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Despite his obvious impact,
Swedenborg's name is still
not well-known three
hundred years after his
birth. He was an inventor,
a scientist, a civil
servant, and a philosopher
before he accepted God's
call to be a rational
revelator during the Age
of Enlightenment. While
Swedenborg's genius may be
found in all his works, it
is his claim to be a
revelator, and his
spiritual vision, which
truly set him apart.
Historically it has been
this claim which has
attracted interest in him;
and it is his theological
writings that have been
the source of his greatest
influence. Swedenborg
stands apart from other
revelators because of the
means through which he
received revelation, its
substance, and the process
of its transmission.
Because his Writings are
exclusively a written
revelation, Swedenborg was
able to integrate in them
elements which in
traditional religious
movements have been
distinct; for contained
within the Writings are
both the charismatic
vision and the rational
codification of its
development. In offering
only a written revelation
to the world, Swedenborg
dramatically decreased the
probability of its
discovery. However, by
widely distributing his
books, he made discovery a
permanent possibility; but
it was a possibility over
which Swedenborg himself
would have no personal
control. Swedenborg left
completely open who would
respond to his vision,
under what conditions, and
at what time and in what
place, or whether anyone
would respond at all.
In
presenting a vision
counter to the prevailing
religious and secular
paradigms of the day, he
invited ridicule; and, in
not organizing a group of
followers to carry his
vision into the future,
his ideas did not become
part of the mainstream in
the development of modern
western thought. However,
the scope of his influence,
as documented in this
book, suggests the
unfolding of another
reality, because
Swedenborg's legacy has
endured.
A
biography of Swedenborg
and a chronological list
of his major works are
included in this anthology
because a knowledge of the
man and the substance of
his writings may provide
some insight into the
persistence of his
influence.
Background
Emanuel Swedenborg was
born in Stockholm on
January 29, 1688 . At the
time of his birth, Sweden
's century of expansion
was drawing to a close. In
asserting her independence
during this century, the
Swedish kingdom became
more economically and
politically integrated
into Europe 's cultural
orbit. The great mineral
wealth of Sweden and war
were important ingredients
in this process. Foreign
miners and mercenaries
were brought to Sweden to
assist in her development
and modernization. The
Swedish arms industry was
established at this time,
strengthening the military
position of Sweden and
providing a valuable
export. The internal
administration of the
kingdom was further
centralized through the
development of a state
bureaucracy, with the
University of Uppsala
providing the training for
the corps of civil
servants. During this
period the city of
Göteborg was established
as an export center and
Stockholm was transformed
into a modern showplace.
While
all these changes were
taking place at one level
in Sweden , the life in
the countryside remained
essentially unchanged. The
rhythms of agriculture, of
the seasons, of sowing and
harvest, of dearth and
plenty were untouched. In
this world the
supernatural brooded over
the landscape and in the
hearts of men. The
struggle between light and
dark, heaven and hell, God
and Satan, salvation and
damnation, good and evil
dominated men's thoughts
and pervaded their
physical world. Only a
thin veil separated life
and death, and which was
which was shrouded in
ambiguity. The reality and
intensity of this world is
brilliantly captured in
the novels of Selma
Lagerlöf, winner of the
Nobel prize for literature
in 1909.
Jesper
Swedberg, Swedenborg's
father, was born into this
reality. Born at "Sveden"
in 1653, the family
homestead not far from
Falun, Swedberg's life
fortunes were dramatically
altered when the new
mining techniques imported
from abroad made a
family-owned mine once
again productive. These
additional resources
enabled Swedberg to attend
the University of Uppsala
and opened to him the
world of modern Sweden
through a career in the
Church. Immediately after
his ordination in 1683
Swedberg married Sarah
Behm, a modest and
religious woman, whose
family's wealth was
derived from extensive
mining interests. Noticed
by the King early in his
career while serving in
the position of chaplain
of his horse guards in
Stockholm , in 1702
Swedberg was elevated to
the post of Bishop of
Skara, having served in
Uppsala as a professor of
theology and Dean and
Rector of the Cathedral in
the interim. He remained
in Skara until his death
in 1735. His tenure in
Skara is remembered today
because of his deep
interest in education.
Despite his prominence,
Swedberg remained outside
of the Church's formal
power structure and
innocent of her official
ideology of faith alone.
Throughout his long and
prosperous life, Swedberg
never abandoned the
perspective and
sensitivities of his early
rural upbringing with its
emphasis on the
supernatural, piety, and
good works.
Early Life
Emanuel was the third of
nine children and the
second son born to Jesper
and Sarah Behm Swedberg.
