friend of God from the Oberland. Tauler became intimately
acquainted with leading Friends of God in many places on his travels,
and was deeply impressed with their way of life. As he said in a sermon
at about this time, “The theologians of Paris study great tomes and turn
over many pages, but the Friends of God read the living Book where
everything is life.”
Among the Friends of God whom Tauler met were Henry of
Nordlingen, one of the outstanding representatives of the mysticism of
the time, Hermann of Fritzlar, and two pious nuns, Christina Ebner,
prioress of the Engelthal Convent near Nuremberg, and Margaretha
Ebner, of the Convent of Maria Medingen in Swabia. one of the letters
from the famous correspondence between Henry of Nordlingen and
Margaretha Ebner is dated 1348, and asks that she “Pray for Tauler,
who lives as a matter of course in the midst of great trial and testing
because he teaches the truth and lives in conformity with it as perfectly
as a preacher can.”
Having visited Friends of God in many places during his seven years'
absence from Strassburg, Tauler was convinced that a layman has tasks
to perform which basically are as spiritually important as those of the
clergy. In one of his sermons Tauler reflects the religious-social spirit
he had found in the way of life of the Friends of God: “One can spin,
another can make shoes, and all these are gifts of the Holy Ghost. I tell
you, if I were not a priest, I would esteem it a great gift that I was able
to make shoes, and I would try to make them so well that they would be
a model to all.”
One of the documents which has come down to us from the Friends of
God is a public announcement which probably originated in Strassburg,
and may have been written by Rulman Merswin himself. It was copied
and recopied, and was circulated very widely in southern and western
Germany during Tauler's lifetime. It is of interest because it gives a
picture of the kind of appeal which was made to the public by the
Friends of God in the latters' search for others who might be minded to
join them:
“All those in whom the love of God or the terror brought about by the
dreadful calamities of the present wakens a wish to begin a new and
spiritual life, will discover great advantage in withdrawing into
themselves every morning when they waken, in order to consider what
they will do during the day. Should they find any evil thought in
themselves, any purpose which is contrary to the divine will, let them
give it up and cast it aside, to the glory of God. In the evening, upon
going to bed, let them consider how they have spent the day. Let them
recall what deeds they have done, and in what spirit they have
performed them. If they discover that they have done any good, let
them thank God, and give Him the glory. If they discover they have
done evil, let them take the blame for it themselves, and lay the fault on
nobody else, and let them deeply repent before God, saying to Him, ‘O
Lord, be merciful to me, and forgive all my sins of this day, for I
sincerely repent, and I firmly intend from now on with Thy help, to
avoid sinning.’”
In 1348 Strassburg was visited by the Black Death. All who could leave
the city fled before the dread disease, and soon few except the sick were
left behind. Even relatives, nurses and physicians left for fear of the
pestilence. But among those who stayed in the city to care for the sick,
to comfort the dying, and to bury the dead, was Johannes Tauler.
Week after week, month after month, this fearless Dominican stood in
his pulpit in defiance of papal ban and the Black Death and bore
witness to the truth that was in him. In one of his sermons He pointed
out that “In all the world God desires and requires but one thing: that
He find the noble ground he has laid in the noble soul of man bare and
ready, so that He may do His noble divine work therein.” Hence it is
necessary that men “let God prepare their ground, and give themselves
wholly to God and put away the self in all things.”
But Tauler had no illusions about the trials that await man on his path
of purification, on his way to the spirit: “When our heavenly Father
determines to grace a particular soul with spiritual gifts, and to
transform it in a special way, He does not purge it gently. Instead, He
plunges it into a sea of bitterness, and deals with it as He did with the
prophet Jonah.”
He knew that “No teacher can teach what he has no lived through
himself,” and he continued his work at Strassburg against all odds,
encouraging others by his Christianity in action. He had said, “Never
trust a virtue which has not been put into practice.” Now he was
practicing the virtue of a Friend of God, the virtue of devotion to his
fellow-men. It is no wonder that Luther was to write of him, “Never in
either the Latin or German language have I found more wholesome,
purer teaching, nor any that more fully agrees with the Gospel.”
Tauler's words were tried and purified in the fire of personal
experience.
It is related that the Friend of God from the Oberland gave Tauler two
prayers which he was to use every morning and evening. They are
significant examples of the spirit which animated the mystical striving
of the Friends of God. “In the morning you are to say, ‘O Lord, I wish to
keep from all sin today. Help me to do everything I do today according
to Thy divine will and to Thy glory, whether my nature likes it or not.’
In similar fashion every evening you are to say, ‘O Lord, I am a poor,
unworthy creature. Be merciful to me, forgive my sins, for I repent of
them and sincerely desire Thy help that I may commit no more.’”
Tauler's writings have great appeal even today because of their
freshness, their closeness to everyday life, their common sense. They
are not primarily Scholastic speculations like much of Eckhart's
writing, but are nearer to the vigorous directness of the Reformers.
Although Tauler loved, as he described it, “to put out into the deep and
let down the nets” into the world of study and meditation, at the same
time he cautioned that such “spiritual enjoyments are food of the soul,
and are only to be taken for nourishment and support to help us in our
active work.” This thought was echoed in the spirit of the Reformation.
In the years following the Black Death and the papal ban, Tauler
continued to make Strassburg the center of his work. He kept up his
correspondence with many of the Friends of God, especially with
Margaretha Ebner. His services were crowded, and his sermons were
held in the highest regard by his congregations.
On the fifteenth of June, 1361 in the Convent of Saint Nikolaus in
Strassburg, Johannes Tauler died at the age of sixty-one. Tradition
relates that for him the moment of death was an experience of pure joy,
for as he said in one of his last sermons, “Eternity is the everlasting
Now.”
3. Heinrich Suso
Linked with the name of Johannes Tauler as a Friend of God and a
continuer of the work of Meister Eckhart is that of yet another
Dominican, Heinrich Suso. Suso was born in 1295, five years before the
birth of Tauler, in the town of Ueberlingen on the Lake of Constance.
When he was still a small boy his parents decided he should study for
the Church, and his preparatory education began at Constance, and was
continued at Cologne, where he came under the influence of the
teaching of Meister Eckhart.
Suso has revealed himself in his autobiography as a deeply emotional
man, with a very unusual gift of expression. In his “glowing, vivid
language,” as it has been described, Suso pictures his mystical
experiences in great detail, in contrast to the silence in which many
other mystics have shrouded their strivings.
At about the age of eighteen, in 1313, the year Boccaccio was born in
Florence, Suso entered a monastery in Constance. There he voluntarily
subjected himself to the most severe ascetic ordeals. He centered his
affection in an ideal which he personified under the name of the
Eternal Wisdom. He relates how this figure appeared before him and
said, “My son, give me your heart.” He took a knife and cut deep into
his chest the letters of the name Jesus, so that the scar-traces of each of
the letters remained all his life, “about the length of a finger-joint,” as
he says.
Suso once saw a vision of angels, and asked them in what manner God
dwelt in his soul. The angel told him to look within. He did so, and as
he gazed he saw that “his body over his heart was as clear as crystal,
and in the center sat tranquilly, the lovely form of the Eternal Wisdom.
Beside her sat, filled with heavenly longing, the servitor's own soul.
which. Leaning lovingly toward God's side, and encircled by His arms,
lay pressed close to His heart.” Suso wrote his autobiography in the
third person, and referred to himself as “the servitor of the Divine
Wisdom,” much as Swedenborg in a later century was to refer to
himself in his writings as “the servant of the Lord Jesus Christ.”
Heinrich Suso took the expression, “No cross, no crown,” with terrible
literalness. He imposed fearful penances upon himself, and consumed
sixteen long years in cruel austerity. For example, he relates how he
donned a hair shirt, and bound himself with a heavy iron chain, but at
length he had to give these up, since the loss of blood they occasioned
was too much for his strength to bear. Instead he fashioned a crude
night-shirt which he wore next to his skin this garment he sewed a
series of leather straps in which sharp tacks were fitted to that they
pierced his skin with his slightest movement. Later he made a cross of
wood as tall as himself, and the cross-beam the length of his
outstretched arms. Into this he drove thirty nails, and wore the cross
fastened to his bare back, the nails pointing into his flesh. He bore this
instrument of torture for some eight years, day and night. Finally, after
sixteen years of agony, Suso had a vision at Whitsuntide in which he
was assured that God no longer wished him to continue his austerities.
Only then did he abate the severity of his asceticism, and threw his
instruments of self-torture into a running stream near the monastery.
In his autobiography Suso relates that one time he prayed that God
would instruct him how to suffer. In response, he had a vision of Christ
on the cross in the likeness of a seraphic being with six wings. On each
pair of wings the legend was inscribed, “Receive suffering willingly;
Bear suffering patiently; Learn suffering in the way of Christ.”
The result of this almost unbelievable “receiving, bearing, learning” of
suffering was a man whose gentleness and calm, lyric beauty of speech
won hearts to his teaching. The fires of affliction had nearly consumed
him to ashes, yet, phoenix-like, his spirit rose anew in a sweetness of
expression and a grandeur of soul which one could scarcely resist. In
1335, the year Giotto began his work on the Cathedral at Florence, Suso
set out on his wanderings through Swabia as a traveling preacher. He
advanced the spiritual teachings of Eckhart, but through his mystical
fervor they were permeated by a newness, a spontaneous grace and a
transcendent beauty. And something of this spirit which was reborn in
Suso comes down to us today in his autobiography, issued in 1365,
which has established itself as a unique work of its kind, and as “one of
the most interesting and charming of all autobiographies.” Suso's
preaching was especially popular among the nuns of the convents he
visited. Their hearts were deeply impressed by the obvious,
overwhelming sincerity and fervor of his manner and words.
