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Astrology Theologised
(1553-1588)
A TREATISE UPON THE INFLUENCE OF THE STARS ON MAN AND ON THE ART OF RULING THEM BY THE LAW OF GRACE:
As also
That the Outward Man, how eminent soever in all Natural and Political Sciences, is to be denied, and die in us; and, that the Inward Man by the Light of Grace, through profession and practice of a holy life, is to be acknowledged and live in us: Which is the only means to keep the true Sabbath in inward Holiness, and free from outward Pollution.
By
London, (Reprinted from the Original of 1649 in 1886.)
What Astrology is, and
what Theology;
THE Kingdom of Nature.
— Astrology is Philosophy itself, or it is the whole light of Nature, from
whence ariseth the universal natural Wisdom, or a solid, sincere, and
exquisite knowledge of natural things: which light of Nature is twofold,
external and internal: external in the Macrocosm, internal in the
Microcosm. Or, Astrology is the very knowledge of good and evil, which is,
and bears rule in Things subject to Nature; which Science flourishing in
man, unless it be ruled and governed by Theology, that is Divine Wisdom,
as the handmaid by her mistress, is vicious. And by her specious
appearance and concupiscible jocundity, Man seduceth himself and, as it
were by eating of the forbidden tree, or by whoring with the Creatures, he
maketh his soul the Babylonian Harlot sitting upon the Beast, having seven
heads and ten horns, and being sweetly deceived of himself, obtains
eternal Death to himself.
THE Kingdom of Grace.
— But Theology is the whole light of Grace happening to man from the Holy
Spirit effused from above, which is the universal Wisdom of the Kingdom of
Heaven, and the saving knowledge of divine and supernatural things, making
chaste and purging the soul from every defilement of sin abiding in the
mortal body in respect whereof that natural Wisdom is but a shadow, which,
when the world is blotted out and removed, will together with it be
blotted out and removed, and then Theology alone shall reign.
Astrology is so called because it ariseth from the stars;
as Theology is so called because it flows from God. To live astrologically
is, with a pleasing concupiscence, to eat of the Tree of the knowledge of
good and evil, and to bring death to himself. To live theologically is to
eat of the wood and Tree of Life by an intimate abnegation of oneself, and
thence to attain to oneself, Life and Salvation.
The Light of Nature in Astrology, with its incitative
fruits, is the probatory instrument whereby Man, placed in the midst, that
is, between God and the Creature, is proved which way he would direct or
convert his free will, desire, love and appetite; whether to God his
Creator, by loving Him above all things, with his whole heart, with his
whole mind, with his whole soul, and with his whole strength; which should
be the Theological life. Or, whether, casting God behind, he would reflect
to himself and to the Creature by love of himself, and arrogating of good
things received, which was the Astrological Life at the Babylonish
fornication, as will appear by that which followeth.
Astrology possesseth our soul with the eternal body,
wherein the Light of Nature dwells and shines forth, in some more
excellently, in others less. And it contains in itself two things.
1st. All kind of Sciences, Arts, Tongues, Faculties, and
natural Studies: all the Gifts, as well of the mind, as of the body, and
also all Negotiations, Occupations, Actions, and Labours of Men, how many
soever of them are found, exercised and used in all times upon the whole
Earth, everywhere amongst men, as well gross as subtle, as well old as
new, serving as well to good as to bad uses.
2nd. Under Astrology, are referred all Orders, States, and
Degrees of men, Distinctions of Persons, Dignities, Gifts, Offices, and
every Kind of Life as well naturally ordained by God Himself, as thought
of and invented by human wit, and found out in the whole world from the
highest and most honourable to the lowest and most base.
All these are the fruits of the Stars, and have their
original from Astrology, and pertain to the body and soul, and may be as
well good as bad, according to the divers pleasures of the users and
abusers.
But Theology possesseth our Spirit, which we have from
God, which alone is Theologus, that is the Speech of God, the
Breath of God, the Word of God, being and inhabiting in the Temple of our
heart, from which alone according to sacred letters, true Theology is to
be drawn forth; that is, the knowledge of God, of things divine and
celestial and supernatural, arising from within, from the illumination of
the holy Spirit Itself dwelling within us. According to Whose beck, will
and command we ought to institute, direct and finish all our Sciences,
Arts, Studies, Actions, Offices, Vocations, Industries, Labours and Kinds
of Life, invented and drawn forth on Earth from the Light of Nature; so as
whatsoever we think, say or do in the World, in all Arts, Sciences and
Labours, it all proceeds from the Will of God, and seems, as it were, to
be done and governed by God Himself in us, as by His fit instruments.
For every astrological gift, coming from the Light of
Nature ought to be ruled and subjected. to the Divine Will by the
Theological Spirit dwelling in us, that so the Will of the Lord be done,
as in Heaven, so also in earth. For all Wisdom, both Natural and
Supernatural, is from the Lord.
Astrology is the Science of Tilling and Perlustrating
(PURIFYING or CLARIFYING) of the inferior terrestrial earth, ground,
garden, Paradise, from which man was taken and made, as to his body and
his soul, in the labour and culture whereof six days were
ordained and appointed. But because this science of itself confers not
salvation and eternal beatitude, but alone belongs to this present life;
it is necessary the Lady and Mistress of all Sciences and Arts — Theology
— be added, which seeing it is Wisdom from above, it hath in itself the
science of tilling and perlustrating the celestial earth, ground, garden,
Paradise, from whence also man was taken, created according to the
similitude and image of God, which garden man also hath in himself, to the
culture whereof, the seventh Day alone, which is the Sabbath day,
is appointed.
For so it was ordained between God and man from all
eternity, that Man should be God, and God, Man, neither without the other;
that is, as God Himself is, and will be, the Paradise, garden, tabernacle,
mansion, house, temple, and Jerusalem of man, so also was Man created for
the same end, that he should be the Paradise, garden, tabernacle, mansion,
house, temple, and Jerusalem of God; that by this mutual union and
friendship of God with Man, and of Man with God, all the wisdom, power,
virtue and glory eternally hidden in God should be opened and multiplied.
For, God once made all things for Man, but Man for Himself.
Concerning the Subject of Astrology.
THE study of Astrology or Philosophy is conversant about
the universal knowledge of all the wonderful and secret things of God,
infused and put into natural things from above in the first Creation.
The exercise therefore of the Light of Nature is the most
sagacious perscrutation (INTENSE SCRUTINY) and enucleation (TO PEEL OUT or
EXTRACT) of the abstruse, internal and invisible virtues, lying hid in
external, corporal and visible things; to wit,
What should be the first matter of this great world
whereof it was made.
What the Elements should be, and those things which are
bred of the Elements, and consist in them; of what kind is their creation,
essence, nature, propriety and operation as well within as without.
What might be in the stars of heaven, what their
operation.
What in volatiles, what in fishes, metals, minerals, gems;
what in every species of sprigs and vegetables.
What in animals, beasts, creeping things, and in the whole
frame of the world.
Lastly, what is in Man, who was made and created of all
these; to wit,
What is that mass, or slime, or dust whereof the body of
the first man was formed, and whence he received his soul, and what it is;
and whence he hath the Spirit, and what he is: And so the Light of Nature,
or Astrology comprehends in itself all the wisdom and knowledge of the
whole universe; that is, all these are hid and learned in the School of
the Light of Nature, and are referred to as Astrology, or are rather
Astrology itself; to wit,
The Subject of Astrology is therefore double; the
Macrocosm and the Microcosm, the greater world and the lesser world.
The greater world is this very frame and great House, or
this huge Tabernacle wherein we inhabit and live; and it consists of the
four elements, Fire, Air, Water and Earth; and is twofold, visible
according to the body, invisible according to the soul or spirit.
The lesser world is Man, the offspring or sum of the
greater world, extracted and composed out of the whole greater world, who
also in himself is twofold, visible according to the body, invisible
according to the soul or spirit.
And as Man is made of nothing else but the world, so also
is he placed and put nowhere else but within the world, to wit, that he
might live, dwell, and walk therein, yet so as that he should take heed of
that subtle Serpent, and should not eat of the Tree of the knowledge of
good and evil, lest he die; that is, that he serve not the soul of the
world, and creatures subject to vanity: but as a wise man rule the stars,
and resist the devil tempting him, by the concupiscence of the flesh, of
the eyes and pride of life; and suppress sinful nature, living and walking
in wisdom and simplicity of the Divine Godhead inspired into him, not in
the Subtlety of the Serpent by arrogancy and love of himself.
For it is most certain, of what anything is born and
procreated, from thence also it seeks, desires and receives its
nourishment, convenient to its essence and nature, for the sustentation of
itself.
Now Man was taken from, and composed of the Macrocosm, and
placed in the same: Therefore also necessarily he is nourished, cherished,
receives his meat and drink, is clothed and sustained according to that.
(Gen. iii, 19. Thou art taken from the earth, and thou shalt eat thereof
in labour all the days of thy life, and shalt eat the herbs of the field
until thou shalt return unto the earth, for from it thou art taken.)
Seeing therefore, Man, as to his body, is composed of the
elements, and as to his soul, of the stars, and each part is fed and
sustained from that from which it was taken; the food or aliment of the
body, whereby the body grows to a due stature, comes to a man from the
elements, the earth, the water, air and fire; not that man should take to
himself for food the crude bodies of the elements, but the fruits growing
from the elements: they are for nutriment. But the food of the soul
inhabiting in the Microcosmical body, are all kinds of sciences, arts,
faculties, and industries, with which she tincts and makes herself
perfect.
Moreover; all aliment passeth into the substance of the
user, and is made the same that he himself is; that is, whatsoever a man
eats and drinks, the same thing is essentially transmitted into the
substance, nature, propriety and form of man, by the digestion of
Archeus in the ventricle (STOMACH). I say, the food passeth and is
converted into the nature of the eater, and drink into the substance of
the drinker, and is made one and the same with him.
And in the first place, let these things be understood
concerning the body without wonder: because man is made of that which he
eats and drinks. So also whatsoever a man learns, studies, knows in things
that are placed without himself, that knowledge and intelligence passeth
into the very essence, nature and propriety of a man, and is made one with
him.
The Light of Nature is made man in man, and by a man's
diligent searching, man is made light both in light and by light; and by
the benefit of that light, he finds out all things, whatsoever he seeks
and desires; but one more and another less, because all do not seek with
the like study.
Every knowledge, science, art, industry and faculty
passeth into the nature of man, penetrates him, occupies him, possesseth
him, tincts him, is agglutinated to him, united with him, and perfected in
him, and he in it. For, whatsoever kind of aliment man useth, and
whatsoever he endeavours to study, inquire, know and understand, this is
not strange or different from his essence and nature.
The reason is, because whatsoever is without a man, the
same is also within him, for that man is made of all these Things which
are without him, that is, of the whole universe of things.
Therefore whatsoever man takes from without from the
elements and stars by meat, drink, knowledge, study and intelligence, this
is the same that man is, and is made the same with man. So man eating
bread, and drinking water, wine, etc., from the Macrocosm, he eats and
drinks himself; and learning — arts, tongues, faculties, and sciences of
external things, he learns and knows himself.
