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TREASURES FROM
THE WRITINGS OF JACOB BOEHME (Jakob Boehme) |
|
1575-1624, |
Man In "The Restored Image" |

Jacob Boehme, "chosen servant of God," was born in Alt
Seidenburg, Germany, in 1575.
John Wesley, in his day, required all of his
preachers to study the writings of Jacob Boehme; and the learned theologian,
Willam Law, said of him: "Jacob Boehme was not a messenger of anything new
in religion, but the mystery of all that was old and true in religion and
nature, was opened up to him," — "the depth of the riches, both of
the wisdom and knowledge of God."
Born of poor,
but pious, Lutheran parents, from childhood, Jacob Boehme was concerned about
"the salvation of his soul." Although daily occupied, first as a
shepherd, and afterward as a shoemaker, he was always an earnest student of the
Holy Scriptures; but he could not understand "the ways of God," and
he became "perplexed, even to sadness, pressed out of measure." He
said: "I knew the Bible from beginning to end, but could find no
consolation in Holy Writ; and my spirit, as if moving in a great storm, arose
in God, carrying with it my whole heart, mind and will and wrestled with the love
and mercy of God, that his blessing might descend upon me, that my mind might
be illumined with his Holy Spirit, that I might understand his will and get rid
of my sorrow . . .
"I had
always thought much of how I might inherit the kingdom of
heaven; but finding in myself a powerful opposition, in the desires
that belong to the flesh and blood, I began a battle against my corrupted
nature; and with the aid of God, I made up my mind to overcome the inherited
evil will, . . . break it, and enter wholly into the love of God in Christ
Jesus . . . I sought the heart of Jesus Christ, the center of all truth; and I
resolved to regard myself as dead in my inherited form, until the Spirit of God
would take form in me, so that in and through him, I might conduct my life.
"I stood
in this resolution, fighting a battle with myself, until the light of the
Spirit, a light entirely foreign to my unruly nature, began to break through
the clouds. Then, after some further hard fights with the powers of darkness,
my spirit broke through the doors of hell, and penetrated even unto the
innermost essence of its newly born divinity where it was received with great
love, as a bridegroom welcomes his beloved bride.
"No word can express the great
joy and triumph I experienced, as of a life out of death, as of a resurrection
from the dead! . . . While in this state, as I was walking through a field of
flowers, in fifteen minutes, I saw through the mystery of creation, the
original of this world and of all creatures. . . . Then for seven days I was in
a continual state of ecstasy, surrounded by the light of the Spirit, which
immersed me in contemplation and happiness. I learned what God is, and what is
his will. . . . I did not know how this happened to me, but my heart admired
and praised the Lord for it!"
At the age of twenty-five, Boehme was
given another great illumination, in which the Lord let him see further into
"the heart of things, . . . the true nature of God and man, and the
relationship existing between them." Ten years later "the divine
order of nature" was opened up to him, and he was inspired to write what
the Lord had revealed to him.
From 1612 to
1624, he wrote thirty books, "My books are written" Boehme said
"only for those who desire to be sanctified and united to God, from whom
they came . . . Not through my understanding, but in my resignation in Christ .
. from him have I received knowledge of his mysteries. God dwells in
that which will resign itself up, with all its reason and skill, unto him .
. . I have prayed strongly that I might not write except for the glory of God
and the instruction and benefit for my brethren."
Jacob Boehme’s
persecutions and suffering began with the publication of his first book,
"Aurora," at the age of thirty-five. then not withstanding five years
of enforced silence, banishment from his home town, and an ecclesiastical trial
for heresy, his "interior wisdom" began to be recognized by the
nobility of Germany; but at this time, at the age of forty-nine, Boehme died, "happy,"
as he said, "in the midst of the heavenly music of the paradise of
God."
MAN IN "THE IMAGE OF THE HEAVENLY"
"O great
and holy God, I pray thee, set open my inwardness to me; that I may rightly
know what I am; and open in me what was shut up in Adam." . . . "God
stirred himself to produce creation . . . He was desirous of having children of
his own kind . . . Creation was an act of the free will of God; God unfolded
his eternal nature, and through his active love, or desire, he caused that
which heretofore had been in him merely as spirit (as an image contained in a
piece of wood before the artist has cut it out), to become substantial,
corporeal.
