X I LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, I 4'>a?. - ^rang-'' »\'' '• # ■# — ^ H^ # J UNITED STATES OP AMERICA. | SOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLxiVERY THE LIGHT 3 col OF THE m^l NEW JERUSALEM. BY RICHARD DE CHARMS. PHILADELPHIA: STEREOTYPED, FOR THE AUTHOR, BY GEORGE CHARLES, NO. 9 S A NSOM STREET. 1851. Urdcrcd, accordinfj to Act of Covjrc^fi, in the ytar 1S51, 6y raCilARD PE CHARMS, In the Clerk's Oj/lcc of the District Court of the United States in and fur the Eastern Di'itrict of Pennffijlvania. CONTENTS, Page. Preface— Displaying The Neio Jerusalem, and its Ilcavmly Doctrine, under the fol- lowing heads : 5 Of the Xew lleaTcn and the New Earth, and what is meant by tlie New Jerusalem 6 Introduction to the Doctrine 10 Of Good and Truth H Of the Will and the Understanding 13 Of the Internal and External Man I4 Of Love in General 16 Of the Love of Self and the Love of the World 18 Of Love towards the Neighbor, or Charity 21 Of Faith 26 Of Piety 29 Of Conscience 31 Of Liberty 32 Of Merit S3 Of Repentance, and the Remission of Sins 35 Of Rej;fncration- 37 Of Temptation og Of r.aptism \as also clcllverod ns a discourse, in Washington Cit}^, on the 24th of February, 1850, before the Washington Society of the Xew Jerusalem, in view of the one hundred and eighteenth anniversary of Washington's birth. The author, having been repeatedly, and especially on that occasion, urged to publish it, issued proposals for that pur- pose, and printed an edition of seven hundred and fifty copies. That edition was soon exhausted. And he is now strenuously importuned to allow it to be reissued, in a cheaper and more accommodated form, for the widest possible circulation as a national tract. Yielding to this solicitation^ he has determined to remodel it, and have it stereotyped. As this little work may now fall into the hands of many who never heard of the new church called the New Jerusalem, it is manifestly proper that something should be premised respecting the character and doctrines of that church. As to its character, it claims to be an entirely new dispensation of christian verities. It is the new and true christian church, predicted by John, in the Apocalypse, under the figurative representations of tlie virgin bride, the Lamb's wife, and the holy city. Its complex doctrine is the internal sense of God's Word : and the unfolding of the truths of this sense, by the long lost, but now restored, science of the correspondences between natural and spiritual or earthly and heavenly things, constitutes the second or spiritual coming of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To effect this his second advent in these latter days, the Lord has, in mercy, deigned to avail himself of the instrumentality of a chosen servant, Ema- nuel Swedenborg. By a preternatural elevation of his under- standing, he illuminated the interiors of his mind with the im- mediate light of his own divine presence, and, by his discrote intromission into the spiritual world, enabled him to converse 1* 5 6 PREFArE. with anjrclH — thus to n^;ialn a knowlciJgc of the great law by whivh the Wcnl «.f (iod was written, to discern and to reveal, not unly tho exiitciice of a iicaven and a hell, but also their naturi' and thi-ir hiws, as well as to discover anfl make known ihe tnu' nature of the connectinn that exists between man's iKiul and his body, between the spiritual world and the natural worhl, Iwfwcon the Pfiiritual and the natural senses of the 8aered Hcri|»lure}», and between the divinity and the humanity of the One, Oidy. LiviuL', and True (iod. The theological system tbua revealed from the Lord Jesus Christ, is to be understood by the holy city, the New Jerusalem, now coming down from (JikI <»ut of heaven. — " In that d.iy shall thr-re be one Lord, and his name onn." rZ"ch., xiv, D.) "And this is his name ^herehy he phall be called, JkIIOVAII OUR RICHTKOUSNESS/' {JvT.^ xxiii, G.) *' These things have I spoken unto you in pro- verbs: the tiinecometh wlien 1 shall no longer speak unto you in proxerbs, [or parables,] but I shall show you jtlainly of the father." (John, xvi, 2;').) "And he that sat upon the throne Bai«l, lJeh(dL'irk, xiii, 2(5; Luke, xii, 40, aud xxi, 27 ; and the last chapter of Revelations throughout. As to the leading, fundamental, or peculiar doctrines of this new and true christian church, it was at first intended to present h"re a very brief and cursory outline of our own. But, on ma- ture reconsideration, it has been deemed best to give the whole of Kmanuel Swcdeiiborg's little work, entitled, ^^On the X>jw Jrrusnh in fii>t heuven and tlio first e:irth had passed away. And I, John. Haw the lioly t-ity, xNew .I(>iusalem, coniinj; down froni (M.d out «)f heaven, prepjired as ji hride ad..rne.l f,,r her husband The city had a wall, groat and hi-h, which had twelve gates and HEAVENLY DOCTRINE. 7 at the gates twelve angels, and names written thereon, which are the names of the twelve tribes of the children of Israel. And the wall of the city had twelve foundations, and in them the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb. And the city lieth four-square, and the length is as great as the breadth. And he measured the city with the reed, twelve thousand furlongs ; the length and the breadth and the height of it were equal. And he measured the wall thereof, a hundred and forty and four cubits, the measure of a man, that is, of the angel. And the wall of it was of jasper ; and the city was pure gold, like unto pure glass ; and the foundations of the wall of the city were garnished with all manner of precious stones. And the twelve gates were twelve pearls. And the street of the city was pure gold, as it were transparent glass. The glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof. And the nations of them which are saved shall Avalk in the light of it ; and the kings of the earth shall bring their glory and honor into it." Chap, xxi, 1, 2, 12—24. When a man reads these words, he understands them only ac- cording to their literal sense, and concludes that the visible heaven and earth will be dissolved, and a new heaven be created, and that the holy city, Jerusalem, answering to the measures above described, will descend upon the new earth: but the angels understand these things altogether dilFerentl}^ ; that is to say, what man understands naturally, they understand spiritually; and what they understand is the true signification ; and this is the internal or spiritual sense of the Word. According to this internal or spiritual sense, a new heaven and a new earth mean a ncAv church, both in the heavens and on the earth, which will be more particularly spoken of here- after. The city, Jerusalem, descending from God out of heaven, signifies the heavenly doctrine of that church ; the length the breadth and the height thereof, which are equal, signify all the varieties of good and truth belonging to that doctrine in the aggre- gate. The wall of the city means the truths which protect it ; the measure of the wall, which is a hundred and forty and four cubits, which is the measure of a man, that is, of the angel, signifies all those defending truths in the aggregate, and their quality. The twelve gates of pearl mean all introductory truths ; and the twelve angels at the gates signify the same. The foundations of the wall, which are of every precious stone, mean the knowledges on which that docrine is founded. The tAvelve tribes of Israel, and the twelve apostles, mean all things belonging to the church in general and in particular. The city and its streets being of gold like unto pure glass, signifies the good of love, giving brightness and trans- parency to the doctrines and its truths. The nations w^ho are saved, and the kings of the earth Avho bring glory and honor into the city, mean all the members of that church who are in goodness and in truth. God and the Lamb mean the Lord as to the essential divi- nity and the divine humanity. Such is the spiritual sense of the Word, to which the natural sense, which is that of the letter, serves as a basis ; but still these two senses, the spiritual and the natural, form a one by correspondences. 8 PREFACE. 2. Before the New Jerusalem and its doctrine are treated of, it may be expedient to give some account of the new heaven and tlie new earth. What is to be understood by the first heaven and the first earth, which passed aAvay, is shown in the small work On ilie Last Judgment and the Destruction of Bahylon. Immcdiattdy after that event, that is, when the last judgment was completed, a new heaven was created or formed by the Lord ; which heaven was composed of all those persons who, from the coming of the Lord to the present time, had lived in faith and charity ; for such persons alone are capable of being assimihited to the form of heaven. For the form of heaven, according to which all consociations and com- munications therein are effected, is the form of divine truth, grounded in divine good, proceeding from the Lord ; and this form man, as to his spirit, acquires by a life according to divine truth. Hence it may be clearly seen, who they are of whom the new hea- ven consists ; and thereby what its quality is, namely, that it is altogether unanimous. He who lives in faith and charity, loves others as himself, and by love conjoins them with himself, the effect of which is reciprocal : for, in the spiritual world, love is conjunc- tion. Wherefore, when all act thus, then, from many, yea, from innumerable individuals, consociated according to the form of hea- ven, unanimity exists, and they become as one ; for then nothing separates and divides, but every thing conjoins and unites. 3. Since this heaven was formed of all those who had been of Buch a quality from the coming of the Lord until the present time, it follows that it is composed both of Christians and of Gentiles, but chiefly of infants, from all parts of the world, who have died since the Lord's coming: for all these were received by the Lord, and educated in heaven, and instructed by the angels, and reserved, that they, together with the others, might constitute a new heaven ; whence it may be concluded how vast that heaven is. 4. Moreover, with respect to this new heaven, it is to be observed, that it is distinct from the ancient heavens which were formed be- fore the coming of the Lord ; at the same time there is such an orderly connection cstal)lished between them, that, together, they form but one heaven. The reason why this new heaven is distinct from the ancient heavens, is, that in the ancient churches there was no other doctrine than the doctrine of love and charity, and that at that time they Avere unacquainted with any doctrine of faith sepa- rated from those principles. Hence, also, it is, that the ancient heavens constitute superior expanses, whilst the new heaven con- Btitutes an expanse beneath tliem ; for the heavens are expanses one above another. In the highest expanse those dwell who are called celestial angels, many of whom were of the most ancient church : they are so named from celestial love, which is love to the liOrd. In the expanse beneath them are those who are called s])i- ritual angels, many of whom were of the ancient church ; they are called spiritual angels frt)m spiritual love, wliich is charit}' towards our neighbor. Below these are the angels who are in the good of faith ; these are they Avho have lived a life of faith : for a man to live a life of faith, is to live according to the doctrine of his parti- HEAVENLY DOCTRINE. 9 cular church ; and to live is to will and to do. All these heavens, however, form a one, by mediate and immediate influx from the Lord. 5. It may be sufficient to state thus much concerning the new heaven ; something shall now be said concerning the new earth. By the new earth is understood a new church upon earth ; for when a former church ceases to exist, then a new one is established by the Lord. It is provided by the Lord that there should always be a church on earth, since by means of the church there is a conjunc- tion of the Lord with mankind, and of heaven with the world : there the Lord is known, and therein are divine truths by which man is conjoined to him. The reason why a new church is signified by a new earth arises from the spiritual sense of the Word ; for, in that sense, by the word earth, or land, no particular country is meant, but the nation dwelling there, and its divine worship ; this, in the spiritual sense, being what answers to earth in the natural sense. Moreover, by earth, or land, in the Word, when there is no name of any particular country affixed to the term, is signified the land of Canaan ; and in that land a church had existed from the earliest ages ; in consequence of which, all the places therein, and in the adjacent countries, with the mountains and rivers, as men- tioned in the AVord, became representative and significative of those things which compose the internals of the church, and which aro called its spiritual things. Hence it is, as was observed, that earth, or land, in the Word, as meaning the land of Canaan, signifies the church ; it is therefore usual in the church to speak of the heavenly Canaan, by which is understood heaven itself. Thus, also, by the new earth is here meant a now church. 