Heinrich Suso's writings are among the classics of mysticism. His first
work, Das Büchlein der Wahrheit, The Little Book of Truth, was
written in Cologne in 1329, and springs directly from the mystical
teachings of Meister Eckhart. Somewhat later, in Constance he wrote of
the more practical aspects of mysticism in his Das Büchlein der Ewigen
Weisheit, The Little Book of Eternal Wisdom. This book has been called
“the finest fruit of German mysticism.”
Something of the romanticism of the troubadour of the Ages of Faith,
the charm of days gone by, the sad evanescence of the dream of chivalry
and the heroic ideals of knighthood lives in the mystical expressions of
Suso. He develops a mood of gentleness, of tender, delicate imagery
which sets him apart from all the other men whose lives we are
considering here.
Concerning his books, Suso wrote, “Whoever will read these writings of
mine in a right spirit can hardly fail to be stirred in his heart's depths,
either to fervent love, or to new light, or to longing and thirsting for
God, or to detestation and loathing of his sins, or to that spiritual
aspiration by which the soul is renewed in grace.” These words gain
“fearful symmetry,” to use Blake's phrase, when we recall that they
were written by one who, for example, had practiced such abstinence in
eating and drinking, that often as he stood with his brother monks in
choir at Compline, when the holy water was sprinkled over the group
during the service, he opened his parched mouth toward the
aspergillum in the hope that even a single drop of water might cool his
burning thirst. Such a man can write about “longing and thirsting” as
very few who have walked this earth have been able to do.
About 1348, his wandering in central and southern Germany having
come to an end, this love-inspired Swabian poet-knight of the spirit,
singer of the glories of Eternal Wisdom, settled at last in Ulm on the
river Donau. There he died on the Day of Damascus, the anniversary of
St. Paul's first mystical vision of the Risen Christ, January 25, 1366, at
the age of seventy-one.
Through the Dominican stream the Scholasticism of Thomas Aquinas
came to Meister Eckhart in the form of ideas which he shaped and
fashioned into aphoristic expression by means of his remarkable
powers of thinking; in the hands of Johannes Tauler Scholasticism was
transformed into Christian action, into practical deeds of will; in the
golden warmth of his loving, devoted heart Heinrich Suso bathed
Scholasticism in a lyric splendor of poetic imagery so that it became a
thing of transcendent, eternal beauty.
5. Nicolas Chrypffs
In 1401, when Ghiberti's Baptistry doors, “worthy to be the gates of
Paradise,” were first shown to the admiring eyes of his fellow
Florentines, and the English Parliament decreed that all proven
heretics were to be burned at the stake, Nicolas Chrypffs was born at
Cusa on the Moselle River. Nicolas was to be known as “the last great
philosopher of the dying Middle Ages,” and was to fling wide the doors
of men's minds to the concept of a universe which is infinite. As a
student he made a brilliant record in his study of law and mathematics
at the renowned University of Padua, and followed this with a course in
theology at Cologne where, as we have seen, he was preceded by
Meister Eckhart, Tauler, Suso, van Ruysbroeck, and Groote. Eventually
Nicolas became Archdeacon of Liege at about the time that Joan of Arc
was burned at the stake in Rouen.
The Council of Basel, which had convened intermittently since 1417,
was beginning its last ten years of existence when Nicolas attended its
sessions in his official capacity as Archdeacon of Liege, in 1437. These
sessions took place at the time when Cosimo de Medici was making
preparations for the opening of his famous Platonic Academy in
Florence, the institution renowned as a center of the revival of the
learning of the classical world.
Shortly after his attendance at the Council of Basel, Nicolas was sent to
Constantinople to try his efforts toward the solution of one of the most
vexing problems of the time, the reunion of the churches of East and
West. His work at Basel and Constantinople attracted the attention of
the Pope, so that in 1440 Nicolas was sent to Germany as papal legate
at a very critical moment in the relations between Germany and the
Church of Rome.
When Nicolas arrived in Germany, Frederick, Duke of Styria was
chosen king to rule as Frederick IV. Just at that time the Council of
Basel had appointed an “anti-pope,” called Felix V, in opposition to
Pope Eugenius IV. In the fact that soon after his election, Frederick
decided to extend his influence to the support of Eugenius in
opposition to the Council of Basel, one perhaps can see the fruit of the
work of Nicolas of Cusa as papal legate in Germany.
It also seems something more than coincidence that in 1448, when
Frederick IV and Pope Nicolas V signed the Concordat of Vienna, by
which the German church was firmly rebound to Rome, Nicolas of Cusa
was raised to the rank of Cardinal. Two years later he was appointed
Bishop of Britten.
The reactionary character of the Concordat of Vienna made impossible
any reform of conditions within the German church. The clergy in
Germany who had hoped for some easing of the repressive measures of
the papacy, were doomed to disappointment. On the other hand, the
Concordat of Vienna was one of the principal links in the chain of
events that finally culminated on All Saints' Day, 1517, when Martin
Luther nailed his theses to the door of the church in Wittenberg, and
the German Reformation became a fact.
The sixteen years (1448–1464) of the Cardinalate of Nicolas of Cusa
coincide with remarkable developments in the social and cultural life of
the Western world. The year 1452 is notable as the year of the birth of
two men of marked divergence of outlook. The first was Girolamo
Savonarola, the Dominican monk, leader of the reaction against the
Renaissance, the dogmatic eschatologist from Ferrara, who as “dictator
of Florence” held a brief sway over the minds and bodies of men of his
time. Also in 1452 was born the genius of the Renaissance, the
archetype of the “new man,” the very incarnation of the spirit of
progress, of universality, of investigation, of freedom from
traditionalism and conservatism — Leonardo da Vinci. At this same
time a host of the world's most famous Greek scholars left
Constantinople in fear of the advancing Turks under Mohammed II,
who finally took the city the following year, which also marked the end
of the Hundred Years' War in Western Europe.
In 1454, as a kind of picture of things to come in the field of technical
development and invention, Johannes Gutenberg issued his first texts
printed with movable type, and before two more years were completed,
published his edition of the Vulgate Bible at Mainz. 1456 is notable as
the year the Turks captured Athens and subsequently all Greece, thus
marking the end of the last vestiges of classicism remaining in that
country.
Pico della Mirandola, famous Renaissance scholar and writer, collector
of precious books and manuscripts, master of Greek, Latin, Hebrew,
Chaldee and Arabic, student of the mysticism of the Kabbalah and
other mystical writings, was born in 1463. The following year, on the
11th of August, Nicolas of Cusa died, renowned as a distinguished
prince of the Church, and as a diplomat traveling in the service of the
Pope.
Today Nicolas of Cusa is remembered for his cosmological conceptions,
his originality and breadth of thought, and his courage as a thinker at a
time when the rationalized dogmatic system of Scholasticism was
breaking down in face of the impact of the new age. As the famous
French mathematician and philosopher, Renè Descartes was to write
nearly two hundred
years after Nicolas' death, “The Cardinal of Cusa and several other
theologians have supposed the world to be infinite, and the Church has
never condemned them for it. On the contrary, it is thought that to
make His works appear very great is one way to honor God.” Nicolas of
Cusa's work was appreciated by such men as Giordano Bruno,
philosopher, poet, and martyr, Johannes Kepler, the astronomer, and
Descartes, to name but a few. The courage necessary for a thinker to
grasp the implications of the new age was present in Nicolas of Cusa,
and the scope of his investigations in the world of thought is evidence
of his importance and stature.
6. Agrippa of Nettesheim
The year 1487 is regarded by some as the year of the beginning of the
Renaissance. By others it is remembered as the time the Portuguese
navigator, Bartholomeu Diaz, sailing along the African coast on a
voyage of exploration, discovered the Cape of Good Hope and thereby
opened the passage to India and China. Still others recall that this was
the year of the birth of one Henry Cornelius, generally known as
Agrippa of Nettesheim, in the city of Cologne on September 14, 1487.
His family was honored for its service to the royal house of Hapsburg,
but little is known of his childhood and youth.
Like others whom we have considered, Henry Cornelius studied at the
University of Cologne. He also learned eight languages, and passed
some time in France while still a young man.
In 1486, the year before Henry Cornelius was born, the son of Frederick
IV, whom Nicolas of Cusa had supported in signing the Concordat of
Vienna, came to the throne of Germany as Maximilian I. The latter was
heir to great areas of Austria, was administrator of the Netherlands,
and not long after he came to the throne of Germany he united the
country, and through the marriage of his son Philip to the heiress of the
Spanish kingdoms, his influence soon spread to that country as well.
Thus Maximilian exercised a power in Europe as had no German ruler
for centuries.
While he was still a young man, Henry Cornelius was appointed
secretary in the service of Maximilian, and his life of travel and
adventure began almost at once. However, the life of the battlefield and
he court did not suit him, and not long afterward we find him at the
University at Dôle as a lecturer on philosophy. This appointment was
made in 1509, the year that Erasmus wrote his Chiliades adagiorum,
by which his reputation as an author was established.
But Henry Cornelius' lectures did not long escape the attention of the
Inquisition, and he went to England on a diplomatic mission for
Maximilian as the result of an attack made upon him by the monk,
John Catilinet who was lecturing at Ghent. In London Henry Cornelius
was a welcome guest in the home of Dr. John Colet, friend and later the
patron of Erasmus, student of the teachings of Savonarola, former
lecturer at Oxford, at that time dean of St. Paul's Cathedral. In his later
life, Colet was to preach on the occasion of Wolsey's installation as
Cardinal, and was to become chaplain to Henry VIII. He did much to
introduce the humanist teachings of the Renaissance into England, and
was an outspoken opponent of auricular confession and the celibacy of
the clergy of the Catholic Church.
