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6
SCIENCE OF CORRESPONDENCES:
OR THE RELATION OP SPIRIT TO MATTER, CONSIDERED AS A MEANS
OF SCRIPTURAL INTERPRETATION.
A Lectuuk Delivered at the New Jebusat-em TEMi'jiE of Touonjo, Novembeii
25th, 1878, iJY Hon. Wm. C. Howells, U. S. Consul at Toronto.
PUBLISHED BY R. CARSWELL, TORONTO.
In the last chapter of the Gospel of Mark, in the 16th, 17th,
and 18th verses, are these words: —
" And he said uuto them, go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel
to every creature.
" He that holieveth and is baptized, shall be saved ; but he that believeth
not, shall be damned.
"And these signs shall follow them that believe. In my name they
cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues; they shall take up ser-
pents ; and if they drink any deadly thinf^ it shall not hurt them ; thty shall
lay hands on the sick and they shall recover."
These words were spoken to His disciples by the Lord at their
last interview, when He gave them their cominis3ion to teach
His Gospel. Indeed these words constituted then* commission
— being His command to go, and the promise of what should
follow as the result of their labors. The injunction to preach
this Gospel to all the world and to every creature, was given
that it might be presented to all alike, the spirit of Divine Love
knowing no distinctions in its direction, but extending every-
where, and embracing all in its limitless arms. All nations,
kindreds, tongues, and peoples, alike in the sight of the Univer-
sal Father, are alike called to the fold, of His Gospel, alike to
the full enjoyment of its rich inheritance, on equal terms, with
equal opportunities to do his will and fulfil the whole law of love.
Like all expressions in the Divine Word, this text will bear
unfolding ; for though, when first spoken to the Apostles, its ap-
plication may have been literally and externally true, it is at this
day applicable, as a Divine injunction, and its promises are as
certainly (though in a higher degree,) fulfilled to-day, as they
were eighteen centuries ago. It contains a deeper meaning
than was understood in that period, one that was to outlast the in-
telligence of those to whom it was immediately spoken, and is
at this moment applicable to all places, as it wall be to all times.
To-day, those who really beUece are baptized; they cast out
devils ; they speak with new tongues ; they take up serpents ;
and they drink deadly things unharmed.
No text has been more frequently misread, or oftener quoted
in support of false theories than this. It is confidently cited by
the Church of Rome ; while the various fanatical sects, quote it
in support of their claim of the power to work miracles.
I have seen it tauntingly flung in the face of Christians by un-
believing scoffers ; while the clause " he that believeth " etc.,
is the staple authority of those who believe in salvation by faith
alone. And in the midst of this misuse of the text, the sincere
Christian often closes the sacred volume with an air of per-
plexed doubt as he reads these promises, and remembers that
he has seen none of them as the signs that follow them who
believe. Taken in its literal sense it confounds us ; and it is
one of the most striking verifications of the assertion that " the
letter killeth, but the spirit maketh alive." He who reads,
literally, " He that believeth and is baptized, shall be saved,"
is dumb, when the unbeliever asks him to show him the signs
that follow them that believe ; for who, they ask, takes up ser-
pents and drinks of deadly things without hurt ?
We must, therefore, resort to some system of interpretation,,
by which to read this passage of the ** Living Oracles;" or we
must set it aside as either unworthy of our belief or beyond our
comprehension. And yet this text is the great commission of
the Gospel of Christianity, at once the mandate to its mission-
area, and in the signs of their success, the rule by which to test
their converts.
We know that Protestant Christendom has explained it by
saying that it applied only to the Apostolic Age, when miracles
were wrought literally ; but they have never successfully shown
the limit to that age of miracles, or the time when the signa
which indicated a believer to the Apostles, ceased to mark them
that believe in later periods. These are insuperable diffi-
culties which admonish us, that while the text may have had its
literal application in the beginning, when men were so external
that truths could be enforced by miracles, if the Scriptures are
of universal application, they must be read by some system of
interpretation that will serve to convey their real meaning,
through all time, to all grades of intellect, and wiU make cer-
tain to us the constant use of either a literal or spiritual render-
ing of all parts of the sacred word.