While living in Uppsala ,
in 1696, Swedenborg
suddenly lost his mother
and his older brother
Albert in an epidemic. A
year later, Swedberg
married for a second time.
His new wife was Sarah
Bergia, a wealthy widow,
who also had mining
interests. She seems to
have been particularly
fond of Emanuel and upon
her death in 1720, he
inherited half of her
estate, Starbo, and a
modest fortune.
Swedenborg wrote very
little concerning his
early life, and except for
the following, which was
written in a letter to a
friend in 1769, what
little else is known comes
from public records and
his father's autobiography:
From
my fourth to my tenth year,
I was constantly engaged
in thought upon God,
salvation, and the
spiritual sufferings of
men, and several times I
revealed that at which my
father and mother wondered....
From my sixth to my
twelfth year my delight
was to discourse with
clergymen concerning Faith—that
the life thereof is love,
and the love that gives
life is the love of one's
neighbor....
After
his family moved to
Uppsala , Swedenborg spent
the next seventeen years
there. He lived in his
father's home for eleven
years, until Bishop
Swedberg was called to
Skara. For the next six
years, until his
graduation from the
university in 1709, he
lived with his sister Anna
and her husband, Eric
Benzelius, who was the
Librarian at the
University. Benzelius was
a modern, forward-looking
man who was eventually
named Bishop of Linköping.
He was a brilliant man and
an "ardent Cartesian" who
was convinced that science
held the key to the future.
With that perspective, he
eagerly took on the
responsibility of
modernizing the holdings
of the Library. To
accomplish this he
corresponded with many of
the most prominent men of
learning in Europe and in
this way he gained a
knowledge of the
developing intellectual
trends of his day.
Both
Swedberg and Benzelius
were important influences
in shaping Swedenborg's
aims and interests.
Swedenborg himself
acknowledges this in
dedications that he wrote
to both men. Swedenborg
dedicated his thesis "Selected
Sentences from Publius
Syrus Mimus and L. Annaeus
Seneca" to his father with
the following words: "May
I grow, with increasing
years, in the imitations
of those deeds which have
covered the name of my
parent with honor and Fame.
May I resemble him in his
writings as well as in
mind and character."
In
1734 Swedenborg dedicated
his Infinite and Final
Cause of Creation to
Benzelius. In that
dedication he states:
In you
I acknowledge the source
of personal benefit,
inasmuch as it was by your
advice and wishes, that my
mind, then ripening and
eager for study, though
hesitating and ignorant,
nevertheless, as at that
early age it is wont to be,
to what pursuits to turn,
was directed to the
present and similar
subjects, which were
auguries of a personal
career in literature....
And as it was at your
instigation that I applied
myself to these studies,
so I hope you will in a
measure acknowledge this
offspring of my powers,
poor though it be, as in
some part your own; and
therefore allow that of
right it should be
dedicated to no one but
yourself.
Although Swedenborg's
interest in the natural
sciences and mathematics
may be attributed to
Benzelius' influence, his
fascination with the
factual and the concrete
also seems quite similar
to Swedberg's vigorous
concern for a "down to
earth," living, practical
theology; and Swedenborg's
distaste for the abstract
in the realm of science is
reminiscent of his father's
animosity toward cerebral
faith and dogmatics in
religion. Therefore, it is
possible to see evidence
of his father's character
in his scientific career
as well as seeing
Benzelius' more rational
and universal concerns
echoed in his theology.
Studies Abroad
In
1710, on the advice of
Benzelius, Swedenborg left
for England to immerse
himself in the most modern
scientific currents of his
day; he stayed for two
years studying mathematics
and astronomy. During his
stay he also frequented
the shops of booksellers
and instrument makers in
order to enlarge his
library and his knowledge,
and while in London he
lived with a variety of
different journeymen in
order to learn their
trades. In this way he
learned the arts of
engraving, making
mathematical instruments
and cabinetry, and later
in Holland he learned
glass-grinding as well.
While
in England Swedenborg
studied with the
astronomers John Flamsteed
and Edward Halley and,
perhaps during
conversations with them,
became intrigued by the
competition seeking a
reliable means to find the
longitude at sea. He
devoted considerable time
and energy to solving the
problem, and it is clear
from his letters that he
discussed his solution
with both Flamsteed and
Halley. His method
required exact lunar
tables, which were
unavailable at the time.
In spite of the criticism
his method received, he
continued to have
confidence in his idea,
perhaps because the
problem was not finally
resolved until the 1740s,
"when John Harrison
perfected a chronometer,
successfully used by James
Cook."