After his return to the Continent, Henry Cornelius went to Italy with
Maximilian on one of the latter's expeditions against Venice. During his
stay in Italy in 1512, the year the Medici were recalled to Florence, and
Martin Luther was made a Doctor of Theology, he attended the Council
of Pisa as a theologian. This council had been called by a group of
Cardinals in opposition to militaristic plans of Pope Julius II who had
laid the cornerstone for the new basilica of St. Peter's in Rome six years
before.
In all, Henry Cornelius remained in Italy about seven years, and they
were a very eventful time, for they coincided with some of the most
important events of the Renaissance period. In these years the Aldine
edition of Plato appeared in Venice, Niccolo Machiavelli wrote The
Prince, a landmark in the history of political thought, and Erasmus
published his New Testament in Greek. Julius II died during this
period, and Giovanni de Medici, made Cardinal at fourteen, now
became Pope Leo X, whose famous exclamation, “Since God has given
us the papacy, let us enjoy it,” set a pattern for the Renaissance, while
his permission to sell indulgences for the benefit of the construction of
St. Peter's led to the upheaval of the Reformation.
Henry Cornelius was active as a physician during his first years in Italy,
first in the household of the Marquis of Monferrato, later in that of the
Duke of Savoy. In 1515 he accepted an invitation to lecture at the
University of Pavia on one of the works of the ancient world beloved by
the adherents of the new learning of the Renaissance, the Pimander of
Hermes Trismegistus. This was the year when Sir Thomas More wrote
his Utopia, and Leonardo da Vinci left Rome for the last time enroute
to his three year exile and death in France.
The university lectures on the Pimander were suddenly broken off as a
result of the victorious advance into Italy by the armies of Francis I of
France. Henry Cornelius returned to Germany, and in 1518, the year
Zwingli began the Reformation among the Swiss, he was appointed
town advocate of Metz. But he was not left in peace for long. First, the
death of Maximilian at the beginning of 1519 and the subsequent
election of Charles V, King of Spain, Naples, Sicily, ruler of the
Netherlands, Austria, Burgundy, and of dominions in the New World,
to be ruler of Germany brought changes in the life of Henry Cornelius.
Second, a woman was tried in Metz for witchcraft. In his position as
town advocate Henry Cornelius went to her defense, with the result
that he became involved in a serious controversy with one of the most
dreaded agents of the Inquisition, the notorious Nicholas Savin.
Finally, in 1520, the year of Magellan's voyage around the world, of the
death of the painter, Raphael, and of Luther's burning of the papal bull,
Henry Cornelius quietly left Metz for Cologne, where he remained in
discreet retirement for about two years.
He appeared in public life once more, first in Geneva, afterward in
Freiburg, where he practiced as a physician. In 1524, a year before
Tyndale's English translation of the New Testament appeared, he went
to Lyons to accept a post as physician to Louise of Savoy, mother of
Francis I. But the unsettled times — now accentuated by the terrible
sack of Rome by the armies of Constable Bourbon in 1527 — caused
him to relinquish the position in favor of some post further north which
might offer greater security for his study and work.
That Henry Cornelius was considered an able scholar is evidenced by
the fact that at about this time he was offered the opportunity to
participate in a disputation concerning the legality of the divorce action
between Henry VIII of England and Catherine of Aragon, which was
then taking place. However, he accepted an offer to be archivist and
historian to Charles V, which Louise of Savoy obtained for him.
The death of Louise of Savoy in 1531 weakened his position, and in
addition to all of the other ferment of the time, the news that Henry
VIII had declared himself “Supreme Head of the Church of England”
only increased the uncertainty of conditions. Henry Cornelius also had
published several works which had attracted the attention of the
Inquisition, and for a time he was imprisoned in Brussels. However,
despite the publication of his De occulta philosophia, Concerning
Secret Science, written about 1510, printed in Antwerp 1531, which the
Inquisition did their best to prevent, Henry Cornelius was able to live
for some time at Cologne and Ronn under the personal protection of
the great Hermann von Wied, Archbishop of Cologne, who recognized
and appreciated his remarkable qualities as a scholar and man.
At the very end of his life, while he was visiting Paris, Francis I had him
arrested on the strength of a report that he had spoken badly of the
reputation of the queen mother. The charge was proven false and he
was released after a brief imprisonment, but the strain of the
experience was too great for him to bear, and he died suddenly at
Grenoble on February 18, 1535 at the age of forty-nine. His death took
place in the same year as that of Sir Thomas More, and five years after
that of Erasmus.
Henry Cornelius was married three times, and was the father of a large
family of children. His memory — despite attacks on his reputation and
teachings by the Inquisition long after his death — has been kept alive
through the years because of his writings, mainly his De occulta
philosophia. A man of unusual courage and in some ways a kind of
universal genius, Henry Cornelius was typical of the men whose lives
spanned the period that opened the way to the modern age.
7. Paracelsus
Columbus had reached America on his western voyage; Lorenzo de
Medici had died in Florence; the Spaniard, Rodrigo Borgia, along with
his mistress and children now inhabited the Vatican as Pope Alexander
VI, whose frankly pagan orgies were more fitting to the later Roman
emperors than to the Vicar of Christ upon earth; and in the little Swiss
town of Einsiedeln in Canton Schwyz, the local physician, illegitimate
son of a Grand Master of the Teutonic Order, was in turn the father of a
son whom he named Theophrastus Bombast von Hohenheim. Later the
son himself chose the name by which he is known to history —
Paracelsus.
The boy's early education was in the hands of his father; at the age of
sixteen he entered the University of Basel. However, his restless nature
and his independent thinking made formal study most unattractive to
him, and he determined to seek an education in his own way.
About this time he heard of the great Benedictine scholar, Johannes
Trithemius, originally Abbot of the Monastery of Wurzburg, later of
Sponheim near Kreuznach. The Abbot of Sponheim was celebrated for
the remarkable library he had collected, for his studies in cryptography,
for his writings on history, and for his researches in alchemy and
related sciences. This same Abbot of Sponheim had greatly influenced
Henry Cornelius in the latter's work on his De occulta philosophia.
Paracelsus decided to apply to the Abbot of Sponheim for the
opportunity to study science with him. He was accepted, but the
association did not last very long. Led by a desire to learn more about
the nature and properties of minerals first-hand, he went to the
Tyrolean mines owned by the famous merchant-administrators and
bankers to the German Emperors, the Fuggers.
Paracelsus felt at home among the miners. He soon came to the
conviction that what he gained through direct observation was the best
education of all. He learned about the processes involved in mining
operations, the nature of ores, the properties of mineral waters, and the
stratification of the rocks of the earth. Meanwhile he came to know the
home life of the miners, studied their illnesses and the types of
accidents to which they were most prone. In brief, from his experiences
in the mines he concluded that formal schooling is not education in the
mysteries of nature. He was convinced that only by reading the book of
nature first-hand and through personal contact with those who work
with nature can one come to anything like truly natural scientific
knowledge.
This point of view followed Paracelsus throughout his life, and colored
his relationships with those scholars with whom he came into contact.
He based his work entirely on the results of his own observation and
experience, and not on theories acquired from others.
Paracelsus wandered over a great part of central Europe in order that
he might come to a direct personal knowledge of things. He once said
that the physician must read the book of nature, and that to do so he
must “walk over its pages.” He came to the conclusion that since the
temperaments, constitutions and activities of different peoples are
different, the diseases from which they suffer must also be different.
Therefore he believed that it was incumbent upon the physician to
know other peoples as the key to understanding his own.
The summation of Paracelsus' method of study is contained in his
questions, “From where do I obtain all my secrets, from what authors?
It would be better if one asked how the animals have learned their
skills. If nature can teach irrational animals, can it not much more
teach men?”
In all, Paracelsus spent nearly a full decade in his wanderings in search
of knowledge. At the end of his travels, while the mass of information
he had gathered lacked order and coherence, there is no doubt that
here was a man whose experiences, observations of peoples, places and
events, as well as knowledge of the elements and processes of nature
gave his words and deeds the weight of direct evidence. His superiority
to his contemporaries was unquestionable.
When Paracelsus returned to Basel in 1527 he was appointed city
physician, and also was made professor of physic, medicine, and
surgery at the University. He undertook to give a course of lectures in
medicine, but the latter provoked a storm of protest because they were
so unconventional, as might have been expected from one holding his
views on education. First of all, Paracelsus lectured in German, not
Latin, which was unheard of in academic circles of the time. Then his
lectures were composed of statements derived from his experience, and
presented his own methods of cure, based upon his personal points of
view. But worst of all to the traditionalists, Paracelsus' lectures dealt
with cure of the diseases current among the peoples of Europe in the
year 1527, and not only did not include comment on the classic medical
texts of Galen or Avicenna, an accepted part of every medical lecture
worthy of the name, but they attacked these sacrosanct authorities and
ridiculed those who followed their teachings. Above all, Paracelsus
plead for a medical practice which met the needs of the time, which
followed the results of direct observation, and which did away with the
ignorance and greed of physicians which hid behind a mask of
pompousness and reliance upon the dicta of men who had been dead
for centuries.
Paracelsus also was hard at work proving the practical worth of his
knowledge in curing the sick. His success was phenomenal. Maladies
previously considered incurable were healed quickly and efficiently by
his methods. Case after case which had been given up by other
physicians of Basel and the surrounding towns, was brought to him and
cured. For two or three years Paracelsus' reputation spread far and
wide. Never before had such a physician practiced in Basel!
But this success did not last. At first, his learning, derived from his
practical experience, his appeal to the common sense of his hearers,
captured the imagination of his students. His successful practice was
proof of the correctness of his teaching, and all opposition based on
traditionalism was pushed aside.