6. What is understood by Jerusalem in the spiritual sense of the Word shall also be briefly described. Jerusalem means the church with respect to doctrine, because at Jerusalem, in the land of Ca- naan, and in no other place, were the temple, the altar, the sacri- fices, and, consequently, all that pertained to divine worship. On this account, also, three festivals were celebrated there every year, to which every male throughout the whole land was commanded to go. This, then, is the reason why Jerusalem, in the spiritual sense, sig- nifies the church with respect to worship, or, what is the same thing, with respect to doctrine ; for worship is prescribed by doctrine, and is performed according to it. The reason why it is said, " the holy city, New Jerusalem, descending from God out of heaven," is, be- cause, in the spiritual sense of the Word, a city signifies doctrine, and a holy city the doctrine of divine truth, since divine truth is •what is called holy in the Word. It is called the New Jerusalem for the same reason that the earth is called a new earth, because, as was observed above, earth or land signifies the church, and Je- rusalem, the church with respect to doctrine ; and it is said to descend from God out of heaven, because all divine truth, whence doctrine is derived, descends out of heaven from the Lord. That Jerusalem does not mean a city, although if was seen " as" a city, manifestly appears from its being said that " its height was," as its length and breadth, " twelve thousand furlongs " (ver. 16) ; and 10 PREFACE. tliat tlio moasurc of Its •^-all, which was " a hundred and forty-fiur cul>its," was the measure of a man, that is, of the an<;el (ver. 17) ; and also from its bein;^ said to l)e " prepared as a hride adorned for her husliand '' (ver. 2) ; and that afterwards " the angel said. Come liither, I will show thee the )>ride, the Lamb's wife : and he showed nie that great city the holy Jerusalem " (ver. 9, 10). The church is called in the "Word the bride and the wife of the Lord ; she is called the hride before conjunction, and the wife aft(;r conjunction. 7. To add a few words respecting the doctrine which is delivered in the following pages. This, also, is from heaven, l)eing from the spiritual sense of the AVord, which is the san»e with the doctrine that is in heaven; for there is a church in heaven as well as on earth. In heaven, there are the "Word and the doctrine from the Word ; there are places of worship there, and sermons delivered in them; there are also both ecclesiastical and civil governments there: in a word, the only difference between the things which are in heaven and those which are on earth is, that in heaven all things exist in a state of greater perfection, since those who dwell there are spiritual, and spiritual things immensely exceed in perfection those that are natural. Hence may evidently appear what is meantT by the holy cit}', New Jerusalem, being seen to descend from God out of heaven. But I proceed to the doctrine itself, which is for the nevj church, and which is called heavenhf doctrine, because it was revealed to me out of heaven. To deliver this doctrine is the desiga of the present work. INTRODUCTION TO THE DOCTRINE. 8. When there is no faith in consequence of there heing no charity, tlie church is at an end. The churches throughout the whole christian world having made their differences to de])end upon points of faith, when yet there can be no faith v.here tiiere is no charity, I will, by way of introduction to the doctrine which follows, make some oljservations concerning the doctrine of charity as held by the ancients. When I use the phrase, " the churches in the chrislian icorld," I mean protestant churches, and not the popish or roman catholic clnirch, since that is not a christian church : for, W'herever the church exists, the J^ord is worshiped, and the Word is read ; wliereas, among lioman Catholics, they worship themselves instead of the Lord; forbid the Word to be read Ijy the people; and affirm the pope's decree to be equal, yea, even superior to it. 9. The doctrine of charity, M'hich is the doctrine of life, was tho essential doctrine in tlie ancient churches. And that doctrine con- joined all churches, and thereby formed one church out of man}-. For they acknowledged all those as members of the church who lived in the good (d' charity, and called them bretin-en, however they might differ r(>specting truths, wiiich at this day are called matters Df faitii. In these they instructed one another, which em[)loyment was among their works of charity; nor were they offended if any one did not accede to the opinion of another, knowing that every one receives truth in proportion to the degree iu which he ia ia HEAVENLY DOCTRINE. 11 good. Such hoing the character of the ancient churches, tlie mem- bers composing them Avere interior men ; and, because they were interior men, thcj excelled in Avisdom. For they who are in the good of love and charity, are, as to the internal man, in heaven, and belong to an angelic society in which the same good prevails. Hence they enjoy an elevation of mind towards interior things, and, consequently, they are in possession of wisdom; for wisdom can come from no other source than from heaven, that is, through hea- ven from the Lord ; and in heaven there is wisdom, because its inhabitants are principled in good. AYisdom consists in seeing truth from the light of truth; and the light of truth is the light which shines in heaven. But, in process of time, that ancient Avisdom decreased; for, as mankind removed themselves from the good of love towards the Lord, and of love toAvards the neighbor, Avhich latter is called charit^^ they remoA^ed themselves, in the same proportion, from wisdom, because, in the same proportion, they removed themselves from heaven. Hence it was that man, from being internal, became external, and this successively ; and, when he became external, he became also AA'orldly and corporeal. When such is his quality, he cares but little for the things of heaven; for the delights of earthly loves, and the evils Avhich, from those loves, are delightful to him, then possess hini entirely. In this state, the things which he hears concerning a life after death, concerning heaven and hell, and concerning spiritual subjects in general, are regarded by him as matters altogether foreign or extraneous to him, and not as things in Avhich he has the most intimate concern ; as, nevertheless, they ought to be. Hence also it is, that the doctrine of charity, which, amongst the ancients, Avas held in such estimation, is, at this day, Avith other excellent things, altogether lost. For who, at this day, is aware Avhat charity is, in the genuine sense of the term, and what, in the same sense, is meant by our neighbor? Avhereas, that doctrine not only teaches this, but innumcral)ie things besides, of Avhich not a thousandth part is knoAvn at this day. The Avhole Sacred Scripture is nothing else than the doctrine of love and charity: Avhich the Lord also teaches, Avhon he says: "Thou shalt kve the Lord thy God Avith all thy heart, and Avith all thy soul, and Avith all thy mind: this is the first and great commandment; and the second is like unto it. Thou shalt love thy neighbor as th3'self: on these tAA^o command- ments, hang all the LaAv and the Prophets." Matt., xxii, 37, 38, 39. The LaAV and the Prophets are the Word, in general and in particular. OF GOOD AXD TRUTH. 11. All things in the universe Avhich are according to divino order, haA'e relation to good and truth. There is nothing, cither in heaven or on earth, Avhicli has not relation to tlicse two. The reason is, because both good and truth proceed from the Divino Being, Avho is the first cause of all. 12. Hence it appears that there is nothing more necessary for man to know than Avliat good and truth arej hoAv the one has 12 THE FACE. respect to tho other; and how tliey become mutually conjoined. But 8uoh knuAvledgo is especially necessary for every member of the church; for, as all things of heaven have relation to good and truth, so also have all things of the church; because the good and truth of heaven are also the good and truth of the church. It is on this account that, in delivering the doctrine of the Xcv Jerusa- lem, we commence with this sul)ject. 13. It is in agreement with divine order, that good and truth should be conjoined, and not separated; thus, that they should be one and not two; for they proceed in conjunction from the LHvinc Being, and continue so in heaven, and therefore they ought of necessity to remain conjoined in the church. The conjunction of good and truth is called, in heaven, the heavenly marriage, for all there are the subjects of this marriage ; and hence it is that, in th(! Word, heaven is compared to a marriage, and that the Lord is called the bridegroom and husband, whilst heaven, and also the church, are called the bride and wife. The reason why heaven and the church are so styled, is, that all therein receive the divine good in trutlis. 14. All the intelligence and wisdom which the angels possess, is derived from this marriage of good and truth ; but not any of it from good separate from truth, nor from truth separate from good. So also it is with the members of the church. 15. Since, therefore, the conjunction of good and truth resembles a marriage, it is evident that there exist between them a mutual love and a mutual desire to be conjoined. That member of the church, then, who does not possess such love and desire, is not the subject of the heavenly marriage; consequently, as yet, the church is not in him; for it is tho conjunction of good and truth which constitutes the church. IG. There are numerous kinds of good, all, however, being com- prehended under the general distinction of spiritual and natural good, Avhich are conjoined in genuine moral good. As there are many kinds of good, so also there are various kinds of truth; for all truth pertains to good, and is, indeed, its form. 17. AV'hat has been said respecting good and truth, may, in a contrary sense, be aftirmed of evil and falsity: for, as all things in the univcrs(3 which exist according to divine order, have relation to good and truth, so also all things which exist in contrariety to divine order, have relation to evil and falsity. Again, as there exist between good and truth a mutual love and desire to be con- joined, so do tjiere exist a similar love and desire between evil and falsity. In fine, as all intelligence and wisdom are produced from the conjuncticm of g(»od and truth, so all insanity and folly sjjring from the conjunction of evil and falsity. This latter conjunction is called the infernal marriage. 18. Now, since evil and falsity are opposed to good and truth, it is plain that truth cannot be conjoined with evil, nor good with the falsity of evil; for, if truth be adjoined to evil, it is no longer truth, but falsity, b-ecause it is falsified; and if j;oud be adjoined to the falsity of evil, it is no longer good, but evil, as it is adul- HEAVENLY DOCTRINE. 13 terated. Nevertheless, the falsity which is not grounded in evil, admits of being conjoined with good. 19. No one who, from confirmation and life, is principled in evil, and thence in falsity, can know what good and truth are ; for he believes his own evil to be good, and his falsity to be truth : but every one who, from the same grounds, is principled in good and thence in truth, is capable of knowing what evil and falsity are. The reason of this is, because all good, with its truth, is, in its essence, celestial; and such as is not celestial in its essence, is still from a celestial origin: but all evil, with its falsity, is, in its es- sence, infernal; and such as is not infernal in its essence, has, nevertheless, its origin thence : and all that is celestial is in light, but all that is infernal is in darkness. OF THE WILL AXD THE UNDERSTANDING. 28. Man is endowed with two ficulties which constitute his life: one is called the will, and the other the understanding. These faculties are distinct from each other, but are so created as to form a one ; and, when they are thus united, they are called the mind. Of these, then, the human mind consists; and in them resides the v^hole life of man. 29. As all things in the universe which are according to divine order, have relation to good and truth, so all things in man have relation to the will and the understanding; for good in man per- tains to his will, and truth in him pertains to his understanding. These two faculties, or these two lives, in man, are respectively their receptacles and subjects: the will being the receptacle and subject of all things relating to good, and the understanding the receptacle and subject of all things relating to truth. Goods and truths have no other residence with man ; so neither, for the same reason, have love and faith; for love pertains to good, and good to love; and faith pertains to truth, and truth to faith. 30. Since, then, all things in the universe have relation to good and truth, and all things belonging to the church to the good of love and the truth of faith ; and since it is from the possession of the faculties of will and understanding that man is man ; they are treated of in this doctrine ; for otherwise man could have no distinct idea of them, to form a basis for his thoughts. 31. The will and the understanding constitute also the spirit of man ; for in these, his wisdom and intelligence, and his life in general, reside, the body being only their passive organ. 