My present object is to show that there is at hand a system
■which can be used as a key for the uniform interpretation of the
Divine Word. In doing this 1 shall assume no originality of
invention, nor affect the possession of advantages over others.
I would merely invite my friends to examine for themselves and
avail themselves of the advantages of a system of scriptural in-
terpretation that indeed amounts to a science, whose rules are
unvarying and yet simple and of easy access to those who would
study them, and to be acquired with very little labor.
This science, — for such it really is, — is not new, as I said ; for
it was in use in the earliest ages. But it has recently been pre-
sented to the world as a part of the theological system taught
by the celebrated, though much misunderstood Swedenborg,
who calls this system the New Jerusalem, mentioned in the
Eevelations of St. John. This theological system embraces a
series of doctrines drawn from the Scriptures, setting forth the
truths that constitute the foundation of the Church of the New
Jerusalem, This Church, though presenting a system of theo-
logy, extending to all the minutiae of faith, has this prominent
doctrine, to which I would call particular attention : that those
who live good lives, according to the faith in which they were
born and educated, from love to the Lord and charity or love of
the neighbor will be saved ; and conversely, none can be saved
who do not love the Lord and the neighbor. With such a be-
lief those who accept this theology will not insist very rigidly
upon a detailed confession of faith. Those who have organized
societies for the advancement of that faith and for the exercise
of religious rites according to it, are in the habit of presenting
to such as ask admission among them this short Confession
of Faith, as fundamental to the true Christian Church. They
say in substance : We believe that God is One, who is the Lord
Jesus Christ, in whom is a Divine Trinity of character, known
under the terms Father, Son and Holy Spirit ; that the Holy
Scriptures are Divine, and contain all instruction necessary to
our Salvation ; that we are to do good and live good lives, as of
ourselves, acknowledging that all power to do good is of the
Lord ; that evils are to be shunned because they are evils and
forbidden in the Divine Word ; that love to God and charity to-
wards the neighbor embrace the all of religion ; and all who sin-
cerely do such acts, and live such lives as they understand to
be good, from love towards God and charity towards their
neighbors, will be regenerated and saved, of whatever nation,
Church or persuasion they may be.
With this Confession of Faith it will be seen that we leave
very little room for intolerance towards others, inasmuch as we
acknowledge every man who lives a truly good life as of this
Church. We impose no conditions of Faith in our fraternal re-
lations of the Church, but accept every sincere person, who lives
a life of purity, acting from an affection for the good and the
true, as of this New Church, let them belong to whatever per-
suasion they may, or however they may have been educated on
the subject of .Religion. With this very catholic platform, we
may be indulged in the claim, that in matters of speculative
faith, we have some light to which we may invite the world —
esjyecidlly since we do not require them to accept our views,
■unless they see them to he true and (jnod.
The Doctrines of this new Church teach that all things in the
universe have a spiritual origin. That the Spiritual World is
the world of causes ; and that all the existences of the natural
world are the outgrowth of some principle, quality, or form,
existing in the world of spirits ; and that all the natural things
around us represent the principles that give them birth, from
which they spring, or around which they grow. That there
exists a permanent correspondence, or relation between the forms
of thought and affection belonging to the spirtual world, and the
things in the natural world that have been caused by these
thoughts and affections.
To illustrate this doctrine of correspondence : Suppose I
have in my mind an end to perform — a house to build, for in-
stance ; I have in view the purposes of the house, therefore in
thought I conceive of all its parts and details. Every room, the
size and arrangement, etc., will be established in my mind ns
completely as if already built. There it exists — a house in the
world of spirit or world of mind. If I were merely a spiritual
being, such a house would serve my purpose ; but as I am also
an inhabitant of this natural world of matter, I must bring my
spiritual house down into the natural world ; and therefore I
call about me the agencies of this natural existence, and build
it of wood, atone, iron, glass, etc. It still exists in my mind a
permanent house, as before it was built of matter, while it also
has come to exist in the natural world. Between the house in
my mind and that on my building lot, there exists a perfect cor-
respondence in all their parts ; because the mental or spiritual
house gave birth to the material one. Any one who has built a
house or constructed a machine to which he has given much
thought, will be sensible of this correspondence; and so well
will he be acquainted with that mental or spiritual form, that
his house or machine will not appear new to him when complet-
ed, but will seem to be an old affair. Any one familiar with
machinery of any kind will see this idea fully exhibited in its-
construction. Each and every part of a good machine corres-
ponds not only to the mental idea from which it is born, but it
also represents the use it is intended to perform and from which
it was conceived. By it, in a thousand years after its construc-
tion, the intelligent mechanic can read in the machine, the pur-
poses and thought of the inventor. The forms of all the parts
are so expressive of every conception in his mind that it is im-
possible to misread them.
This is correspondence, as it appears in its finite range be-
tween man and matter. But when we come to trace it in the
works of the Creator, the Infinite, it grows into a study as grand
as infinity. We see in the whole world of nature a complete
revelation of the Divine mind, and creation becomes " that
elder Scripture," in which the whole universe may read the
Divine plan, through all times and ages. He who looks upon
the surface of the earth, contemplates its structure and its pro-
ductions, sees in them all the purposes of the Divine Father, to
provide man with habitation, sustenance, and" the means of de-
veloping the man, in industry, and works of charity and useful-
ness to his fellows. No part of the Bible can tell more plainly
than the earth itself, that it was made for man, as a means to
promote the great sum of happiness throughout the universe
— to enlarge Heaven by peopling it with properly developed
humanity.
We see this correspondence illustrated very strikingly in the
Universal Creation, where every creature represents some spiri-
tual principle of importance connected v/ith us, and correspond-
ing to some of our moral qualities ; and, while promoting our
6
natural comfort or convenience, they exhibit iu their peculiar
traits of character, the idea from which they spring. Thus,
when the Creator would provide for man, among the lower
animals, one that would supply his wants, of food and clothing,
which should multiply rapidly, and subsist upon vegetation, he
created the sheep, a creature whose usefulness, gentleness and
innocence, most plainly represent the best qualities of the re-
generated human mind. When he designed to assist man with
the means of locomotion and progression, he made the horse and
similar animals of burden. So of every other creature. Each
being created for a certain end, and each springing from a cer-
tain moral idea, or spiritual principle, they necessarily repre-
sent these ideas and principles ; and he who will look at them
from this standpoint, will see that their very forms, and
natures express the Divine purpose, in the natural world, and
are so to speak, so many letters of a written revelation, which
can be read in all times and by all peoples, conveying the same
ideas to all with absolute certainty, whatever tongue they may
speak.
We call this the Science of Correspondences. Like other science,
it must be learned — studied — when it will be found to contain
all the elements of a science, and applicable to the purposes
of mental development. Swedenborg tells us that it was once
well known to the ancient world, afterwards lost and unused;
like the Egyptian hieroglyphics, unreadable because of disuse.
He tells us that a leading feature of his mission was to nj-pre-
sent to the world this lost science and make it available to us
as the means of reading the Divine Word in its full meaning.
He maintained that before this science fell into disuse, and men
habituated themselves to looking at every thing from a material
point of view, the mysteries of the various ancient theologies
were simple and easily understood ; and that they only came
to be called mythologies or fables when this means of interpre-
tation was lost. It was only after the Greeks had so lost this
science of corresponderces that they came to regard Minerva as
a personality, that it was wrong for them to say that she sprang
from the brain of Jupiter ; for nothing could have been so
strictly as well as poetically true, as that the personification of
wisdom should be born from the mind of the Supreme Deity.
This was the case with most of ancient theosophies. They
came to be mythologies, only when the people who received
them sunk into such profound materialism that they could no
longer conceive of the invisible to material eyes from the material
representatives before them.