Swedenborg published
his method in 1718 and
again in 1769. At the time
of his second publication,
he presented his method to
the Royal Society in
England .
Swedenborg remained abroad
until 1715, spending
considerable time in
Holland and France
absorbing new knowledge,
and time in the German
city of Rostock developing
his own insights. His
approach to each new
environment was similar to
the way he approached his
stay in London : he
attended public lectures,
visited the best libraries,
searched bookshops and
stalls, read and studied,
and held frequent
conversations with
academics on topics of
importance to him.
Throughout his tour
mathematics was the major
focus of his interest.
During
his year-long stay in
Rostock he took time to
order and integrate his
studies and reflections of
the previous four years.
"In a letter he wrote to
Benzelius, he lists and
briefly describes fourteen
inventions. Included in
the list are the following:
a submarine, an airplane,
a mechanical carriage, a
lock system for raising
the height of ships and 'a
method of conjuring the
wills and affections of
men's minds by means of
analysis.' For some of his
inventions he made
drawings; for all of them
he made the necessary
mechanical and
mathematical calculations."
The
fourteen inventions
Swedenborg described to
Benzelius were the most
obvious but not the only
intellectual fruits of his
first trip abroad. He left
Sweden in 1710 a Christian
and a Cartesian who was
still willing to
acknowledge a debt to
Aristotle—he appreciated
both system-building and
the experimental sciences,
and his driving
intellectual quest was to
rationally understand the
relationship between first
causes and ends without
being forced into a
determinism that
eliminated freedom. He
firmly believed that truth
cannot be fabricated from
a priori knowledge alone,
but must be capable of
demonstration. The purpose
of his trip to England "was
to learn the language and
method of scientific proof,
to learn the rules
governing the
demonstration of truth
through experience, and to
learn the laws through
which nature operates."
While in England
Swedenborg deepened his
appreciation for the
beauty, the power, and the
necessity of the
experimental sciences as
the proper key to
understanding the natural
and physical universe.
Upon
his return to Sweden he
endorsed the views of the
noted Swedish inventor and
engineer Christopher
Polhem, who was critical
of the Cartesians.
Philosophically, however,
he did not become a
Newtonian. Swedenborg
returned from his sojourn
abroad aware of both the
tremendous power and the
limits of empiricism. He
realized that a complete
understanding of the human
condition simply cannot be
grasped empirically—an
insight that was not
unique to him. However, "most
eighteenth century
philosophers were content
to explore the questions
which could be addressed
through the instrument or
agency of reason and
confirmed by experience."7
They consciously abandoned
the quest of penetrating
into absolutes, ultimates,
and ends. They were
content to ask the
questions which they felt
they had the tools to
answer, rather than
seeking new instruments to
explore the essential
question of human
existence, "What shall we
do and how shall we live?"8
For Swedenborg the
essential question
remained the quest.
Search for a Career
Swedenborg had gone abroad
to learn everything he
could about the practical
sciences of his day. His
interest was both personal
and civic, for he had
dreams of assisting the
modernization of Sweden by
means of his own career in
science and technology.
However, upon his return
to Sweden at the age of
twenty-eight, Swedenborg
was confronted with the
very practical problem of
what to do. How could he
integrate who he was and
what he had learned abroad
into the rather static and
aristocratic social
environment of Sweden —an
environment in which a man's
connections were the
currency of placement and
position, and where
competence and
achievements were
secondary or unimportant
considerations?
Immediately upon his
return, Swedenborg threw
his energy into
introducing a journal
which he called Daedalus
Hyperboreus, dedicated to
practical scientific
inquiry. He had conceived
the idea for the journal
while he was abroad, and
he saw it as a means of
stimulating the
development of mechanics
and manufacturing in
Sweden , the growth of
which he felt would
strengthen the national
economy. The journal was
published in Swedish in an
attempt to encourage the
interest of the general
public in these matters,
and six issues were
published over the next
several years. The
articles covered a wide
range of topics, including
mine machinery,
salt-making, a flying
machine, and coinage.
Although the journal sold
moderately well,
Swedenborg was unable to
find others willing to
back it financially, and
discontinued its
publication in 1718. Even
though Daedalus was
commercially unsuccessful,
it was intellectually
innovative and is regarded
as the foundation of the
present Royal Society of
Sciences of Uppsala.
The
question of a career
appeared to be resolved
when Charles XII appointed
him Extraordinary Assessor
of the Board of Mines in
1716. Although the King's
warrant was initially
accepted and he was seated
on the Board, after the
King's death in 1718 and a
shift in the political
climate, the regularity of
the appointment was
questioned and the Board
denied him the seat and a
salary. Swedenborg refused
to accept the decision of
the Board and continued to
insist on the legitimacy
of his appointment. The
matter was settled to
Swedenborg's satisfaction
in 1723.