32. Nothing is of more importance to be known, than in what manner the will and understanding make one mind. This they do as good and truth form a one ; for between the will and the under- standing there is a marriage, similar to that which takes place between good and truth. What the nature of this marriage is, may fully appear from what has been adduced above, in the section On Good and Truth: namely, that as good is the very esse of a thing, and truth is the existere derived from that esse, so the will, in man, is the vory esse of his life, and the understanding is the 14 PREFACE. exisfcre of lils life thonce derived : fur good, wliich belongs to the yv\\\, assumes to itself a form iu the uudcrstauding, and thus ren- ders itself visible. 33. They who are principled in good and truth have will and un- derstanding; but they who are principled in evil and in falsity have no will and understanding properly considered; Init instead of ■will they have cupidity, and instead of understanding they have mere science. The human will, when truly such, is the receptacle of good, and the understanding is the receptacle of truth ; for which reason, will cannot be predicated of evil, nor can understanding be predicated of falsity, because they are opposites, and opposites destroy each other. Hence it is, that the man who is principled in evil and thence in falsity, cannot be called rational, wise and in- telligent, properly speaking. With the evil, also, the interiors of the mind, in which the will and the understanding principally reside, are closed. It is supposed, however, that the evil, as well as the good, have will and understanding, because they say that they will and that they understand : but their volition is only the exercise of their cupidity, and their intellection is nothing more than science. OF THE INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL MAN. 36. Man is so created as to be in the spiritual and in the na- tural world at the same time. The spiritual world is that which is the abode of angels, and the natural world is that which is the abode of men. A man is so created, he is endowed both with an internal and an external ; that by means of his internal he may Ije present in the spiritual world, and by means of his external in the natural world. His internal is what is called the internal man, and his external is what is called the external man. 37. Every man is possessed of both an internal and an external ; "but these widely differ with the good and the evil. With the good, the internal is in heaven and in its light, and the external is in the world and in its light: and, with them, this latter light is illu- minated by the light of heaven, so that their internal and external act in unity, or form a one, like cause and effect, or like what is prior and what is posterior. But, with the evil, the internal is in the world and in its light; as is also the external ; for which reason they sec nothing from the light of heaven, but only from the light of the world, which they call the light of nature, llence it is that, to them, the things of heaven are immersed in darkness, whilst the things of the world appear in light, llence it is manifest, that the good have both an internal and an external man, but that the evil have not an internal man, but only an external. 38. The internal man is called the spiritual man, because it is in the light of heaven, which light is spiritual: and the external man is called the natural man, because it is in the light of the world, which light ts natural. The man whose internal is in the light of heaven, and whose external is in the light of the world, is a spiritual man as to both; but the man whose internal is not in the light of heaven, but only in the light of the wArld, in wliich is Lis external also, is a natural man as to both. The spiritual man HEAVENLY DOCTIIINE. 15 IS said in the Word to be alive, but the natural man is said to bo dead. 39. The man whose internal is in the light of heaven and his external in the light of the Avorld, thinks both spiritually and naturally; but, when he thinks naturally, his spiritual thought flows into his natural thought, and is thore perceived. But the man who has both his internal and external in the light of the world, docs not think spiritually^ but materially: for he thinks from such things as are within nature as it belongs to the world, all which are material. To think spiritually, is to think of things as they essentially are, to see truths jn the light of truth, and to perceive goods from the love of good ; also, to see the qualities of things, and to perceive their affections, abstractedly from matter. But to think materially of things, is to think, to see and to perceive them together with matter and in matter, thus in a gross and obscure manner respectively. 40. The internal spiritual man, simply considered, is an angel of heaven ; and, during his life in the body, although not conscious of the fact, is also in society with angels, amongst whom he is introduced after his separation from the body. But the merely natural man, as to his internal or soul, is a spirit, but not an angel: he also, during his life in the body, is in society v>uth spirits, but with those who are in hell ; and amongst these he is introduced after his separation from the body. 41. The interiors of the mind of those who are spiritual men, are also actually elevated towards heaven ; for heaven is the primary object of thcur regard: but with those vrho are merely natural, the interiors are directed towards the world, because this is the primary object of regard with them. Indeed, the interiors of every man's mind are directed towards that which he loves supremely ; and his exteriors take the same direction. 42. They who entertain only a general idea concerning the internal and external man, believe that it is the internal man which thinks and wills, and that it is the external man which speaks and acts ; because to think and to will relate to what is internal, and to speak and act to what is external. But it is to be observed, that, when man thinks intelligently, and wills wisely, he thinks and wills from a spiritual internal ; but when he does not thus think and will, he thinks and wills from a natural internal. Ilcnco, when man thinks well concerning the Lord and those things which are the Lord's, and concerning the neighbor and the things which are the neighbor's, and wills vrell towards them, he then thinks and Avills from a spiritual internal ; because from the fiith of truth and the love of good, consequently, from heaven. But, when man is ill affected towards them, both in thought and in will, ho thinks and wills from a natural internal ; because from the faith of what is false and the love of what is evil, consequently, from hell. In short, so fiir as man is principled in love to the Lord, he is in the spiritual internal, whence he both thinks and wills, and also speaks and acts; but, so far as he is in the love of self and in the love of the world, he is in the natural internal, from which ho thinks and Vfills, and also speaks and acts. IQ PREFACE. 43. It iM BO provided and ord<'rcd by the Lord, that, in proportion AA man thinks and wills from heaven, his internal ppiritual man is opened and furnn-d : it is opcneil into heaven even to the Lord; and it is funned aeoonling to tliosc thinj^s which belong to heaven. But, on the c<»ntrary, in proportion as man docs not think and Avill from heaven, hut from the worhl, his internal spiritual man is rlojiod, and his external is opened : and it is opened into the world, and is formed accordinj:^ to those thinp;s which belong to the world. •II. They who have the internal spiritual man opened into hca- Ten to the I^)rd, are in tlie li^dit of heaven, and in illumination from tlif I/<»r«l, and are thence in intelli;;ence and wisdom ; they MM« truth in the li;:ht uf trutii, and ])iritual man is closed, do not so much as know'that there is an internal man; much less do they know wlmt the internal man is; neither do they believe that thero is a l>i\ine Being, nor that there is a life after death; consequently, neither do they l)elievo in any tiling belonging to heaven and the cljurch. Ami since such persons are only in the light of the world, and in illumination thence, they Ijciievc in nature as the Divine Being: they sec f:'lsity as truth, and ]»erceive evil as good. •1'). The man whoso internal is so i'ar external that he believes in nothing but wliat he can see with his eyes, and touch with his hamls, is caUed a sensual man. Tiie sensual man is one who is in tli<' lowest degree natural; and he is in fallacies concerning all thingH belonging to iaith and the e Juirch. •10. The internal and external which have been treated of, are the internal and external of the sitirit of man ; his body being merely an a«lditional external, within which the former exist: for the body «l(»es nothing of itself, but is solely actuated by the spirit which is in it. And here it is to be observed, that th'e spirit of man, aftrr its sejiaration from the body, thinks, and wills, and hpf.nks, an4. The very life of man is his love, and according to the quality of that h.xr, hueh is his lif.', yea, such is the whole man; it is, howe\er, the ruling or reigning h>ve, whiih constitutes the man. This love i« acronipanied by numerous other loves, Avhich are de- rived from it and are in .'•ubordination to it. These present them- MdveM to \\rw nn.jer other forms, but still they are all compre- hendey self-love, does not, in reality, love cither the church, or his country, or his fellow-citizen, or so- ciety, or anv thing good, but himself alone. r»0. Man IS under the dominion of self-love, when, in his thoughts and actions, he has no n-ganl to the neighbor, consequently, none f«»r the public, still less ior the Lord, l)ut for himself alone and his connc'ctions. Thus, whilst every thing which he does is for tlie fake of himself and his connections, should he even do any thing for his neighl^or and for the public, it is done merely for the sake of app<*arance. 07. We have said, himself and his connections; for the man -who loves himself, loves those also w ho are connected with him. These are, in j»artieular, his chiMren and his other near relations, and, in general, all who c<»-oj»erate with him, and whom he calls his friends. Still, however, his love for these; is only s<'lf-love, for he regards them, as it were, in himself, and himself in them. vVmongst those \%liom such a nnm denoininates liis friends, are all they who ilatter him, honor him, and pay their court to him. ('•H. lie also is inider the influence of self-love, who thinks contemptuously of the neighbor in comparison with himself, and enteems him as an enemy unless ho shows him marks of favor, re»|>ccta him. and treats liim w ith great courtesy. But still more is he actuated by the love of self, who, for such reasons, hates and jKTj4e«-utes the nei;:hl>or; and more so still the man who burns with revenge against him, and desires his destruction. Such persons at length come to delight in savage crindty. «■»'.». The true nature of self-love may bo clearly discerned from comparing it with heavenly love. Heavenly love consists in loving, for it.s own sake, the use or the good whicha man ought to ]»erform to tlte church, to his country, to society, and to his fellow-citizens; but he who loves those for his own sake, loves them no otherwise than he loves his domestics, that is, because they are serviceable to liini. Hence it follows, that he who is immersed in self-love, would doBiro to have the church, his country, society, and his fellow- cititenM, to be his servants, rather than that he should serve them ; Uo exalts himself above them, and abases them beneath himself. HEAVENLY DOCTRINE. 19 70. Moreover, in proportion as any one is influenced by celestial love, which consists in loving offices of usefulness, delighting in the performance of good deeds, and in being affected with joy of heart in thus acting, he is led by the Lord, for in this love the Lord himself is, and from him it has its origin. But, on the contrary, so far as any one is influenced by self-love, ho is led by himself; and as far as he is so led, he is guided by his own selfhood, Avhich is nothing but evil, being that hereditary evil which disposes man to love himself in preference to God, and the world in preference to heaven. 71. Such also is the nature of self-love, that, in proportion as the reins are given to it, that is, so far as external restraints are removed, such as the fear of the law and its penalties, the loss of reputation, of honor, of gain, of office, or of life, it rushes on with such unlimited desire as to grasp at universal dominion, not only over this world, but also over heaven, yea, over God himself; for its aim is boundless. This propensity lurks in the heart of every man who is governed by self-love, although it may not be visible to the eyes of the world, in consequence of the checks and restraints before mentioned. Besides, when such a character encounters an insuperable obstacle, he waits till it is removed ; and hence it is that even he himself is not aAvare that such a mad and unbounded cupidity lies latent within him. That this, hoAvever, is really the case, any one may see who observes the conduct of potentates and kings, who are not subject to such chocks, restraints and insu- perable obstacles, and who, so long as success attends their enter- prises, rush on, and subjugate provinces and kingdoms, panting after unlimited power and glory. This is still more apparent in the case of those who endeavor to extend their dominion into hea- ven, transferring to themselves the divine power of the Lord, and thirsting after something beyond even that. 72. There are two general kinds of dominion, one originating in love towards the neighbor, the other in the love of self; and these are, in essence, directly opposed to each other. He who exercises dominion from the influence of love towards the neighbor, is desi- rous of promoting the welfare of all, and has no higher delight than that which arises from the performance of works of real utility: this is his love, and the very delight of his heart. The higher such a person is exalted in dignit}^ tiie greater is his joy ; not, indeed, on account of the dignity itself, but because the sphere of his use- fulness is thus enlarged in extent, and rendered more excellent in degree. Such is the dominion that prevails in the heavens. But he who rules under the influence of self-love, has no desire to pro- mote the welfare of any beyond himself and his own connections. The Avorks of utility which he performs are done for the advance- ment of his own honor and glory, Avhich he considers as the only objects Avorthy of his pursuit. Hence, Avhen he serves others, it is only that he may himself be serA'ed, honored and entrusted Avith dominion; he desires preferment, not for the sake of extending his means of doing good, but that he may obtain pre-eminence and glory, and thus enjoy the delight of his heart. 