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Astrology-Theologized
"Astrology Theologised"
Valentin Weigel (1553-1588)
THE SPIRITUAL HERMENEUTICS
of
Astrology and Holy Writ
A TREATISE UPON THE INFLUENCE OF THE
STARS ON MAN AND ON THE ART OF RULING THEM BY THE LAW OF
GRACE:
Wherein is set forth, what Astrology, and
the Light of Nature is. What influence the Stars naturally have on
Man, and how the same may be diverted, and avoided.
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
Valentine
Weigelius.
SAPIENS DOMINABITUR
ASTRIS
London,
(Reprinted from the Original of
1649 in 1886.)

"Astrology
Theologised"
CHAPTER I.
What Astrology is, and what
Theology;
and how they have reference one to another.
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.
CHAPTER II.
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.
CHAPTER III.
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,
that man should not eat death and perish to himself by the eating
of the forbidden Tree.
To eat is to be delighted in himself, and in the
creatures, rather than in the Creator Himself.
Rom. I. I. Cor. 2. I. John 2. Matt. 6. Gen. 2. Exod.
20.
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.
CHAPTER IV.
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.
CHAPTER V.
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.
CHAPTER VI.
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, suffe
Valentin Weigel |