"God
longed after the visible substance of his similitude and image, and so created
man . . . Man was created the child of Omnipotency; a pure virgin, after the
form of the Eternal. . . . with a pure mind and holy faculties, in which dwelt
no lust. . . . His will was in God. He was to be a perfect symbol of God; to attain
the great fountain of meekness and love welling up from the heart of God. He
was a virgin without a feminine form, after the form of the Eternal; full of
love, modesty and purity, in the image of God. . .
"He had
both fire and light in him, and
therefore, love. . . No knowledge of any evil was in him; no lust, no
covetousness, no pride, no envy, no anger, nothing but love. . . . the
Celestial image clothed him with divine power. He could have removed mountains
with a word; he could rule over the sun, moon and stars; all was in his power,
the fire, the air, the water and the earth. Every living creature feared him.
His life fluid was heavenly. His will was in God, and God was in him. He was in
paradise, clothed with the heavenly glory. . . . the light of the majesty of
God. . . . He lived on paradisiacal fruit and the Word of God. . . . He knew no
woe, no sickness, no death; he lived in joy and delight, without toil or care.
"Man was
created free and responsible, with a will to move in whatever direction he
chose; to be nothing in himself, to be one with God; and in freedom to pass
into that state of the Son, to give all and to receive all from the Father, for
the glory and power of God; or — to enter and remain in the world of darkness.
For he was the son of God, and could have gone on into the manifestation of
God, and God’s deeds of wonder!
"Understand,
O man, what you were before the fall; created to live eternally in love! . . .
Know how sin arose, that you may lay hold of the remedy for it!
"God
created his image and likeness in a single man. Adam was a man and also a
woman; . . . for God did not, in the beginning make man and woman, he did not
create them at the same time, because the life in which the two properties of
masculine and feminine are united in one, constitutes man in the image of God,
. . . after the manner of the Father’s and the Son’s property, which together
are one God, not divided; for perfect love is not found in one property, but in
the two, one entering into the other.
"The
fire, and light (which is the meekness and love of God) was in Adam. The fire
of God is the root of all things, and the origin of life, the cause of all
strength and power. Lucifer took offense at the light, the humility of God, and
entered into the fierce might of the fire, for he would domineer . . . He turned
away from the will of the Eternal, for the fierce power of the fire delighted
him more that the meekness in the still habitation of God, and he became the
prince of this world. . . . He ever moves in a fire which consumes all else to
himself. . . . The devil’s fire desires a body to devour and turn to nothing,
to darkness.
"God’s
fire is coupled with love; his fire causes light; and light, love; light
desires substance, a body to fill, and does not consume; it takes away nothing,
but it quickens; . . . love gives itself freely to all. . . . The natural
comprehended not light. . . . Light changes the false imagination into the
truth . . . Fire alone makes a hard set self-hood . . . God moves in the light
of meekness, and hath a substance, water, ‘the water of life’, which holds fire
captive . . . ‘The water of life’ alone can make immortal bodies.
"Adam
could have generated a heavenly kingdom out of himself. . . . Eve was within
Adam as a pure, virginal power. He could then generate in a virginal state, and
procreate by means of his will, and out of his own substance, without pain or
laceration: . . . for one being could have been born of another, in the same
way as Adam in his virginal state, was projected into being, in the image of
God; because that which is of the Eternal, can also procreate, multiply itself,
according to the law of Eternity. In time there was to have been born the King
of all men, who was to take possession of God’s kingdom, as Ruler of all
created beings, in place of cast-out Lucifer, now prince of this world.
"Adam saw
within himself two forms of being, belonging to the paradisiacal world; and
then he saw one also without, belonging to this world; and his soul imagined
after the outward. . . . Then came the command to him, ‘Eat not of the mixed
fruit of good and evil, lest ye die’! But Adam continued to imagine after the
earthly dominion: . . . he imagined after the beasts and introduced himself
into bestial lust, to eat and to generate as beasts do. . . . He desired to
live in himself and be lord. . . . He thought he would eat both the
paradisiacal and the forbidden fruit and so live forever; . . . but he had
brought the earthly quality into the pure, celestial substance, and his light
was being extinguished; the divine image was disappearing, the earthly
appearing.