2.0 PREFACE. 73. Tiic love of (loininion remains also v.'itli man after tlic termi- nation of his life in this world. They -who have exercised it from love towards the nci^iibor, are then intrusted with dominion in the heavens ; still, however, it is not they who rule, but the useful offices which they y)erform, and the floods which they love; and when these rule, the Lord rules. Those, on the contrary, who, durino; their abode in the world, have exorcised dominion from the iniluonce of self-love, have their abode in hell, where they are vile slaves. 74. From what has been said, it may easily be perceived who they arc that are influenced by the hjvc of self. Nor is it of any conse([uencc how they appear externally, whether liaughty or humble; for the qualities which have been specified exist in tho internal man, which the generality of mankind study to conceal, whilst they teach the external to assume the contrary appearance of love for the public good, and for the welfare of tho neighbor. This also they do for the sake of self; for they well know that such love has the power of interiorly moving the affections of all men, and that they will be loved and esteemed in proportion as they appear to be under its influence. The reason why that love is pos- sessed of such power is, because heaven enters into it by influx. 75. The evils which predominate in those whose ruling princi- ple is self-love, are, in general, contempt of others, envy, enmity towards those who do not favor their designs, with hostility on that account; also hatreds of various kinds, revenge, cunning, deceit, unmercifulness and cruelty. "Where such evils exist, there is also a contempt of God, and of divine things, that is, of all the good and truth belonging to the church ; or, if there be any respect shown to these by such persons, it is in words only, and not from the heart. And as such evils result from the love of self, it is also attended by corresponding falsities from the same source; for falsities are derived from evils. 70. The love of the world consists in desiring to appropriate to oursclvcf^ by every availalde artifice, the wealth of others; also, in setting the heart on riches, and suffering the world to withdraw our affections from spiritual love, which is love towards the neigh- bor, consequently, from heaven. They are influenced by the love of the world, who are desirous of appropriating to tlicmselves the property of others by various artifices; they particularly who have recourse to cunning and deceit, esteeming the welfare oi' the neigh- bor as of no account whatever. Such persons greedily covet tho goods of others; and, when not restrained by the fear of the laws and the loss of reputation, which they regard only for the sake r»f gain, they deprive others of their possessions, nay, rob and plunder them. 77. The love of the world is not opposed to heavenly love in the pame degree that the love of self is, because the evils contained in it are not so great. The love of the world is manifold. There is the love of riches as the means of exaltation to honors : there is the love of lionors and dignities us tlio moans of olttaining wealth; there is the lovo of Aveaith for various ubca with which men arc HEAVENLY DOCTRINE. 21 delighted in the world ; there is also the love of wealth merely for its own sake, which is the love of misers; and so in other instances. The end for which wealth is desired is called its use, and from the end or use tlie love derives its quality. The nature of all love is determined by the use to which it is directed ; other things serve but as means to promote the end. 78. In short, the love of self and the love of the world are in direct opposition to love of the Lord and love towards the neigh- bor; wherefore the loves of self and the world are infernal, and reign in hell, and constitute hell in man: but love to the Lord and love towards the neighbor are of heavenly origin, and reign in heaven, and constitute heaven in man. 79. From what has now been said, it may be clearly seen, that all evils are contained in these loves, and are derived from them ; ft)r the evils Avhich are enumerated at n. 75, are common or general in their nature ; and the others, which were not enumerated there, because they are particular evils, are derived and flow from them. Hence it appears that, since man is born into the love of self and of the world, he is born into evils of every description. 80. In order that man may know what evils are, he ought to know their origin; and unless he knows what evils are, he cannot know what good is; consequently, neither can he know of what quality he himself is : and for this reason these two origins of evil have been here treated of. OF LOVE TOWARDS THE NEIGHBOR, OR CHARITY. 84. Here it shall first be shown what is meant by the term neighbor; as it is the neighbor who is to be loved, and towards whom charity is to be exercised. Unless this point be clearly understood, charity may be exercised indiscriminately towards the evil and the good, and thus become no charity at all; for the evil, from the benefactions they receive, do evil to the neighbor, but the good do good. 85. It is a prevailing opinion at the present day, that every man is to be considered as being equally the neighljor, and that acts of beneficence are to be performed towards every one who needs our assistance. But it is the province of christian prudence thoroughly to scrutinize the quality of a man's life, and to exercise charity to him according!}'. The man who is a member of the internal church, exercises his charity in this manner; but he who is of the external church, because he cannot so easily discern things, acts without discrimination. 86. The distinctions of neighbor, which the member of the church ought well to understand, depend upon the degree of good which each man possesses. And since all good proceeds from the Lord, the Lord himself is neighbor in the supreme sense of that word, and in the super-eminent degree, and from him is the origin of this relationship. Hence it follows, tliat as fiir as the Lord is resident with any one, so far that man is the neighbor; and becaiise no one receives the Lord, that is, receives good from him, in exactly tho 22 PREFACE. Bamo manner as anotlier Hoc^, no one can ho the noij^hhor in tho eaine manner as anotiier is; i'or all who arc in the heavens, and all the good who are on earth, difler from each other as to the degree of tl)eir goodness. No two persons ever receive a divine gift that is in all respects one and the same: such gifts must he various, that each may suhsist hy itself. But all these varieties, consequently all the distinctions "which exist in the relationship of neighhor, Avhieh depend on the reception of the Lord, that is, on the reception of good from him, can never be known by any man, nor indeed by any angel, exce[»t in a general manner, or with respect to their genera and species; neither does the Lord require any thing more from the members of his church, than that each should live accord- ing to what he knows. 87. Since every one possesses good in a different degree, it fol- lows, that the quality of that good determines in what degree, and in what proportion, any man is to bo considered as our neiglibor. That this is the case, is plain from tlie Lord's parable concerning the man w ho fell among thieves, whom, when half dead, the priest, and also the Levite, passed by; but whom the Samaritan, after pouring oil and wine into his wounds, and liinding them up, took upon his own beast, and brouglit to an inn, giving orders that care should be taken of him. This man, because he did good from a principle of genuine charity, is called his neighbor, (Luke, x, 20 — 37): whence it may be known, that they who are influenced by good are neighbors; for the oil and wine which the Samaritan poured into the wounds, signify good and its truth. . 88. From what has now been said, it is evident that good, in the universal sense of that word, is the neighbor; because man is the neighbor only according to the quality of the good which he receives from the Lord. And because good itself is the neighbor, so also is love; for all good is from love: consequently, every man is the neighbor according to the quality of the love which he possesses from the Lord. 89. That it is love wliich constitutes any one the neighbor, and that every man is the neighbor according to the quality of the love, manifestly appears from the case of those who are influenced by the love of self. Such persons acknowledge as neighbor those who love them most; that is, they regard them as such, so far as they favor their own interests. These they embrace; they treat them with ail'ection, confer on them their iavors, and call them their brethren: nay more ; because they are evil, they acknowledge them as neighljors in proportion as th.ey love themselves, thus according to the quality and extent of their love. Men of this description deduce the origin of neighbor from self; and for this reason, that love constitutes and determines it. But those who do not love themselves aljove others, as is the character of all who belong to the kingdom of tho Lord, derive the origin of neighbor from llim whom they ought to love sujiremely, thus from the Lord ; an/e of his action, and so lowers the standard of humanity in himself. CHAPTER II. The same suhject continued, in an effort to sJiow, tJiat Slaveri/ is an Evil to the White Man, because it debases his Huma- nity, first, by develojnnj and strengthening in him an Arbi- trary and Domineering Spirit, and, second, by making Labor disreputable among the Whites. Still, Slavery in our Southern States may not be SiN; but must be regarded as a Chronic Constitutional Disease, which entitles our Southern Brethren to our Kind Consideration, and imposes on us the Duty of Co-operation with them in gradually get- ting rid of it as an Hereditary Evil. Life in time is a probation for life in eternity. "Whatever prin- ciples a man acts from in this mundane sphere, determine his form and quality in that spiritual and celestial empyrean which is his soul's proper home. Consequently, all true elevation or de- pression of human character must be measured on the scale that marks the intervals between the upper and nether extremes of man's spiritual and celestial or sensual and animal natures. And whatever develops and strengthens by exercise the ruling passions of the one, must be formatively and actively evil; and whatever develops and strengthens by exercise the ruling affec- tions of the other, must be formatively and actively good. Now our argument is, that slavery in the South, so far as its own inherent tendencies are considered, is an evil, because it debases the character of the poor white man, and makes the white property-holder naturally proud instead of spiritually humble. It generates in the rich white man a haughty chivalry and a proud sense of belligerous honor, instead of a spirit of christian meekness, and that manly forbearance under injury, and persistence in doing good despite of wrong, which charac- terized that all-perfect type of pure humanity the Divine Saviour of the World. By nature, man's grand master passion is the love of him- self, which primarily manifests itself in the delight of exercising IN THE LIGHT OP THE NEW JERUSALEM. G3 dominion over other persons, and secondarily in the delight of possessing all valuable things. For, in the possession of these, self expects to secure that respect, deference and service from others, which it Joves. To the activity of this master passion, in its two chief forms of love of power and love of wealth, must be ascribed those false notions of honor, of glory, of fame, and of respectability in the abject dependence and service of others, which prompt nations to war and conquest, and individuals to overreaching, fraud and oppression. And in the train of these follow all mortal pains and miseries. In short, however men may gild or polish them by outside and factitious amenities, the love of money is the root^ and the love of rule is the 8ap^ of all evil. These passions, then, indigenous to all men in their state by nature, are both essentially and formally evil^ when- ever they become 'principle?, of the mind. But it may be asked. What do you mean by a principle of the mind ? A principle of the mind is whatever a man proposes to himself as the final end of his action. Hence, wdien a man proposes to himself power and wealth as ends, — that is, seeks and obtains them for their own sakes, and without the end of use to others, — he acts from evil principles, which are the op- posites and antagonists of love to God and charity to the neigh- bor.