From
1715 until he was
officially recognized by
the Board of Mines,
besides publishing
Daedalus Swedenborg threw
his talent and energy into
three other areas: he
worked as an assistant to
Christopher Polhem working
on a variety of mechanical
inventions and various
military projects under
the direction of Charles
XII; he wrote several
books and treatises
including some reflections
on theology and anatomy;
and, after his ennoblement,
due to his father's
position, he wrote and
submitted to the Riksdag a
variety of memorials on
important political and
economic problems which
were plaguing Sweden.
Throughout this period he
received no retainer or
salary in any position,
and every enterprise was
begun and sustained
exclusively through
personal relationship—with
writers, printers, the
mercurial inventor and
engineer Christopher
Polhem, and the
strong-willed King. During
this period Swedenborg was
both frustrated and
discouraged about his
ability to find a stable
position through which he
could serve Sweden .
Swedenborg's personal
fortune was dramatically
enhanced when he inherited
Starbo at the death of his
stepmother, Sarah Bergia,
in early 1720. Although
her death was a personally
painful experience for him,
it provided the financial
resources for Swedenborg
to pursue a career as an
independent scholar.
Intending to research,
write, and publish as soon
as the matter of the
inheritance were settled,
Swedenborg left Sweden for
Holland—first leg of a
journey in which he also
planned to visit England,
France, Italy,
Austria-Hungary, and
Germany.
In
Holland he published three
works: A Forerunner of the
Principles of Natural
Things, commonly known as
Chemistry; New
Observations and
Discoveries Respecting
Iron and Fire; and A New
Method of Finding the
Longitude of Places on
Land and at Sea, by Means
of the Moon. These works
contained a collection of
articles addressing old
interests and new ideas.
In the work on Chemistry
Swedenborg articulated for
the first time one of the
principles of his
philosophy: "The first
conception is that all
things are in series;
there is a series of
particles, beginning with
mathematical points and
ending in water, salt and
earth."
Although he wrote on a
variety of different
subjects during his stay
abroad, it is clear that
the issue of the
assessorship was still on
his mind and that one of
his objectives in
publishing was to become
an authority on mining. He
dedicated Parts I through
III of his Miscellaneous
Observations to Count
Gustaf Bonde, the new
president of the Board of
Mines, and he published
some new observations and
research on mining
techniques in Part IV. He
also sent a prospectus
entitled The Genuine
Treatment of Metals to a
variety of learned
journals. It was published
in the Nova Literaria.
Swedenborg was called home
by his father in the midst
of his trip to help settle
another inheritance
dispute within the family.
After arriving in Sweden
in June of 1722, he
quickly helped to settle
the family problem and
then turned his attention
to two other important
matters, one private and
the other public—his
career and Sweden's dire
economic situation. To
further his career he
proposed a test of a new
method to smelt copper;
and to address Sweden 's
economic problems he wrote
a memorial on coinage and
six other memorials on the
state of Sweden 's
economy. The memorial on
coinage "caused a great
stir, as it took a firm
stand against the
debasement of the
coinage."10
His memorials on economics
were read in the House of
Nobles, but were not acted
upon, while his pursuit of
the position of Assessor
finally bore fruit. In
March 1723, Swedenborg was
invited to attend the
sessions of the Board and
in April an agreement was
reached on the issue of
his seniority. In 1724 he
was finally awarded a
salary. Having achieved
the position he had
pursued with such dogged
determination, Swedenborg
devoted himself to the
broad and complex duties
of an assessor which
required administrative,
technical, and judicial
competence. He remained
active in this position
until 1747, when the King
regretfully accepted his
resignation, noting in a
letter his faithful and
exemplary service to
Sweden .
Upon
assuming the assessorship,
Swedenborg brought to a
close one phase of his
life and began another.
During this period
Swedenborg had touched
base with all the major
concerns to which he was
to devote the rest of his
life: cosmology, anatomy,
and even theology. These
efforts notwithstanding,
perhaps his major
accomplishment during this
period was his persistence
in pursuing what he
thought was the right and
legitimate course, without
much external recognition
and support.
The
Philosopher
It
would appear that securing
a position of public
employment freed
Swedenborg to focus his
intellect on what was for
him the essential problem
of philosophy—the
relationship between the
Creator and the world of
creation. For twenty years
from 1724 he investigated,
reflected upon, and wrote
down his understanding of
this problem—both how to
approach it and what the
structure of the
relationship might be.