Slowly, however, the tide began to turn; the waters of opposition
gathered their strength. No single detail escaped the vigilant eyes of his
enemies; nothing was too insignificant to throw into the scale against
him. There was the matter of his having no degree; the conservatives
demanded that he be forced to prove his qualifications before
continuing his teaching and practice. And his prescriptions were a
source of annoyance to the pharmacists of Basel, for Paracelsus had
worked out his own system of drug compounding, which differed
radically from that generally employed by other physicians. Therefore
the apothecaries attacked Paracelsus, because he did not use their
products as did the Galenists. On the other hand, Paracelsus requested
the city authorities to keep close watch on the purity of the drugs sold
in Basel, to be certain that the apothecaries really knew their work, and,
above all, to be watchful of the commercial relationships between the
apothecaries and physicians.
At last the day came for which the enemies of Paracelsus had long been
waiting. Among his patients was one Canon Cornelius von Lichtenfels,
who had called upon Paracelsus for professional aid when his own
physician had given up his case. Although he had promised to pay
Paracelsus' fee in the event of a cure, von Lichtenfels now refused to do
so. Eventually the matter was taken into a court of law, where the
judges found in favor of von Lichtenfels. Noted for his quickness of
temper and outspokenness, Paracelsus candidly told the judges his
opinion of them, their conduct of the case, and their method of
administering the law. When he left the court, Paracelsus' friends
advised him to leave Basel without delay, for his enemies would surely
see to it that he be severely punished for his speech before the justices.
Paracelsus took this advice, and departed from Basel in haste.
Once again Paracelsus resumed his wandering life. For a brief time he
remained in Esslingen, then went to Colmar, but the pinch of poverty
drove him from town to town in search of work. Twelve years were
passed in these journeyings, Paracelsus never remaining in one place
for more than a year.
Finally, in 1541 when Paracelsus was forty-eight, he received an
invitation which seemed to be the fulfillment of his longing for a
permanent home where he could pursue his work undisturbed and in
peace. Archbishop Ernst of Salzburg offered Paracelsus his protection if
the latter would come to that city and take up his professional activities
there.
But Paracelsus was in Salzburg only a few months when he died at
almost the same time Michelangelo completed his painting of the Last
Judgment in the Sistine Chapel at Rome.
Even the reports of Paracelsus death reflect the efforts of his enemies to
defame him. One tale recounts that his death was caused by a drunken
brawl in which he was a participant. A report with sinister implications
tells that Paracelsus did not die a natural death, but was thrown over a
steep cliff at night by assassins in the employ of the apothecaries and
physicians, whose vengeance followed him through all his years of
exile.
One of Paracelsus' most far-reaching concepts is that of Signatures,
that is, the idea that each single part of the microcosmic world of man
corresponds with each single part of the macrocosmic world outside
man. This leads directly to his teaching concerning Specifics. He
realized that the latter were not to be discovered in the labyrinth of
often fantastic nostrums and combinations of substances prescribed in
the writings of the Galenists. Through careful observation extending
over many years, Paracelsus concluded that mineral, plant and animal
substances contain within themselves what he called “active
principles.” It was his conviction that if a method of purification and
intensification could be discovered whereby these substances could be
caused to release their “active principles,” the latter would be infinitely
more efficacious and safer in producing a cure than would their crude
and often dangerous originals.
Paracelsus died before he could discover the method which could
unlock the potency, the healing power latent in mineral, plant and
animal substances. This problem was not solved until two and a half
centuries later when another physician, Samuel Hahnemann,
discovered a method of so handling mineral, plant and animal
substances that their innate healing powers were enhanced and made
available to a medical practice in line with the highest ideals of cure
envisioned by Paracelsus. This method of preparation of substances
and the manner of their selection and administration to the sick,
Hahnemann called Homeopathy.
The first of Paracelsus' extensive works was published in Augsburg in
1529, memorable as the year when the Reformers' presentation of a
protest to the Diet of Spires won them the name of Protestants.
Throughout the extensive writings of Paracelsus, repeated again and
again in every one of the more than two hundred separate publications
of his works which appeared between 1542 and 1845, a single theme is
to be observed: The life of man cannot be separated from the life of the
universe; therefore, to understand man, understand the universe; to
understand the universe, understand man. Only upon such an
understanding — universal in its scope — Paracelsus believed a medical
art worthy of the name could be built. To the proclamation of such a
goal of medicine he devoted his life.
In one of his writings, Paracelsus says, “There is a light in the spirit of
man . . . by which the qualities of each thing created by God, whether it
be visible or invisible to the senses, may be perceived and known. If
man knows the essence of things, their attributes, their attractions, and
the elements of which they consist, he will be a master of nature, of the
elements, and of the spirits.”
Robert Browning expressed Paracelsus' thoughts in the well-known
lines:
“Truth is within ourselves; it takes no rise
From outward things, what'er you may believe.
There is an inmost center in us all,
Where truth abides in fullness; and around,
Wall upon wall, the gross flesh hems it in,
This perfect, clear perception — which is truth,
A baffling and perverting carnal mesh
Binds it, and makes all error: and, to KNOW,
Rather consists in opening out a way
Whence the imprisoned splendor may escape,
Than in effecting entry for a light
Supposed to be without.”
8. Valentine Weigel
Eight years before the death of Paracelsus, Valentine Weigel was born
at Naundorff, near Grossenheim in the district of Meissen. This year
1533 was also the year of the birth of Montaigne, the skeptic, of the
completion of the rape of Peru by the most notorious of all Spanish
conquistadores, Francisco Pizarro, of the proclamation of Anne Boleyn,
soon to be the mother of Elizabeth, as Queen of England by Henry VIII,
and of the final preparation of Luther's complete German Bible which
was published the next year.
The details of Weigel's childhood are obscure, but in course of time he
received his Bachelor's and Master's degrees at the University of
Leipzig. He continued his studies at the University of Wittenberg until
1567, three years after the death of Michelangelo. In that year he was
ordained a Lutheran pastor and was called to the church at Zschopau,
not far from Chemnitz in eastern Germany. His life was passed entirely
in this place, and he continued as pastor of this church until his death
in 1588, the year the English defeated the Spanish Armada.
While the external events of Weigel's life are few and somewhat
unimpressive when compared with some of the biographies discussed
thus far, his inner development and his dedication to his pastoral tasks
are very remarkable. He is remembered as a loving, devoted man, a
true shepherd of his flock, a man whom all his parishioners loved, and
who loved them in return.
Twenty-one years after the death of their pastor, his parishioners came
to know that in addition to the Valentin Weigel they knew, another
man, as it were, had been active all the years in Zschopau. This was
Valentin Weigel, student, mystic, and author.
Weigel had long been a close student of the writings of Paracelsus,
whose work he deeply admired, but whose fate he was determined not
to share. Therefore while he studied and wrote a great deal during his
lifetime, he never revealed his interest in mysticism to anyone, and left
instructions that his writings were not to be published until sometime
after his death. So while Pastor Weigel stood in his pulpit and preached
to his flock Sunday after Sunday without interruption for twenty-one
years, he never shared his most cherished interests and convictions
with them.
Weigel was well acquainted with the works of Eckhart and Tauler and
also with such classical mystics as Dionysius and the Neo-Platonists.
But with all his study he recognized that the ultimate truth of things is
not acquired from without, but is to be found within each man. He
wrote, “Study nature, physics, alchemy, magic, and so on, but it is all in
you, and you become what you have learned.”
In 1609, twenty-one years after Weigel's death, the year Henry Hudson
sailed up the river that now bears his name, Weigel's book that was to
greatly influence English mystics after its translation into English in
1648, was published. It bore the title, Von den Leben Christi, das ist,
vom wahren Glauben, Of the Life of Christ, that is, of True Faith, and
one of its outstanding passages is, “Faith comes by inward hearing.
Good books, external preaching, have their place; they testify to the real
Treasure. They are witnesses to the Word within us. But faith is not tied
to books; Faith is a new birth, which cannot be found in books. The one
who has the inner Schoolmaster would lose nothing of his salvation,
even though all the preachers should die and all books be burned.”
When one considers the theological ideas prevailing in his time, one of
Weigel's interesting concepts deals with the location of heaven and hell.
In an age when basically materialistic descriptions of heavenly wonders
were contrasted with equally materialistic portrayals of hellish tortures,
and men were assured by their pastors that these were definite places,
Weigel's conviction, which probably he never voiced from his pulpit, is
surprisingly modern. He wrote that “Heaven and Hell are in the soul of
man, after all; both Trees of the Paradise, the Tree of Knowledge of
Good and Evil, as well as the Tree of Life, flourish in the human soul.”
(See Weigel's Erkenne dich Selbst, Know Thyself)
Like Luther and others, Weigel prized and edited the little book,
Theologia Germanica, or The Golden Book of German Theology, as
Henry More called it, and spoke of it as “A precious little book, a noble
book.” Weigel also loved the sermons of Johannes Tauler because “they
testify to the experience of the Heavenly Jerusalem within us.”
For Weigel, the immanence of the spiritual world was a profound
conviction, born of his personal experience. His expression of this is
one of the classic statements of mysticism: “God is nearer to us than we
are to ourselves.”
9. Jacob Boehme
Jacob Boehme was born on April 24, 1575 in the little German village of
Alt Seidenberg on a hillside south of Goerlitz, near the Bohemian
border. Jacob was the fourth child of his parents, of old German
peasant stock, noted for their honesty and devoutness. The Boehme
family were staunch Lutherans, and the children were brought up
according to the family faith. Jacob was a sickly child, and was not
thought strong enough to work in the fields. Therefore his childhood
summers were spent watching the herds, and in winter he received the
rudiments of reading, writing, simple arithmetic and a little Latin. His
favorite reading was his Bible, which he carried with him in the fields,
and came to know as few other men have.