And as he tincts his body by meat and drink, which pass
into the substance of flesh and blood, so also his soul is tincted with
whatsoever kind of sciences, arts, etc., eating and drinking, he is united
essentially with that which he eats and drinks. And learning and knowing,
he is united essentially with that which he studies, learns and knows.
Wherefore this is a most certain rule; — Whatsoever is without us, is
also within us. Which in this place, we, philosophizing of the soul
and body, do thus declare.
This whole world visible as to the body, invisible as to
its soul, is without us. From this we are all essentially in and with the
first man complicitly made and created, and incontinently after the
creation, were put and placed into it. And seeing it is manifest that
everything that is derived, retains the essence, nature and propriety of
its original; that although the Macrocosm is without us, yet nevertheless
it may also be found truly within us; I say the World is in us, and we are
in it, and yet this is, as that is without us, and we without that. For
indeed we have no existence or original from anything else, but from that
which is without us, and which was before us; nor are we, nor do we
inhabit, walk and live in anything else, save in that whereof we are made.
Neither do we seek and draw forth meat and drink from any other, either
for the body or the soul, but from that into which we are placed, and
which is placed in us.
As to the Spirit, we are of God, move in God, and live in
God, and are nourished of God. Hence God is in us and we are in God; God
hath put and placed Himself in us, and we are put and placed in God.
As to the Soul, we are from the Firmament and Stars, we
move and live therein, and are nourished thereof. Hence the firmament with
its astralic virtues and operations is in us, and we in it. The Firmament
is put and placed in us, and we are put and placed in the Firmament.
As to the Body, we are of the elements, we move and live
in them, and are nourished of them: — hence the elements are in us, and we
in them. The elements, by the slime (SOFT, MOIST EARTH), are put and
placed in us, and we are put and placed in them.
So God is whole without us, and also whole within us, by
the being of inspiration, that is, by His Spirit communicated to us.
So the World is whole without Adam, and also the whole
world is within Adam, by the being of extracted slime.
So Adam is whole without us, and also whole within us, by
the being of seed.
And so we bear God within us, and God bears us in Himself.
God hath us with Himself, and is nearer to us than we are to ourselves. We
have God everywhere with us, whether me know it, or know it not.
We bear the world in us, and the world bears us in itself.
Therefore whatsoever we perceive, feel, touch, taste, smell, hear, see,
imagine, think, speculate, learn, understand, savour, know, eat, and
drink, and wheresoever we walk, this is the very same from whence we have
drawn our original. We are always conversant in those things of which we
are made. For Man is the centre of the whole universe. So we learn nothing
else, but the very same thing that was before us, and whereof we are made,
and which before we begin to learn, lies hid in us. Yea, we learn, search
and know nothing else than our selves; to wit, learning,
searching and knowing that whereof we come, and whence we have received
our being. So we eat and drink nothing else but ourselves, to wit eating
and drinking that whereof we are made.
So our Body hath its hunger and thirst in itself from
within, and desires the perfection of itself, by meat and drink taken from
the elements from without.
See "Paracelsus" of the 'Lodestone of Nature in the
Macrocosm and Microcosm'— So the soul hath its
hunger and thirst in itself, and desires the perfection of itself, by meat
and drink from the stars, which is the wisdom and knowledge of natural
things; by arts, tongues, sciences, etc. Hence spring the artificers and
wise men of this world.
Moreover, as in meat and drink taken from the elements,
there is always pure and impure conjoined, which when they come into the
stomach to the fire of digestion, are by the internal Vulcan or Archeus of
Nature separated from one another after a spagirical (TO SEPARATE, THEN
REASSEMBLE) manner, and that which is pure is retained and abides in us,
that is the essence extracted from meat and drink, the pure is separated
from the impure which passeth into flesh and blood. For it penetrates the
body like unto leaven, and is made one with it, and causeth it to
increase, that it may become greater and more solid in its strength and
nerves; but the impure, differing from nutriment, is cast forth into the
draught, and that by the operation of Archeus labouring in the ventricle.
By like reason the matter is even in all sciences arising from the Light
of Nature, where always good and evil are joined together. For in Nature
all things are convertible, as well to good as to evil. Wherefore unless
Astrology be Theologized, that is, unless that which is good be retained,
and that which is evil rejected, Man from thence acquires to himself
eternal death. And this is the probation of Man.
Of the three parts of Man; Spirit, Soul and
Body, from whence every one is taken, and how one is in the other.
THE parts of the Universe, of which the whole man is made,
are three; — the World of Eternity, the Evial World, and the World of
Time. The parts of man are three, Spirit, Soul and Body; and these three
parts spring and are taken from these three parts of the whole Universe.
The Spirit of man comes from the Spirit of God, and
participates with Eternity and Ævo (AEvo).
The Soul in man is extracted from the soul of the World,
and participates with Ævo (AEvo) and Time.
The Body of Man is formed and composed from the body of
the World, as elements, and participates with Time only.
The Body extracted from the elements, and constituted into
this form, is the House, the Tabernacle, the seat of the Soul, and
resident chiefly in the heart.
The Soul of Man extracted from the Soul of the world, and
delivered over to the heart, is the habitation of the Divine Spirit, and
hath the Divine Spirit in itself.
So one exists in the other, and dwells in the other,
abides in the other, and operates in the other.
The Spirit in the Soul, and by the Soul.
The Soul in the Body, and by the Body.
The Body in and by external subjects.
Everything which is without is as that which is
within, but the internal always excels the
external in essence, virtue, and operation.
For by how much any thing is more inward, by so much
the more it is more noble, potent and capacious.
Great virtue is in the Body, if it be excited.
Greater in the Soul of the firmament, if it be excited.
Greatest in the Divine Spirit, if it be excited.
By excitation all things are laid open, which are hidden
and placed in Ignorance. For both Divine and Natural Wisdom sleep in us,
and each light shines in darkness, and without excitation, man wants the
having.
Great and excellent is the knowledge of the human body,
extracted from the elements, and disposed into this form.
Greater and more excellent is the knowledge of the Soul,
taken from the firmament, and inserted into the body.
Greatest and most excellent is the knowledge of the Spirit
inspired from the Mouth of God into the first man, and by the mysteries
of multiplication equally communicated to every one of us.
Wherefore is the knowledge of the human body great? By
reason of its wonderful composition, that is, because all the four
Elements are essentially composed in it. And moreover I say, the essence,
nature, and propriety of all the Creatures of the whole invisible
world which are in the earth, water, air and fire, are incorporated and
situate in man. But seeing all things generally are conjoined and included
into one skin, they are not altogether and at once discovered, nor can be
revealed, but at least come forth and are known in specie, as
they are drawn forth and excited.
Wherefore is the knowledge of the Soul which is in the
heart of Man greater? Because the whole firmament, with all the essences,
nature, virtue, propriety, inclination, operation and effect of all the
Stars is therein conjoined and complicated, so as there is nothing in the
whole power of the Spirit of the firmament or Soul of the World, which the
soul of man also hath not in himself, and in the exaltation of itself, can
give it of itself.
Yea, the whole Light of Nature is in the soul of the
Microcosm, which is the wisdom and power and vigour of all things of the
whole world throughout all the elements and things procreated of the
elements. For she is the Astrological Spirit, containing in herself all
kind of sciences, magic, Cabalistic, astronomic, with all their species,
chemistry, medicine, Physic, all arts, tongues, all workmanships and all
studies existent throughout the whole shop of Nature.
But because all these things are collected in one, and
generally comprehended in the soul, they do not all lie open, or can they
be in act together, although they are in power; but are let out and
produced one species after another.
Wheresoever, therefore, these kinds of divers sciences
flourish and are exercised amongst men, there shines the Light of Nature,
and the soul of the Microcosm is in her exaltation, that is, the firmament
of the Microcosm is in its ascendants.
But why is the knowledge of the Spirit of God greatest in
us? Because He from Whom we receive this Spirit is greatest and most
eminent above all. For in this same Spirit all the divine wisdom and power
from whence that saving knowledge flows forth, that is, Theology, treating
of supernatural, celestial and divine things, and is conversant in the
Magnalia and mysteries of God placed above Nature, and tends even to the
inexhausted and unspeakable profundity of the Deity, in which profundity,
the very original matter, cause and end of all the works of God, and of
things acted in time from the beginning of the creation even to the end of
the consummation of the world, eternally and essentially lay hid. For all
things came forth from Him; all things were made by Him, and all things
consist in Him.
By how much anything is most inward, by so much it is
more noble and excellent. This visible world
is a body compacted of fire, air, water and earth, which is without, and
hath in itself the spirit of Nature which is the soul of the world, which
is within, to which soul this external body belongeth; because it is
inhabited, possessed and governed by it. Hence the soul of the world is
more noble than the body.
This soul of the world hath in it the Spirit of God, which
comprehendeth and possesseth it. For nothing is beyond God or the Spirit
of God. Hence the Spirit is more noble than the soul. The more noble
always exists in the more ignoble, and internals prevail over externals,
as in essence as in power. So our external body is indeed great in
its stature and quantity, and a wonderful creature.
Yet the soul dwelling in the body is far greater, and more
wonderful, not in corporeal quantity, but in essence, virtue and power.
But the Spirit is the greatest of all, not in the lump or
corporeal quantity, but in essence, virtue and power; and therefore most
wonderful.
There is nothing greater than that in which are all
things. And there is nothing less than that which is in all smallest
things Therefore let us observe this rule well:
By how much anything is more inward and more hidden from
the external senses, by so much the more it is more worthy, noble and
potent in its essence, nature and propriety.
Which we will demonstrate by examples. There is not any
house built for itself, but for the inhabitant. Now the edifice is an
external thing, and the inhabitant an internal thing. The house is for the
guest, and not the guest for the house. Therefore the inhabitant is far
more noble, worthy and excellent in his essence than every edifice,
although sumptuous. For what is the house profitable, the guest being
absent?
So garments are made and prepared for the body, that it
might be and walk in them. Garments are external things; the body is
internal. Therefore the body in its essence is far more noble and worthy
than all garments, although precious. For, what need is there of garments,
if they are wanting that which should put them on? Therefore garments are
for the body, and not the body for garments.
So the body, raiment, house and habitation is a certain
external thing to the soul, but the soul is internal.
And the body is for the soul, and not the soul for the
body. Therefore the soul in her essence is a far more noble and worthy
creature than the body, although most comely and most excellently
proportioned. For, what availeth the body, the soul being wanting? It is
but a carcase.
So the Soul, made and created for an habitation of the
Divine Spirit, is external; but the Spirit is internal. And the soul is
for the Spirit, and not the Spirit for the soul. Therefore the Spirit of
God is found far more noble and excellent, and worthy in His original
essence, virtue, nature, power and propriety.
So God is and abides the most inward, chief, great,
potent, noble and worthy above all things; and contains all things in
Himself, and He Himself is contained of none.
Everything that is most Inward is most precious and
most noble. — Moreover, by how much
anything is more inward, by so much it is more nigh and near to us, but
also so much the harder to be found and known. Because of the too
much aversion and alienation of our soul from divine and heavenly things;
and by reason of the too much tenacity and adherency of our love to the
creatures of the world.
