In
the preceding essay on the “Spiritual
Philosophy of African Slavery,” I ventured the assertion, that the
barbarians
of the world, and especially the dark-skinned savages, are descendants
of the
antediluvians. The New Church reader
will perhaps ask, What rational ground is there for such an hypothesis?
There
are evidently three great classes
or types of men now existing in the world.
1. Barbarians.—These people have never
invented an alphabet, and therefore have no literature, no science, no
theology,
no rational government. They lead the sensual-corporeal
life of animals, with merely the exterior-natural, as
Swedenborg calls
it, of human life. They do not
accumulate facts so as to cultivate the scientific principle;
nor have
they the least idea of the rational, which is still more
interior. Consequently, they are totally
unprogressive.
2. Semi-civilized nations.—We may take
the Hindoos as the most ancient and best type of this class. They have the most extraordinary literature,
theology,
government, habits, customs, etc., thousands of years old, and in a
strangely
crystallized or unprogressive condition. They
are perfect enigmas to us modern thinkers; nor is
there any key to
the mystery, but the science of correspondences. I
assume that all such nations are the descendants
of the men of the Ancient Church, and have been made unprogressive by
the
closure of the spiritual degree of the human mind.
3.
Modern civilized nations—With
the scientific and rational faculties of the mind in constant and
progressive activity.
It is the ineradicable fault of
modern philosophy to suppose
that there has been, from the beginning, a regular progressive
development of
the human race from the savage condition upward, into the light and
beauty of
civilization. It presumes that all
nations were originally barbarous, with fetichism for their first and
only
theological manifestation. From this
stage they passed into a semi-civilized condition, with polytheism for
their
religion; and, lastly, they became scientific and philosophical, and,
as to
their theological opinions, atheistic, deistic, or monotheistic. This corresponds to M. Comte's three stages
of human evolution—the mythical, the metaphysical, and the positive.
The Europeans, it is assumed,
have outstripped all others in
the race of civilization, on account of superior organization of brain,
and a
great number of favoring natural and external causes.
And it is confidently expected that the
African and the Asiatic will, finally, come up to the same point of
development, under the influence of similar stimuli and surrounding
circumstances.
I can not here appeal, as I
might, to every department of
human knowledge and inquiry to refute this doctrine, that the savage is
the
primitive man, or the seed out of which in due time the civilized man
is
unfolded. I will make a single quotation
from a distinguished Old Church authority, and then pass on to a more
strictly New
Church, or Swedenborgian, view of the subject:
"Were the savage the primitive
man, we should then find
savage tribes furnished, scantily enough it might be, with the elements
of
speech, yet at the same time with its fruitful beginnings, its vigorous
and
healthful germs. But what does their
language on close inspection prove? In
every case, what they are themselves, the remnant and ruin of a better
and nobler
past. Fearful indeed is the impress of
degradation which is stamped upon the language of the savage—more
fearful than
that even which is stamped upon his form.
“Yet with all this, ever and
anon in the midst of this wreck
and ruin there is that in the language of the savage, some subtle
distinction,
some curious allusion to a perished civilization, now utterly
unintelligible to
the speaker; or some other note, which proclaims his language to be the
remains
of a dissipated inheritance, the rags and remnants of a robe which was
a royal
one once. The fragments of a broken
sceptre are in his hand, a sceptre wherewith he (or rather his
progenitors)
once held dominion over large kingdoms of thought, which have now
escaped wholly
from his sway.”—Dr. Richard Trench, on the Study of
Words, pp. 26
and
27.
Swedenborg asserts that there
were three great and distinct
civilizations before the coming of Christ—celestial, spiritual,
and natural—connected
by influx, we may safely presume, respectively with the three distinct
heavens. The church is the medium of life,
and progress
occurs first and prominently on the plane where the church is. The ancient civilizations perished because
the celestial and spiritual degrees of the human mind
were
successively closed. Now is it not
probable that barbarism resulted from the closure of the celestial
plane, and that a barbarian is a man spiritually organized like a
child, that
is, leading a sensual-corporeal life with celestial
“remains” stored
away in his interiors?
Does the New Churchman object,
that the whole human race perished
at the flood or closure of the celestial plane, except the
“remnant” in
whom the spiritual plane could be opened? and
that all men thereafter are of the spiritual
or natural type? I answer, what
then can Swedenborg mean by saying that the African race is of the celestial
genius? Does he mean spiritual-celestial,
analogous to one half of the spiritual heavens? I
think not, for the African would then exhibit some token
or trace, as
the Asiatic does, of having once enjoyed a high degree of spiritual
light. But he is thoroughly sensual-corporeal,
and his “remains” are evidently celestial, nor has he ever had
any thing
about him of which the spiritual could be predicated.