"He could
no longer live in obedience to the will of the Father; . . . his lust for the
earthly fruit overcame him, and he sank into a deep sleep; and God saw that is
was not possible for him to live in obedience, and let him sleep; sleep signify
death.
"So Adam
cast himself out from the majesty of God, with his own will; he could not
continue to walk in his innocence, that he might have his confirmation in the
divine way of production; for he had turned from ‘the speaking of the word’
into self-will, lust and ‘speaking good and evil’; and God’s good will perished
in him.
"God had
forbidden Adam his false desire, lust after earthly fruit and power and virtue;
and Adam had no necessity for these things; he had the paradisiacal fruit, the
Word of God, and no want or death. . . . His eyes, which might have continued
to see always and eternally, the glory of God, closed in sleep. . . . God
permitted Adam to sleep; otherwise, in the power of fire, in his selfishness,
he would have become a devil."
"O great
and holy God, I pray thee, set open my inwardness to me; that I may rightly
know what I am; and open in me what was shut up in Adam." . . .
"God
stirred himself to produce creation . . . He was desirous of having children of
his own kind . . . Creation was an act of the free will of God; God unfolded
his eternal nature, and through his active love, or desire, he caused that
which heretofore had been in him merely as spirit (as an image contained in a
piece of wood before the artist has cut it out), to become substantial,
corporeal.
"God
longed after the visible substance of his similitude and image, and so created
man . . . Man was created the child of Omnipotency; a pure virgin, after the form
of the Eternal. . . . with a pure mind and holy faculties, in which dwelt no
lust. . . . His will was in God. He was to be a perfect symbol of God; to attain
the great fountain of meekness and love welling up from the heart of God. He
was a virgin without a feminine form, after the form of the Eternal; full of
chastity, modesty and purity, in the image of God. . .
"He had
both fire and light in him, and therefore,
love. . . No knowledge of any evil was in him; no lust, no covetousness, no
pride, no envy, no anger, nothing but love. . . . the Celestial image clothed
him with divine power. He could have removed mountains with a word; he could
rule over the sun, moon and stars; all was in his power, the fire, the air, the
water and the earth. Every living creature feared him. His life fluid was
heavenly. His will was in God, and God was in him. He was in paradise, clothed
with the heavenly glory. . . . the light of the majesty of God. . . . He lived
on paradisiacal fruit and the Word of God. . . . He knew no woe, no sickness,
no death; he lived in joy and delight, without toil or care.
"Man was
created free and responsible, with a will to move in whatever direction he
chose; to be nothing in himself, to be one with God; and in freedom to pass
into that state of the Son, to give all and to receive all from the Father, for
the glory and power of God; or — to enter and remain in the world of darkness.
For he was the son of God, and could have gone on into the manifestation of
God, and God’s deeds of wonder!
"Understand,
O man, what thou wast before the fall; created to live eternally in love! . . .
Know how sin arose, that thou mayst lay hold of the remedy for it!
"God
created his image and likeness in a single man. Adam was a man and also a
woman; . . . for God did not, in the beginning make man and woman, he did not
create them at the same time, because the life in which the two properties of
masculine and feminine are united in one, constitutes man in the image of God,
. . . after the manner of the Father’s and the Son’s property, which together
are one God, not divided; for perfect love is not found in one property, but in
the two, one entering into the other.
"The
fire, and light (which is the meekness and love of God) was in Adam. The fire
of God is the root of all things, and the origin of life, the cause of all
strength and power. Lucifer took offense at the light, the humility of God, and
entered into the fierce might of the fire, for he would domineer . . . He
turned away from the will of the Eternal, for the fierce power of the fire
delighted him more that the meekness in the still habitation of God, and he
became the prince of this world. . . . He ever moveth in a fire which consumeth
all else to himself. . . . The devil’s fire desires a body to devour and turn
to nothing, to darkness.