Although on the surface
his published works appear
to be investigations of
widely divergent topics,
his works during this
period form a series. His
first work, the
three-volume Philosophical
and Mineralogical Works,
was published in Leipzig
in 1734. The first volume
is the Principia, and the
second and third volumes
are scientific studies, On
Iron and On Copper. His
second major philosophical
work was published in
Dresden in 1734. It was a
small volume entitled The
Infinite and Final Cause
of Creation. His third
work was called The
Economy of the Soul's
Kingdom, published in
Amsterdam in 1740 and
1741. Dissatisfied with
his efforts in the Economy,
he began another work
called The Soul's Kingdom.
Three parts of this work
were published before
Swedenborg abandoned his
enterprise. The first two
parts were published in
Amsterdam in 1744, and a
third part was published
in London in 1745.
Swedenborg's desire to
understand the order and
purpose of creation first
led him to investigate the
structure of matter and
the process of creation
itself. In the Principia
he outlined his
philosophical method,
which incorporated
experience, geometry (the
means whereby the inner
order of the world can be
known), and the power of
reason; and he presented
his cosmology, which
included the first
presentation of the
nebular hypothesis. In
1734, satisfied that he
had understood the
mechanics of the unfolding
of the natural universe
from the first natural
point or the first finite,
he turned his attention to
the problem of the nature
of the infinite and its
relation to the finite.
In the
Principia Swedenborg
concluded his presentation
of his cosmology with a
discussion of man, because
in his view man completes
creation. In ending this
work with a discussion of
the place of man in
creation, Swedenborg was
pointing to the focus of
his philosophical endeavor
for the next ten years of
his life. The completion
of his philosophical
system required Swedenborg
to move precisely in this
direction. Without a
consideration of man, who
alone of all creation can
worship the Creator, and
who can thus return what
has been created to the
Creator, his system would
be incomplete.
However, before he could
examine the manner in
which the human body is
animated and functions and
is thereby connected to
the creator, it was
necessary for him to
address the essential or
pivotal question of his
entire philosophical
system—the existence of
"the Infinite itself." At
the beginning of the
Principia the infinite was
identified as that from
which all of creation
proceeds, and at the end
of that work, Swedenborg
indicated that it is to
the infinite that all of
creation must return.
However, before he could
explore how that return is
made possible, he found it
necessary to demonstrate
that the infinite does, in
fact, exist and that it is
both the first and final
cause of creation—the
Alpha and the Omega. In
this essay he also found
it necessary to
demonstrate why man's
place in nature should be
examined at all. According
to Swedenborg, "Since man
resembles nature as to his
body and organs, or as to
means, if he is
undifferentiated from the
rest of nature as to ends
as well, then the
principles which explain
the 'least of creation'
would likewise explain
man"—making any further
philosophical examination
of nature unnecessary.11
In his treatise on The
Infinite Swedenborg
demonstrated the existence
of the Infinite, and the
unique role of man in the
order of creation. Mankind
is the means whereby the
final cause is effected,
and the medium of
conjunction between the
Creator and man is love.
In this essay Swedenborg
emphasized that all man's
faculties—his sensual, his
rational, his freedom, and
his capacity to love—serve
in the realization of the
final cause of creation,
each in its proper place.
In The
Infinite, Swedenborg for
the first time drew
together truths from
reason and revelation for
the sake of man's
understanding. Revelation,
as he employed it in this
work, was not a "stopgap"
for reason, but an
independent and necessary
source of truth.
At the
end of this work
Swedenborg set as the next
task of his philosophical
inquiry "to demonstrate
the immortality of the
soul to the very senses."12
This is what he attempted
to do in The Economy of
the Soul's Kingdom and in
the Soul's Kingdom. In
these works, he was
seeking to discover the
world of cause from a
detailed examination of
the world of effects, or
to understand the rules of
government whereby the
soul operates in its
kingdom, the body.
Ultimately, he was
interested in
understanding the
principal cause whereby
the microcosm operated, or
"to trace out the nature
of the human soul" itself.13
While
pursuing this goal
Swedenborg wrote several
remarkable treatises,
including his work on the
brain and his rational
psychology. Ultimately,
however, he gave up his
endeavor, as he yearned to
go where the methods of
philosophy could not take
him. At the beginning of
his quest he was animated
by a desire to seek
immortal truth both for
its own sake and for the
sake of banishing mere
appearances of truth—a
desire which is compatible
with the pursuit of
science and
philosophy—whereas in the
end he stated that he was
engaged in his labors for
the sake of those who can
only comprehend high
truths by way of the
intellect, and not by
faith. As he said in his
introduction to The Soul's
Kingdom, "For these
persons only am I
anxious...and to them I
dedicate my work. For when
I shall have demonstrated
truths themselves by the
analytical method, I hope
that those debasing
shadows will be dispersed;
and thus...that an access
will be opened and a way
laid down, to faith. My
ardent desire and zeal for
this end is what urges and
animates me."14
This
passage highlights the
transformation of
Swedenborg's motivating
love or purpose.