When he was fourteen, his father apprenticed him to the village cobbler
for three years, since it was clear that Jacob's health would never
permit him to be a farmer. In 592 Jacob Boehme began his
journeyman's wanderings.
Abraham von Franckenberg, whom we shall meet again as the friend of
Johannes Scheffler (Angelus Silesius), knew Jacob Boehme, and
described the latter's appearance in these years: “Jacob's body was
worn and plain. He was short, with low forehead, wide temples, his
nose slightly crooked, his eyes grey, lighting up at times like the
windows of Solomon's Temple. He had a short beard, somewhat thin, a
slight voice, but very gentle in conversation. His manner was modest,
mild and humble. He was of patient heart, and his spirit was lightened
by God beyond anything to be found in nature.”
In the chapter in this book dealing with Jacob Boehme, Rudolf Steiner
relates the famous story of the stranger and the pair of shoes, which
took place during Boehme's apprentice days, sometime before 1599. In
May of that year Boehme was officially made a citizen of Goerlitz,
became established as a master shoemaker there, and soon afterward
married Catherina Kuntzsch, daughter of a butcher of Goerlitz, by
whom he had four children.
In the year 1600, when Jacob Boehme was twenty-five, he had the
remarkable spiritual experience which Rudolf Steiner mentions in this
book. Boehme saw the sunlight reflected on the surface of a polished
pewter dish, and it was suddenly as though he could penetrate into the
most secret depths of the universe, could probe the secrets of nature,
and could fathom the essential being of everything in creation. This is
comparable to Paracelsus' observation: “Hidden things which cannot
be perceived by the physical senses may be discovered by means of the
sidereal body, through whose organism we can look into nature just as
the sun shines through a glass.”
Boehme later explained his spiritual experience or “illumination” in the
introduction to his book, Aurora: “In a quarter of an hour I observed
and knew more than if I had attended a university for many years. I
recognized the Being of Beings, both the Byss and Abyss the eternal
generation of the Trinity, the origin and creation of this world and of all
creatures through the Divine Wisdom. I saw all three worlds in myself:
first, the Divine World; second, the dark world and the source of fire;
third, the external, visible world as an outbreathing of the inner or
spiritual worlds. I also saw the fundamental nature of evil and good,
and how the pregnant Mother, the eternal genetrix, brought them forth.
My experience is like the evoking of life in the presence of death, or like
the resurrection from the dead. My spirit suddenly saw all created
things, even the herbs and grass, in this light. I knew who God is, what
He is like, and the nature of His Will. Suddenly in that light my will was
seized by a mighty impulse to describe the Being of God.”
For ten long years after this spiritual experience, to which Boehme
referred repeatedly throughout the remainder of his life, he meditated
on his vision. He came to believe that what he had to tell others was
entirely unique with him, and that his mission was to purify
Christianity, which he thought had become corrupt once again. He had
no use for theology born of reason, nor for creeds and dogmas
established on purely intellectual foundations. He was convinced that
only one's personal experience of the reality of the spiritual world can
enable one to overcome evil and advance into genuine knowledge of the
spirit.
In 1610, the year when Galileo discovered the satellites of Jupiter by
means of the newlyinvented telescope, Jacob Boehme knew that the
moment had come when he could write down an account of what he
had seen a decade before: “To write these things was strongly urged
upon my spirit, however difficult they might be for my outer self to
understand, and for my pen to express. Like a child beginning school I
was compelled to start my work on this very great Mystery. Within
myself I saw it well enough, as in a great depth, but the describing and
explaining of it seemed impossible.”
Boehme wrote in the early morning before he went to his cobbler's
bench, and in the evening after he returned home from his work. And
at last, after two years of diligent effort, Jacob Boehme produced his
Aurora one of the masterpieces of mystical literature.
That Boehme knew that the twenty-six chapters of his Aurora are not
easy to read, and are not for everyman, is clear from his words: “If you
are not a spiritual overcomer, then let my book alone. Don't meddle
with it, but stick to your old ways.” “Art was not written here, nor did I
find time to consider how to set things down accurately, according to
rules of composition, but everything followed the direction of the Spirit,
which often hastened so that the writer's hand shook. As the burning
fire of the Spirit hurried ahead, the hand and pen had to follow after it,
for it came and went like a sudden shower.”
Handwritten copies of the manuscript were made by Carl Ender von
Sercha, Boehme's friend and student. Sercha believed that in Boehme's
work a prophecy of Paracelsus had been fulfilled, which announced
that the years between 1599 and 1603 would bring about a new age for
mankind, a time of “singing, dancing, rejoicing, jubilating.” Therefore
many who heard of Boehme's remarkable spiritual experience when he
had, to use his own words, “wrestled in God's presence a considerable
time for the knightly crown . . . which later, with the breaking of the
gate in the deep center of nature, I attained with much joy,” believed
that in him the words of Paracelsus had come true.
Their enthusiasm, however, was not universally shared. A copy of the
manuscript of Aurora fell by chance into the hands of the Lutheran
Pastor Primarius Gregorius Richter of Goerlitz. After the clergyman
read the pages that John Wesley was later to describe as “sublime
nonsense, inimitable bombast, fustian not to be paralleled,” and the
celebrated English Bishop Warburton characterized as something that
“would disgrace Bedlam at full moon,” he went to his pulpit the next
Sunday and poured out his indignation upon Boehme's work. Among
the congregation that morning sat Jacob Boehme himself, listened
quietly and without a shadow of emotion to the stern denunciations of
his pastor. Afterward he went to Richter and attempted to explain the
passages of Aurora to which the latter took most violent exception. But
the clergyman would have neither Boehme nor his book, asked the
town council to expel Boehme from Goerlitz. His effort failed, but the
justices warned Boehme that since he was a shoemaker, he must
abandon writing and stick to the trade for which he was licensed.
Boehme, who had said, “In Yes and No all things consist,” accepted
their injunction, and entered upon still another time of silence. This
period lasted from 1612, the year the King James Version of the English
Bible was issued, until 1619, when a Dutch ship landed in Jamestown,
Virginia, with the first African slaves to be sold in North America.
Meanwhile, Boehme's fame was spreading as more and more people
read the manuscript copies of his Aurora, which were circulated by his
admirers. Among the latter were the physician of Goerlitz, the learned
Dr. Tobias Kober, the director of the Elector of Saxony's chemical
laboratory at Dresden, Dr. Balthazar Walther, the nobleman Carl Ender
von Sercha, and the Paracelsus student, who was to be Boehme's
biographer, Abraham von Franckenberg.
Again and again these men urged Boehme to ignore the order of the
magistrates of Goerlitz, and to continue his writing, but he consistently
refused. However, early in 1619 their urgings met with success, and
Boehme resumed his writing, and continued with increasing zeal
during the following years. As he wrote, “I had resolved to do nothing
in future, but to be quiet before God in obedience, and to let the devil
with all his host sweep over me. But with me it was as when a seed is
hidden in the earth. Contrary to all reason, it grows up in storm and
rough weather. In the winter, all is dead, and reason says, ‘Everything
is ended for it.’ But the precious seed within me sprouted and grew
green, oblivious of all storms, and, amid disgrace and ridicule, it has
blossomed into a lily!”
Through all the following years Boehme remained faithful to his
original conviction that everything he wrote was not the fruit of his own
intellectual creativeness, but was the gift of the spiritual world. In 1620,
the memorable year of the Pilgrim Fathers at Plymouth, he said, “I did
not dare to write other than as I was guided. I have continued writing
as the Spirit directed, and have not given place to reason.”
Boehme was one of those people who suffer much from the enthusiasm
and admiration of their friends The latter were responsible for the
attack by Pastor Primarius Richter, because of their circulating copies
of Aurora, as we have seen. Again, toward the end of 1623, Boehme's
friend, Sigismund von Schweinitz published three small works of
Boehme, the first of the latter's writings to appear in print. Immediately
the enemy in the person of clergyman Richter attacked Jacob Boehme,
and once again complained to the magistrates of Goerlitz. This time,
since he had broken their injunction against his writing, they ordered
Boehme to leave town.
Before receiving the sentence of the magistrates, however, Boehme had
been invited to visit the Court of the Elector of Saxony in Dresden.
Therefore, early in May the shoemaker, exile from Goerlitz arrived in
Dresden to attend “a conference of noble people,” as he described it.
Boehme was fast becoming famous. The second attack upon him by
Pastor Primarius Richter was known widely, and the sale of his
writings, which were rapidly appearing in print, steadily increased. He
was convinced that in only a short time “the nations will take up what
my native town is casting away.” He regarded the invitation to the
Elector's Court as an opportunity to defend his works before some of
the leading theologians and scholars of his time, and he was right.
His devoted student, Dr. Balthazar Walther, had arranged that Boehme
was to be a guest in the home of Dr. Benedict Hinckelmann, Walther's
successor as director of the Elector's laboratory, and the court
physician. Boehme's reception in Dresden was all that his most devoted
friends could have desired. He was entertained with consideration and
appreciation, and found that important members of the court circle had
studied his writings, and welcomed this opportunity to discuss them
with him. One of the prominent noblemen of the Elector's household,
Joachim von Loss, invited Boehme to visit his castle in order that they
might have conversation together. Major Stahlmeister, chief master of
horse to the Elector, did everything possible to inform the Elector
favorably concerning Boehme's work.
Finally, at the request of the Elector, Boehme was examined orally by
six eminently learned doctors of theology, and by two mathematicians.
As a contemporary account describes it, “The illustrious Elector found
great satisfaction in Boehme's answers. He asked Boehme to come to
him privately, spoke with him, extended many favors to him, and gave
him permission to return to his home in Goerlitz.”