* But when those principles, by reformation and regene- ration, are subordinated to these, they become relatively good. In other words, when the love of power and the love of wealth react ordinately on the love of God and the love of the neighbor, so as to serve as means for the attainment of their ends, they partake of the quality of the ends to which they are subservient, and are good and not evil. These natural loves, when separated from those spiritual loves, are like the rod of Aaron when cast from him upon the earth — a crawling venomous serpent : but, when subordinate and subservient to them, they are like that serpent taken up by Moses — a staff, support or power in the hand of the spiritual man.*]" * " If a man regards self and the world as ends, let him know that he is infernal; but if he regards the good of his neighbor, the general good, the Lord's kingdom, and especially the Lord himself, let him know that he is celestial." (A.C. 19U9.)— " All evils and falsities come from worldly, terres- trial and corporeal loves, when they prevail." (A. C. 10.49^?.) t " Corporeal and sensual things are in themselves merely material, inani- mate and dead; but they are made alive by the delights which come from the interiors in their orderly arrangements. Hence it appears that, ac- cording to the quality of the life of the interiors, such is the delightsome- ness of pleasures, inasmuch as in delight there is life. The delight wherein there is good from the Lord, is alone a living delight; tor, in such case, it has life from the essential life of good. Some suppose that whosoever wishes to be happy in the other life, ought by no means to live in the pleasures of the body and of sensual things, but to refuse all such enjoy- ments ; and they urge, in favor of this notion, that corporeal and worldly G4 SOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY By that reformation and regeneration in which man is gifted with a new nature from the Lord, man's sublime master passion is the supreme love of God, which generates disinterested lovo to mankind. Love to Grod is the groat right side, and love to mankind is the great left side, which, uniting in the median line of universal usefulness, form the perfect symmetry of divine humanity. These arc spiritual, celestial and divine loves, which actuated man in his pristine state, or golden age, of purity and bliss. And as his fall consisted in his gradually ceasing to act from these, and, in long process of time, coming to act wholly from those natural, sensual and corporeal loves, as principles, so his restoration must consist in a free and rational reinversioa of his state. In this rein version, the natural loves of power and wealth are not to be destroyed as absolutely evil, but are to be put from the centre off to the circumference, as evil rela- tively. While they ordinately react in the circumference on love to God and love to man in the centre, they are in order. And it is only when they rush to the centre, so as to shove those heavenly loves to the circumference, that they are in dis- order, and thus evil. As, then, these natural loves arc good things draw off and detain the mind from spiritual and celestial life. But they who suppose so, and, in consequence thereof, resign tlicmselves up voluntarily to miseries wliilst they live in the world, are ignorant of the real truth in the case. It is by no means forbidden any one to enjoy tlie pleasures of the body and of sensual things; that is to say, the pleasures arising from the possession of lands and money ; the pleasures arising from honors and otlices in tlie state; the pleasures of conjugial love, and love towards inl'ants and children; tJie pleasures of fricndsinp and of social in- tercourse ; the pleasures of hearing, or of the sweetnesses of singing and music ; the pleasures of sight, or of beauties, which are manilbld — as hand- some raiment, weU-furnisiied houses, beautiful gardens, and the like — which things are delightful by reason of the harmony contained in them ; the pleasures of smelling, or of the sweetness of odors; the pleasures of taste, or of the agreeablcness and usefulness of meats and drinJvs ; and tlie plea- sures of touch : for these are the extreme or corporeal allections, wJiich have their origin, as was said, from the interior allections. Tlie interior affections which are alive, all derive their delight from goodness and truth ; and goodness and truth derive their delight from charity and laith ; and, in this case, Irom the Lord ; consequently, from the very essential lile. Where- fore, the allections and pleasures winch have this origin are alive. And whereas genuine i)leasures are from such source, they are never denied to any one; yea, when they are derived from tliat source, then their delight indchnitely exceeds the deligJit whicJi is from any otiier source, and vvhicli is rcsijectively lilliiy and denied. That tlie pleasures above mentioned are by no means denied to man,— yea, so far from being denied, that they then lirst become pleasures when tliey are derived from their true ori- gin, — may further api)ear from this consideration, that very many who lived in the world in power, dignity and opulence, and who enjoyed abundantly all pleasures, both of the body and of the things of sense, are among the blisstd and hai)py in heaven; and with them the interior de- lights and happiness are now alive; because such delights and happiness had their source in the good things ol'charity and the truths of liiith towards the Lord: and, tieriving i)leasure from charity and laith towiirds the Lord, they regard tlieui all with a vuvv to use, which was their end in the enjoy- ment of them: for it was use itself which was to them most delighlfulj aoici hence came the delight of their pleasures." (A. C. i){)d.) IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 65 when in order, and only become evil when in disorder, we are enabled to discern the great truth, that all evil is perverted good. But neither good nor evil can be seen distinctly except from its opposite. Having, therefore, discerned the nature of a principle, what evil is, and what is a principle of evil, we are brought clearly to see what good is, and what is the principle of good. And, as true humanity is good in form and activity, we can also see, most clearly, what elevates, and what depresses, humanity in mankind. By the law of opposites, love to God and charity to the neighbor are good. And the principle of good is man's acting with a final end to good; that is, his doing good for goodness' sake. '' God is love," and '^ God is light.'' God is goodness itself, and God is truth itself. And the essential life of love is to do — to do good by and according to truth. Love is spiritual heat, as truth, or wisdom, is spi- ritual light; and love in and by wisdom creates and sustains the whole spiritual world, as the heat of our sun in and by its light creates and sustains the whole material world. Further as the material sun is produced by and corresponds to the sun of heaven, in which, as a sphere of his love and wisdom, the Lord is, therefore, the heat and light of our material sun are but the discrete production of divine love and divine wisdom, so as to make these divine principles constitute, contain, vivify and sustain the whole material universe, or macrocosm, and man as the microcosm. Thus it is, that '' in God we live, and move and have our being;" and that ^'he who dwelleth in love, dwelleth in God, and God in him." Since, then, love and light, or goodness and truth, are God, because the essence and form of God; and since the essence of love is to regard goodness as an end, and the life of love is to do good for goodness' sake; therefore, to do what is good and true for the sake of goodness^ and truth, is to love God : and the form and action correspond- ing to this love, is true humanity. Consequently, true huma- nity is depressed and marred by whatever impairs this form and degrades this action. " Charity* is an affection of being serviceable to others, without having respect to any recompense" — thus is diame- trically opposed to selfishness and its domineering and possess- ing propensities. " The neighbor, towards whom charity is to be exercised, is all in the universe, but still cacli with discri- mination" as to the good that is in him. Thus, ''to love the Lord and the neighbor is, in general, to perform uses." And hence the divine law, that he is the greatest of all who is the Charitas, spiritual love— not mere alms-giving. 6* CO SOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY servant of all. The Lord himself came not to be ministered unto, but to minister. Now hnmanlti/ is th.e form of God, because it is goodness forming itself in truth, and becoming active by truth. Hence, as God-with-us, the AVord, which was with God and was (rod, made flesh, Divinity in Humanity, and thus True and Good Humanity Itself, came to minister in doing good to others, therefore, the true dignity of humanity is to serve; and the post of true honor is the rendering useful services to others. Consequently, humanity is elevated by useful service, and de- pressed by imperious sway. And, as the essential principle of true humanity is the acting "in freedom according to reason," therefore, the most perfect man is he who has the highest intelligence guiding the most virtuous will in the most widely extended usefulness to all other men; while the most imperfect man is he who has the lowest int^jlligence, without any rational will of his own, but who is forced to obey the mandate, subserve the will, and be guided by the reason, of some other one man, in promoting his interests, just as the mere animal does. AVherefore, as that is an evil which depresses humanity, african slavery in this country is an evil, because it is the forced or involuntary service of one or a few, instead of the free or voluntary service of all or many. In short, african slavery in this country is an evil, because it tends to make the master more a natural man, and the slave more an animal. From these premises we deduce the conclusion, that slavery is an evil, because it mars true humanity in two chief respects : it develops and strengthens by exercise the love of dominion from the love of self, and it makes labor disgraceful among the whites. First, African slavery in this country is an evil, because it develops and strengthens by exercise the love of dominion from the love of self, or develops and strengthens an arbitrary and domineering spirit in the white man. Any person who has lived in a slave state, must have observed that such is the efi'ect of slavery on the slaveholder's offspring. The little white learns to domineer over the little black, in ordering him about, buf- feting him, and making him bend wholly to his will and pleasure as his prospective property. It is seen in the tones of voice, and in every gesture and motion of the body, with which he speaks and acts to the little slave. Hence, as we have before said, comes pride, — which is contempt of others in comparison with self, — a false sense of honor, a most quick proclivity to resent injuries, and a supercilious and anti-christian haughtiness to inferiors, which never can be compensated by that case of IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 67 manners, and polisli of intellectual refinement, in intercourse ■with equals, which exemption from low labor and the appliances of leisure and learning impart to the wealthy slaveholder. AYe grant that this principle may elaborate from human nature, as now constituted, the higher order of minds in the military and naval professions, or in the executive departments of govern- ment : but this is because mankind in the mass are now sunk into a mostly natural state, and require the government of natural passions individually and of natural men collectively ; and it is, as we think, the chief evil characteristic of human slavery, that it develops in the master the natural, in antago- nism to the spiritual, love of rule — which natural love, when not subordinated, is, as we have shown, selfish and worldly, and therefore evil : for " the desire to bear rule is somewhat of human proprium different from what is received of the Lord : nevertheless, all [spiritual] rule [such as that of the angels, or of the Lord] is of love and mercy loitliout a desire to bear rule." (A.C. 1755.) Secondly, African slavery in this country is an evil, because it makes labor disgraceful or disreputable among the whites. In this respect, it is more especially a civil and political evil. But it is also, in this respect, an essentially aristocratic and anti-republican institution. And we will add, it is, in this respect, essentially anti-christian. For, as we have shown, it is the spirit of Christianity to make useful service honorable, and thus to elevate in the scale of respectability the agricultural, commercial and mechanic arts. But it is the direct tendency of slavery to make those professions which enjoy exemption from physical labor the most respectable. The possessor and enjoyer of wealth is always more honorable in slave countries than the maker and profitable user of v»"ealth. Hence slavery must be regarded as a civil evil, because all the best and most enduring civil interests of a community rest on the ground of the citizen's engaging and continuing in useful callings with a final end to the good of society, and not for the purpose of making a fortune, with the view of retiring at last from business and enjoying the respectability, the luxury or the pleasure which wealth gives. But that this disparagement of a man because he pursues a mechanical calling, is against the spirit of Christianity, and is a spiritual evil in its influence on the church, may be known from the simple flict, that it induced the Jews, in the time of our Lord's first advent, to disparage, if not to reject, him, because he was a carpenter's son. And how this making a mechanical calling disreputable^ or 68 SOME VIEWS OP FREEDOM AND SLAVERY this making labor disgraceful, is a political evil, in its influence on the commonwealth, any discerning man can see at a glance. For instance, in case of the sons of the wealthy, who are not stimulated by ambition to shine in the spheres of literary, pro- fessional or political preeminence, and are unfortunately more impelled by the natural love of pleasure than by the spiritual love of use, this degradation of labor throws them into the spheres of gambling and dissipation. " All heaven is a continent of uses.'