And on the contrary; — by how much anything is more
exterior, by so much the more it is remote from us, and by so much the
more strange. For example sake; — the Spirit of the Lord truly is and
inhabiteth in my soul, whose seat is in the captula of my heart: But,
seeing every inhabitant is within, and its habitation without, it
followeth; that the Spirit of the Lord is more near to me than I am to
myself. And so it most evidently appears; —That the Kingdom of God is not
to be sought without us, here or there, but within us; — witness Christ
himself who saith (Luke xvii), being asked of the Pharisees when the
kingdom of God should come: The kingdom of God shall not come with
observation; neither shall they say, lo here, or lo there; for behold the
kingdom of God is within you. And the Apostle Paul (Rom. xiv),
The kingdom of God is not meat and drink, but righteousness and peace, and
joy in the holy Spirit. For by these he which doth service to Christ
is accepted of God and approved by men.
The soul is and dwells in the heart, and the heart is in
my body, therefore the soul is more near to me than the body.
My body is clothed with garments: hence the body is nearer
to me than garments, and the soul nearer to me than the body: and the
Spirit nearer than the soul: and therefore more noble, more worthy, and of
more moment.
And because it is true, — that every internal is more
noble and more worthy than his external, in which it is and dwells; that
even all of us do witness, nilling or willing, knowing or not knowing. For
behold, if we are in danger of life by fire, by water, by pestilence, or
wars, etc., these being imminent upon us, then indeed in the first place,
we leave behind us all our edifices, as well sumptuous as vile, with our
external goods: and with a few things, if there be any we can carry with
us, we betake ourselves to flight; so that the body being clad, might be
preserved safe and unhurt, with the life and soul. By which very thing we
testify, that the internals are more desirable than externals. For who
would be so foolish that he would neglect, lose and destroy his body for
the retaining of his edifices and external goods, when, the body being
lost and destroyed, edifices and external goods are much more lost and
destroyed. Furthermore, danger pressing, and necessity and straights
urging us, and overwhelming us, with John the Disciple of Christ, we even
leave and cast off our garments, with which we are covered, and whatsoever
else is abounding to us of our substance, and naked and poor we commit
ourselves to flight, that the body only with the life and soul may be
preserved, and kept safe and sure. Do we not by this very thing point out
and show that internals are better and greater than externals? — seeing
that the body and life are internal, but vestments external. And who would
be of so perverse a mind that he should embrace vestments with greater
love than the body and life, and would in that mind persist in danger,
that he would retain and keep his garments although he were compelled to
lose and to destroy his body and life?
Moreover, in persecutions for the name of Christ, or for
the truth, putting our body and life in danger, we even leave these and
give them up to our enemies, to tyrants, etc., with patience, like the
Lamb of God, whom all sheep imitate, only that the soul may be kept
entire, strong, safe and uncorrupt, in the faith and knowledge of God and
truth. Do we not signify by this, that internals prevail over externals? —
because the soul is internal, the body external; and who would be of so
foolish a mind, that he had rather neglect and lose his soul, with faith
in God, and knowledge of the truth, only that he might keep his external
mortal body, and temporal life? For faith and the knowledge of the truth
being destroyed and lost, the body with the temporal life is of no moment.
Finally, in extreme torments, anguish and infernal dolours
(DISTRESS) of our conscience for sins committed, even with David we leave
and execrate (ABHOR) the very soul itself, and we bring to nought, and
empty ourselves of all the solace both of God and the creatures, and we
are left unto ourselves, crying out with the Son of God, "My God, my God,
why hast thou forsaken me?" So that God only, and alone, might be, and
remain in us, unhurt, unviolated, just and perfect in all things that He
doth with us, both sweet and bitter. So, by adverse things, we are always
reduced to internals, and make a regression to ourselves, and unto God
which is in us. Do we not therefore after this manner testify the truth of
this rule: — that every internal is more noble and more worthy than his
exterior?
Wherefore, seeing there is nothing in us so near and
intimate as God is, it follows that any other thing is not to be so
esteemed, sought and loved as God alone, Who hath put and hid in us, the
most excellent Treasure of His divine Wisdom, Light, Life, Truth, and
Virtue, taken from His own Self, and hath commanded to ask Him, seek, and
knock in the hidden place of our heart, in Spirit, and in Truth, having
given a testimony, that the kingdom of God, first of all, to be sought, is
not here or there without us, but is to be found most inward in us, as a
Treasure hid in a Field.
From all these things it clearly appears to me that God is
not at all more remote or nearer to me in this life whilst I am in this
world, and in this mortal body, than He will to me be in life eternal. But
I have and feel my God equally now present and intimate to me, even as I
shall have Him in the other world, in a new body. For He is in me and I in
Him, whether I am in a mortal body in this world, or without this body in
that world. This alone makes the difference, that this thing even hitherto
is hidden: but then it shall be manifest and open.
But that I am not so nigh and near to Him as He is to me,
this is not to be imputed to Him, but to my aversion, who do not
sabbathize in my God Who is with me, that is, who by running up and
down with my unquiet and vagabond soul through the creatures, am more
delighted to be and to be busied in my proper will out of my internal
Country; and I suffer that ever hissing Serpent to creep on to the
creatures in the multifarious concupiscence and delectation of the flesh,
of the eyes, and pride of life, or self-love: neither am I less frequent
in the various discourse of my thoughts, ever and anon, day and night,
ascending out of my heart, now desiring this, now that, speculating,
willing, nilling, now this, now that; where, moreover I weary and burden
myself with all kind of care, and vex myself with various affections. All
of which things are the Astrological operation and revolution of the
internal stars in our soul.
But if I could Theologize my Astrology, that is, if I
could desist sometimes from all these things, and study to be at rest in
my God Who dwells with me, that is, if I could accustom my mind to quiet
and spiritual tranquillity, that it should cease to wander in the variety
of thoughts, cares, and affections, that it might be at leisure from the
external things and creatures of this world, and chiefly from the love of
myself; that I might wholly die, and as it were be annihilated in my self,
that I could come into a loathing and oblivion, not alone of all the
things of the whole world placed without me, and of mundane friendship,
which I have with men, but also into a plenary dereliction of myself, that
is, of my will, of mine — if there be any — wisdom, knowledge, science,
art, industry, prudence; of mine — if there be any — dignity, praise,
honour, authority, estimation in the world amongst men; of mine — if there
be any — office, state, degree, order; and, in brief, into an absolute
forgetfulness of all my negotiations and occupations, and of myself as
well within as without, which is nothing else than to Theologize
Astrology.
Then, at length should I begin: more and more to see and
know the most present habitation of God in me, and so I should taste and
eat of the Tree of Life, which is in the midst of Paradise, which Paradise
I myself am, as a Guest with whom God is, and ought to be, and I
in like manner with God.
This, I say, should be the exercise of my soul, the
Theologization of Astrology, and a regression from Externals to Internals;
from Nature to Grace; from the Creature to God; from the friendship of the
world, to the friendship of God; from the tree of Death, to the Tree of
Life; from terrene things to Celestial.
So should I go again to my first original, from whence I
went forth, by arrogating to myself a liberty of willing, desiring,
coveting, thinking, speaking and doing what pleased me, God in the
meantime being neglected, without Whom I ought not to do any thing.
Whatsoever therefore we have from the Light of Nature, all
this with most humble self-denial once in the week is to be laid down at
the feet of the best and greatest God, whether it be magic, or cabalistic,
or astronomic, or chemic, or medicinal, or physical science. Also liberal
arts, and mechanic work, and whatsoever study, office, state, order,
dignity, kind of life, also wealth, riches, houses, and all kind of
natural gifts. All these appertain to this our Astrology, and ought so to
be Theologised, by the exercise of sanctifying the Sabbath, which is an
universal forgetfulness of all things and of ourselves, and the rest to
our soul from all disquiet, in a sacred silence, a cessation from all
will, thought, desire, affection, discourse, operation, etc., as well
within as without. And this is that only and principle cause of the
Sabbaths being divinely commanded to Man: —to wit,
To eat is to be delighted
in himself, and in the creatures, rather than in the Creator Himself.
To kiss himself in the gift received, neglecting the
Giver.
To love the world, and things which are in the world,
neglecting God.
To serve Mammon, neglecting God.
To use all things after his pleasure and will, despising
the Law of the Lord. Thou shalt not covet, thou shalt not eat, thou shalt
not desire to turn from God to the creatures; and to thyself; to commit
whoredom with the creatures; to depend on thyself and on things created:
to languish in love of terrene things, and temporal good things, setting
God aside; which may be described a thousand ways.
Hence the Doctrine of Christ, who came from above, and
brings celestial and divine wisdom from the Light of Grace, sounds
altogether contrary, to wit: —
That a man ought to be converted into a child, and to have
so much of the knowledge of good and evil to live in him, as he had when
he was but a child, or infant newly born.
I say the Doctrine of Christ commands a man to eat of the
Tree of Life, to live by the inspiration of the internal Godhead, which
is, —
To fall off again from the creatures, and from himself to
God.
To adhere to God, Mammon being left.
To be united with God, the love of the creatures being
left.
To believe in God, to offer and give up himself to God, to
pray - "Thy will be done."
To put off the old Man, and to put on the new Man.
To fly evil and adhere to good, which in like Sort may be
explicated by a thousand manners of speaking and phrases from the very
writings of the Apostles.
But in what manner all and singular kinds of sciences, and
natural gifts, and those vain studies, actions, businesses and differences
of men, etc., arise from the Light of Nature, or the Stars; and in what
order they are referred to the Seven Governors of the world and how a man
ought to use them; also how every one of us ought to Theologize his own
Astrology flourishing in himself, and to erect to himself a new Nativity,
from the heaven of the new Creature, and to institute and assume a new
kind of life; and chiefly, what is the solid and the most certain cause of
all the holy Sabbath, that is, after what manner a man ought to labour six
days and on the seventh day to sanctify the Sabbath rightly; — all these
things are most evidently set forth and propounded in the following
chapters of this book.
Of the composition of the Microcosm, that is
Man, from the Macrocosm, the great World.
ADAM, the first parent of the whole human kind, was
produced and formed by the admirable wisdom, and workmanship of God, as to
his Soul and body of the slime or dust of the earth; which slime or dust
was such a mass or matter, which had conjoined and composed in itself the
universal essence, nature, virtue and propriety of the whole greater
world, and of all things which were therein. I say that mass, slime or
dust, was a mere quintessence, extracted from every part, from the whole
frame of the whole world; from which slime or mass was made such a
creature, with its form excepted, being one and the same with the great
world, of which it was produced. Hence that creature was called Man, who
afterwards, his admirable creation and formation being revealed amongst
the wise, was wont most fitly to be called the Microcosm, that is, the
little, or less world.
The absolute description, and essential explication of
this slime, dust or mass, extracted from the whole macrocosm, we shall
find everywhere abundantly and wonderfully declared, alone by
Theophrastus Paracelsus in his most excellent writings.