At the conclusion of his visit, which lasted nearly two months, Boehme
left Dresden, his teachings at least partly accepted. He did not return
directly to Goerlitz, but visited three of his noblemen friends on the
way. At the home of one of them he was taken ill, and as soon as
possible, he hastened home to Goerlitz, where his friend and physician,
Dr. Tobias Kober undertook his care. It was not long, however, before
Dr. Kober, realizing that Jacob Boehme's death was near, arranged that
he should receive the sacrament of the Lord's Supper after he had made
a confession of faith. This was done on November, 15 1624.
It was nearly two o'clock in the morning of the following Sunday that
Jacob Boehme asked his son, Tobias, “Do you hear that beautiful
music, my son?” Tobias replied that he did not. Then Boehme said,
“Open the door then, so we can hear it better.” He inquired as to the
hour, and when he was told that it was not yet three o'clock, he replied,
“Then my time has not yet come.”
With the first faint touches of Aurora on the eastern sky, Jacob Boehme
spoke words of farewell to his wife and children, and with a smile of
joyful expectancy on his face, breathed out his spirit with the words,
“Now I go to Paradise.”
A great crowd of the everyday people of Goerlitz, the shoemakers,
tanners, craftsmen, along with devoted students of Boehme's writings,
attended his funeral. The pall-bearers were shoemakers of Goerlitz, and
the funeral service was conducted by the Lutheran clergyman who
succeeded Richter. On the tombstone of porphyry are inscribed the
words, “Jacob Boehme, philosophus Teutonicus.”
Jacob Boehme once described life as “a curious bath of thorns and
thistles,” and his experience witnessed the truth of his words. But all
the difficulties of his comparatively short life of forty-nine years were
more than compensated by his vision of the greatness of man and of
man's destiny. As he wrote, “Man has a spark of the spirit as a
supernatural gift of God, to bring forth by degrees a new birth of that
life which was lost in Paradise. This sacred spark of the divine nature
within man has a natural, strong, almost infinite longing for that
eternal spirit of God from which it came forth. It came forth from God,
it came out of God; therefore it is always in a state of return to God. All
this is called the breathing, the quickening of the Holy Spirit within us,
which are so many operations of this spark of life, tending toward God.”
In this work more than twenty years ago, I wanted to answer the
question, Why do a particular form of mysticism and the beginnings of
modern scientific thinking clash in a period from the thirteenth to the
seventeenth century.
I did not wish to write a “history” of the mysticism of this period, but
only to answer this question. The publications which have appeared on
this subject in the past twenty years do not, in my opinion, furnish any
grounds for making any changes in the answer. The work can therefore
reappear in the main unchanged.
The mystics who are dealt with here are the last offshoots of a way of
inquiry and thinking which in its details is foreign to present-day
consciousness. However, the disposition of soul which lived in this way
of inquiry exists in thoughtful natures at the present time. The manner
of looking at objects of nature with which, before the period
characterized here, this disposition of soul was connected, has almost
disappeared. Its place has been taken by present-day natural science.
The personalities described in this book were not able to transmit the
earlier way of inquiry to the future. It no longer corresponds to the
cognitive powers which have developed in European man from the
thirteenth and fourteenth century onward. What Paracelsus or Jacob
Boehme preserve of this way of inquiry appears only as a reminiscence
of something past. In essence it is the disposition of soul which remains
to thoughtful men. And for it they seek an impulse in the inclinations of
the soul itself, while formerly it arose in the soul when the latter
observed nature. Many of those who incline toward mysticism today do
not want to kindle mystical experiences in connection with what
present-day natural science says, but with what the works of the period
described here contain. But in this way they become strangers to what
most occupies the present.
It might appear as though the present-day knowledge of nature, seen in
its true character, does not indicate a way which could so incline the
soul as to find, in mystical contemplation, the light of the spirit. Why do
mystically inclined souls find satisfaction in Meister Eckhart, in Jacob
Boehme, etc., but not in the book of nature, insofar as, opened by
knowledge, it lies before man today?
It is true that the manner in which this book of nature is discussed
today for the most part, cannot lead to a mystical disposition of soul.
It is the intention of this work to indicate that this manner of discussion
does not have to be used. This is attempted by speaking also of those
spirits who, out of the disposition of soul of the old mysticism,
developed a way of thinking which also can incorporate the newer
knowledge into itself. This is the case with Nicolas of Cusa.
In such personalities it becomes apparent that present-day natural
science too is capable of a mystical intensification. For a Nicolas of
Cusa would be able to lead his thinking over into this science. In his
time one could have discarded the old way of inquiry, retained the
mystical disposition, and accepted modern natural science, had it
already existed.
But what the human soul finds compatible with a way of inquiry it
must, if it is strong enough, also be able to extract from it.
I wanted to describe the characteristics of medieval mysticism in order
to indicate how, separated from its native soil, the old way of
conceiving things, it develops into an independent mysticism, but
cannot preserve itself because it now lacks the spiritual impulse which,
through its connection with inquiry, it had in earlier times.
This leads to the thought that those elements of more recent research
which lead to mysticism must be sought for. From this inquiry the
spiritual impulse which does not stop at the darkly mystical, emotional
inner life, but ascends from the mystical starting-point to a knowledge
of the spirits, can be regained. Medieval mysticism atrophied because it
had lost the substratum of inquiry which directs the faculties of the soul
upward to the spirit. This book is intended to provide a stimulus for
extracting from more recent inquiry, when properly understood, those
forces which are directed toward the spiritual world.
Goetheanum in Dornach bei Basel, Switzerland Autumn, 1923
Rudolf Steiner
Introduction
Wholly irradiated by the feeling that things are reborn as higher entities
in the spirit of man, is the conceptual world of Meister Eckhart. He
belonged to the Order of the Dominicans, as did the greatest Christian
theologian of the Middle Ages, Thomas Aquinas, who lived from 1225
to 1274. Eckhart was an admirer of Thomas in the fullest sense. This is
altogether understandable when one examines the whole conceptual
framework of Meister Eckhart. He considered himself to be as much in
harmony with the teachings of the Christian church as he assumed such
an agreement for Thomas. Eckhart did not want to take anything away
from the content of Christianity, nor to add anything to it. But he
wanted to produce this content anew in his way. It is not among the
spiritual needs of a personality such as he was to put new truths of
various kinds in place of old ones. He was intimately connected with
the content which had been transmitted to him. But he wanted to give a
new form, a new life to this content. Without doubt he wanted to
remain an orthodox Christian. The Christian truths were his truths.
Only he wanted to look at them in a different way than had Thomas
Aquinas, for instance. The latter assumed two sources of knowledge:
revelation for faith, and reason for inquiry. Reason understands the
laws of things, that is, the spiritual in nature. It can also raise itself
above nature, and in the spirit grasp, from one side, the divine essence
which underlies all nature. But in this way it does not achieve an
immersion in the full essence of God. A higher truth must meet it
halfway. This is given in the Scriptures. It reveals what by himself man
cannot attain. The truth of the Scriptures must be taken for granted by
man; reason can defend it, can endeavor to understand it as well as
possible by means of its powers of cognition, but it can never produce it
out of the human spirit. What the spirit sees is not the highest truth,
but is a certain cognitive content which has come to the spirit from
outside. St. Augustine declares that within himself he is unable to find
the source of what he should believe. He says, “I would not believe the
Gospel if the authority of the Catholic church did not move me to do
so.” This is in the sense of the Evangelist, who refers us to the external
testimony: “That which we have heard, which we have seen with our
eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, of the
Word of life . . . that which we have seen and heard declare we unto
you, that ye also may have fellowship with us.” But Meister Eckhart
wishes to impress upon men Christ's words: “It is expedient for you
that I go away: for if I go not away, the Comforter [in the German
version, der heilige Geist, i.e., the Holy Ghost] will not come unto you.”
And he explains these words by saying, “It is as if he said: You have
taken too much joy in my present image, therefore the perfect joy of the
Holy Ghost cannot be in you.” Eckhart thinks that he is speaking of no
God other than the one of whom Augustine and the Evangelist and
Thomas speak, and yet their testimony of God is not his testimony.
“Some people want to look upon God with their eyes, as they look upon
a cow, and want to love God as they love a cow. Thus they love God for
the sake of external riches and of internal solace; but these people do
not love God aright . . . Foolish people deem that they should look upon
God as though He stood there and they here. It is not thus. God and I
are one in the act of knowing.” Such declarations in Eckhart are based
on nothing but the experience of the inner sense. And this experience
shows things to him in a higher light. He therefore does not think that
he needs an external light in order to attain to the highest insights: “A
master says, God has become man; through this all mankind is raised
and exalted. Let us rejoice that Christ our brother has ascended by his
own strength above all the angelic choirs and sits on the right hand of
the Father. This master has spoken well, but in truth, I do not set great
store by it. What would it avail me if I had a brother who was a rich
man, and for my part I were a poor man? What would it avail me if I
had a brother who was a wise man, and I were a fool? . . . The Heavenly
Father brings forth his only-begotten Son in Himself and in me. Why in
Himself and in me? I am one with Him, and He cannot shut me out. In
the same act the Holy Ghost receives its being, and it arises through me
as it does through God. Why? I am in God, and if the Holy Ghost does
not take its being from me it does not take it from God either. I am not
shut out in any way.” When Eckhart reminds us of the word of Paul:
“Clothe yourselves in Jesus Christ,” he wishes to give to this word the
following meaning: Become submerged in yourselves, plunge down
into self-contemplation, and from the depths of your being God will
shine upon you; He will outshine everything for you; you have found
Him within yourselves; you have become united with God's essence.