^ And so far as men on earth are engaged in doing uses from heavenly ends, they breathe and pulsate with heaven, and have the sphere of heaven around them for their protection from the assaults of vagrant and libidinous spirits. Hence, one of the chief safeguards of young men from vice, is useful employment. But, where use- ful labor is disreputable, genteel young men are ashamed to engage in it, because they lose caste in such occupation. And the energies of their minds, needing excitement for their plea- surable development, draw them to the race course, the billiard table, the cock pit, the gambling club room, the carousal, or other nameless places of resort, for the killing of time, which hangs so heavy on the man who finds life only in the vortices of pleasure or the rounds of fashionable society. As we have seen, when the sensuous things of pleasure, to- gether with games of chance and athletic sports, are occasionally enjoyed as relaxations from useful labor, or unbending recrea- tions of the mind, which enable it to return to its mental, oflScial or business occupations with renewed vigor, they are subservient to use, and so useful and proper themselves. But, "when they are made the sole objects of life, they dissipate all of man's truly virile powers, and destroy or enervate his soul. At least, the exclusive pursuit of them unfits young men for any high service of the commonwealth. And, in this case, the community suffers the loss of the valuable executive services, of some of her sons of the best genius, in stations of high trust atid responsible function. So, too, in the case of poor white men and their offspring, the community loses a great fountain of her wealth and pros- perity in the want of that superior quality and richer quantity of productive services, which results from the destitution of the stimulus of an lionorahle calling acting as a premium in draw- ing out the higher order of agricultural, mechanical, or com- mercial, abilities. As man always stamps the form of his own quality upon his work, be it what it may, how is it possible that the community can be so much enriched or benefited by the productions of degraded slave labor in agriculture, for ex.- IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 69 aniple, as by the productioDs of the dignified labor of men of the higher order of intellectual power and moral worth ! In view of this, no one need hesitate for a moment in ac- counting for the fact that capital and population, with their political influence, have increased in a vastly greater ratio in our northern, than in our southern, states. And most empty is the hypothesis, that, if southern capital had been kept in the South, and not drained from it by tariff restrictions, european immigration would have prevailed more at the South, instead of occurring wholly at the North, so as to have preserved there an equilibrium of political power. For never will free white men, however unpropitious their physical or political condition, migrate to a country where slavery has made their labor dis- graceful and their arts or handicrafts disreputable. White men will indeed go to slave states, and labor in commercial or me- chanical callings, with a view of getting rich and enjoying their wealth elsewhere, or with a view to become themselves slave- holders, and to acquire the respectability which wealth gives, in the South : but this is an exception to the general rule, which only confirms it; for it proves that those callings are disrepu- table in comparison with slaveholding wealth and otiiim cum dignitate.^ They never would go thither to pursue those call- ings with a sole view to the use of them, and to the community's good in thoir faithful and eflficient continued pursuit of them. They never would go thither, if they were sure that they should always remain in those callings where their wives and daughters would not be visited by resj^ectahle people because their hus- bands and brothers were mechanics. Or the number of such persons migrating to slave states would be very small in com- parison with the number of them coming to free states. And the reason is very obvious. For most of the emigrants from Europe hope and expect to rise to a higher and better relative position in society by coming to this country; and there is no * It is conceded, that the principles of self-love and love of the world have this same aristocratic tendency every where. Hence, in the free states, they generate invidious distinctions in society, by wliich the mem- bers of the common body are arrayed against one another in the most unhappy, and some times the most latal, antagonism. They generate an aristocracy of wealth there too ; and also a disparaging estimate of the mechanical callings. But they do not do it there in so great a degree as in the slave states; and we argue that the institution of human slavery, as an exciting or determining cause, has more directly and inevitably this tendency. Whereas Christianity, regarding all professions and callings as uses of one common body, which "is not one member, but many," that tend, by their mutual relations and their various adaptations to the com- mon good, to the pertiection of the whole, esteems " much more those mem- bers of the body, which seem to be more feeble, as necessary ; and upon those members of the body, which we think to be less honorable, she bestows more abundant honor." (1 Cor., xii, 12 — 27.) 70 SOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY country in the world where what is called the middling class in other countries is so respectable as in the free states of our union. It is made so by the institutions of freedom; particu- larly by common school education, which is interdicted to the slaves in the slave states, and never can be extended, with any practically beneficial effects, to the poor whites there, on ac- count of that pride which makes the poor white man scorn to owe the education of his child to the rich man's alms, or makes him prefer to see his child grow up in ignorance rather than send him to a school where the institutions of society have generated an invidious distinction between the children of the poor and the children of the rich. A similar cause prevents the introduction of our common and free school system into Great Britain. The various grades of aristocratic distinction prove an insuperable barrier to its introduction into that coun- try. It has been introduced into Prussia; but future history is to tell, whether it is not even now leavening its whole lump, and whether it will not in time produce radical changes in the Prussian monarchy. Certainly no where, but in our free states, is the sublime political spectacle so fully and clearly presented, of the education of all classes of their citizens on one common plain, or of th*^. erection of so high a standard of education for what is elsewhere denominated the middling class. And this incalculably greater political advantage especially induces foreign emigrants to come to our northern states in preference to our southern. They seldom think of migrating to states where the owners of land stand at the top of the social ladder, and the workers of land are drudging slaves at the bottom; and all rounds for resj^ectahle middle classes are excluded, or con- fined to cities and large towns, by this worse than feudalism; and thus where slavery not only disparages mechanical pursuits, but also excludes, in gancral, from the community, the small landholder, who tills with his own hands the soil he owns, and therefore has a more stimulating interest in developing the utmost productive powers of the whole land for the greater wealth and prosperity of the whole body politic. The inherent and legitimate eifect of slavery is, then, we repeat, to degrade labor in general. Look at its effect on the poor white agriculturalists, who roam through the pine lands that intervallate the sea coast and the mountain regions of the Caro- linas, and spend more than half their time in fishing and hunting, rather than be yoke-fellows with negroes in tilling the soil. Wit- ness the contempt which the Bedouin Arab feels for the cultiva- tor of the earth.* lie only regards him as the bald eagle does * See Lyna/is Expedition to the Dead Sea.—'^ The Bedawin, in their in- IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 71 the fish-Iiawk.* The poorest specimens of white humanity that we ever laid our eyes on, were the country people who came in with their produce to the Charleston market. But the effect of slavery in making useful labor disreputable, is best seen in the slaves' own estimation of those who are obliged to pursue it for a livelihood. It is well known that the slaves look upon the poor whites as beneath them. Even in Maryland,! ^® know how difficult it is for poor whites to get black servants, that- are worth having, to work for them. The genteel negroes have an utter contempt for what they call ^^ the poor luhite trash" ! They would rather starve, and work their fingers to the quick, in the service of white gentility, than live on the fat of the land in the families of those whom they esteem disreputable mechanics. This is the fact in general; and it renders more intensive the evidence that slavery makes labor disgraceful, and therefore is a civil and political evil. But whether slavery is a sin, is quite another question. Not a little confusion of ideas seems to prevail in some minds on this subject. Perhaps those who think slavery a sin, mean no cursions, rob the fellahin of their produce and their crops. Miserable and unarmed, the latter abandon their villages and seek a more secure position, or trust to chance to supplj'^ themselves with food, until the summer brings the harvest and the robber." p. 182. " When 'Akil w^as this evening asked, why he did not settle down on some of the fertile lands in his dis- trict, and no longer live on pillage, his reply was, ' Would you have me disgrace myself, and till the ground like one of the fellahin 1 ' " p. 195. * " Elevated on the high dead limb of some gigantic tree, that commands a wide view of the neighboring shore and ocean, the bald eagle seems calmly to contemplate the motions of the various feathered tribes that pursue their busy avocations below: the snow white gulls slowly winnow- ing the air; the busy tringae coursing along the sands; trains of ducks streaming over the surface ; silent and watchful cranes, intent and wading ; clamorous crows, and all the winged multitudes that subsist by the bounty of this vast liquid magazine of nature. High over all these hovers one, whose action instantly arrests all his attention. By his wide curvature of wing, and sudden suspension in air, he knows him to be the fish- hawk, settling over some devoted victim of the deep. His eye kindles at the sight, and, balancing himself, with half opened wings, on the branch, he watches the result. Down, rapid as an arrow from heaven, descends the distant object of his attention, the roar of its wings reaching the ear as it disap- pears in the deep, making the surges foam around ! At this moment, the eager looks of the eagle are all ardor; and, levelling his neck for flight, he sees the fish-hawk once more emerge, struggling with his prey, and mount- ing in the air with screams of exultation. These are the signal lor our hero, who, launching into the air, instantly gives chase — soon gains on the fish-hawk — each exerts his utmost to mount above the other, disphiying in these rencontres the most elegant and sublime aerial evolutions. The unencumbered eagle rapidly advances, and is just on the point of reaching his opponent, when, with a sudden scream, probably of despair and honest execration, the latter drops his fish: the eagle, poising himself for a mo- ment, as if to take a more certain aim, descends like a whirlwind, snatches it in his grasp ere it reaches the water, and bears his ill-gotten booty silently away to the woods."— fFi/son's Ornithology, vol. v, p. 90. t When this was written, the author was residing in Baltimore. 