Here let me remark to those who may not be aware of it,
that Swedenborg claimed to have been instructed, from the
Spiritual world, in this science, by the Divine Providence, and
commissioned to present it again to the world. I need not stop
here to establish that claim by argument. To those who ob-
stinately say there is no Spiritual world, and never can be any
spiritual revelations ; or those who as obstinately insist that all
revelation or spiritual instruction has ceased, I do not present
this claim for him ; because it would be useless labor. But to
the earnest man who is prepared to receive truth for its own
sake, I submit a view of the application of this science, accord-
ing to Swedenborg, in reading the Scriptures ; and I shall be
content to trust it for its intrinsic value, knowing that " Wis-
dom is justified of her children."
As all spiritual principles are represented in the natural
world, by the forms to which they have given birth ; and as
those forms are expressions of spiritual ideas, as a written chap-
ter or a composition drawing, is the expression of an idea in the
mind of the writer or the artist. This system of correspondence
is the best suited, as the most natural stjde of language, for
Divine revelation ; because it is less liable to the mutations to
which other forms of language are subject.
The Scriptures were written for our spirit ual instruction and
moral improvement through all ages ; therefore they could not
be 6xj)ressed in ordinary changeable language ; and they were
written in the immutable alphabet established by the Almighty
himself, in the work of Creation. So that the Book which is to
direct our lives is a composed exhibit of all that was created
around us in the Spiritual World, for our happiness there,
brought down into the natural forms that fill the Universe, to
prepare us for thai' happiness. For this reason the more cer-
tain system of embodying ideas in symbols is used ; and the
created forms are given to express the idea of their origin.
Many of these expressions are very readily conceived of,
while others are more remote. The idea of innocent simplicity
is very clearly expressed in the lamb — so much so, that in all
8
the world, in all laiij^im^t'S, that word alono expresses the moral
quality of truthful iniioconci'. But though equally true, it is
not so apparc^nt, that the grown animal represents the same
idea, only matured and strengthened hy years. This corres-
pondence of animals is very generally recognized and appreciat-
ed. The habits of the creatures, their living motions, exhibit
the internal originating quality so plainly that the poets of all
times and nations have U3ed the names of animals to express in
the most intensilled manner the ideas they rejDresent. Indeed,
it is a noticeable fact that the best poems are susceptible of an
analysis by this system of correspondence, as are the Scrip-
tures. We are also in daily use of this style of speech in our
ordinary conversation. Thus, if we wish to say of a man that
he is groveling, sensual, and greedy, we shorten and intensify
the expression by calling him a //o//. If he is rapacious, we call
him a irolf ov a slidrk. In these expressions we have reference
to the man's internal quality, and we express it by naming the
creatures that represent the qualities predominant in the dis-
ordered man. If we would describe a perfect man, our strongest
term would be a man, meaning that he possessed the qualities
pertaining to him as the likeness of his Creator. But as thi-j
science of correspondence is so comprehensive that it embraces
everything and is made up of minuitire that are overlooked by
those who have noi made it a study, it is a very natural quere
how can it be made the medium of conveying that exactness of
expression proper to the Divine Word. An acquaintance with
the science will ansv.er this question. But to those who have
not become acquainted with it, I will present a few examples, to
show the operation of the system ; though I have not the time
now ■'lO explain the uhy of every correspondence that I quote.
But I can show you that they work out a consistent exi^lanation
of the passage of Scripture illustrated ; while I assure you that a
thorough knowledge of the system, will convince you of its
power to work out certain results in every case. I will quote a
few.
You have no doubt heard many a sincere and affectionate
Christian,whoEe piety would not allow of a doubt of the sanctity
as well as the truth of the Bible, wonder how it was that things
were there spoken of as proper,, which, if anywhere else, would
have severely shocked his moral sense. Who has not read that
ft
9
beautiful 137th Psalm, describing the Israelites in captivity:
" By the rivers of Babylon we sat down, yea, we wept when
"WO thought of Zion. We hanged our harps upon the willows in
the midst thereof," etc., and closing with," Happy shall he bo
that taketh thy little ones and dasheth them against the stones,'
and has not felt that something was wanting to supply the true
meaning of that sublime hymn ? Let us read this last jarring
verse in the light of this system of correspondence. Babylon
signifies false doctrines and the evils arising from them. The
Jews were led captive there, and enslaved by the evils repre-
sented by the Babylonians as well as the" Babylonians them-
selves. When suffering from these evils, in their despair, they
exclaim: ** Happy shall he be that taketh and dasheth thy little
ones against the stones." The little ones of false doctrines and
their evils, are the beginning of error and temptations — the
children of heresy. Stones represent truths in the lowest sense,
as rocks do in a higher sense, — as shown in the expressions
" On this rock "— ** Thou art Christ," etc., (Matt, xvi., 18.) I
will build my Church." A man built his house upon a rock,
Matt, viii., 29 ; and they convey the idea of foundations and per-
manency. In this light we read the Sweet Singer of Israel,
exclaiming : " Happy shall he be who takes the incipient errors
and evils about him and dashes them against, and breaks them
with even the lower forms of truth ! "
The Lord said thou art Peter, (the word Pctros signifying a
rock), and upon this rock — truth, I will build my Church.
This was said in answer to the confession, " Thou art Christ,
the Son of the Living God " — a confession in which the funda-
mental idea of the Church was expressed. The Church was not
to be built upon Peter or by Peter, as the Roman Catholics sup-
pose, but upon the great truth confessed by Peter, whose name,
(Petros, a rock,) represented the truth. In this representative
sense all the Apostles had their signiiicance. While Peter re-
presented UiHh and truth ; John, the beloved disciple repre-
sented love and cJuwiti/,
In the Revelations of John, we are told of a judgment when
the " Books were opened," and men were judged according to
what was written therein. Many in their simplicity, under-
stand this to be a general judgment, where account or record
books, kept by some recording angel, are to witness against
those judged. Perhaps it may do no great harm for thsm to so
10
understand it. But how much more rational does this appear,
when we understand that a book corresponds to the memory ;
and that it is the memory of the man that is to be opened, that
he may be judged by what is there, — where every act and every
thought of his life has left its indelible impress, to be read by
those spirits who are to search out the quality of his character !
In passing, let me remark that the true idea of a future judg-
ment is not to see how much punishment a spirit being judged
deserves, but to find out what he is fit for, and assign him asso-
ciation accordingly.
We also read in the Apocalypse of a book and horses coming out
of it. This is impos.nble even in a dream. But if we under-
stand that horses represent intelligence, or the knowledge of and
jieans of advancing in truths, the expression is seen at once to
be rational and very forcible. We expect to find intelligence
and knowledge in the memory, but not horses in a book, till we
know what horses and books mean. The reason why a horse
corresponds to intelligence is that he is a traveller, a progres-
sive, and a means of progression. By this same analogy, roads
and paths, and chariots, all have relative correspondence to
knowledge and truth, and the means of their acquirement.
There is a woe pronounced by one of the Prophets against those
who put their trust in horses — who go down into Egypt on
horses — which is a woe to them who trust merely in what they
know. Egypt signifies natural science, which is the first step in
intellectual progress. Those who use their horses (knowledges)
to go down into Egypt (mere natural science,) are retrograding,
and justly incurring woes. In this interpretation of Egypt, as
meaning science, we see the propriety of the command to the
Israelites to borrow from the Egytians their jewels and orna-
ments, and carry them away with them. For a people being
instructed in spiritual things, to obtain and keep the jewels and
ornamonts of natural science, is consistent with our highest
standard of morality and justice.
The Bible abounds with passages that are either wholly un-
intelligible, or repulsive, in their literal reading, which when
read in the light of this system of correspondence, present us
the most rational ideas, and truths glorious as the noon-day
sun — harmonizing perfectly with our sense of right and the
science of the age.