Scholarship and a love of
truth for its own sake
have become transformed
from ends in themselves
into means. Faith has
become the primary end,
with his philosophy
serving as the means. Such
an end is ultimately
perhaps more compatible
with the love of saving
souls, which is a priestly
rather than a philosophic
love.
It is
at this point in
Swedenborg's life, in
1743, that he underwent a
profound spiritual crisis
which is documented in The
Journal of Dreams. In his
journal Swedenborg
recorded his dreams and
visions which were
dramatizations of his
temptation to determine
his own way rather than
choosing God's. It is
important to realize that
once the process was begun
the outcome hung in the
balance. To continue his
search to understand the
relationship between the
Divine and man required
more than intellectual
passion and clarity—it
required his absolute
devotion. That devotion
could only come about
through the subordination
of his self-love to the
love of God. What may have
activated the necessity of
temptation at this time,
and to this depth, was
Swedenborg's joining the
love of saving souls with
his own philosophy as the
means.
Prior
to his spiritual crisis,
Swedenborg had experienced
"a certain cheering light
and joyful flash" darting
through his brain when he
was in the presence of
truth.15
Thus, whenever he felt any
lack of clarity or mental
confusion he took that as
a sign not to go on
immediately. As he
proceeded with his
investigations he came
closer to passing over the
abyss between matter and
spirit and between
philosophy and revelation.
His journal of dreams not
only documents his
spiritual crisis, but also
serves as a record of his
personal call.
I saw
also in vision that fine
bread on a plate was
presented to me; which was
a sign that the Lord
Himself will instruct me
since I have now come
first into the condition
that I know nothing, and
all preconceived judgments
are take away from me;
which is where learning
commences; namely, first
to be a child and thus be
nursed into knowledge, as
is the case with me now.16
With
this realization,
Swedenborg was ready to
put aside his
philosophical studies in
order to focus all his
attention on the
spiritual. But how? It was
not absolutely clear to
him what he ought to do.
At this time he began a
manuscript entitled The
Worship and Love of God,
of which he published the
first two parts in London
in 1745. It stands apart
from the philosophy that
preceded it and from the
Arcana Coelestia that was
to follow. Like The
Infinite it was both a
culmination and a
beginning. It differs from
the philosophic works more
in tone and form that in
substance, and it differs
from the later revelatory
works both formally and
substantively. This poetic
work was written as an
offertory to express his
love and adoration to God
the Creator and Redeemer.
The
third part of this work
Swedenborg left unfinished
in manuscript form,
abandoned in mid-sentence;
in this section he
intended to move beyond a
poetic summary of his
published philosophical
works to present a
treatise on the Sun of
Life. A consideration of
both man's freedom and the
fall were to be
incorporated in the
discussion. The literary
metaphor with which he
chose to illustrate these
things was a vision of the
spiritual sun, seen by the
first married pair as they
awoke from the conjugal
bed. But perhaps he became
concerned that this
direction was based too
much on his own private
vision, and violated his
own concern that the rules
of evidence be followed.
It became apparent to him
that the more objective
path was to be found in
the study of the Holy
Bible or the Lord's Word.
The
Revelator
In his
study of the Word,
Swedenborg interiorly
heard the Lord calling. In
a small unpublished
manuscript entitled The
Messiah About to Come, he
wrote down passages that
held special meaning for
him—perhaps they are the
passages in which he could
hear the Lord most clearly
speaking to him. At the
end of the manuscript is a
brief note written in
Swedish on November 17,
1745 . In part it says "Lord
Jesus Christ, lead me to
and on the way on which
Thou willest that I shall
walk."17
In his study he gradually
realized that the Word
alone could form the
experiential ground of a
new revelation from God to
man. Because this ground
is universally available
to all people and unlike a
private vision, it can be
challenged or confirmed by
other men's rational and
experiential response to
it.
Desiring to direct his
life to serving the Lord,
Swedenborg saw no further
need to remain abroad, and
he abandoned his projects
and returned to Sweden in
the summer of 1745. For
the next two years he
continued to fulfill his
duties at the College of
Mines , while privately he
methodically studied the
Bible, reading it in
Hebrew and Greek as well
as in Latin. During this
time he began an extensive
Biblical Index and a four
tome exposition of the
Bible, entitled The Word
Explained, which he never
published; while in
another journal he
recorded his experiences
and insights from the
spiritual world. This too
he never published.
