Everything about Swedenborgianism totally explained
Swedenborgianism is a name for the belief system developed from the writings of the Swedish theologian
Emanuel Swedenborg (
1688 –
1772). It is a new form of
Christianity, and the movement is founded on the belief that God explained the spiritual meaning of the
the Scriptures to Swedenborg as a means of revealing the truth of the
second coming of Jesus Christ. It is also believed that Swedenborg witnessed the
Last Judgment in the spiritual world, along with the inauguration of the
New Church. Some Swedenborgian organizations teach that the writings of Swedenborg (often called
The Writings or
The Third Testament) are a third part of the
Bible and have the same authority as the
Old and
New Testaments. Other names for the movement are also used, especially by adherents, including
New Christians,
Neo-Christians,
The New Church, and
Church of the New Jerusalem.
History
Swedenborg spoke of a "new church" that would be founded on the theology in his works, but he himself never tried to establish an organization. At the time of his death, few efforts had been made, but on
May 7,
1787, 15 years after Swedenborg's death, the New Church movement was founded in England, a country Swedenborg often visited and where he also died. Its ideas were carried to United States by missionaries. One famous Swedenborgian was John Chapman, known as
Johnny Appleseed. Early missionaries also travelled to parts of Africa as Swedenborg himself believed that the "African race" was "in greater enlightenment than others on this earth, since they're such that they think more interiorly, and so receive truths and acknowledge them." (
A Treatise concerning the Last Judgment, n. 118) Although merely odd-sounding today, at the time these concepts were judged highly liberal, and so Swedenborgians accepted freed African converts to their homes as early as 1790. Several of them were also involved in
abolitionism.
In the 19th century,
occultism became increasingly popular especially in France and England, and Swedenborg's writings were, by some, blended in with
theosophy,
alchemy and
divination. What fascinated these followers most was Swedenborg's mystical side. Much emphasis was laid on his work
Heaven and Hell, wherein Swedenborg visits
Heaven and
Hell to experience and report the conditions there (compare
The Divine Comedy).
In the U.S., Swedenborgianism was organized in 1817 with the founding of the
General Convention of the New Church (sometimes referred to as the Convention), now also known as the
Swedenborgian Church of North America.
The movement in the United States grew stronger until the late 19th century, when a controversy about doctrinal issues and the authority of Swedenborg's writings caused a faction to split off to form the
Academy of the New Church which would later become the
General Church of New Jerusalem (sometimes referred to as the General Church), with headquarters in
Bryn Athyn, a suburb of
Philadelphia. In the 1930s, a doctrinal issue about the authority of Swedenborg's writings arose in the General Church. Members in the Hague branch of the General Church saw Swedenborg's theological writings as the Word of the Third Testament, which they wrote about extensively in their Dutch magazine De Hemelsche Leer. Actions by the leading Bishop of the General Church caused those holding this new doctrinal view to split off to form The Lord's New Church Which Is Nova Hierosolyma.
Today, the General Church has about 5,000 members in 33 churches. The
Swedenborgian Church of North America, with headquarters in
Newton, a suburb of
Boston, now has 37 active churches with about 1,500 members in the U.S. The Lord's New Church Which Is Nova Hierosolyma, with headquarters in Bryn Athyn, now has about 28 active churches with about 1900 members worldwide.
As of 2000 the most recent membership figures for the Four Church Organizations were
(External Link
):
- General Conference (Great Britain): 1,314
- General Convention (USA): 2,029
- General Church of the New Jerusalem: 5,563
- The Lord's New Church Which Is Nova Hierosolyma: 1,000
The Lord's New Church is primarily associated with
South Africa, although roughly 200 members are found in the
United States. It is noted for its concern for
justice issues. The nations of
Australia and
Germany are estimated to have 504 and 200 members, respectively. When counting additional members in
Asia,
Africa, and
South America, current sources put the total of Swedenborgians as between 25,000-30,000.
Membership in the
United States has been in long decline since peaking in the
1850s, although it should be noted it was never a large organization. In
1911 the total US membership in all Swedenborgian organizations was estimated at roughly 9,400.