The
first men created on earth
were of the celestial genius. A celestial
church was established among them which no doubt had its rise,
culmination, and
fall. There is no reason, however, to
suppose that every created being had been brought into its intimate
communion
before its deterioration, nor that all, save the spiritual
remnant, were
suffocated by its disappearance. The
following from Swedenborg appears satisfactory on that point:
“By
all which is on the earth
expiring, those are signified who being of that church had acquired
such a nature,
as may appear from this consideration, that earth does not signify the
whole
habitable globe, but only those who are of the church, as was shown
above. Consequently there is no particular
flood
here meant, much less a universal flood, but only the expiration or
suffocation
of those who were of the church, when they had separated themselves
from
remains, and thereby from the intellectual things of truth, and from
what
appertained to the will of good, consequently from the heavens.” A. C. 662.
Swedenborg
expressly declares that
this suffocation or closure of the celestial plane in those of
the Most Ancient
Church, and the opening of the spiritual plane for the
establishment of
a spiritual church, were gradual processes. Those
who had extinguished remains by immersion in lusts
and phantasies
no doubt perished. No doubt also this
process would have gone on to the extermination of the whole race, for
influx
is through the church alone. But with the
opening of the spiritual degree, a great organic modification
was induced. Influx came through the
spiritual into the
natural and thence into the corporeal. The
sensual-corporeal life of both men and brutes was
maintained by the
influx from the New Church. The process
of extinction was arrested, but all, save the spiritual
remnant, were
left in a sensual-corporeal condition, with some few celestial
“remains”
deeply imbedded in their structure—their sole hope of future
resuscitation.
This
rationale of barbarism,
according to the New Church psychology, seems to be eminently clear and
beautiful. It explains the mysteries of
savage
life. It shows why the scientific,
rational,
and spiritual degrees have not been opened in his mind.
His “remains” are celestial, and not till
they are vivified, will his inferior faculties develop.
No influx or creative impetus has reached
these remains since the flood—for no celestial church has existed. When inferior things have been subordinated
and coordinated for the descent of the celestial, then will
those
nations of the celestial type who can receive the new influx—especially
the
Africans—reveal the mercy, and wisdom, and power of God in a manner
surpassingly strange and beautiful.
Some
barbarians appear doomed to
inevitable extinction, such as our American Indians, the Australians,
the
Bushmen, some wild tribes in Ceylon and Malabar who live in trees and
are very
little superior to apes, the cannibals of Madagascar, some hopelessly
degraded
races in Siberia, Patagonia, and elsewhere, etc., etc.
Do they not all represent certain great
principles or qualities in the Most Ancient Church, of which the
“remains” were
becoming extinct? Were they not secured
a low kind of physical existence by the change of influx as above
mentioned,
and will not the incipient influx of the celestial church ensure their
destruction?
Swedenborg
speaks always well of
the Africans, and his description of them, from a spiritual
stand-point, will
hereafter be regarded as a strong external proof of the reliability of
his own
revelations. It is singular that although
Africa is west and southwest of Asia and south of Europe, Swedenborg
says
Africa in thc spiritual or angelic sense means the East. (Apoc. Ex. 21.) It was of course
correspondential,
representing the celestial state nearest the Lord.
Its first people must have been celestial.
In
my former essay I intimated my
belief that the Africans are to play a great part in the ultimation of
the
celestial church and the regeneration of the world.
It is more than a curious coincidence that at
the time Swedenborg was revealing the vast organic system of spiritual
truth, which
is the doctrine of angels, a revelation was being made to negroes in
the
interior of Africa. Of this remarkable
fact
we have as yet no external proof, but no New Churchman doubts that
Swedenborg’s
statement will be verified, perhaps in some unanticipated manner. Notice this passage from Swedenborg: “I have
heard
the angels rejoice at this revelation, because it serves to open a
communication
with the rational principle in man, which has been heretofore
closed up
with the universally received dogma, that the understanding should be
kept in
obedience to ecclesiastical faith.” T. C. R. 840. Now if I understand this sentence aright, it
means, that we owe much of our great emancipation from the dogmas of
the past
to the quiet and imperceptible influx into our rational
principle, of a
sphere flowing from a little obscure community in Africa, whose
celestial “remains”
have been vivified by the special implantation of truth.
What effect then may we presume the sphere of
Christianized Africans in the south to have on the world and church at
large? The natural man would scout such an
idea,
because he knows nothing of influx and correspondences.
We may owe all of our boasted civil and
religious liberty to the fact, that the inmost celestial sphere of
Africa has
here in America impinged upon the rational-scientific sphere of the
European. Hence the whole world is thrown
into dire
commotion about African slavery. It is,
indeed, the question of questions. The
whole future of the church depends on the existence and
Christianization of
this institution. Devils and
enthusiastic spirits, by the agency of fanatics and misguided good
people,
would thwart the influx from the celestial by restoring the African to
his
original barbarism.