In
1747 he was appointed
first Councillor at the
Board of Mines. Swedenborg,
realizing that the
responsibilities of such a
promotion would hinder the
more important spiritual
work he was doing, asked
to be passed over for this
appointment and then he
submitted his resignation
from the College.
The
King accepted his
resignation with mixed
feelings: gratitude for
Swedenborg's steadfast and
faithful service to Sweden
, sadness because he was
leaving that service, and
confidence that his latest
endeavor would be as
beneficial to the public
as his other works had
been. These feelings of
gratitude and respect were
concretely reinforced by
the King's genuine
pleasure in granting
Swedenborg's request for a
pension. In leaving the
King's service Swedenborg
was able to focus his full
attention on his Divine
commission.
As he
grew to understand it,
that commission required
both intellectual and
spiritual preparation. The
need for such preparation,
according to Swedenborg's
own testimony, lay in the
nature of the revelation
he was to receive. As he
stated in Arcana
Coelestia, internal
revelation, or revelation
from perception, requires
preparation of the mind
and soul, in order to
create a foundation for
it. External revelations
through dreams, visions or
hearing a voice, on the
other hand, such as those
received by the Jewish
prophets, do not require a
similar foundation.
Revelations of this kind
are revelations without
perception or
understanding.
That
Swedenborg's understanding
of scripture deepened and
changed from the time he
felt his call until his
first theological work
(Arcana Coelestia) was
published, is made obvious
through comparison. The
Arcana was his fourth
effort to unfold the
hidden meaning of Genesis.
According to Swedenborg
himself, it was begun only
after a change of state
had occurred within him
which permitted him to
view "the heavenly kingdom
in an image."18
With this change of state
the last veil had been
removed and he had
achieved the degree of
perception necessary to be
an instrument of a
rational revelation. From
seeing Genesis first as
cosmology, as he did in
"The History of Creation
as Given by Moses," and
then as historical
prophecy as he had in both
in the "Biblical Index"
and The Word Explained, he
was ultimately led to see
that Genesis treats
primarily of the process
of the Lord's
glorification and man's
regeneration. With
reference to man, the
story of creation refers
not to man's first
creation an earth, but
rather to his second or
essential creation—his
spiritual birth.
Swedenborg's Public
Mission
The
eight quarto volumes of
the Arcana Coelestia were
published anonymously in
London between 1749 and
1756. Even though he did
not claim authorship, the
publication of the Arcana
initiated the "public"
phase of Swedenborg's
mission because his inner
visions and spiritual
experiences were no longer
to serve primarily his own
enlightenment. They were
now to be shared with the
world.
Because Swedenborg was an
instrument of an internal
revelation, his spiritual
mission took place in both
the spiritual and natural
worlds. He believed that
his commission to the
natural world entailed
only that he should
faithfully write, publish,
and disseminate the
heavenly truths that were
revealed to him by the
Lord. This is all that he
did during the
twenty-three years of his
public mission. He never
put any effort into direct
proselytizing or into
organizing a new church,
nor did he personally
attempt to convert anyone
to his views. Throughout
this time he underwrote
all of the expense
necessary to fulfill this
mission, and whatever
income he received from
the sale of these books he
directed his printer to
reinvest in their
publication. He sold his
books below cost and he
also sent many copies of
his works to libraries,
prelates, and various
other notable individuals.
During this time from 1749
to 1771 he published
eighteen separate
theological works.
The
scope of Swedenborg's
theological writings is
immense. Two of his works,
Arcana Coelestia and
Apocalypse Revealed,
expound the internal sense
of Genesis, a portion of
Exodus, and the
Apocalypse, utilizing the
doctrine of
correspondences to do so.
In some of the other works
he published he discusses
such topics as: life in
heaven and bell, the Last
Judgment, Divine
providence, the doctrine
of the Lord, the doctrine
of the Sacred Scripture,
life in the universe,
marriage love, and the
essentials of the true
Christian religion.