(External Link
)
Beliefs
The doctrines of the New Church are as follows:
That there's one God and that He is the Lord Jesus Christ. Within Him there's a Divine Trinity.
That a saving faith is to believe in Him and to live a life of charity.
That all evils originate in mankind and are to be shunned.
That good actions are of God and from God, and are therefore necessary for life and should be done.
That these good acts are to be done by a person as if from him/herself; but that it ought to be acknowledged that they're done from the Lord with him/her and by him/her.
That one's fate after death is according to the character one has acquired in life; specifically that those governed by the love of the Lord or the love of being useful to others are in heaven, and that those governed by love of self or the love of worldly things are in hell.
(see Swedenborg's True Christian Religion, author's introduction (External Link
))
Added to this the Swedenborgians believe that marriage is eternal. They state that an individual will be married to his or her spouse in the afterlife if he or she's a true spiritual marriage, and that if a person dies unmarried he or she'll find a spouse in heaven.
Non-organized Swedenborgians
The term may also be used to refer to people inspired by some part of Swedenborgian philosophy or theology who nevertheless take an eclectic approach to such topics and so blend "pure" Swedenborgian thought with ideas from other systems, including Jungian psychology, Spiritualism, and "traditional" Christianity. Such Swedenborgianism bears little resemblance to the more ecclesiastical form usually referred to by the term. For various reasons, such as not believing in the trinity that's esteemed as a 3rd Century development by Tertullian, Swedenborg held to a Oneness view of God such as modern day Oneness Pentecostalism.
Other views
Swedenborgians have been viewed skeptically by fundamentalist Christian groups for the unorthodox aspects of their religion. These aspects are the rejection of the common explanation of the Trinity as a Trinity of Persons (Swedenborgians see the Trinity in One Person, the Lord Jesus Christ), and the rejection of the doctrine of atonement as an avenging justice (Swedenborgians see atonement as an act of love apart from revenge). They have been accused of being a fringe or even occult movement in which people communicate with spirits. While the mystical aspect certainly appealed to some people, and still does, this isn't the focus of most New Church members today. Interestingly, in contrast to accusations of occultism, the doctrine of the New Church actually warns against contact with spirits.
Influence
Notable persons influenced either by Swedenborg's writing or by the New Church include:
Johnny Appleseed – Swedenborgian missionary first written about by the Swedenborgian society of Manchester, United Kingdom.
Honoré de Balzac
Charles Baudelaire
Henry Ward Beecher
William Blake
Elizabeth and Robert Browning
Daniel Burnham – His parents were Swedenborgians
George Bush (biblical scholar) – Converted to Swedenborgianism and promoted it to his death.
Thomas Carlyle
Andrew Carnegie
Robert Carter III – Became a Swedenborgian in 1787 after his wife died and remained in the movement.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Alfred Deakin - Australia’s second, fifth, and seventh Prime Minister
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Robert Frost – His mother joined the Swedenborgian church and had him baptized in it (External Link
), but he left it as an adult.
Scott Glenn
Gyllenhaal family:
George Inness
Henry James Sr. – lectured on Swedenborg's thought
Carl Jung
Helen Keller – wrote Light in my Darkness which advocated the ideals of Emanuel Swedenborg
James Tyler Kent - Homeopathic physician.
Stephen King
Fitz Hugh Ludlow
Lucius Lyon – “In politics he was Democrat, in religion a Swedenborgian.”
Kristine Mann - American psychoanalyst.
William Rainey Marshall – Fifth governor of Minnesota and advocate for black suffrage.(External Link
)
William Page
Coventry Patmore – Catholic after 1862.
J.M. Schneider – Meat/Sausage Business empire in Canada, influential in the spread of Swedenborgianism across Canada
Walt Whitman
James John Garth Wilkinson – “commemorated by a bust and portrait in the rooms of the Swedenborgian Society in London.”
Lois Wilson – Founder of Al-Anon, raised Swedenborgian.(External Link
)(Her husband Bill W, of A.A. fame, married her at her family's Swedenborgian chapel. Still the influence of the faith on him is disputed)Further Information
Get more info on 'Swedenborgianism'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://swedenborgianism.totallyexplained.com">Swedenborgianism Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |