Evelyn Underhill called the German Lutheran Mystic Jacob Boehme 'one of the most astonishing cases in history of a natural genius for the transcendent.' Boehme was the son of a farmer who lived the first part of his life as a shepherd and later became a shoemaker. He claimed that his writings reflect only what he was taught through the direct experience of God. A truly giant figure in the spiritual tradition, he has greatly influenced Angelus Silesius, William Blake, John Milton, Isaac Newton, William Law, and many others.
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