72 SOME "v^EWS op freedom and slavery more than that it is an evil. There is, however, a material distinction, which is to be observed between the ideas involved in these two terms. There is the same distinction between evil and sin that there is between an inclination to do what is wrong and the actual doing it. The chaste and pious Joseph said, on a memorable occasion, '^ How shall I do this great evil, and SIN against God?'^ This shows that sin is the doing of evil. Evil is that which tempts man. For " every man is tempted when he is drawn of his own lust, and entieed." (James, i, 4.) No man can be enticed by any thing but that which he loves : for to this the love, which is his veriest life, always inclines him. And the love of self, which inclines one constantly to seek and act for its own interest and gratification at the expense of every common good, is, as we have shown, essentially evil. This love is the fountain-head of every inordinate natural pas- sion, which the apostle calls lust. Hence, the inclination of lust, which draws away and entices, is evil; and to give way to the inclination — to yield to the enticement, and so to do the evil, is sin. For, as the apostle, John, declares, " sin is the transgression of the law.'^ In other words, evil is sin in inti- mate conception, and sin is evil brought forth into life. Now, with this discrimination in our eye, we may see that slavery, though undoubtedly an evil, may not, in all cases, be a sin. Or, if a sin, may be one which the apostle deems ^' not unto death ;'^ but which may be "prayed for.'^ The apostle declares, " all unrighteousness is sin :'' that is, sin consists ia all transgression of the divine laws. But, says he, " there is a sin not unto death. ^' Doubtless, the sin which is unto death is voluntary sin; and that which is not unto death is involuntary. The sin of ignorance is involuntary sin. So is the sin of he- reditary transmission; so far as it does not become actual evil by one's own irrational volition. Still, both these kinds of involuntary sin, although not unto death, must occasion to the committer of them some degree of penalty. " The Lord," says the doctrine of our church, " requires no more of a man than that he should do according to what he knoics to be true." The same doctrine is taught by our church in this form : *' Those who know their duty, and not those who are ignorant of it, are the objects of imputation, whether it be of righteous- ness or of guilt; just as blind men, when they stumble, are no objects of blame; for the Lord says, 'If ye were blind, ye would have no sin; but now you say. We see; therefore your sin re- maineth.' John, ix, 41." (U. T. 127.) Hence the condemna- tion and fatality of all sin lie in a man's knowing what is true, and yet willing and acting contrary to it — in ''loving darkness IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 73 rather than light, because his deeds are evil." So that, if a man ^' knows his Lord's will, and does things worthy of stripes, he shall be beaten with manj/ stripes. "" But, " if he knows not his Lord's will, and yet does things worthy of stripes, he shall be beaten with few stripes.'' In both cases, a penalty is inflicted ; but in the former a heavy, and in the latter a light one. Hence, if slavery be an evil, all who are implicated in it — even those who are innocently implicated — must suffer in some degree from it.* But those who do not know, or believe, it to be wrong, are not condemnable on account of it as sin. Neither are those guilty sinners, who have had slavery entailed on them by hereditary transmission. Yet to those who do know, or believe, it to be siaful, the implication of it is indeed a heinous offence both against God and man. For surely no one can doubt, that, while voluntary service, or the service of love and therefore of freedom, is supernal, forced service, or that service which fear renders to im^ierious mastcrdom, is infernal. Now we cannot believe that slavery in our southern states is heinously sinful. We do indeed believe it is an evil: but we hold it to be an evil mercifully permitted, in the divine re- storative economy, for an ultimate or final good. What that is, * Evil is its own punishment. In the divine economy, the effects of evil are made to react upon it for its own correction. If, therefore, slavery be a!i evil, as we suppose it is, there must be some evil effects of it, which must, by their reactions, ultimately remove it from the slave states. Pha- raoh, whether he be the love of power or the love of wealth, will be plagued until he lets the Children of Africa ^o ! This is not the place to name or d'iscribc the plagues by which the divine will in the exodus of the Africans is to be brought about. It is enough to know the counsel of the Almighty, and to yield willing, rational and co-operative acquiescence in his august behests. Perhaps the manifest lagging of the slave states behind the free Oiies of thi'ir political sisterhood in all the race of natural wealth and civil power, will convince them that it is their interest to substitute voluntary for forced labor in developing the resources of their country. Perhaps, in view of the moral workings of their system, and of the political axiom, tliat the price of our liberties is eternal vigilance, they may feel impelled, by the most powerful of all incentives, to do their own working, as well as their own voting and fighting! But there is one evil effect of slavery in this country, which we ought not to pass unnoticed. It is the civil lepro- sy—the plague spot on the fair Jice of our social polity— of a degraded and hybrid race, in a state of quasi freedom, without the jiower of amalgama- tion or healthy assimilation in our body politic, but deforming and sick- ening it by parasitic attachment and nourishment. Surely we need not state how this is an external evil. The mere fact of the solicitous efflirts of the slave states themselves to get rid of this portion of their population, proves it. And any who have lived in contact with the unchristianized and naturally worst sort of this race in the free states, need not be told of their being a thieving and predatory nuisance to the whites. Nor need they be reminded that the confessions of the more malignant have shown us, that the blacks feel themselves Justijied in thus furtively preying upon the whites, by revenge for the wrong they have done them in making them slaves/ Is not this, then, a reaction of the evil of slavery ] Is it not a righteous retribution 1 Is it not a plague to compel Pharaoh in us to let the Africans go ] 7 74 SOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY we shall see as we proceed. Or, if southern slavery be a sin, we are sure it is not one that is unto death. It is a venial transmitted sin. The institution of slavery was entailed upon the southern states by the mother country's cupidity. Hence, we regard it there in the light of an hereditary evil, which requires much love and wisdom — great prudence, care, patience and tender solicitude — in its eradication. It must be regarded as a politically constitutional disease, which can be cured only by time, wise political dietetics, and intelligent skill exciting the body politic's recuperative energies. AH nature is as ab- liorrent to sudden change as to a vacuum. And the sin of slavery sinks into absolute insignificance in comparison with the egregious sin of those political or morbidly philanthropic quacks, who, by their heroic treatment of this disease — by their sudden alteratives, their decided blood-lettings, their drastic purges, their violent counter-irritants, and their other strong remedies — would either kill the patient, or inflict upon his shattered constitution vastly greater and more incurable factitious dis- eases, if, by some mercifully providential fortuity, he should happen to get well in spite of their physic ! No true man will he forced to do even what is right. And the very worst efi'ect of all objurgatory and even seeming compulsory efforts to destroy the evil of slavery in the South as damning sin, has been the driving of our southern brethren into the justification of it as a divine institution and a positive good. Thus do ex- tremes beget extremes. The wise and proper course is to reason with our brethren in true political love — to show them, if we can, their error in kindness; and, by convincing their reason, so act upon their own wills as to get them to work themselves in freely and rationally putting off an acknowledged evil. It is, moreover, our duty to help to bear their political burden ; and, in this, to share the self-sacrifice and the pecuniary or other loss of their evil's eradication. Nay, it is our privilege to be parti- cipants with them in that high national virtue which we verily believe is to be gained by this country in doing magnanimous justice to Africa. For we are sure that Divine Providence has ])ermitted the evil of african slavery to exist in this country for tliat end, as we hope to show in the sequel. And it is our duty, not only to help our southern brethren to see tliis, if we can, but also to be co-operators with them in their noble work. IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 75 CHAPTER III. From the Particular Doctrine of the New JeriLsalem hearincj on the subject he/ore us, it is argued, that the Evil of African Slavery is a Permission of the Divine Providence, for the Ultimate Regeneration of the African Race, and the Full Development of a Celestial Church in Africa; whereby it is seen, what is the True Duty of America' in regard to the Natural Institution of Slavery, and her Genuine Charity to the African in the Emancipation of him from it, as well as w'hat are the True Pritwiples on ichich alone such Emanci- pation can be safely and securely effected. "We are aware how startling our assertions must be. Many think the permission of human slavery by a merciful Divine Providence is an inscrutable or inexplicable mystery. To some minds, indeed, it borders on blasphemy to say, that God could have connived at, by permitting, an evil so great, or a sin so heinous. But it is well to remember, that " God's ways are not as man's ways," and are always '^ equal" — however otherwise they may seem to short-sighted mortals. Not only is the Lord ever " from seeming evil still educing good;" but all real evil is permitted by him for no other purpose.* There- fore, we are bound to believe, that african slavery in this country has been permitted, in the Lord's wise and merciful providence, for some ultimate good. * The Lord's government of the universe is called providence. Or, pro- vidence is " arrangement into good." (A. C. 10.45-'.) " Evils, however, arc not provided, but previded, that is, foreseen ; and in like manner permis- sions. But— that it may be known how the case is— previdence relates to evils ; but providence is the arrangement of them to good ends. There is, however, no chance; that is, no evil can happen by chance. But all evils are so governed, that no evil whatever, but what conduces to good, is per- mitted to befal either man or [departed] soul: consequently, nothing is permitted but what must have been foreseen in the way of the discernment of an inevitable event. Therefore it follows, that various evils are so turned as to have such a form [as conduces to good,] and no other ; and it cannot but be [that evils occur] in a state so perverse [as that of mankind, in the abuse of their rational and voluntary faculties, has become.] Thus it is pro- vidence alone which governs ; for previdence, or foresight, is thus changed into providence ; and thus evils are provided only in the sense of being changed into good: since, if the foreseen [designs] of evil spirits were per- mitted, they would tend to the destruction of both men and souls. Where- fore, the evils intended by evil spirits are turned into such things as are permissible." (Diarv, Vol. I, p. 334, n. 1088.) "The Lord foresees and beholds all and singular things ; and provides for and disposes of all and singular things: yet in some cases by permission, in some by admission, in some by leave, in some by good pleasure, in some by will." (A.C. 17o.5.) "^a SOME VIEWS OP FREEDOM AND SLAVERY The particular doctrine of the New Jerusalem hearing on the suhjcct before us is, that in the centre of Africa there is now a celestial church, and that the african race are men of the celestial genius. Doubtless, this will be, to many, the most startling of our assertions. And certainly, to all appearance, the assertion seems most untrue. Africans, as we see them in this country, are a degraded race. The bondage in which they are, is a correspondent of their mental and moral degradation. Thoir enslaved condition is an outbirth of their interior evils, and, as a reaction on them for their correction or restraint, is a sort of penitentiary punishment of their defects of character. The mere fact of their being slaves, also, produces a prejudice against them; and, by the association of ideas, their color, their woolly heads, and their every peculiar and distinctive feature, are connected with all that is low and debased in humanity. Hence, to say they are of the celestial genius, shocks the common sense of men around us. But, in rightly estimating any form of our common humanity, we must look with philo- sophic eyes, and "judge righteous judgment/' And thus, in estimating the peculiar genius of the african race, we must send our intellectual vision through outside, deceptions appearances, to their interior qualities; or we must apprehend the exterior forms or types of those qualities by that revived science of cor- respondences which makes effects exponents of their causes. But let us first learn what is meant by celestial, and what is the distinguishing characteristic of the celestial man. "To know wliat is true bj' virtue of what is good, is celestial."