The first chapters of Genesis have been understood by the
^
11
world generally, (and there is no particular danger to the sim-
ple-minded, of spiritual death from the behef, that I see,) to be
a history of the creation of the physical world and the solar
system. Scientific men have always stumbled over this part of
the Divine Word. But since the science of Geology has been
brought to its present perfection, the difficulty of harmonizing
the literal reading of these chapters and the facts of. science,
has been so great, that ingenious and candid minds have de-
spaired of its accomplishment, — while the account of Noah's
flood, literally read, has set all attempts at such harmony at
absolute defiance.
But suppose we read those first chapters as a sacred allegory,
under the form of Creation, exhibiting the spiritual nistory of
mankind in the complex, and each individual in particular,
showing the commencement and progress of evils and their ac-
companying falsities and man's redemption from them. The
first chapters of Genesis tell us of Adam and Eve in the Garden
of Eden. By this system of correspondence, the man signifies
the judgment or understanding in the human mind ; while the
woman represents the associated affections ; and this represen-
tation is remarkably natural and significant to the most care-
less observer. Here these two leading qualities of the mental
or spiritual man are exhibited, as placed in a garden — a situa-
tion for culture — innocent and pure, surrounded with all the
sources of happiness, good because just from the hand of the
Creator, and not yet acquainted with evil ; and true because
unused to falsehood. Man thus represented as to his under-
standing or judgment by man and his affections by the woman,
is told that he must not eat of (acquire,) the fruit of the tree of the
knowledge of good and evil, though of all other trees he may eat ;
and this injunction comprehending in itself all tliat is necessary
as such, is his law. "While ma>i and ivoman represent the two
leading qualities of the mind, every other animal repri.P'nts
some of the subordinate qualities of man's nature. Of these the
■Serpent represents his sensual principle. It dwells in his appe-
tites and near his passions ; and they being the lower portion of
his nature, are Hkely to be first assailed by the blandishments
of evil ; and they also are the first to be tempted astray. Our
sensual appetites are good in their sphere ; but they are to be
ru/ed and not to rule. Then here we have an exhibition of the
12
progress of the whole human race into evil, and that of our-
selves individually. Every man has his Garden of Eden and
his fall ; while every man must have his regeneration from it,
or remain fallen forever. In the beginning, the serpent, the
sensual principle, glides into excess and learns to delight in un-
due indulgences. It tempts the ivoman, or affections with these
delights. It presents the fruit of experience in good and evil,
gathered from the tree of knowledge of good and evil, as delight-
ful to the appetites, to the eye and to the taste. The affections
are drawn down, and fixed upon these sensual experiences of
good and evil. The woman in this way eats, (appropriates), this,
forbidden fruit at the solicitation of the serpent. These cor-
rupted affections, thus delighting in sensual indulgences, ap-
peal to the judgment ; the ivoman tempts the man, and he eats
also. Thus the judgment, led by the affections, which had been
corrupted by the appetites, yields its assent, and approves of the
love of sensual delirjhts, and both these qualities of the mind,
the man and the woman, are involved in the eating of the fruit
of this tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Then the fall is
complete. The sensual appetites, the affections and the judg-
ment, all delighting in the experiences of evil, man is neces-
sarily removed from the garden or state of innocence and purity..