“God has become man so that I might become God.” In his treatise
Über die Abgeschiedenheit, Concerning Solitude, Eckhart expresses
himself on the relationship of external to internal perception: “Here
you must know that the masters say that in each man there are two
kinds of men: one is called the external man, that is, sensuousness;
man is served by five senses, nevertheless he acts through the force of
the soul. The other man is called the inner man, that is, the interior of
man. Now you must know that every man who loves God does not use
the faculties of the soul in the external man any more than is required
by the five senses; and the interior does not turn to the five senses
except as it is the director and guide of the five senses and watches over
them so that, in their strivings, they do not pander to animality.” One
who speaks in this way about the inner man can no longer fix his eye
upon a nature of things which lies sensorily outside him. For he is
aware that this nature cannot confront him in any kind of sensory
outside world. To him one might object, What have the things in the
outside world to do with what you add to them out of your spirit. Trust
your senses. They alone give you intelligence of the outside world. Do
not falsify with a spiritual trimming what your senses give you in
purity, without decoration, as a picture of the external world. Your eye
tells you what a color is like; nothing that your spirit apprehends
concerning the color is in the color. From the point of view of Meister
Eckhart one would have to answer: the senses are physical devices.
Their communications about things therefore can concern only the
physical aspect of things. And this physical aspect of things
communicates itself to me by the excitation of a physical process within
myself. Color as a physical process of the outside world gives rise to a
physical process in my eye and in my brain. Through this I perceive the
color. But in this way I can perceive in the color only what is physical,
sensory. Sensory perception excludes all those aspects of things which
are not sensory. It divests things of all that is not sensory in them. If I
then proceed to the spiritual, the idea-content, I only re-establish that
aspect of things which sensory perception has effaced. Hence sensory
perception does not show me the deepest nature of things; rather it
separates me from this nature. Spiritual comprehension,
comprehension by the idea, again connects me with this nature. It
shows me that within themselves things are of exactly the same
spiritual nature as I myself. The boundary between me and the external
world is abolished by the spiritual comprehension of the world. I am
separated from the external world insofar as I am a sensory thing
among sensory things. My eye and the color are two different entities.
My brain and the plant are two. But the idea-content of the plant and of
the color, together with the idea-content of my brain and of the eye,
belong to a unified idea-entity. — This view must not be confused with
the widespread anthropomorphizing world view which thinks that it
comprehends the things of the external world by ascribing to them
qualities of a psychical nature, which are supposed to be similar to the
qualities of the human soul. This view says: When he confronts us
externally, we perceive only sensory features in another man. I cannot
look into the interior of my fellow man. From what I see and hear of
him I make inferences as to his interior, his soul. Thus the soul is never
something I perceive directly. A soul I perceive only within myself. No
man sees my thoughts, my imaginings, my feelings. And just as I have
such an inner life beside the one which can be perceived externally, so
all other beings must have one too. This is the conclusion of one who
takes the position of the anthropomorphizing world view. That part of a
plant which I perceive externally must in the same way be only the
outside of an interior, of a soul, which in my thoughts I must add to
what I perceive. And since there exists for me only a single inner world,
namely my own, I can only imagine the inner world of other beings to
be similar to my own. Thus one reaches a sort of universal animation of
all nature (panpsychism). This view rests on a misunderstanding of
what the developed inner sense really offers. The spiritual content of an
external thing, which appears to me within myself, is not something
added in thought to the external perception. It is no more this than is
the spirit of another man. I perceive this spiritual content through the
inner sense, just as I perceive the physical content through the external
senses. And what I call my inner life, in the sense indicated above, is by
no means my spirit in the higher sense. This inner life is only the result
of purely sensory processes; it belongs to me only as a totally individual
personality, which is nothing but the result of its physical organization.
When I transfer this interior to external things, I am in fact indulging in
idle fancy. My personal inner life, my thoughts, memories, and feelings
are in me because I am a creature of nature with such and such an
organization, with a certain sensory apparatus, with a certain nervous
system. I cannot transfer this human soul of mine to things. I could do
this only if somewhere I found a similarly organized nervous system.
But my individual soul is not the highest spiritual part in me. This
highest spiritual part must first be awakened in me by the inner sense.
And this spiritual part which is awakened in me is at the same time one
and the same with the spiritual in all things. Before this spiritual part
the plant appears directly in its own spirituality. I need not endow it
with a spirituality similar to my own. For this world view all talk about
the unknown “thing in itself” becomes devoid of meaning. For it is
precisely the “thing in itself” which reveals itself to the inner sense. All
talk about the unknown “thing in itself” is only due to the fact that
those who speak in this way are incapable of recognizing the “things in
themselves” in the spiritual contents within them. They think that
within themselves they recognize only unsubstantial shadows and
phantoms, “mere concepts and ideas” of things. But nevertheless since
they have an intimation of the “thing in itself” they think that this
“thing in itself” conceals itself, and that limits are set to the human
powers of cognition. One cannot prove to those who labor under this
belief that they must seize the “thing in itself” within themselves, for
they never would acknowledge this “thing in itself” if one showed it to
them. And it is just a matter of this acknowledgment. — Everything
Meister Eckhart says is penetrated by this acknowledgment. “Consider
a simile for this. A door opens and closes on a hinge. If I compare the
outer boards of the door to the external man, then I shall compare the
hinge to the inner man. Now when the door opens and closes the outer
boards move back and forth, while the hinge remains constantly
immobile, and in no way is changed thereby. And here it is the same.”
As an individual creature of the senses I can investigate things in all
directions — the door opens and closes —; if I do not let the perceptions
of the senses arise within me spiritually I shall know nothing of their
essence — the hinge does not move —. The illumination mediated by
the inner sense is, in Eckhart's conception, the entry of God into the
soul. He calls the light of knowledge which is lit by this entry, the
“spark of the soul.” The place within the human being where this
“spark” is lighted is “so pure, and so high, and so noble in itself, that no
creature can be in it, but only God alone dwells therein in His pure
divine nature.” one who has let this “spark” light up within himself, no
longer sees merely as man sees with the external senses, and with the
logical intellect, which orders and classifies the impressions of the
senses; rather he sees how things are in themselves. The external
senses and the ordering intellect separate the individual human being
from other things; they make of him an individual in space and in time,
who also perceives other things in space and in time. The man
illuminated by the “spark” ceases to be an individual being. He
annihilates his isolation. Everything which causes the difference
between him and things, ceases. That it is he as an individual being who
perceives, no longer can even be taken into consideration. The things
and he are no longer separated. The things, and thus also God, see
themselves in him. “This spark is God, in such a way that it is an united
one, and carries within itself the image of all creatures, image without
image, and image above image.” In the most magnificent words does
Eckhart speak of the extinction of the individual being: “It must
therefore be known that to know God and to be known by God is the
same. We know God and see Him in that He makes us to see and to
know. And as the air which illuminates is nothing but what it
illuminates, for it shines through this, that it is illuminated: thus do we
know that we are known and that He causes Himself to know us.”
It is on this foundation that Meister Eckhart builds Up his relationship
to God. It is a purely spiritual relationship, and it cannot be formed in
an image borrowed from the individual life of man. God cannot love
His creation as one individual man loves another; God cannot have
created the world as a masterbuilder constructs a house. All such
thoughts disappear in face of the inner vision. It is in the nature of God
that He loves the world. A god who could love and also not love is
formed in the image of the individual man. “I say in good truth and in
eternal truth and in everlasting truth that into every man who has gone
within himself God must pour Himself out to the limits of His ability,
utterly and completely, so that He retains nothing in His life and in His
being, in His nature and in His divinity; everything must He pour out in
fruitful fashion.” And the inner illumination is something which the
soul necessarily must find when it goes down into its depths. From this
it already becomes evident that the communication of God to mankind
cannot be thought of in the image of the revelation of one man to
another. The latter communication can also be left unmade. One man
can close himself off from another. God must communicate Himself, in
conformity with His nature. “It is a certain truth that God must needs
seek us, as if all His divinity depended upon it. God can no more do
without us than we can do without Him. Although we may turn away
from God, yet God can never turn away from us.” Consequently the
relationship of man to God cannot be understood as containing
anything figurative, borrowed from what is individually human.
Eckhart realizes that part of the accomplishment of the primordial
nature of the world is that it should find itself in the human soul. This
primordial nature would be imperfect, even unfinished, if it lacked that
component of its frame which appears in the human soul. What takes
place in man belongs to the primordial nature; and if it did not take
place the primordial nature would be only a part of itself. In this sense
man can feel himself to be a necessary part of the nature of the world.
Eckhart expresses this by describing his feelings toward God as follows:
“I do not thank God for loving me, for He cannot keep from doing so,
whether He wants to or not, His nature compels him to it . . . Therefore
I shall not beg God that He should give me something, nor shall I praise
Him for what He has given me . . . ”
But this relationship of the human soul to the primordial nature must
not be understood to mean that the soul in its individual character is
declared to be one with this primordial nature. The soul which is
entangled in the world of the senses, and therewith in the finite, does
not as such already have the content of the primordial nature within
itself. It must first develop it in itself. It must annihilate itself as an
individual being. Meister Eckhart has aptly characterized this
annihilation as an “un-becoming” (“Entwerdung”). “When I reach the
depths of divinity no one asks me whence I come and where I have
been, and no one misses me, for here there is an un-becoming.” This
relationship is also clearly expressed in the sentence: “I take a basin of
water and place a mirror in it and put it under the wheel of the sun. The
sun casts its luminous radiance upon the mirror, and yet it is not
diminished. The reflection of the mirror in the sun is sun in the sun,
and yet the mirror is what it is. Thus it is with God. God is in the soul
with His nature and in His being and His divinity, and yet He is not the
soul. The reflection of the soul in God is God in God, and yet the soul is
what it is.”
The soul which gives itself over to the inner illumination recognizes in
itself not only what it was before the illumination; it also recognizes
what it has become only through this illumination. “We are to be united
with God essentially; we are to be united with God as one; we are to be
united with God altogether. I low are we to be united with God
essentially? This is to be accomplished by a seeing and not by a being.