"God’s
fire is coupled with love; his fire causes light; and light, love; light
desireth substance, a body to fill, and does not consume; it takes away
nothing, but it quickens; . . . love giveth itself freely to all. . . . The
natural comprehendeth not light. . . . Light changeth the false imagination
into the truth . . . Fire alone makes a hard set self-hood . . . God moveth in
the light of meekness, and hath a substance, water, ‘the water of life’, which
holds fire captive . . . ‘The water of life’ alone can make immortal bodies.
"Adam
could have generated a heavenly kingdom out of himself. . . . Eve was within
Adam as a pure, chaste, virginal power. He could then generate in a virginal
state, and procreate by means of his will, and out of his own substance,
without pain or laceration: . . . for one being could have been born of
another, in the same way as Adam in his virginal state, was projected into
being, in the image of God; because that which is of the Eternal, can also
procreate, multiply itself, according to the law of Eternity. In time there was
to have been born the King of all men, who was to take possession of God’s
kingdom, as Ruler of all created beings, in place of cast-out Lucifer, now
prince of this world.
"Adam saw
within himself two forms of being, belonging to the paradisiacal world; and
then he saw one also without, belonging to this world; and his soul imagined
after the outward. . . . Then came the command to him, ‘Eat not of the mixed
fruit of good and evil, lest ye die’! But Adam continued to imagine after the
earthly dominion: . . . he imagined after the beasts and introduced himself
into bestial lust, to eat and to generate as beasts do. . . . He desired to
live in himself and be lord. . . . He thought he would eat both the
paradisiacal and the forbidden fruit and so live forever; . . . but he had
brought the earthly quality into the pure, celestial substance, and his light
was being extinguished; the divine image was disappearing, the earthly
appearing.
"He could
no longer live in obedience to the will of the Father; . . . his lust for the
earthly fruit overcame him, and he sank into a deep sleep; and God saw that is
was not possible for him to live in obedience, and let him sleep; sleep signifieth
death.
"So Adam
cast himself out from the majesty of God, with his own will; he could not
continue to walk in his innocency, that he might have his confirmation in the
divine way of production; for he had turned from ‘the speaking of the word’ into
self-will, lust and ‘speaking good and evil’; and God’s good will perished in
him.
"God had
forbidden Adam his false desire, lust after earthly fruit and power and virtue;
and Adam had no necessity for these things; he had the paradisiacal fruit, the
Word of God, and no want or death. . . . His eyes, which might have continued
to see always and eternally, the glory of God, closed in sleep. . . . God
permitted Adam to sleep; otherwise, in the power of fire, in his selfishness,
he would have become a devil."
"Adam
was given that which he would have, . . . the terrestrial woman, in place of
the celestial virgin; for Adam’s treachery toward his heavenly consort,
disqualified him for her, and left him only fitted for an ‘Eve’! During his
sleep, the woman was made out of Adam, and the image of God was destroyed. . .
. The man and the woman were made into creatures of this outer world, fashioned
into mortality.
"Adam
and Eve had still a paradisiacal consciousness, but mixed with terrestrial
desire. They were ‘naked’ although ‘not ashamed’ until they had eaten of the
earthly fruit, . . . Adam went out from the will of God into the world, and was
captivated by it, and ate of earthly fruit. Then the spirit of this world took
his soul captive, and his faculties became earthly, his substance bestial.
"After
eating of the tree of self-knowledge, of good and evil, . . . by willing
otherwise than God willed, . . . . man became unholy; . . . .he died to the
holy, heavenly image, and lived in the awakened bestial image of the serpent. .
. . The animal being had swallowed up the celestial state, and Adam and Eve
then had common flesh, hard bones, bestial members, and needed bestial
clothing.
"Man
was now separated from God. . . . Lusting after the earthly, the holy anointing
oil, given of Christ, was dried up; he became shut up in a gross, bestial
image, for his flesh now belonged to the earth and to death; the dominion of
this world now dwelt in him.