Swedenborg's religious
teachings provide a new
vision of God, new insight
into the nature of the
relationship between the
spiritual and natural
worlds, and a universal
and rational ethic to
guide men to a useful
life. It is a radical and
rational Christian
religion: radical because
it breaks with both
Catholic and Protestant
traditional
interpretations of the
Trinity, original sin, the
atonement, and imputation
and justification; and
rational because the focus
of its theology is the
penetration and
clarification of the
mysteries of faith,
through which a new
understanding of salvation
emerges which grants man
cooperative efficacy in
spiritual things. While
engaged in making known
these new spiritual
truths, Swedenborg was
able to maintain his
anonymity for only the
first ten years of his
mission. An extraordinary
experience that he had
while attending a dinner
party in Göteborg in 1759,
in which he reported a
fire in Stockholm three
hundred miles away, gained
him a reputation in Sweden
as a clairvoyant.
Gradually as his books
became known in Sweden ,
those who had read them
guessed that Swedenborg
was the author and when
asked by them, he
acknowledged authorship.
He continued to publish
his works anonymously, but
gradually knowledge of his
authorship grew outside of
Sweden as well. It was not
until 1769 that he
declared himself as author
of any of his theological
writings: on the title
page of Conjugial Love he
wrote "Emanuel Swedenborg,
A Swede."
As
knowledge of his
authorship of these
religious books increased,
men began to seek him out
to discuss them with him.
Swedenborg almost always
obliged; however, by this
time had gained notoriety
in some circles as a mad
visionary. This was due to
his reputation as a
clairvoyant, the nature of
his claim to be able to
see into the spiritual
world, and to his
descriptions of that
world. Many people who
sought him out did so more
from curiosity than for
enlightenment. He refused
to demonstrate his
spiritual prowess but was
always delighted to
discuss religious issues
with sincere seekers.
Because of restrictions on
the freedom of the press
in Sweden , Swedenborg
published all of his
religious works outside of
Sweden , primarily in
Holland or England .
Neither this fact nor the
fact that he did not try
to organize a church
enabled him to escape
controversy with the
Church in Sweden . Toward
the end of his life two
men who had accepted his
teachings became embroiled
in a heresy trial as a
result of propagating the
new ideas of Swedenborg at
the University of Göteborg
. When Swedenborg heard of
this he became indignant
and wrote to the King on
behalf of these men. His
letter seems to have had a
positive result, and
eventually the matter was
dropped. The universities
were also asked to make a
judgment regarding
Swedenborg's writings.
After three years they
asked to be excused from
the duty without ever
presenting any findings.
It
would be over one hundred
years before an official
New Church organization
was established in Sweden
.
Swedenborg's Mission in
the Spiritual World
According to Swedenborg,
the purpose of spiritual
and natural creation was
to form a heaven from the
human race. However, this
required free response on
the part of man, and
provision for his
salvation. The spiritual
world, of which heaven is
a part, is the world of
causes, while the natural
world is that of effects.
Therefore, for a new
revelation to be truly new
and universal, it must
reveal the world of causes
which was for so long
hidden from man, and it
must essentially address
the question of order at
that level; for so far as
the world of causes is
ordered, so will be the
world of effects. Thus,
the major events which
surround the formation of
this new church occurred
in the spiritual world,
according to Swedenborg.
Thus, the last judgment
which is referred to in
the book of Revelation,
was an event which took
place in the spiritual
world in 1757. Once that
judgment took place, this
world of causes was
prepared for the
establishment of a new
heaven there. Both this
new heaven and new church
were to be founded on a
more interior or essential
vision of the conjunction
of good and truth in the
Divine Human of the Lord
Jesus Christ. The new
heaven would be
established among the good
departed souls who had not
received a clear
understanding of the Lord
as a result of their
experiences in the
Christian church before
their death, or who at
death knew little or
nothing about Christianity.
Swedenborg's role in the
spiritual world was to
serve as an instrument
whereby the world of cause
could be conjoined to the
world of effect, not just
for the sake of his own
salvation, but for all men.
For in The True Christian
Religion, his last
published work, Swedenborg
details the universal
theology of the new church,
and informs mankind that
with the advent of the New
Church , "now it is
permitted to enter with
understanding into the
mysteries of faith." What
will bring about the
establishment of this
church both in the
spiritual and the natural
worlds is the
acknowledgment on the part
of spirits and men that
the Lord Jesus Christ
reigns.
The
publication of The True
Christian Religion
inscribed by the "Lord's
command" with the words "Servant
of the Lord Jesus Christ,"
marked the culmination of
Swedenborg's dual mission—to
serve as an instrument for
the establishment of a new
heaven, and a new church
on earth. These, he
believed, would be
established by the Lord
alone among those who
freely acknowledged His
sovereignty and led a good
life.
Shortly after the
publication of The True
Christian Religion in
Amsterdam in 1771,
Swedenborg left the
Netherlands and went to
England . He suffered a
stroke in December 1771
and died on March 29, 1772
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