Since man fell into evil by progression he must return from
it by retracing the steps that he took. Cast out from the Gar-
den, but not from the Divine care ; he is given the means of
redemption. From the judgment (the man,) and the affections
(the woman) is bom a son, Cain, who represents Faith, or con-
fidence in Truth, and the power to believ-^. As the judgment
yielded to the temptations of evil after the affections ; in the re-
trogression or return from evil, it must lead the affections and
govern the appetites; and in this state we see the woman placed
in subjection to the man, while the serpent is denounced to go-
upon his belly in the dust. Then Cain, this principle of faith,
born of the fallen judgment and affections, is succeeded by Abel,
representing charity and the good of life. Here is described a
step towards redemption. After Faith is born into the
human household, we find Charit}' soon appearing. But to
show how readily we pervert all good gifts, another scene is in-
troduced. Ix. ie brothers. Faith and Charity, are in the field
together, guarding the flocks, the gentler useful (pialities repre-
^
18
•eented by sheep and cattle, — and they worship. Cain, the Faith
principle, which dehghts in studying doctrines and forming
theories, brings an offering of the fruits of the Earth, — his self-
derived intelligence. It is scattered by a blast of wind. His
loving brother Abel or Charity offers up the firstlings of the
flocks, the tender, gentle and useful quaUties represented by the
lamb. This is accepted of Heaven. The self-reliant Cain is
enraged because the simple offering of gentle good affections is
received ; while his lofty theories are scattered to the winds ; and
overcome by jealousy, he smites his brother to the earth. Then
the next grand downward step is taken. The faith principle
being unduly cultivated, and being corrupted, it makes offering
of its fancies pnd theories, cultivated from the earth, of the earth
earthy, and the sweet and loving qualities reared and tended by
Charity are discarded ; Charity itself is slain at the altar ; and
Faith is placed to rule alone in the individual and in the
Church, guided only by the light of its self-derived intelligence,
of which we have examples all around us — where the fine spun
theories and doctrines of some cold head, are insisted upon as
essential to salvation ; while the spirit of brotherly love and
charity, and simple hearted, tender and pure affections towards
God and man, arc set aside as of minor importance, or treated
^ with contempt or neglect. Then it is expected that much will
be forgiven to those who believe much, rather than those who »
lov* much.
Under this allegory we have a rational history of the develope-
ment of evil in the human race, and of the fall of the first Church,
under the name of Adam, which lasted or lived nine hundred
years, and thon died, or fell into that state of evil where charity
or love of the neighbor was extinguished, and doctrinal tests set
up in its place. Then it was, as we olten find it now, when the
Church does not ask respecting a man : Does he love God and
his neighbor ; but does he believe our particular doctrines ?
And good men are condemned for want of faith in some dogma
or logic that they do not understand.
Other churches or dispensations succeeded the Adamic, and
in their turn became corrupt and falsified, and perished ; till in
later times these false doctrines and the evils resulting from
them spread over the whole earth as a Jlood, deluging and
drowning out all that was manly and humanizing among men —
14
covering the whole earth of humanity, even to the highest moun-
tains, or most elevated portions of the mind, leaving only a few
pure principles and truths, represented by Noah and his family,
and the qualities represented by the animals in the Ark, of
which there were seven of all the clean and only pairs of the
lower orders.
It will be readily seen that we do not therefore understand the
first chapters of the Bible to be a history of the physical crea-
tion or the first times of the world. They are only an allegory
illustrating the introduction and progress of evil in the first
ages of the world, and the fall into evils, experienced by every
individual in all ages. Of course, then, Adam and Methuselah
and Enoch are names of churches, or epochs of the first ages,
and not the names of individual men.
After the period described under the figure of the flood and
Noah, the Scriptures become the history of the Jewish Church,
in which they were written ; and as such they detail actual oc-
currences as well as the progress of principles ; while these
actual occurrences are representative and typical of after and
higher spiritual matters, — the Hebrews being a representative
people, and their whole course a grand life drama, so to speak,
containing and representing the great work of Kedemption.
The scenes they enacted and the language in which these scenes
are related, are all correspondent to interior principles, and may
be read and interpreted by this system, as I instanced in the
Psalm.
But I will be excused for introducing here another reading of
the Bible by this system of correspondence, wherein we have an
explanation of a text in which the literal reading is almost re-
versed, and that so strikingly, that it cannot fail to arrest at-
tention, while it relieves some torturing doubts.
When the Israelites were starting upon one of their expedi-
tions against the Canaanites, they were directed to exterminate
those idolators, and not spare any of th' males of any age, nor
the women who were married or attached to any of the men ;
but the young women they were to spare, and keep for them-
selves. See Numbers the 31st, 17th and 18th verses : " Now
kill every male among the little ones, and kill every woman
that has known man," etc," " but all the young women that
have not known men, etc., keep alive for yourselves." Here is.