"The
desire of a beast is only to nourish itself and to multiply
itself. It hath no understanding of any higher thing. It hath its own spirit,
whereby it liveth and groweth and consumeth itself. . . If God had intended
that man should live as the beasts, he would have created him in the similitude
of, and with the beasts. . . If he had created him for this earthly, miserable,
naked, toilsome, corruptible, animal life, he would have made men and women
from the start; and both sexes would have come forth in the ‘spoken word,’ into
the division of both properites, as it was in other earthly creatures.
"Lust
originated in Adam, but thereupon his perverted desire began to be excited in
the woman. . . .Eve was then moved by her lust, which the devil awakened in her,
and desiring to be skillful, she became foolish. . . The serpent said to her,
‘Your eyes shall be opened, and you shall be as gods.’ It is true that her
earthly eyes were opened, but her spiritual eyes became closed; with earthly
eyes, man cannot see the kingdom of God.
"When
Adam took notice of his bestial form, he was ashamed, and God said; ‘Adam,
where art thou’? His body did hide itself, so ashamed was his poor soul and he
said, ‘I was afraid; I was naked, and hid myself’. The precious heavenly virgin,
with which he was clothed, was lost; his crystalline image was destroyed.
"After
the fall, man was subject to the limitations of time, and was degraded to the
animal state of being, so that heaven, paradise and divinity became a mystery
to him. . . . God cursed the earth for man’s sake, and no paradisiacal fruit
grew any more; all was gone, save only the mercy and the grace of God! . . .
After the fall, men lived in weakness, as today. They begat children in two
kingdoms of wrath and love, evil and good, Cain and Abel, Ishmael and Isaac,
Esau and Jacob.
"When
man fell, the paradise of all heavenly knowledge withdrew, and wisdom was in
grief, until God gave the promise of the seed of the woman."
"All the
teachings of Christ have no other object than to show us how we may re-ascend
to our virginal unity with him . . . . There is ever a strife
over man’s image; the devil and hell say, ‘It is mine, by right of nature; it
is generated out of my root.’ The spirit of this world says, ‘It is mine, I
give it life, nourishment, and bring it up, and give to it my power and
wonders.’ The kingdom of God says, ‘I have set my heart upon it; I have
regenerated it; I sought and found it; it is mine. It is now in my kingdom, and
it must reveal my wonders!’ And the poor soul of man is in continual warfare.
"O man,
when the devil seeks to hinder thee, set thyself against him; oppose him
strongly! Thou hast, in Christ, far greater power than he! Take all thy sins
and throw them at the devil, and say, ‘Thou art the cause of them all! I take
the mercy of God, the death of Christ, to myself! Therein will I roll myself’ .
. . For the last Adam was the Offering and the Liberator to set thee free!
"Cease to
please thyself, and keep from thy natural will, then wilt thou fall into the
will of God; and then the devil cannot meddle with thee! Man’s own will brought
him to his own center, separated from God. . . . Man began in the Word of God,
but broke off from it; he must come back and be regenerated, to become as he
was made originally, inbreathed by God.
"The
heavenly image, lost in Adam, the lightlife of Christ, has been the birth-right
of man ever since the ‘treader down’ of the serpent of self-will was promised.
. . . Christ restores this image through regeneration, by which man re-enters
into the one Tree, Christ. . . . This divine fire of the Spirit of
Christ continually crushes the head of the serpent, i.e. the desire of the
flesh, beneath his feet. . . . for the devil ever holdeth before the soul the
unclean forbidden tree; for he would have inward dominion in man. . . . When
man yieldeth himself wholly to God, his will falls again into the unsearchable
will of God.
"Such a
man as Adam was before his Eve, shall arise again, and enter into, and
eternally possess paradise. . . . Man will enter again into the ‘speaking Word’
and speak with God!