It
is curious and instructive to
see how spheres withdraw or approach, and are correspondentially
represented in
history. The celestial is closed, and
Africa and America disappear from the consciousness of the race. The spiritual is closed, and Hindostan, China,
and Japan exist to the Greek and Roman only by tradition.
The natural is nearly closed, and the Jew
alone remains, thoroughly sensual-corporeal—the ultimate form of the
ancient
civilizations. The new natural of ascending
civilization is formed in Europe, and spheres approach again. Asia comes into contact with Europe by the
crusades, the career of Moor and Turk, and, finally, by the British
domination
in India. Asia comes into contact with
Africa
by the Moor and Arab imposing the Mohammedan religion on almost all the
tribes
of Central Africa. The celestial
approaches, and Africa and America are re-discovered.
Africa comes into contact with Europe in
America—and it will meet Asia again on the same ground by the
emigration from
China to our Pacific Coast, and the importation of Coolies into
tropical
America. The celestial, spiritual,
and natural will meet in tropical America, and not until their
spheres
have been fully subordinated and co-ordinated will the New Jerusalem
descend in
all its fulness upon earth, and the New Zion be established. The Jew—the connecting link between the descending
and ascending civilizations will be the last to be regenerated,
and then
the triumph of our Lord, the Redeemer, will be complete.
No
one, I hope, will infer from these
remarks that I suppose the celestial, spiritual, and natural,
which are discrete degrees, can possibly exist upon the same plane. If the celestial church had not
fallen, we would have remained forever in connection with the third
heavens. If the spiritual church
could have
persisted, we might have been still connected by influx with the second
heavens,
and so on. But having descended into the sensual-corporeal,
we become by the process of
reconstruction or
regeneration only celestial-natural or spiritual-natural. The African will be celestial-natural,
the Asiatic spiritual-natural, the European either. Our world, according to Swedenborg, belongs
to the corporeal sphere, and has place in the cutaneous principle of
the Grand
Man. For this reason the Word is given
here in so sensuous a form, and our Lord became a sensual-corporeal
being on
our planet. All things are repeated or
represented in ultimates, and hence our descent from the celestial to
the
sensual, and our acquisition of a new basis into which all the higher
elements
may be inserted.
If
I am not greatly mistaken, the
application of the doctrines of influx, order, series, degrees, and
correspondence, in the light of Swedenborg’s direct revelations, to the
physical,
moral, and historical study of man, will be productive of great results. Physiologists, ethnologists, and historians
are
collecting the facts, which the New Church philosophy alone can ever
harmonize
or explain.
Not only will the natural
history
of man and the philosophy of history be elevated into rational light,
but the
moral government of God will be vindicated from many objections which
have been
urged against it. God created no man a
savage, or black, or yellow, or hideous and deformed, or idiotic, or
insane. Men have made themselves and their children so. God
governs the hells and all states of human
imperfection and barbarism with infinite mercy.
By confining a vast portion of the race for a definite and provisional
period to barbarism, he saved them from total annihilation. Those
people viewed in spiritual light are
children, and they have unquestionably been saved in heaven. The
fears of orthodoxy for their salvation
are wholly gratuitous. In the fulness of
time, when His celestial church is ultimated, these people, preserved
as a
remnant or seed for that very purpose, will be the principal means and
agents
to a perfect reorganization of society. The
end was foreseen in the beginning and provided for. He has led us
by ways we knew not, and we may
be sure, that the wonders and mercies of the past will be immeasurably
eclipsed
by those of the future. “The light of
the moon shall be as the light of the sun, and the light of the sun
shall be
sevenfold.”
~~~~~~~~~~
Dr. Horace Bushnell, in his work on “Nature
and the Supernatural,” cites a case in his own experience, of what
he
regards as the possession of a spiritual gift in an African, which may
perhaps
be referred to the “vivification of remains.” After
relating numerous facts in proof that “miracles
and spiritual gifts are not discontinued,” Dr. B. proceeds:
“I
cite only one more witness; a
man who carries the manner and supports the office of a prophet, though
without
claiming the repute of it himself. He is
a fugitive from slavery, whose name I had barely heard, but whose
character and
life have been known to many in our community, for the last twenty
years. He called at my door, about the
time I was
sketching the outline of this chapter, requesting an interview. As I entered the room, it was quite evident
that he was struggling with a good deal of mental agitation, though his
manner was
firm, and even dignified. He said
immediately, that he had come to me ‘with a message from de Lord.’ I
replied,
that I was glad if he had any so good thing as that for me, and hoped
he would
deliver it faithfully. He told me, in
terms of great delicacy, and with a seriousness that excluded all
appearance of
a design to win his way by flattery, that he had conceived the greatest
personal interest in me, because, in hearing me once or twice, he had
discovered that God was teaching me, and discovering Himself to me in a
way
that was specially hopeful; and that, for this very reason, he had been
suffering the greatest personal burdens of feeling on my account. For more than a year he had been praying for
me,
and sometimes in the night, because of his apprehension that I had made
a false
step, and been disobedient to the heavenly vision.