15
indeed a monstrous order of proceeding, as literally read. But
let us analyze it : The Canaanites were the representatives of all
false or falsified doctrines. The men among them represented
the judgment, perverted and corrupted by false teaching and
also the falsehoods themselves, which the Hebrews were to
exterminate, to kill. The women married to them, were the
affections for the false, the corrupted affections, from which,
would be born evils of course, which evils were the male child-
ren. But the young women, unattached to, and uncorrupted by
these falses, the pure natural affections for good and truth, they
were commanded to spare and appropriate to themselves. Here
is indeed beauty for ashes !
So it would be with any of the knotty texts in the entire
Bible, if read by this system. Without it, they are dark, mys-
terious, and often repulsive ; but with it they are lucid, beauti-
ful and holy. But the text I quoted when I began, most emi-
nently furnishes an example of the advantages of this method
of interj)retation.
He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved. Of the
the term believe we are to understand of course, that kind of
belief which is carried out into acts, that living faith which
makes men do as well as think the truth — ivith a heart unto
righteousness To believe in this case, signifies to act, as to-
hear sincerely, implies obedience, not merely to receive the truth,
but that deeper act of the affection, to love and to do it. From
this belief, men are baptized, washed, cleansed, purified. He
that believes and is baptized, by that belief, will be saved. It
does not say in the converse part of the text — he that believeth
not and is not baptized ; because he who does not believe in this
higher sense, never can be spiritually or really baptized. When
the belief extends to, and invests the heart or affections, that
purity of life follows which is symbolized by the rite of baptism.
Then we are told that these signs shall follow them that be-
lieve. ** In my name they shall cast out devils," — from them-
selves, from their own hearts, where evil spirits previously
ruled. They shall speak with new tongues, for from the abun-
dance of the heart, from which the mouth speaks, the utter-
ances of their hearts will be true and good.
They shall take up serpents — those sensual appetites, that
tempted the woman or affections, in the garden of Eden, shall
f
m
16
te made pure and elevated to the position they occupied before
the fall — taken up from the dust, reduced to order and applied
to use ; for all our appetites are good when taken up or elevated
«ibove evil desire.
If they dr'mk any deadly thing it shall not hurt them. Pure
water represents truth, and hence the signij5cance of baptism.
If water is rendered impure, it represents truth falsified. If
poisoned, it contains deadly errors. To drink any deadly thing
would signify to receive grievous errors and false doctrines ;
but they Avho have cast out devils, (evils,) from their hearts,
and from the abundance of their hearts speak with new and
regenerated tongues, and have taken up their serpents ; if they
should drink some deadly thing, accept some false doctrine, i
shall not hurt them ; because loving and doing what is good
they are not led into evil nets, by the false views which they
may receive into their understandings, as we see daily, men
holding very erroneous doctrines, and yet living good lives.
They shall lay hands upon the sick, and they shall recover.
Those qualities in us which are diseased and disordered by evil,
are properly called the sick. The hand represents power and
guiding strength. With the good man, it would be the power of
righteousness, which is potent to heal the sick on which it is
laid.
If, at the time of the Apostles, when a few miracles were
wrought, to arrest the attention of the very sensual men of that
age, these signs literally or physically followed some of the
believers ; that was no reason that the signs, in their deeper
spn-itual sense, should not always follow true faith. For though
the outward appearance may not now be present ; so far as the
great work of spiritual regeneration is concerned, the signs still
follow, and the promise still holds good. He that sincerely and
heartily believes and idibaptized — purified in heart and purpose
— his sensual nature, the serpent, shall be lifted up ; he shall
speak with new tongues, i— the understanding will be enlightened
by true faith ; the affections will be purified and led by that true
faith ; his sin-sick soul shall be healed ; " and if they drink any
deadly thing it shall not hurt them, "for they shall not hurt nor
destroy in my holy mountain saith the Lord."