"The
image of God is the fair virgin, which substantiated by the regenerate life,
restores to man the wife of his youth (Mal.2:14), the divine womanhood of
Adam’s two-fold perfection. This image, shut up in Adam, could only be stirred
by the power of God . . . . That it might again appear, God manifested himself
in Christ. . . . The eternal virginity, lost by Adam, came unto Mary by the
Word of life. The fire of divine love in her being, in the virginal essence,
(corrupted in Adam, and now restored), brought to birth that ‘Holy Thing’, the
Son of God. . . . And Christ in man makes man alive; restores again that which
the devil severed in the first Adam(into the male and female), making them one
again — a virginal manhood — a son of God.
"Christ,
the divine spiritual Sun of Righteousness, enters again into the original
matrix, out of which the life of man has taken its origin, — the eternal Word.
. . . The hungry soul absorbs the Word, and then returns to the original
spiritual state, and becomes a temple of divine love, wherein the Father
receives his beloved Son; and in which the Holy Spirit dwells . . . The
creature is not God; it remaineth eternally under God; but God blazeth through
it with his love-fire, his light and shining; and that shining, man retaineth
as long as his will remaineth in God’s light. . . .Where the will is, there is
the heart also.
"As
Christ was born in a stable, and cradled in a manger, so is Christ in man ever
born amidst the animals in man. The new-born Savior is ever laid in a
cradle between the ox of self-will and the ass of ignorance, in the stable of
the animal condition in man; and from thence the king of pride (as Herod),
finds his kingdom endangered, and seeks to kill the child, who is to become the
ruler of the ‘New Jerusalem’ in man.
"O man, take
heed of pride; the devil fleeth into it! . . .Take heed of covetousness! The
covetous man is the greatest fool upon earth; he gathers that which he must
leave to others, and gains only an evil conscience and treasures in hell! But
he that trusteth God hath continually enough; he gets a new body, which neither
hunger, cold, nor heat, can affect; he hath a conscience at rest, and will
eternally rejoice in his treasure he has laid up in heaven! . . . Take heed of
anger; that is the devil’s sword, with which he commits all murders. If the
soul is given to lust, pleasure and dominion of this world, the devil doth not
sift it so strongly; he carrieth it in his triumphant chariot!. . . .Take heed
of the perfect pattern God has given, of what man should and must be, — Jesus!
. . . And pray for the illumination of the Holy Spirit; resolve not to let him
go, until he bless thee!
"The Holy
Spirit, the moving power of God, the former of his Word, which expresseth the
will of God, the heart of God, openeth the heart of man to the virtues of God’s
Word. . . . Then the animal within must die! One cannot remain an animal and
become divine. . . . When the soul is freed from the evil beast
then it is open to Christ, and his divine love-fire. . . . God’s Son is love
and light and life; for man to pass from fire to light, there is only one way,
through death.
"Man must
cease to act by his false imagination; he must put it to death—into
the hiddenness; nail it to the cross of Christ, and there, through lack of
indulgence, nourishment, it dies; and then comes the ‘new-birth’,— light,
liberty and love! . . . By the power of the light and love of Christ, man
overcomes the fire of self-will, and re-establishes his soul in the divine
image of God. . . . Then must he keep his imagination fixed in the love of God;
for all outside is darkness.
"The two
kingdoms of fire and light, — wrath and love, part at the cross. On the cross
the Son of God redeemed the soul unto the heavenly image, the Word, the eternal
body of christ, which is heavenly. . . . In Christ the divine kingdom standeth
open, and every one that will, may enter in; whosoever puts his will away from
himself, and puts it into Christ, . . . when that soul is born of the Word and
the Spirit of Christ, then the inward body of the soul becometh a new creation
in Christ; . . . God and this inward man become one. . . .Mortification
of self-will and the recipiency of grace, is all a human can do to work out his
own salvation.
"The
going on ‘to perfection’, includes both an increase of knowledge, and the
greatest holiness of life. . . . Sin must be brought into the judgment of God,
and the holy love fire of God must consume it. When the will is converted, the
soul enters into such sorrow for earthly iniquity that it will have nothing of
iniquity any more.
"The
regenerated, new-born soul in Christ has not only a new spirit, but is a new
creation, with an everlasting (spiritual) body. . . . . He is not of this
world; he is a stranger to this world, with no understanding of it. . . . He is
in the paradise of God, and desires nothing else but that which Christ within
his soul desires. . . . This soul must die to letters, reason, scholarship and
knowledge, to enter into the only one true life — Jesus! . . . For hard
thoughts, high fancies and conceits are not necessary, but the love and mercy
of God — to be one with him. . . . This soul must keep plunged in the humility,
love and patience of God; . . . go every hour out of death, and into life!
"He must
learn how to go out of discussion and vanity; . . . break the power of the
selfish will, which no man can do by his own human power. . . . He must give up
his self-will as dead, that he may be submerged in the love of God. . . To
every self-centered desire this soul must die; for all that doth vex and plague
is the self-hood. . . . In all the world there is no such cruel beast as
that which is in the heart of every man and woman, — self-love!
"What
hinders men from seeing and hearing God, is their own hearing, seeing and
willing; by their own wills they separate themselves from the will of God. They
see and hear within their own desires, which obstructs them from seeing and
hearing God. Terrestrial and material things overshadow them, and they cannot
see beyond their own human nature. If they would be still, desist from thinking
and feeling with their own self-hood, subdue the self-will, enter into a state
of resignation, into a divine union with Christ, who sees God, and hears God,
and speaks with him, who knows the word and will of God; then would the eternal
hearing seeing and speaking become revealed to them.
"Self-will
cannot comprehend anything of God. It is not in God, but external to him. If we
live in Christ, the Spirit of Christ will see through us, and in us. We will
see and know what Christ desires.
"Christ
dwelling in the soul, causes his light to become a holy substance, a spiritual
body, a true temple, in which the Holy Spirit dwells. . . . Self-hood hath not
true substance, in which light can be steadfast. It desireth not God’s
meekness.
"In
meekness and lowliness consisteth the kingdom of heaven. . . God’s substance is
humility. He who came to rescue us from the evil power, described himself as
‘meek and lowly’; and he could announce, when quit of coarse flesh and blood
disguise, that to him was given ‘all power in heaven and in earth’. . . The
mysteries of God are revealed to the meek. Let the soul lose no time in trying
to clothe itself with humility. . . .Humility is the throne of love; unless
this throne is firmly established, love is quickly deposed by every spasm of
self-will. . . .It is more blessed to continue under the cross of
Christ, in patience and meekness, than to bring down ‘fire from heaven’!
. . . There is no contention in Christ, but love and humility.
"The flowers
of the earth do not grudge at one another, though one be more beautiful and
fuller of virtue than another, but they stand humbly, kindly, one by another,
and enjoy one another’s virtue; so we all please God, if we give up ourselves
into his will; if we all stand humbly in his field.
"Our
trance of selfishness must end, for we are all being organized, by the one only
life, in the one body. In the body of Christ, self-seeking is a
monstrosity! . . . The whole body must be ‘fitly joined together and compacted
by that which every joint (or joining) supplieth, . . . unto the edifying of
itself in love.’ The second manifestation of Christ to his people will be in
their bodies. . . . Our Lord hath need of each one in his great, mystical body;
and they must all be one in him, the Anointed.
"There is
a life, this world comprehendeth it not; . . . it hath no fire to consume, but
a mighty fire in light and love and joy; a fire of brightness and majesty, no pain
therein. . . . It hath a body without defect, want, misery, anger, death or
devil. . . . The Holy Spirit is its air and spirit; it is filled with love and
joy. . . . This life has been from eternity. . . uprising and blossoming! . . .
. It is not of this earth, but substantial, — the eternal life! . . . and all
who have received this life, at the end of the age, will be presented pure and
without blemish, . . . one body in Christ!
"In the
time of the end, the time of the Lily, these writings will be sought as
serviceable . . . to all such who are shooting forth into the fair Lily in the
kingdom of God, who are in the process of birth, are these lines written; that
each one may be strengthened, and bud in the life of God, and grow, and bear
fruit in the Tree of paradise; . . . that each branch and twig in this fair
Tree may contribute, help and shelter all the other branches and twigs, that
this Tree may become a great Tree! . . . Then shall we all rejoice, one with
another, with ‘joy unspeakable and full of glory’!"