Johannes Kelpius was born Johann Kelp in 1673, near the village of
Sighişoara (then called Schässburg) in
Transylvania (modern
Romania) and attended
Bavaria’s University of Altdorf, near
Nuremberg, where his name was Latinized to Johannes Kelpius according to the custom of scholars of his day. By the age of 16 he had taken a master's degree in theology and published several works, including one in collaboration with
Johannes Fabricius. At the university he had been drawn to
Pietism, initially a reaction against the formalism of orthodox
Lutheranism, but a term that sometimes included various esoteric or heretical Christian ideas. He became a follower of
Johann Jacob Zimmermann, a mathematician, astronomer, and cleric, whose pastoral position had ended in 1685 due to his prediction of the imminent advent of a heavenly kingdom, as well as his criticism of the state church. Zimmermann was himself attached to the ideas of theosophist
Jakob Bohme. After Zimmerman's sudden death, shortly before the group's departure for the New World, Kelpius became the group's
magister or leader.
The travel diary of Kelpius has been preserved. Some of the forty or so who traveled with him aboard the
Sarah Maria Hopewell were Heinrich Bernhard Koster, Daniel Falckner, and Johann Gottfried Seelig. They disembarked at Bohemia Landing, Maryland and proceeded to Philadelphia and Germantown. On arrival in
Philadelphia (which barely had 500 houses at this time) they moved to
Germantown and then to the
Wissahickon. There they established a regular program of private study and meditation. They eventually erected a large building for their meetings; some say they lived there communally, but others that they lived separately in caves and other rude shelters and cabins. They created a school for neighborhood children, held public worship services, and shared their medical knowledge. A few newcomers, including Conrad Matthai and
Christopher Witt joined the group, but the community began to decline, especially after the death of Kelpius.
Little is known of his death except for an account from years later which states that Kelpius had believed that he would not suffer physical death, but be translated to another existence. The same account suggests that Kelpius possessed the legendary
philosopher's stone, which at his direction was cast into the Wissahickon or Schuylkill River shortly before he died near Germantown in 1708.
His literary legacy is a collection of
original hymns, a journal that includes many of his correspondences, and a book on prayer and meditation,
A Short, Easy, and Comprehensive Method of Prayer, first published in English in 1761, and republished in 1951. However, this old translation has some inaccuracies, and English has changed over the more than two centuries since it appeared. Fortunately, a completely new translation has been completed by Kirby Don Richards, Ph.D.:
A Method of Prayer. A Mystical Pamphlet from Colonial America Dr. Richards' book includes both the German original and the new English translation. It also contains background materials that help explain the pamphlet and put it in its historical context.
Kelpius was the subject of the
one of the first oil portraits in the thirteen British colonies; painting was by
Christopher Witt and is in the
Historical Society of Pennsylvania, also home to Kelpius's journal, two collections of his original hymns, and other research source material.