During all this time, he had been struggling
also with the question, whether he might come and see me, and testify
his concern
for me?
“I
asked him to explain, and not
to suffer any feeling of constraint. In
a manner of the greatest deference possible, and with a most singularly
beautiful skill, he went on, gathering round his point, and keeping it
all the
while concealed, as he was nearing it, straightening up his tall, manly
form,
dropping out his Africanisms, rising in the port of his language,
beaming with
a look of intelligence and spiritual beauty, all in a manner to second
his
prophetic formulas—'The Lord said to m’' thus and thus; ‘The Lord has
sent me
to say ;’ till I also, as I gazed upon him, was obliged internally to
confess, ‘verily,
Nathan the prophet has come again!’ It
was really a scene such as any painter might look a long time to find
such dignity
in one so humble; expression so lofty, and yet so gentle and
respectful; the air
of a prophet so commanding and positive, and yet in such divine
authority, as to
allow no sense of forwardness or presumption.
“It
came out, finally, as the
burden of the message, that on a certain occasion, and in reference to
a
certain public matter, I had undertaken that which could not but
withdraw me
from God’s teaching, and was certain to obscure the revelations
otherwise ready
and waiting to be made. ‘Yes,’ I
replied, ‘but there was nothing wrong in what I undertook to set
forward.’ It
brought no scandal on religion. It
concerned, you will admit, the real benefit of the public, in all
future times.’ ‘Ah, yes,’ he answered,’ it
was well
enough to be done, but it was not for you. God
had other and better things for you. He
was calling you to Himself, and it was yours to go with
Him, not to
be laboring in things more properly belonging to other men.’ I had given him the plea, by which, drawing on
my natural judgment, I had justified myself in going into the
engagement in
question. And yet, I am obliged to
confess to a strong, and even prevalent impression, that my humble
brother was
right.
“I
thanked him for his message,
and even looked upon him with a kind of reverence as we parted. I found, on inquiry, that he was a man
without blame, industrious, pure, a husband and father, faithful to his
office,
and always in the same high key of Christian living.
But the people of his color, knowing him
well, and having nothing to say against him, could yet offer no opinion
at all
concerning him. He was plainly enough a
strange being to them; they could make nothing of him.
The most they could say was, that he is
always the same.
“I
have since visited him, in his
little shop, and drawn out of him the story of bis life.
He became a Christian about the time of his
arrival at manhood, and gives a very clear and beautiful account of his
conversion. And the Lord, he says, told
him, at that time, that he should be free, soul and body.
To which he answered, ‘Yea, Lord, I know it.’ A promise that was afterward
fulfilled
in a very strange and wonderful deliverance. I
observed that, in the account he gave me, he was
continually saying, in
the manner of the prophets, ‘the Lord said,’ and ‘the Lord commanded,’
and ‘the
Lord promised,’ and I called his attention to the fact, asking—what do
you mean
by this? Do you hear words audibly spoken? ‘Oh
no.’ ‘What then? Do you think
what appears to be said to you, and call that the saying of the Lord?’ ‘Yes,
I think it; but that is not all.’ ‘How then do you know that it is any thing more
than ——'s thought?’ ‘Well,
I know it, I feel it to be not from me,
and I can tell you things that show it to be so;’ reciting facts,
which, if
they are true, prove beyond a question, the certainty of some
illumination not
of himself. ' Why, then,' I asked, '
does God teach you in this manner, and not me? I feel a strong
conviction,
sometimes, that I am in the will, I know not how, and the directing
counsel of
God, but I could never say, as you do, ' the Lord said thus to me.' '
Ah,' said
he, ' but you have the. means—you can
read as I can not, you have great learning. But
I am a poor, Ignorant child, and God does with me just
as he can.' Whatever
may be thought of his revelations, none, I think, will deny him, in his
reply, the
credit of a true philosophy. What can be
worthier of God. than to be the guide of
this faithful, and otherwise dejected man, making up for his privations
of
ignorance, by the fuller and more open vision of Himself?
“And yet I
should leave a wrong
impression, were I not to say, that this Christian fugitive, this
unlettered
body servant, now, of Christ, as once of his earthly master, is deep in
the
wisdom of the Scriptures, quotes them continually with a remarkable
eloquence and
propriety, and with a degree of insight which many of the best educated
preachers
might envy. He also believes that God
has healed the sick, in many instances, in immediate connection with
his prayers,
giving the names and particulars without scruple.”
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