Seeing therefore it is manifest, that every produced and
composed thing can take or assume its essence, nature and propriety from
nothing else but from that whereof it is made and produced; which even
that first Man, as another and later world, made of the former
world, by the Ens of that slime, is made partaker of the same
essence, nature and propriety, as the Macrocosm had in itself. For the
whole great world existing and being compact in that quintessence of
extracted slime, forthwith it followed that the whole Macrocosm was
complicitly collected and transposed into man, by divine formation, the
substance and nature of the Macrocosm remaining nevertheless safe and
entire. For such is the condition in the universal production and
generation of things, that every like, of itself produceth his like, and
that without destruction of its essence and nature.
John 3. That which is born of the Spirit is Spirit.
That which is born of the flesh is flesh. —
Hence that which hath its original and derivation from God, is the same
that God is, — the Spirit or breath of God which is in man immediately
proceeds from God: therefore God is of a truth in man by the Ens
of inspiration.
That which hath its original and derivation from the
world, is the same that the world is. The soul and body of man are
immediately taken, extracted, and composed of the world, therefore the
world is of a truth in man, by the Ens of slime.
So the first man, made of the Macrocosm, bears in himself
the Macrocosm, with the essence and nature of all creatures complicated,
collected, and compacted together: yet, nevertheless, he was formed as to
his body of the elements and things elementated; as to his soul, of the
soul of the Macrocosm, or the Spirit of Nature which contains and
comprehends in himself the whole Firmament, with all its stars, and
astralic virtues and operations. So it comes to pass that there is
nothing without a man in the whole heaven of Nature and in all the
elements, with which Man in his composition doth not participate, and is
endued with its nature.
But there are two things in which the Microcosm and the
Macrocosm differ, and appear to be contrary, to wit, — the form of the
person, and the complication of things.
As to the form, it seemed good to divine wisdom, to
convert that mass extracted from the Macrocosm, and to be converted into a
man, not to put and set it into the form of the Macrocosm, which is round
and circular; nor according to the animal form. But it pleased him to
erect and apply it to the form of His own Image and similitude; man
nevertheless, in the meantime, remaining the Microcosm.
Therefore, this difference does not touch his essence. The
form doth not take away the truth of the subject, that man may not be
believed to be the Microcosm. See, concerning this, the 'Foundation of
Wisdom' by Paracelsus.
As to the complication or composition of all natural
things into one body, or into one person, all things cannot be apparent
and distinctly known together in a man; one Thing after another, as it is
excited and provoked, is manifest and flourisheth in the species, other
things in the meantime remaining hidden in the Macrocosm; all things are
explicitly existing, living and operating in the species. But in the
Microcosm all things are compact and conjoined together.
Moreover, after that Man, the Microcosm was, and held all
things now in himself, out of which he was taken, behold the whole
plenitude of Nature, as well corporally as spiritually, was conjoined in
him, and as a most rich Treasure collected and laid up in one Centre, yet
so as Man should be all Things complicitly; and yet none of them all
explicitly.
Adam, Protoplastos. — And
from this Protoplast, or first formed Man and begetter of all (Adam,) even
in like manner are we constituted and formed: not of the same slime or
mass as that was in the beginning, whereof Adam was made; but by a mass
extracted from the substance of the Microcosm, which we, with Paracelsus,
call the Ens of seed, which seed hath and bears in itself
complicitly the whole Microcosm, that is, Man, and thence the human
offspring, as to the essence, nature and propriety, in all things alike
grows and comes forth to its begetter, as a most lively image, which truly
could not be done if all these things did not lie hid and extant in the
Ens of the seed. Hence every one of us hath the same in himself
essentially delivered over to himself by the Ens of the seed from
his parent, which the first Man received and had from the extracted
Macrocosm by the Ens of Slime, to wit — an elemental body from
the Elements, and a soul or Siderean Spirit from the Firmament.
That all kinds of Sciences, Studies, Actions
and Lives, flourishing amongst Men on the Earth and Sea do testify that
all Astrology, that is, natural wisdom with all its species, is and is to
be really found in every Man . And so all things, whatsoever men act on
earth, are produced, moved, governed, and acted from the inward heaven.
And what are the Stars which a wise man ought to rule.
IT is manifest therefore by the above-said, how man
appeareth to be made at length as to his creation and formation of slime,
that is, from the Macrocosm.
Because Man the Microcosm, placed in the Macrocosm,
agreeth altogether as well with the whole Firmament, as with all the
Elements, and is one and the same (his form only excepted) as we see
redness to be altogether one and the same in wine and with wine, and
whiteness in snow and with snow.
Then it followeth: — Seeing Man for himself and in himself
is the whole world, as he which hath his proper Heaven, his proper
Firmament, and Spirit of Nature, with the Sun, Moon, Planets, and all the
Stars with him in himself, of which — from within— is constellated,
inclined, directed, moves, excited, drawn, turned, governed, taught,
illuminated, made joyful, made sad, is fortunate, and affected ; — it is
manifest that he is in no wise forced and compelled by the external
Firmament of the Macrocosm, or Soul of the World, that he should assume
and take a mind and affections of willing, doing and operating this or
that, from without, from the revolution and inclination, or constellation
of the celestial stars in the Macrocosm.
For their opinion is of no moment, who, not rightly
knowing the Macrocosm, are fallen into that error that they doubt not to
determine that man, by the external influence of the stars, by a certain
natural necessity is conditioned, predestinated, constellated, directed,
compelled, and driven to this or that good or evil. Hence those false
proverbs, — " the stars incline "— " the stars rule men," — which is in no
sort so, if, according to their opinion, it be understood of the external
Stars.
But we must know that all things whatsoever that are done
by men, as well in soul as in body, arise and proceed from within,
from their own proper inclination and nature.
Within, I say, in Man, is that Heaven, that Planet, that
Sidus or Star, by which he is inclined, constituted, predestinated and
signed to this or that ; and not from without, by the constitution of the
external Heaven.
A wise man shall rule the stars.
— And that saying— "A wise man shall rule the Stars," is not to be
understood of the external stars, in the Heaven or Firmament of the great
world, but of the internal stars, bearing sway and running, up and down in
man himself; which will more and more appear by that which followeth. But
this we premise for the beginning to be noted: —
That the external Heaven with its continual revolution,
hath a most convenient correspondency with the inward Heaven in the
Microcosm, and this with that; which you may
thus understand : —
Whatsoever the figure of the external Heaven is, in the
point of conception of any man, which happens in the matrix of the
woman by the Ens of seed, even now sent forth from Man ; that man
which is born and grows from that seed, receiveth from within, such a
constitution of his nature, and life to be performed on earth.
Yet that constitution lies so long hid and unknown, that
is, without act, in a naked power, until a man born into the world and
educated to the use of free-will and reason, putting forth itself, begins
to be moved and incited. For then, and not before, that constitution of
his Heaven begins, by little and little, to roll, bring forth, move, and
shew forth itself, when the Ascendants of that figure, by the imagination
and fantasy, newly sprung up in the will and reason. arise and proceed to
the motion of the mind and operation of the body. And so the internal
Heaven in the Microcosm begins its motion and course, that a man, from
within, from the guidance of his own Nature, begins to imagine, think,
desire, hear, speak, do the same thing which before was signified, from
the position of the external Heaven, while he was conceived.
Therefore the external Heaven in the Macrocosm, as it hath
respect to Man, is, at least, a looking-glass and perludium, by
which the Astrologer may look into, search, know, and describe what, and
what kind of nature and propriety shall happen, and rule in him from the
beginning of his nativity, to the end of his life— as he shall live
Astrologically and not Theologically; — what, and what manner his
imagination shall be, what his affections, what his cupidities, what his
desires, what his manners, what his study, what his kind of life and
death, with what he shall be adverse, and all things whatsoever seem to
belong to the condition of human life. This, I say, may, from the position
or erected figure of the external Heaven, be prognosticated and foretold ;
not that those things are so done by necessity or coactive force, but only
that those things are presignified, and, as it were, preludiated, and are,
indeed, a certain picture of human life, as in like sort, a certain living
man is painted by a painter, on the wall, from which picture his species
and proportion, with all his habit, is exhibited and declared to be known.
So also we men, living according to the course of nature, and not
Theologizing our Astrology. are known, described and discovered, by an
Astrologer from the Table-figure, face and concordance of the superior
Firmament, as by a looking-glass.
For, living naturally, we have from the figure of Heaven,
a natural description of our life, whether it be honest or dishonest,
whether virtuous or vicious. Yet so as the impulsive or efficient cause of
living thus may not be thought to proceed and be impressed on man from the
external Heaven, but from within, from our internal Heaven, which is in
our soul, delighted with this or that manner of living. For neither God
nor the Macrocosm doth compel or force man, (placed in the midst,) from
without, to this or that good or evil kind of life, by a certain natural
necessity; but that very thing which is put into us by God, and by the
Macrocosm, that is it whereby we are led, whereby we are constellated,
moved, instigated, stirred up, invited, governed and inclined.
Rom. 6, Galat.5
— The one is the Spirit of God, the breath of God, the Deity and
Heavenly Light, the holy Spirit, the Mind of God.
The other is the Spirit of Nature, the breath of the
World, the Light of Nature, the affections of the flesh, terrene Wisdom,
the animal man, the Siderean Spirit, the reason of Man.
Both lead to their Original, and shew what are theirs.
Our Nature instigates, moves, and leads to our naturals ;
but the Spirit of God, which we have in us from God, instigates, moves,
urges and leads us to supernaturals; that is, thither whence He Himself
is.
There are, I say, two Inspirers, two Governors, two
Captains, two Lords in us, to whom none of us can equally serve. The one
tends to the straight way, to inherit and possess the Kingdom of Heaven,
by contempt of the World, and denial of ourselves ; the other, neglecting
the Kingdom of God, to enter into the broad way. The one is of God, which
is the Theological Spirit, propounding and persuading the Theological life
to man; the other is from Nature, from the World, which is the
Astrological Spirit, propounding, and persuading the Astrological life to
man.
The Theological Spirit being endued with supernatural
Light and Wisdom, shews the Kingdom of God, and eternal life.
But the Astrological Spirit, endowed with natural wisdom
and light, shews the shop of Nature, and the glory of this world ;
therefore those which are acted by the Spirit of God, these are the Sons
of God, that is, who live Theologically. But they which are acted and led
by the Spirit of Nature, (caring nothing, for the Kingdom of God, and the
eternal country,) these are the sons of Nature, the sons of this world,
animal men, not doing the will of God, but the will of the flesh: in
which, with all their glory and magnificence, they, whosoever they are,
how great soever they are, and wheresoever they are, must perish. For
without the Theologization of Astrology, no mortal man can attain eternal
salvation and beatitude. We must die once to flesh and blood, and to the
whole animal man, and we must live to God; which life is altogether
contrary to the worldly life. Of which more largely in the Epistles of
Paul, and other Apostles.
But the stars, which a wise man is commanded to rule, are
not those celestial stars extant in the Firmament of the Macrocosm, which
are set before the Creatures of the Elements, that they might illuminate
the earth, and be for signs and seasons, and rule over the day and the
night; those have their peculiar Regent, Lord and Governor, to wit, the
Spirit or Soul of the world, diffused into the seven Planets, and the rest
of the Stars of the whole Zodiac, by which he exerciseth his rule and hath
his influx into inferior things; therefore there is no cause that any
should, through simplicity, think the dominion which a wise man hath over
the stars, belongs to the moderation of the external Firmament ; as if a
wise man ought to rule the course of the celestial stars and signs, and to
reduce the frame of the Macrocosm under his power; to direct and govern
the Sun, Moon, Planets and Stars according to his pleasure; and to make
calm and tempestuous weather according to his will. Not so; but the Stars
over which we ought to rule, if we will be true wise men, are all the
cogitations, speculations, cupidities, affections, etc., ascending, by
imagination, out of our hearts, respecting the things and creatures of the
world, and tending by free-will and reason to abuse and pleasure. To them
we ought not to be too much addicted, or overmuch to connive and
indulge. For in these, that deadly and infernal Snake or Serpent lieth hid,
seducing man by all sorts of concupiscences into an unlawful love,
honour and worship of the creatures, and thereof makes a Babylonish
harlot; as in the subsequent matter will be demonstrated.
Touching a double
Firmament and Star in every man ; and that, by the benefit of Regeneration
in the exercise of the Sabbath, a man may be transposed from a worse
Nature into a better.
FROM the above-said, there appears a most elegant
doctrine, to wit ; although some of us by constitution and concordance of
the external and internal Heaven, in the point of his conception and
nativity, should haply have attained the most wicked constellation and
nature, ready and prone to commit any kind of maliciousness, so as he
should even bear in his face, in his countenance, in his hands, and in his
whole body, an evident signature or physiognomy to every most wicked
crime, all which should shew most certain tokens that he should act
only a most miserable and most wicked kind of life; but also should expect
on himself the most cruel punishment and destruction. Yet, nevertheless,
we must not altogether despair of such a man's correction and salvation.
The reason is, because besides the natural Heaven, and Astralic Firmament
which is in our soul, we have another Heaven, another Sidus, another star,
another Light, another Constellation, which is the Spirit of God, by whose
power being supported, we may shake off and drive away all the
provocations of the evil ascendants of natural stars, as an ass is wont to
shake off and drive away flies and gnats stinging him on his back.
Sibi Velit— Therefore
although Nature is potent and strong in herself in inciting and forcing a
man in his proper will and reason by her divers and delectable
concupiscences to any kind of crime; yet the Spirit of the Lord in his
virtue, power and fortitude, is far superior, and exceeds Nature in as
great a measure as the Sun is seen to excel the Moon. Let a man then at
length learn, and do his endeavor that he may know what that most
profitable precept of God, touching the sanctification of the Sabbath to
be exercised every seventh day requires of him, in which exercise,
nevertheless, the worst of things may be corrected, and also transformed
into the best things. For such a medicine lieth hid in the holy exercise
of the Sabbath, as whole Nature, with her universal virtue is not able to
exhibit to a man ; for which medicine's sake, this book is written.
A man, therefore, inclined naturally to this or that vice,
by occasion of his generation, ought not to connive at himself, or to
frame any excuse, as if he could by right accuse the external heaven that
it is the cause, wherefore he cannot live honestly and do that which is
good, nor by any means can overcome, chance, break, correct his sinful
nature, or convert it into better; and so under the pretext of human
imbecility, as it were, defend his spontaneous malice, avarice, lust,
pride and intemperance, etc., and to go forward in a vicious life.
O opinion most worthy of refutation, and to be accursed! I
pray, what should the cry of Christ, the Prophets and Apostles avail ?
Repent, repent, be ye converted unto me, and I will be converted unto you;
put off the old man, and put on the new man; and fly evil, and cleave to
that which is good; and lay aside the works of darkness, and walk in the
light! I say, to what end should these things be spoken and commanded, if
our defence or excuse should have place in the divine Judgment ?
Let such a man, therefore, so wickedly deceived of
himself, suffer himself to be instructed and taught by this our most
profitable Theologization of Astrology, wherein we have found and tried,
not without the greatest joy of the mind, that besides the shop and
operation of Nature, there is always present in us something far more
great and excellent, with the knowledge and virtue whereof we being
fraught, have power of resisting not only one, but all vices, as well the
greatest as the least, whatsoever lie hid and are manifest in us. Yea,
power not only of casting down, and drowning one stone, but also the whole
mountain of the Microcosm being in us, in the Sea of divine Power; or
extirpating utterly, not only one leaf, but even the whole tree of the
knowledge of good and evil extant in us, and of transplanting it into the
garden of the celestial Paradise.
Mark this.— For so all these
things are manifest in Theological Mysteries to those that understand
these things. Truly, it is evident, all things are Essentially to be
transferred unto Man, which are divinely written for Man.
See the Scripture, of Regeneration and New Birth.
— I say, we have a power lying hid in us of over-ruling whole Nature, of
stopping the Serpent, and overcoming all his force, and of instituting in
us a new, and that a good— a better— the best Nativity ; of erecting and
instituting in us, from a new Heaven, a new kind of Life, and a far more
happy figure, and that by the sole benefit of the Sabbath; by which, from
day to day we may put off the old man, and put on the new man; fall back
from vices, and pass on to virtues, that is, to shake off from us all the
ascendant stars or flames of divers concupiscences and desires to all kind
of pleasures of this world, ever and anon provoking, drawing, and
seducing, us.
John 17. — By this means we
go forth safe and free from the House of Egypt; from the Babylonian
Captivity ; and we escape from the power of the great Creature ; we
overcome sinful Nature, we resist the Serpent, we chase away the Devil.
And by how much the more frequent we are in this exercise of the Sabbath,
or in this Theologization of Astrology, by so much the more are we made
strangers to Nature, that we are scarce any more known or touched by her,
neither doth any Astrologer, Physiognomist, Signator, Divinator, artist
how industrious soever, know any more to erect any certain nativity, or to
prognosticate any thing, to come. Because they which are frequent in
familiarity with God, these are more and more alienated from the world,
that they are not any more said to be of the world, but of heaven,
although as to the body, they are as yet conversant in the world. And
whatsoever any one doth by the Sabbath, in the introversion of his mind,
he acts and orders with God, and God with him, in the hidden place of his
heart; this cannot be seen or known by any spirit, much less by man.
Rom 12. — In brief, by the
Sabbath alone, the Phoenix of our Soul is renewed, who, altogether
denying, deposing, refusing and accompting for nothing all the vanity of
this world, and itself from within and without, plainly dies in the
forgetfulness and contempt of all things, and of itself, and offers itself
a living and pleasing sacrifice to God and, being regenerate anew, becomes
a new creature, a new offspring from the seed of the Woman, by conception
from the holy Spirit, is made a Son of God, a new man, an imitator of
Christ, following his steps; is made a hater of evil, and a follower of
good ; a new plant, a new tree that is good, which brings forth good
fruits. This is true repentance, true penitence, the true putting off the
old man.
Here some Astrologers are to be admonished of their want
of knowledge, who have not doubted to subject even the whole man, with all
things which are in him, to the dominion of the world and stars, in
erecting their nativities as if a man were or had no more in himself than
a brute or beast, through ignorance passing by the constitution of Man in
three parts — Spirit, Soul, and Body; whose soul arising from the
firmamental zodiac, and whose body from the elements, are altogether
subject to the dominion of Nature. But not the Spirit, which we have from
God; and listening, nothing, to that, which every disciple of Christ and
friend of God, regenerate from above, by faith and the death of sin in the
most holy Sabbath, hath within himself, a most present medicine in his
heart, against all the poisonous and deadly wounds of nature, and the
Serpent; and also the divine commandment of deposing, overcoming, and
conquering, the old heaven, with its inclinations of divers
concupiscences, and of walking in the newness of the Spirit, in the Light
of Grace.
The exercise of the Sabbath, or Theologization of
Astrology, is to die to thyself and the whole creature; to offer thyself
wholly to God, with all things which are within and without. Hither belong
all the Scriptures, and all books speaking of the mortification of Man.
— To wise men, therefore, that is, to those that know both God and
themselves rightly, the matter is far better to be looked into, for they
know both are in us: —
God, and Nature.
The Kingdom of Heaven, and the Kingdom of the world.
The Tree of Life, and the Tree of Death.
The greater Light, and the lesser Light.
The seed of the Woman, and the seed of the Serpent.
And also that Man is placed between these two, to be
exercised in this world in a perpetual war, whether of these should
overcome ; thence shall man have his reward, for God will render to every
one— all crafty excuse and imbecility being laid aside — according to his
works, whether they be good or evil.
Here you shall observe an example, touching the change of
man from an inferior and worse nature into a superior and better nature.
If you take a certain stone, lying, by chance in a sunny place, and very
much heated by the too much parching heat of the sun, and put it into
water or some river, then the sun can no more make it so hot, or penetrate
it with his heat; in like manner the case is in the Theologization of
Astrology. Take or gather, and apprehend all thy evil nature, and thy
insincere affections, and unlawful lusts, too much operating and
flourishing in thee; I say, take and put them by the Sabbath, into the
mind, or spirit of thy mind, which thou hast from God, who is the
everlasting fountain and water of life; and sabbathize in a solid and
constant abnegation of thyself, and of all things known unto thee, which
are within thee, as well as without thee, that thou mayest almost wholly
die there; then will thy soul with all her adherent stores of
concupiscences, fall down and be drowned in the depth of the supernal
water, which is the Spirit of God infused in us; and the firmamental
operation will more and more cease and be wearied in thee, and the
ascendant stars of thy concupiscences will no more afflict, urge, drive,
carry thee as before ; but, from day to day, thou shalt ease thyself from
that most hard yoke of the Zodiac, and of all the Planets; thy youth shall
be renewed as an Eagle. and thou shalt be like an infant new-born, and
shalt perceive in thyself new virtues, and affections to work and move in
thee, arising, inclining, occupying, leading and governing thee from the
celestial Star, and influence of the divine Spirit. So as where,
heretofore, thou hast been the servant of sin, and hast given thy members
weapons of unrighteousness and malice, now with trembling thou abhorrest
the performances of thy fore-past life, and fraught with a new mind,
heart, affections and desire, from the exercise of the Sabbath, by the
Spirit of God, hereafter thou shalt serve God, and give up thy members
weapons of justice, piety, charity, mercy, meekness, temperance, modesty,
chastity, and so thou shalt rightly Theologize thy Astrology, so shalt
thou best overcome, correct, amend thy nature, so shalt thou rightly tread
the head of the Serpent under thy feet, so shalt thou well silence in
thyself the assaults of the devil.
Hence the true Sabbath instituted and commanded of God, is
the best cure and medicine against all kind of evil, — which quickly
brings death eternal to the soul, and temporal to the body, by which we
may put off, bear and take off that great and most grievous yoke and
mountain of so great a Zodiac, of so great a Firmament, of so great
Governors. I say, to take away the Kingdom of Rule, and to precipitate
into the immense Sea of eternal water, and ever and anon get new strength,
and come out more vivacious, as was well known and used by the Patriarchs
in the first age, whence also they could yet to themselves the Enochian
long life upon earth, by the exercise of this kind of mental Sabbath,
which, indeed, is altogether obliterated, abrogated in this our age, and
seems to be a thing unknown.
But how every one of us ought, and may know, and try in
himself, what and what kind truly is his Astrology or firmamental action
or operation of the Light of Nature; and how he may and can Theologize the
same, that is, overcome Nature and be made the Son of God, this the
following Chapters will illustrate, and teach more clearly than the Sun.
Touching the Distribution of all Astrology into the
Seven Governors of the World, and their Operations and Offices, as well in
the Macrocosm as in the Microcosm.
THE whole shop of Nature, with all her sorts of
sciences and actions, is ordained and distributed into Seven chief
members, Kingdoms or Dominions according to the Seven Astras
of the Planets; of the Sun, of the Moon, of Mercury, of Venus, of
Mars, of Jupiter, of Saturn. who are the Governors of all natural
things extant in the whole frame of the World by the four Elements.
But the Light of Nature, which we call Astrology, is
nothing else than the very life, vigour, virtue, action and operation of
the whole world, in things, which proceed and come forth from the Soul of
the World, or the Spirit of the Firmament; whose seat is in the body of
the Sun. For there the Soul of the World, or the Spirit of the Macrocosm
dwells, as the Soul of the Microcosm in the heart, and in the sun it is
most potent, whence it diffuseth his virtues, actions and powers, out of
itself ever and anon into the other six Planets,— the Moon, Mercury,
Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. And, moreover, in all the other Stars,
being throughout the whole stelliferous chaos.
By this only Soul the whole World lives, is governed,
agitated and moved, as a body by its spirit.
The Sun is the heart and light of the World. In this
heart, I say the Soul inhabits, which illuminates all and every the
Planets and Stars upwards above itself, and downwards beneath itself, as
well in the day as in the night time, and disperses its power into all and
singular bodies, as well the superior things to the utmost superficies of
the frame, as also the inferior things even to the inward centre in the
earth.
Yea, the Sun by his virtue passeth through all corporeals
like unto glass, and operates in them without any impediment.
The power and working of the Sun.
— So his force penetrates the whole body of the sea as glass, without any
obstacle, even to the lowest bottom thereof; so the whole body of the
earth, full of pores on every side, is passable to the Sun, even to the
inward point of its Circle. So the Sun fills the sphere of Air; also the
spheres of Heaven, and enters into views, and possesseth with his power
all the Angels of all the regions and parts of the World, as the Soul doth
the body of the Microcosm; and not only the Chaos and the bodies of
Elements, but also all the generations and substances of all things
whencesoever existing, as well subtle as gross, as well light as heavy, as
well soft as hard; metals, mountains, hills, gems, rocks, stones, wood,
and whatsoever is, everywhere, so as it reacheth to the very centre of the
earth; neither is his force and operation wanting, or deficient there. For
all bodies though never so great, gross, thick, are altogether as glass to
the penetrative power of the Sun, and although our eyes do not so
expressly know and see this present ingressive, penetrating, subtle and
active power of the Sun in all things, but the gross bodies always are and
remain in our eyes gross, dark and shady, yet in respect of the Sun, and
to the virtue of the Sun, after their manner, all things are diaphanous
and perspicuous, and penetrable. Which solar virtue thrusts forth and
produces all things hid in the earth: and, also, the air is such, that
with the very virtue of the Sun, it doth essentially enter into all
bodies, penetrate and fill all things. Life is Fire. —For fire is
the life of things; no fire can burn, that is, live without air,
wheresoever therefore there is life, or fire, or the virtue of the Sun,
there also is air. The World a great Creature—Now the whole greater
World, as to its soul and body, with all the creatures that are therein,
is one Creature by itself, and one animal, and lives like an animal,
having in itself its vital Spirit, endued with a Sevenfold operation, or
diffused into the seven Planets, into all the Stars, and into all the
elements, and all vegetables, minerals and animals generated of elements.
The element of Fire hath his shop or seat in the body of the Sun, Planets
and all the Stars; in that fire the Phoenix of the world, or Soul of the
world, dwells, which operates all things, and is the Light of Nature, the
Vulcan of Heaven, the Archeus of Nature.
The Air is its respiration and balsam, the Water is its
blood, the Earth is its flesh. In like manner also it is in the Minor
World, or Man, who, as to his soul and body (the form excepted) in all
things answers to the Major World, as a son to his father, because taken
out of him, and placed in him.
In the heart, is the seat or habitation of the soul of the
little world, or the Siderian Spirit, whose virtue, life, motion, nature,
force, operation, ever and anon by going forth, diffuseth itself into the
other six principal members of the Microcosm, — the Brain, the Liver, the
Lungs, the Gall, the Spleen, the Reins, and from thence into the whole
body, and all the muscles, veins, nerves, parts and extremities of the
whole Microcosm ; and so, that only Soul, resident in the Heart, carries,
governs, agitates, leads, moves the whole body, according to the nature
and propriety of these Seven principal members; by which the body performs
all his works, as well artificial and subtle, as simple and rude.
As the soul of the Macrocosm, labouring in the Seven
Governors of his body, and the rest of the stars, produceth all created
things.
Therefore, as to the concordance of these seven Governors,
Planets, Stars, or Virtues in the Major and Minor Worlds, it is certain
that
1. The Heart
1. The Sun
And as to the Elements,
1. The Flesh
1. Earth
For in the Flesh of the Microcosm lieth hid the essence,
nature and propriety of all vegetables springing out of the Earth,
compacted and dispersed throughout the whole body.
In the Blood doth exist the essence, nature and propriety
of all minerals and metals bred of Water, dispersed throughout the whole
region of the blood.
In the Respiration, whose seat is in the Lungs, the
Bowels, and the Veins, and all pores, muscles, etc., is the essence,
nature and propriety of all the airy creatures, dispersed through the
whole body.
In the Heat dwells the essence, nature, force, operation,
and propriety of all the Stars, and constellations of stars, dispersed
through the whole body.
Moreover, as to the concordance of either Light, as well
in the Major as in the Minor World, thus it is.
Also, the fruit of the Tree of knowledge of good and
evil, which is evident only to Magians.
—Whatsoever things man living on earth hath found out, first
theoretically, by speculating, meditating, searching and inquiring,,
excogitating, from within in his heart and after by his free Will or
desire produceth, endeavours, attempts, institutes, handles, operates and
transfers to practice in whatsoever kind of Sciences, Arts, Faculties,
(Theology excepted, which is not a human invention) studies, handy works,
labours and negotiations, whether they be referred to good or evil, —all
these comprehended under one name, are called the Light of Nature, or
Astrology, or Natural Wisdom, arising from the Natural Heaven, or
Firmament and Stars. That wisdom and that light are in the Soul of Man,
dwelling and working in the heart, which, if it be exalted in its power
given to it, and created in it, can do the same, and more, than the soul
of Nature in the Macrocosm, whose seat is in the Sun; because Man the
Microcosm is the quintessence, extracted from the Macrocosm.
But, seeing all and singular Sciences, Arts, Faculties,
Orders, States, kinds of Life and Studies flourishing amongst men on the
earth, arise and proceed from an internal invisible Heaven, Firmament,
Star and Light of Nature, in the Microcosm, which is extracted from the
Light, Heaven, Firmament, and Star of the Macrocosm, and hath its singular
anatomy, distribution and conveniency to the offices and operations of the
Seven Governors of the World without, we, as the order of those Governors
extant in the Firmament of Heaven is exposed to our eyes, will first of
all handle Saturn, occupying the supreme sphere; to wit, what is
the theory and practice of his Heaven, Star, or constellation, with his
adjunct stars in the Macrocosm; that is, what is his condition, nature,
propriety, virtue and inclination, what Science, what Art, and Industry,
what Order, what Study, what Fortune, what good and what evil men draw and
handle from him on the earth.
Whereby it will appear that Saturn is not only without a
man in the Major World, but also in man, with all the legion and
inclination of the adjunct stars.
Then, how the whole Astrology, —that is, the nature,
propriety and operation of this Planet—ought to be Theologized, by the
exercise of the Sabbath.
Touching the Astrology of Saturn, of what kind it
is, and how it ought to be Theologized.
SATURN, as to the description of his substance and nature
in the Macrocosm, is one of the chief of those seven stars, which we call
Planets, or Governors of the World walking next of all in the aerial
region under the Firmament or Zodiac, and ordained in a certain Sphere or
Circle, or Mansion; the circuit of circle he finisheth he passeth over
once in the space of thirty years time, through the twelve celestial signs
extent in the Zodiac. His body arising from the element of Fire, and
illuminating, that is cherishing, and governing the earth, and what are in
and on the earth, — his body is fiery and globulous, his astralic force,
which is the firmamental or Siderian Spirit, is invisible.
Now Saturn is conditioned with that nature and propriety
from the first creation, that he may send forth and exercise the virtue
and operation of his splendor and light in his subjects existing here and
there in the four elements, as are vegetables, minerals, animals,
properly, and in species, pertaining to him, wherein he effects and frames
such a nature and virtue, as he hath in himself. Now Saturn hath his
subjects appropriate to himself in every kind of creature; amongst
vegetables he hath his young twigs, his herbs, his plants, his flowers,
his trees, on which he operates by his influence after his manner. So
amongst minerals and metals, also amongst animals, creeping, going,
cattle, beasts, watery and volatile creatures.
For the whole university of the creatures of this world,
with us men, is divided into seven kinds or assemblies, and dispersed into
every region, which answer to these seven Governors, in their natural
virtues and proprieties, as well internal as external.
But, touching the Astronomical condition of Saturn, and
the rest of the Planets, to wit, what kind of motion, position, course,
quantity, distance, opposition, conjunction, and other dimensions of this
kind they have amongst themselves ; also touching, the difference of their
weights in metals, etc., it is not our purpose here to handle them;
concerning such kind of things, consult Astronomical books, and Chemical
books and the like, publicly extant abroad; but we rather handle and shew
this :—How all the studies and offices and kinds of life of all men have
their original from the stars, and to which Planet every thing is to be
referred. Then, how the whole Astrology ought to be Theologized, that is,
how every one of us ought to know, discern, hate, put off, lay aside, and
deny the old man made of Astrology, with all his Wisdom, science,
knowledge, prudence, industry, art, and whatsoever a man hath, occupies
and possesses of the gifts of Nature ; and in the denial of himself and
all that he hath, as well within as without, altogether to grow a child
again, to be made an infant, yea a fool; and to put on the new Man, which
is created according to God, to walk in newness of life, to die to sin,
and to live to justice; to know that Babylonian harlot and her Beast, and
to preserve himself from her; to know the forbidden Tree, and to eat of
the Tree of Life, and to pass over from nature into grace, to be made a
new creature, to be born again, to transplant himself from the terrene
Paradise into the Heavenly; to labour six days, and rightly to sanctify
the seventh, and the like. This is the intention, end and scope of this
our work.
Therefore, Saturnists, or the worshippers of Saturn, whose
minds, desires, wills, inclinations, affections, concupiscences,
pleasures, cogitations, speculations, inventions, actions, and labours are
ascribed to Saturn, as to their study, and kind of life, are men in whom
is and flourisheth all kind of science and industry.
1.Cain was a husbandman; Abel a keeper of sheep. —
Of all Agriculture; as are husbandmen, countrymen, farmers, tillers of the
ground; also mowers, threshers, herdsmen, swineherds, pastors of cattle,
purveyors of corn, or those who exercise merchandise, with corn and pulse;
also dressers of vineyards, that purge wines, gardeners, and briefly, all
agriculture, with all its species.
2. Jubal was the father of inhabitants in tents, and
feeders of sheep. Tubal Cain found out every artifice of brass and iron.
— The whole art and science, edificatory, as under; with all kind
of artificers, and workmen, comprehended, as rough masons, stone-cutters,
carpenters, joiners, and in brief, the whole administration of economy,
or household affairs, joined with parsimony and frugality.
3. The whole art and metallic science, which teacheth the
manner of searching and trying the bowels of the earth, and of digging
minerals, metals and riches, the provocations of evils; also
Treasurers, and whosoever seem to seek and take their
livelihood from the earth by the the labours of their hands, as are
potters, tile-makers, bearers of dead bodies, fishmongers, root-sellers,
colliers, and others of this kind ; and also clothiers, linen-weavers,
shoemakers, cobblers, cardmakers, etc. Also solitary men, as monks,
hermits, and like to these.
As touching the mind, and vices, Saturnists are avaricious
men, covetous of gain, usurers, lenders for gain, Jews, toll-gatherers or
publicans, tenacious, livers sparingly, Mammonists, altogether watching
for their proper commodities. Also thieves, robbers, makers of false
money, sergeants, false judges, hangmen, enchanters, evildoers ; also men
austere by nature, froward, more sad than joyful, thoughtful, melancholic,
fantastic, very silent, tedious, infidels, sacrilegious, and what kinds of
life soever of this sort.
Likewise, philoponoi, laborious, full of business,
tumbling, macerating and wearing themselves in continual cares, and
furthermore in whatsoever appears like to these.
As to the quality of the body, and external manners,
Saturnists are men worn with years and age as well men as women, covered
with gray hairs, with a slender and lean body, thin beard, eyes lying deep
in the head, with a neglected form, and not amiable, always looking grimly
agelasoi, halting, beggars, often sick, etc.
All these studies, and all and singular kinds of life of
men, as they are formed and seen abroad amongst all nations, people,
kindreds, etc., of the whole compass of the earth, are referred to the
heaven, region, dominion, nature and inclination of Saturn.
I say, all these kinds of men, with all their studies and
kinds of life, as well honest as dishonest, as well good as bad, as well
private as public, are worshippers of Saturn, for that in the handling of
Saturn, that is, in the drawing forth of the nature of the Saturnine
light, they spend their labour and time; and by diligent study and
inquisition they draw forth, search, produce and manifest those things of
Saturn which are in natural things.
All the industries, inventions, arts, actions and labours
of these men in every season, have proceeded and as yet do proceed,
from the internal invisible heaven, which is in the Microcosm ; and
are part of the Light of Nature, in which man walketh, whether well or
ill, honestly or filthily, according to the diversity of his flexible will
and desire, as well to good as to evil ; and men are busied about the
external subjects of the Macrocosm, without which, vain were the vigour
and endeavour of the Light of Nature in man. For every action of the
Microcosm from within, tends to the subjects of the Macrocosm without;
because there the works of man are perfected or performed. For indeed man
hath from the Light of Nature in himself, the science of ploughing and
tilling the earth, and fields, building houses, of seeking and handling
metals, etc., but he hath not in himself the subjects, matter and
instruments ; therefore he takes them from the Macrocosm, and perfects his
work, found out and excogitated by the Light of Nature. Thus, seeing all
the external works of men arise from within, from the invisible revolution
of the internal stars, ever and anon ascending and shining forth by
cogitations and imaginations, and are perfected by external operations and
labours, we may from every work of man, see and know the constitution of
the internal heaven, what kind of position, what ascendants, what motions,
constellations and inclinations every artificer hath; where it is
wonderful to behold the variety of the Natural Light. Hence, by how much
the more the artificer doth appear in external works, by so much the more
and more perfect, hath the constitution and influence of the internal
heaven, been with the workman.
Therefore we must know that every species, of whatsoever
science, art and faculty, is a singular constellation, star, inclination
and influence, ascending from the inward heaven, and shining, acting and
operating one by one in man ; therefore all the cogitations, imaginations,
inventions, desires, studies and intentions of Saturnists bent or inclined
to good or evil, are the Astras or stars ascending from the inward heaven,
and are the operation of the Saturn, of the Microcosm. in the soul, with
his stars agreeable to himself, in which cogitations and operations that
crafty Serpent, which almost none in this our age seems to know, is
powerful and rageth, by leave permitted to him by God, to tempt and prove
man, (placed in the midst,) by these delights of the Light of Nature, and
of the things of this world, and to bend the will, love, desire, and
concupiscence thereof from good to evil, from God to the creature,
whereunto man, (O grievous!) is too ready and prompt.
Truly innumerable and infinite are the multitudes of men
living on the earth which are found in this kind or practice of Astrology.
For it is, (which we would have mystically spoken) one of those seven
congregations or generations of the World, or people worshipping the Queen
of Heaven, or venerating, and worshipping the Babylonian harlot, and
adoring the Beast endowed with seven heads and ten horns. And this is the
sense which sleeps with wisdom, which will appear better by the following
things.
Now, as the external heaven in the Macrocosm, always and
ever and anon is rolled and turned about with a perpetual motion; and
always other and other stars are seen to appear ascending and always
descending, so as there is a perpetual mutation and vicissitude of the
actions of Nature, labouring in the greater World, where now it is winter,
now spring, now summer, now autumn, now day, now night, now fair weather,
now tempest, now snow, now rain, now winds, now storms, now this, now
that, etc., which are all the Astralic operations of the heaven of the
Macrocosm : —so also in like sort is the course, vicissitude, motion and
revolution of the stars, ever and anon ascending. and descending in the
heaven or Soul of the lesser world ; that is, the soul, or our siderean
Spirit, is an unjust spirit, wherein the ascendant cogitations, new
concupiscences, various desires, are always moved, excited and felt, now
willing this, now willing that, now so, now thus, now we
rejoice, now we sorrow, now we are beaten and agitated with these, and now
those affections, now we are occupied with these, now with those
businesses and labours, all which are nothing else than the Astrology of
the Microcosm, to be Theologized in all of us that are willing to use them
piously.
But how and wherefore ought the Astrology of Saturn to be
Theologized in Man ? If thou askest me, wherefore and how all the natural
sciences appertaining to the Astrology of Saturn, together with all the
kinds of the Saturnine life, ought to be and may be Theologized, I again
ask thee, that thou tell me the cause wherefore, according to that great
precept of God, we ought to labour and finish our work in six days, but
the Seventh day to sanctify the Sabbath ? Or wherefore we cannot enter
into the Kingdom of God, and possess beatitude in eternal life unless we
shall be converted and be made as infants ? For these have one and the
same reason and cause, tend to one, will one, and belong to one.
The answer therefore is ; —Therefore we ought to
Theologize Astrology, therefore we ought to labour six days and sanctify
the seventh, therefore we ought to be converted and become as infants,
because nothing at all but the New Creature, the new Man from Heaven, he
that is regenerate from above, he that is born again of immortal seed, is
required to the possession or acquisition of the Kingdom of Heaven. Not
the old man from the earth, seeking earthly things, gaping after earthly
things, rejoicing in earthly things, occupied and delighted in earthly
things, loving, possessing, favouring earthly things. I say, not such, but
as we have now said, the man born again from above, seeking those things
which are above, and not those things which are below, not arising from
the will of the flesh; and not of the will of man, but of God.
But to the end that we may be the better understood of the
ruder sort, first we will handle a few things in general.
What is the Theologization of Astrology?
Afterwards we will set upon our Saturn, with his
professions and faculties, where we shall demonstrate to the eye, that in
the sole Theologization of Astrology is to be sought and found the
gate of Paradise, to eat of the Tree or wood of life, which is in the
midst of Paradise, etc. Also, what is that strait gate that leads to life,
which few find ; and what the broad way which leads to hell, which many
walk. Also, what is that Babylonish harlot, with whom all the people of
the world commit fornication; and many, and those the greatest Theological
Mysteries are here shewn to the intelligent, which otherwise are and abide
hidden from the eyes of all mortals.
Therefore to Theologize Astrology is nothing else than to
labour six days, and to sanctify the Seventh that is to rest and desist
from labour, and to keep holy day in God, with the spirit, soul and body,
which God the Father seriously commanded to his people by the Law, in the
Old Testament in these words : —
Exod.20 —Remember the
Sabbath day that ye may sanctify it. Six days shalt thou labour, and do
all thy work ; but the seventh day shall be a Sabbath to the Lord thy God
; thou shalt not do any work, neither thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter,
nor thy servant, nor thy maid, nor thy beast, nor the stranger which is in
thy gates ; for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea and
whatsoever is in them, and rested the seventh day ; therefore the Lord
blessed the Sabbath day and sanctified it. Exod 23. —Also, in six
days thou shalt do thy works, but the seventh day thou shalt rest, that
thy ox and thy ass may rest together, and the son of thy hand-maid, and
the stranger may be refreshed. And in all that I have said to you, you
shall be wary, (to wit, because of the Serpent.) Deut. 5.
—Also, observe the Sabbath day, that ye may, sanctify, it, even as the
Lord thy God hath commanded thee ; six days shalt thou labour and do all
thy work, but on the seventh day shall be the Sabbath of the Lord thy God.
But although the divine commandment, amongst the vulgar,
hath seemed, and yet doth seem to be spoken only, touching the corporal
and external labour and rest for repairing the strength of the body; yet
those to whom it is given, (as well amongst the Jews as Christians) to
know and understand the mysteries of the Mind of God, and of his Kingdom.
they, I say, have known a far more profound and better cause and reason of
this precept, of sanctifying the Sabbath.
In the New Testament, to Theologize Astrology is,
according to the doctrine of Christ and the Apostles, to receive the
Kingdom of God, as a child or infant, to be born again from above,
having, renounced and left all things to deny oneself and seek the
Kingdom of God which lieth hidden in us, as a Treasure in a field.
The labours of the six days
are all the actions, operations, studies, offices, businesses and
occupations of all men in the whole earth, and in all islands and in every
sea, amongst all orders, states and kinds of life, whatsoever all men
everywhere, every time they act, study, handle, operate; this they do by
the Light of Nature, according to their divers Sciences. Now the Seventh
part of those labours, studies and actions of men is referred unto Saturn,
to wit, the several kinds whereof we have before recited.
Moreover, the sanctification of the Sabbath, divinely
ordained and commanded to man on the Seventh day, is to cease once in a
week from all labour and handling of natural things, and actual studies,
to desist from the Astrological life, that is, to lay aside every motion
and action, as well of the mind as of the body, by an absolute abnegation
and oblivion of the whole creature and of oneself, as well within as
without ; to give and offer oneself wholly to God, with all that we are,
within the six days we have known, studied, gotten and gained by our
labours, as well in the internal gifts of wisdom, as in the getting of
external things. Hither, hither and to this Centre tends that divine
Commandment touching the sanctifying of the Sabbath, as by the following
things will most pleasantly be laid open.
A Specifical Declaration, how the Astrology of
Saturn in Man ought to be and may be Theologized.
FORASMUCH as hitherto we have heard that all the
sciences, actions, studies, and states of life of all men, by a certain
inevitable necessity ought to be Theologized, or by the exercise or
sanctification of the Mental Sabbath be laid aside, denied, put off and
accounted for nothing; now we would particularly see how the Astrology of
Saturn is to be Theologized in us. For, because infinite is the multitude
of men, only handling and exercising this Saturnine Astrology. And we do
set down first of all in a certain paradoxical sense, that is above the
common intellect of the vulgar; that no husbandman, countryman, farmer,
gardener, herb-seller, vine-dresser, steward, builder, metal-man, potter,
weaver, cobbler, shoemaker, etc., can ever enter into the Kingdom of God,
or come to the possession of a heavenly life, unless he learn to drive
away, to subject this power, his Saturnine Heaven, with all its ascendant
stars, and resist every inclination thereof, tending to evil, through the
instinct of the Serpent ; reign over it, and overcome it.
" Good God," here will some ignorant say, from the
instinct of the Serpent, "of what kind is this your Theologization of
Astrology, which you here handle? What mortal can believe that a
husbandman, a farmer, a steward, a vine-dresser, a porter, a metal-man, a
mechanic, a carpenter, etc., cannot be made an heir and possessor of the
kingdom of heaven?' What, is the Light of Nature to be contemned and
altogether rejected, and must we cease from all labour? What, ought
we not at all to act, work, study, learn, search, but to be plainly idle?
Whence shall we receive food and raiment and other necessaries to the
sustentation of life, seeing no man, whosoever is busied in the studies,
labours and works above said, can from them attain eternal salvation? The
sentence of this book seems to be wonderful indeed and estranged from the
truth."
I answer, these things do not seem strange or
obscure but to the ignorant, nor are they indeed a hair's breadth
estranged from truth, so that they be rightly received and
understood. For nothing can be so truly spoken or written that by the
ruder and less intelligent may not be called into doubt, or be esteemed
even for a lie.
But a lesson read which pleaseth, being repeated ten times
it will please.
Lo, this our sense. If thou art a husbandman, a
countryman, a farmer, a steward, a gardener, a seller of herbs, a
vine-dresser, a potter, a metal-man, a carpenter, a builder, etc., or
busied in some other like kind of life, then thou art constituted and
walkest in the sphere of Saturn, and art governed by the Saturnine stars
which are in thee, ever and anon ascending in thy imagination, cogitation
and senses ; ruling thee, inclining thee hither and thither, even as thy
pleasure draweth thee by free will, and the inward Serpent persuadeth
thee.
Now, unless thou as a wise man, shalt be cautious and
attent, and shalt over-rule thy stars running up and down, flourishing and
operating in thee, or shalt Theologize thy Astrology; that is unless thou
shalt learn to Sabbathize, and to cease from all thy work, and keep
holy the Lord's Day, according to the mind and sense of the divine
precept, it altogether is and abides impossible to thee, by any means, to
enter into the kingdom of God, and come to the possession of eternal
salvation. For I will make it clear by a most manifest demonstration that
never any husbandman, farmer, countryman, steward, metal-man, etc., could
enter into the kingdom of God, who, neglecting and omitting the
sanctification of the Sabbath, departed out of this world. But I would
thou shouldest take these things rightly.
My judgment is, that no Saturnist, such as are before
recited, can enter into the Kingdom of Heaven, but that he ought to be
thoroughly converted, and made as an infant then at length he is fit to
take, enter and possess the Kingdom of God, not indeed as a
husbandman, a farmer, a steward, a builder, a vine-dresser, a seller of
herbs, a metal-man, a potter, etc., because there is no such thing, to be
done there, for such workmen. But see thou be as a child and infant, as a
new creature, as the Son of God. ' For no man hath ascended to heaven, but
he which descended from heaven, the Son of God, which is Christ,
and as many as received him, he gave them power to be made the sons of
God.' Now to receive Christ requires an inevitable putting off and
mortification, yea, destruction of the old creature, of the old man
created of earth, and the new birth of the same from above, from whence
also, Christ is arisen.
Therefore the reasons and causes, for which the Saturnist
cannot come into heaven, are these; First, because in the celestial
Paradise, or the country of the Heavens, there are no grounds, nor oxen,
nor ploughs, for husbandman; nor farms or lands for farmers; nor houses
nor granaries for stewards; nor stones nor wood for builders nor vineyards
nor forks for vine-dressers; nor gardens, herbs, plants, seeds for
herb-sellers; nor mountains fertile in metals for metal-men; nor loam nor
clay for potters; nor flax nor wool for weavers ; and therefore there is
not any need of any such, neither shall those which inhabit there want
such kind of science and industry. For all these things are, and are only
to be found under the Zodiac in this corruptible world, where in the last
day at one time together and at once, they shall be taken away and cease
with the world.
So far therefore, my husbandman, as thy field, thy ox and
thy plough shall be transported after the last day to the Kingdom of
Heaven; so far also shalt thou thyself, with thy rustic science and
industry, after this life enter into the Kingdom of Heaven,- that is,
never. Therefore put off the old earthly and natural man with all his
science, prudence, craftiness, which thou usest in the handling of natural
things, and put on the new man which alone savours and desires heavenly
things, and leadeth thee to heavenly things, by the exercise of the true
Sabbath, to be had in the spirit of thy mind every week.
And, so far, my vine-dresser, as thy vine and thy
fork shall be found after the last day, in the Kingdom of Heaven ; so far
also shalt thou appear there with thy vinitory science and
industry,— that is, never. For then all old things are passed away.
And, so far, my steward, as thy household-stuff and
granaries shall be found out in the Kingdom of Heaven, after the world is
blotted out, so far also shalt thou thyself be there with thy science and
industry of domestic parsimony,— that is,never. For we do not act those
things there which we are wont here.
And, so far as my gardener, my potter, etc., thy
colworts, herbs, plants, trees, with thy garden, and thy loam and clay
shall, after the world is defaced, remain and be transferred into the
perpetual heaven, so far also shalt thou thyself. with all thy plantatory
and pot-making science, be promoted to the heavenly mansion, — that is,
never. For the subjects and matter being wanting, what can thy science
profit thee ?
So also it is with all the rest of the kinds, and
sciences and arts appertaining to the Astrology of Saturn; all these have
their matter and subjects about which they are conversant and with which
they are occupied, without them in the Macrocosm, which, being
taken away and withdrawn, all things will be taken away and withdrawn with
them; and they have within themselves in their soul, in which the light of
Nature is, the wisdom, industry, art and understanding rightly to handle
and perform their works which soul, and which light are nothing, else than
the Astralic Heaven and Firmament in the Microcosm, where every science,
art, and work hath its peculiar star with the ascendants convenient to
itself.
Therefore this science and operation is once a week to be
laid aside and put off; and we must sabbathize in God, that God may act
and operate his work in us, to wit, the work of our conversion,
repentance, amendment, new birth, and of the new creation, that we may be
made fit to enter into his kingdom after death and the resurrection.
Furthermore, also for this cause none of the aforesaid can
see, enter, possess, the Kingdom of Heaven, because such a workman is only
born of flesh and blood, is the old creature of the earth of this world,
and is the son of the firmament, the offspring of Nature; and although he
excels in the knowledge of natural things, yet all his science and
knowledge is to take an end with the life of time. He that would be
capable of heaven, ought to be the new Man born again of God, regenerate;
the new creature. For nothing that is earthly can take or possess heaven ;
therefore none of those which we have hitherto recited, and shall recite
in the following things shall come thither, unless they be converted, and
become as an infant, who knows none of these things. "There shall be a new
Heaven and a new earth, old things are passed away," saith he which doth
it, " all things are made new."
A new heaven, therefore, requires new inhabitants, fit for
it and capable of it, for as man at first was created of the old heaven
and of the old earth, and was born of mortal seed, in which earth he now
temporally dwelleth; so it also behoveth him to be created of that new
heaven and of that new birth, and to be born again, to be regenerated of
the immortal seed, in which earth he would be and inhabit eternally.
The third reason is because the Light of Nature,
with all kinds of Sciences, is given to man, for this life only, to till
the earth, for the labour of his hands, to eat his bread in the sweat of
his countenance, etc.; and belongs only to the sustentation of the natural
and temporal life, living in the mortal body; and the body being dead and
the world blotted out, no such thing remaineth; therefore we have no need
of corn, vines, buildings, tents, houses, garments, meat, etc.; therefore
neither knowledge nor desire of getting, or labouring for such things; the
cause ceasing, the effect ceaseth.
The fourth reason is, because man was not made of
God finally for this world, or for those things which are in this world;
but chiefly for the kingdom of God, where none of these things is found or
is in use, which in this life are everywhere agitated and handled with
men, throughout the divers shops of the Light of Nature.
The fifth is, because man was therefore constituted
for a time only in this world, that he might ascend from the inferior
things, and seek after the superior things; that is, that by natural light
and wisdom, as it were from a looking glass or shadow, he might learn to
know and apprehend the heavenly Light and Wisdom, at whose majesty and
glory, all natural things, although glorious, might plainly vanish and be
annihilated: and so, leaving the inferior and lesser light, he should
suddenly betake himself to and follow the greater and superior Light; and
departing from this transitory world, forsaking and accompting all things
for nothing which he receiveth, hath, and possesseth in this time from the
world; and having denied himself, as a naked and new-born infant, depart
into that eternal mansion and region of the eternal country, and so come
thither, fasting and empty from the possession of all natural science, as
if he had never at all been in this world, or had not known any the least
state of this world.
But these things are not propounded and written to that
end that they should happen in contempt of philosophy, or of natural
sciences, arts and faculties, which are and flourish amongst men, and
which in this life cannot but be; but rather that we, being fraught with
the sagacity, of the Light of Nature, may be led further, may go forward
and be excited to the knowledge of the greater Light, which may confer
upon us a new birth, eternal life and salvation.
For to all that covet and desire the kingdom of God, is
the old man made of Nature, to be put off and laid down; yea, to be buried
in an absolute abnegation and oblivion, as well of himself as of all those
things which he hath, possesseth, studieth, knoweth, learneth; and the new
man is to be put on, which is created according to God, where " there is
neither Jew nor Greek, neither male nor female, neither bond nor free, but
the new creature."
I say, the new creature is required to possess the kingdom
of God, wherein there is nothing, left of the old leaven. The old leaven
is the knowledge of good and evil, beginning to spring in man from the
forbidden tree, and is the prudence or subtilty of the Serpent. But the
new leaven is the heavenly wisdom, the simplicity of the Dove, from whom
alone true life and beatitude flow, and which also only shall bear rule in
the elect heirs of the kingdom of God, the natural and terrene wisdom
being then utterly together and at once swallowed up, blotted out, and
extinct.
Matt.18, John 3 - For
the kingdom of God is of such only who are converted from the old creature
into the new, and become as children, who never knew neither good nor
evil.
FINIS.
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