His being cannot be our being, but is to be our life.” Not an already
existing life — a being (Wesung) — is to be understood in the logical
sense; but the higher understanding — the seeing — is itself to become
life; the spiritual, that which belongs to the idea, is to be experienced by
the seeing man in the same way as the individual human nature
experiences ordinary, everyday life.
From such starting-points Meister Eckhart also attains a pure concept
of freedom. In ordinary life the soul is not free. For it is entangled in
the realm of lower causes. It accomplishes that to which it is compelled
by these lower causes. By the “seeing” it is raised out of the region of
these causes. It no longer acts as an individual soul. In it is exposed the
primordial essence, which cannot be caused by anything except itself.
“God does not compel the will, rather He sets it at liberty, so that it
wills nothing but what God Himself wills. And the spirit can will
nothing but what God wills; and this is not its unfreedom; it is its true
freedom. For freedom is this, that we are not bound, that we be free
and pure and unadulterated as we were in our first origin, and when we
were wed in the Holy Ghost.” It can be said of the enlightened man that
he himself is the entity which determines good and evil out of itself. He
cannot do otherwise than accomplish the good. For he does not serve
the good, rather does the good live within him. “The righteous man
serves neither God nor the creatures, for he is free, and the closer he is
to righteousness, the more he is freedom itself.” What then must evil be
for Meister Eckhart? It can only be an acting under the influence of the
lower view, the acting of a soul which has not passed through the state
of un-becoming. Such a soul is selfish in the sense that it wills only
itself. Only externally could it bring its willing into harmony with moral
ideals. The seeing soul cannot be selfish in this sense. Even should it
will itself it would still will the mastery of the ideal; for it has made
itself into this ideal. It can no longer will the goals of the lower nature,
for it no longer has anything in common with this lower nature. It is no
compulsion, no deprivation, for the seeing soul to act in the sense of
moral ideals. “For the man who stands in God's will and in God's love it
is a joy to do all the good things God wills, and to leave undone all the
evil things which are against God. And it is impossible for him to leave
a thing undone which God wants to have accomplished. As it would be
impossible for one to walk whose legs are bound, so it would be
impossible for one to do ill who is in God's will.” Furthermore Eckhart
expressly protests against an interpretation which would see in his view
a license for anything the individual might want. It is just in this that
one recognizes the seeing man, that he no longer wants anything as an
individual. “Some men say: If I have God and God's freedom, then I can
do everything I want. They understand these words amiss. As long as
you can do anything which is against God and His commandment, you
do not have God's love; you can only deceive the world into the belief
that you have it.” Eckhart is convinced that for the soul which goes
down into its depths, in these depths a perfect morality will appear,
that there all logical understanding and all action in the ordinary sense
have an end, and that there an entirely new order of human life begins.
“For everything the understanding can grasp, and everything desire
demands, is not God. Where understanding and desire have an end,
there it is dark, there does God shine. There that power unfolds in the
soul which is wider than the wide heavens . . . The bliss of the righteous
and God's bliss is one bliss; for then are the righteous blissful, when
God is blissful.”
The Friendship with God
Almost two and a half centuries have passed since Angelus Silesius
gathered together the profound wisdom of his precursors in his
Cherubinic Wanderer. These centuries have brought rich insights into
nature. Goethe opened a great perspective into natural science. He
sought to pursue the eternal, iron laws of nature's action up to that
peak where they bring forth man with the same inevitability with
which, on a lower level, they produce a stone (cf. my book, Goethes
Weltanschauung, Goethe's Conception of the World). Lamarck,
Darwin, Haeckel and others have continued to work in the spirit of
this way of thinking. The “question of all questions,” that concerning
the natural origin of man, was answered in the nineteenth century.
Other problems in the realm of natural processes connected with this
question, have been solved. Today one knows that one need not step
outside the realm of the factual and sensory in order to understand, in a
purely natural fashion, the sequence of beings in its development up to
man. — And the nature of the human “I” too has been illuminated by
the discernment of J. G. Fichte, which has shown the human soul
where it should seek itself and what it is (cf. above, and the section on
Fichte in my book, Welt-und Lebensanschauungen im neunzehnten
Jahrhundert, Conceptions of the World and of Life in the Nineteenth
Century, published in a new edition as Rätsel der Philosophie, Riddles
of Philosophy). Hegel has extended the domain of thought over all
fields of being, and has endeavored to grasp in thought the external,
sensory existence of nature as well as the highest creations of the
human spirit, together with the laws by which they are governed (cf. my
presentation of Hegel in Rätsel der Philosophie, v. 1) — How do the
spirits, whose thoughts have been traced in this work, appear in the
light of a conception of the world which takes into account the scientific
achievements of the periods succeeding theirs? They still believe in a
“supernatural” history of creation. How do their thoughts appear when
confronted by the “natural” one which the science of the nineteenth
century has developed? — This science has not given anything to nature
which does not belong to it; it has only taken from it what does not
belong to it. It has banished from it everything which is not to be
sought in it, but is to be found only within man. It no longer sees
something in nature that resembles the human soul and that acts in the
same way as man. It no longer lets the forms of organisms be created
by a manlike God; it traces their development in the world of the senses
in accordance with purely natural laws. Meister Eckhart as well as
Tauler, and Jacob Boehme as well as Angelus Silesius, would needs feel
the most profound satisfaction in the contemplation of this natural
science. The spirit in which they wished to regard the world has passed
in the fullest sense into this conception of nature when it is properly
understood. What they could not yet do, that is, to place the facts of
nature into that light which had arisen in them, would no doubt have
become their desire if this natural science had been accessible to them.
They could not do this, for no geology, no “natural history of creation”
told them of the processes of nature. The Bible alone, in its own way,
told them of such processes. Therefore, as well as they could, they
sought the spiritual where alone it is to be found: within the human
being. Today they would employ quite different resources than at their
time in order to show that, in a form accessible to the senses, the spirit
is only to be found in man. Today they would entirely agree with those
who seek the spirit as fact, not at the root of nature, but in its fruit.
They would admit that the spirit in the sensory body is the result of
development, and that such a spirit cannot be sought on lower levels of
development. They would understand that no “creative thought” was
active in the formation of the spirit in the organism, any more than
such a “creative thought” made the ape develop out of the marsupials.
— Our present time cannot speak about the facts of nature in the same
way as Jacob Boehme spoke about them. But today also there is a point
of view which brings the way of thinking of Jacob Boehme close to a
conception of the world that takes account of modern science. One
need not lose the spirit when one finds in nature only what is natural. It
is true that today there are many who think that one must slip into a
shallow, dry materialism if one accepts the “facts” discovered by natural
science without further ado. I myself stand completely upon the ground
of this natural science. I have the definite conviction that with a
conception of nature such as that of Ernst Haeckel, only he can become
shallow who approaches it with a world of ideas that is already shallow.
I feel something higher and more glorious when I let the revelations of
the “natural history of creation” act upon me than when I am
confronted with the stories of supernatural miracles of the Creed. I
know of nothing in any “holy” book that reveals to me anything as
sublime as the “dry” fact that, in the womb, every human fetus rapidly
goes through a succession of all those forms through which its animal
ancestors have evolved. Let us fill our mind with the magnificence of
the facts our senses perceive, and we shall care little for the “miracles”
which do not lie within the course of nature. If we experience the spirit
within ourselves we do not require one in external nature. In my
Philosophie der Freiheit I have described my conception of the
world, which does not think that it is driving out the spirit because it
regards nature in the same way as do Darwin and Haeckel. A plant, an
animal, do not gain anything for me if I people them with souls of
which my senses tell me nothing. I do not seek a “deeper,” “spiritual”
nature of things in the external world, I do not even assume it, because
I believe that the cognition which illuminates my inner self preserves
me from doing so. I believe that the things of the sensory world are
what they appear to us to be, for I see that a true self-knowledge leads
us to seek in nature nothing but natural processes. I seek no divine
spirit in nature, because I believe that I perceive the essence of the
human spirit in myself. I calmly acknowledge my animal ancestors,
because I believe I understand that where these animal ancestors have
their origin, no soul-like spirit can be active. I can only agree with
Ernst Haeckel when he prefers “the eternal stillness of the grave” to
such an immortality as many a religion teaches (cf. Haeckel's
Welträtsel, The Riddle of the Universe, p. 239). For I find a degradation
of the spirit, a repugnant sin against the spirit, in the conception of a
soul which continues to exist after the fashion of a sensory being. — I
hear a shrill dissonance when the facts of natural science in Haeckel's
presentation encounter the “piety” of the creeds of many
contemporaries. But in creeds which are in but poor harmony with
natural facts, there resounds for me nothing of the spirit of the higher
piety which I find in Jacob Boehme and Angelus Silesius. This higher
piety is rather in full harmony with the action of the natural. There is
no contradiction in becoming penetrated with the insights of modern
science and at the same time in entering upon the road which Jacob
Boehme and Angelus Silesius pursued in their search for the spirit. One
who enters upon this road in the spirit of these thinkers need not fear
that he will slip into shallow materialism if he lets the secrets of nature
be described to him by a “natural history of creation.” One who
interprets my ideas in this sense will understand in the same way as I
the last saying of the Cherubinic Wanderer, which shall also sound the
last note of this work: “Friend, it is enough now. If you wish to read
more, go and become yourself the writing and the essence.”
Addendum III. In a few words I hint here at the road to the cognition
of the spirit which I have described in my later writings, especially in
Wie erlangt man Erkenntnisse der höheren Welten, How does one
Attain Knowledge of the Higher Worlds, Umriss einer
Geheimwissenschaft, Outline of a Secret Science, Von Seelenrätseln,
Riddles of the Soul.
Preface to the First Edition, 1901