—" Man is called celestial, if the Lord's divine good is received in the will part — spiritual, if in the intellectual part." (A.C. 51;)0.) "The celestial man is one who, from the will principle, is in good, and thence in truth ; and ho is distinguished from the spiritual man in this, that the latter, from the intellectual principle, is in truth, and thence in good." (A.C. ()29.5.) "They who arc in the Lord's spiritual kingdom worship him from faith; but they wJio are in his celestial kingdom worship him from love." (A.C. 1U.C46.) From this it appears, that the celestial principle of humanity is love, will or affection ; and that a man of celestial genius is one whose distinguishing characteristic is action from this prin- ciple. Now every external of the African is a celestial corre- spondent. His having wool instead of hair,* with his strong propensities for laughing, singing and dancing, are all such."f- * See "The Classification of mankind by the Hair and Wool of their Heads; with An Answer to iJr. Prichard's Assertion, that 'the covering of the head of the Negro is Hair, properly so termed, and not Wool.' Head before the American Ethnological Society, Nov. 3, 1849. By P. A. Browne, LL. D." t, J, , 3 , t The Encyclopapdia Americana, in the article AVgro, savs : "The negro character, if inferior in intellectual vigor, is marked hy a warmth of social allcctions, and a kindness and tenderness of feeling, which even the atro- IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 77 His color seems to be against this hypothesis. But, besides that we have the best reason for knowing that the spirit of the good and wise African is white, and have some reason for be- lieving that the bodies of the higher tribes in the centre of Africa are white also, we must remember that the correspondence of the spiritual things of the soul is with the uses of the natural things of the body, and not with the substance, form or modi- fication of its organs. Thus the correspondence of the under- standing is with the sight of the eye, and not with the eye itself; the correspondence of the perception of the mind is with the smelling, and not with the nose; the correspondence of the obedience of the will is with the hearing, and not with the ear; and so forth. Hence the correspondence of the distinctive genius of the African is with the use of the color of his skin, and not with the color itself. What, then, is the use of a black skin in the african race ? and is this use a spiritual or a celestial correspondent? We know that black does not reflect either light or heat, but absorbs both ; and, in absorbing heat from one side, transmits it to the other. Hence the water in a copper tea-kettle, the bottom of which is scoured bright, will not boil near so soon as when the bottom is blackened with smoke or soot. So heated water in a silver tea-pot will not part with its caloric near so fast, when the surface of the tea-pot is thoroughly cleaned by polishing, as when it is soiled or discolored by being tarnished and uncleaned ; and as the virtue of the tea is more thoroughly extracted by drawing, the hotter the water is, therefore white china and polished metallic tea-pots are much better for draw- ing tea than any of the colored sorts. The use of a black skin in the negro is, then, the ready absorption and radiation of heat. The black color of the negro's skin has also a correspondence with his celestial genius. For the negro is the celestial man in an utterly degenerate state; and black corresponds to the proprium of man in such a state of celestial degeneracy. Further, Africa is peculiarly the land of heat; and heat in .the natural world corresponds to love in the spiritual world : therefore, both the African and his color, which, as we have seen, corresponds to heat naturally, correspond to the celestial principle of man. This applies, in some degree, to all the cities of foreign oppression have not been able to stifle. All travellers concur in describing the negroes as mild, amiable, simple, hospitable, unsus- pecting and laithful. They are passionately fond of rnusic, and they ex- press their hopes and fears in extemporary effusions of song. AU tnct-o are characteristics of men of the celestial genius. 7* 78 SOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY inhabitants of the torrid zone, who are all, more or less, charac- terized ])j dark color of the skin. For, as natural heat corre- sponds to spiritual heat, or love, hence it is that man becomes quickly and intensely warm in the ratio of the strength and ready activity of passion, and that the natives of hot climates are apt to be choleric and jealous. From all this, we conclude, that the countries of the torrid zone, which lie constantly under the sun's vertical rays, have a celestial correspondence in the material cosmos, and that the men of those countries are relatively of the celestial genius; that is, are men more characterized by love and its passions, than by wisdom and 'its intellections; or men whose wisdom is more the perceptive intelligence of love, than the ratiocinative intelligence of science. Nothing can be clearer than that the negro is as much formed, by the whole constitution of his body, as well as by the color of his skin, for living, and enjoying life, in the in- tense intertropicjil heat of Africa, as the camel is formed for travelling in african deserts. In fact, he is a sort of human salamander. And it is because the negro can endure a degree of heat which kills the white man, that the blacks are better fitted to cultivate the rice, cotton and sugar plantations of the South, and of the West Indies, than the whites; and why black can never compete with white labor in mountainous and frosty regions. The negro has this power in the peculiar organization of his skin, which not only has an extraordinary development of the layer \_rete miicosvm'] that secretes a black pigment,* but also a more copiously and rapidly perspirable structure. The want of this quality of the negro skin, is strikingly illus- trated by what is believed to be a fact of natural history. It is said that sheep, when taken from cold, mountainous, northern regions to the torrid zone, lose their covering of wool and get one of hair. Their wool is one of the worst conductors of heat * "When a blister has been applied to the skin of a ncj?ro, if it has not been very stimulating, in twelve hours after, a thin transparent greyish membrane is raised, under which we find a lluid. This membrane is the cuticle or scarf skin. WJien this, with the fluid, is removed, the surface under them appears black. But, if the blister had been very stimulating, another membrane, in which this black color resides, would also have been raised with the cuticle: this is rete mucosum, which is itse/f double, con- sisting of another grey transparent membrane, and of a black web, very much resembling the nigrum pigmentum of the eye. When this mem- brane is removed, the surface of the true skin (as has hitherto been be- lieved) comes into view, and is white, like that of a European." (Hoop. Med. Dit-t., Lond. Edit., 1811, «. 749.) This manifest doubleness of the reto mucosum in the negro, which we had ourselves seen, — making the skin of the black man, when tanned, considerably thicker than tliat of the white man, — led us to say, in the first edition, that hi« skin "has an addiiianal layer which secrete* a plack pigment;" but we have now deemed it the safest form of expression to say, his skin has "an extraordinary develop- meat " of tliat layer. IN THE LIGHT OP THE NEW JERUSALEM. 79 and moisture. The colder the climate, the finer it is; because its nonconducting power increases in the ratio of its fineness. Hence, in the torrid zone, the sheep's wool so obstructs the animal heat and perspirable matters in their passage off, that they generate a fever in the skin, which, by its suppurating efifects, causes the woolly coat to slough oiF, and give place to a hairy mantle. For the sheep, with a coat of hair, radiates heat more rapidly, and perspires more freely, so as to be able to endure the otherwise destructive heats of the torrid regions. In like manner, the negro, by the blackness and the greater per- spirability of his skin, radiates heat and evacuates humors more readily and rapidly than the white man. The African's head, indeed, has wool instead of hair; but this is because his celes- tial genius makes him fond of heat in his head. In Kentucky, we observed that, although the negro's feet were very suscep- tible of cold and liable to be frosted, yet, when sleeping at night, he would roll himself in his blanket and lie with his head to the fire — even, some times, in the very ashes. White men, in like circumstance, are wont to lie with their feet to the fire. But the skin of the black man certainly voids heat and mois- ture more readily and more iM'ofusely than the white man ; and as his perspiration is greater in quantity, and more oily in qua- lity, it requires more of his animal heat to become latent in it for its evaporation. This is an additional cause of the African's greater ability to endure the excessive heat of his native climate. Hence the animal heat and morbid humors, which, pent in by his white skin, kill the Caucasian in Africa with fevers, are no impediment to the negro's free and full enjoyment of life there. This is one reason why the whites have never yet been able fully to explore the centre of Africa. The Mighty Lord has encircled that centre with a wall of fire, which is a far more efi'ectual bar- rier against the inroads of the Europeans, than the wall of China ever was against those of the Tartars. And as this is a clear indication of the divine will that Africa should be inhabited, improved, reformed, regenerated, governed and elevated solely or mainly by Africans, therefore justice to Africa demands that Europeans, and their descendants in America, who hold her sous in servile bondage or slavish apprenticeship, should send them back to her, having previously fitted them for a happy repose on her bosom ! We conclude, that, as the african race, color and all, are correspondents of heat in the torrid zone; and as heat there is a correspondent of love in the celestial kingdom of the spiritual world; therefore Africans are men of a celestial genius. Their degraded forms and characters here, and the hideous forms and 80 SOME VIEWS OP FREEDOM AND SLAVERY horrid barbarities in the circumferential parts of their o^vn country, are the results of the utter perversion of their more noble nature. For, as all evil is but perverted good, the more exalted and more perfect the good, the more debased and more deformed must be the evil which results from its per- version. But the revelations which are now made, from the spiritual world, for the use of the new christian church, are our best and truest informants respecting the genius and destinies of the african race. And when we know that the quarters of the com- pass in this world signify the four cardinal states of the soul in the other world; and that the east in the spiritual world is whore the Lord is in love to him and from him; we may see whatjs the spiritual position of Africa, relatively to Asia and Europe, from the following revelation : " The angels, when Asia is named, perceive the south; when Europe is named, they perceive the north; and yhen Africa is named, they per- ceive the cast.^' (^P- Ex. 21.) This shows that, in the percep- tion of the angels, Africans are of the celestial genius. The following revelations also bear upon this subject. They are our authorities for asserting, that there is now, in the centre of Africa, a new church of a celestial stamp, and that, among all heathen nations, the Africans stand preeminent as men of an interior and celestial order. The distinguishing truths of Christianity are "comprehended and received by the Afiicans " in the other world, " inasmuch as they think more interi- orly and spiritually than others. Such being the character of the Africans even in this world, there is, there/ore, at this day, a revelation begun among them, which is communicated from the centre round about, but does not extend to the sea coasts. Tl>ey acknowledge our Lord as the Lord of heaven and earth, and laugh at the Monks who visit them, and at Christians who talk of a threefold divinity, and of salvation by mere thought — asserting that there is no man, who worships at all, that does not live according to his religion ; and that, unless a man so lives, he must needs become stupid and wicked, because, in such case, be receives nothing from heaven. They likewise give the name of stupidity to ingenious wicked- ness, because there is not life but death in it." All "the things contained in the doctrine of the New Jerusalem," whiqh are now revealed from hea- ven, for the use of a new and true christian church in christian countries, by writing and the press, "are now revealed by word of mouth, throuj^h angelic spirits, to the inhabitants of that country." (^Con. Last Jud. 75, ?(■.) " The new church is planted in the centre of Africa amongst those who live a good life, according to the best of their knowledge, and worship one God under a human form." (C. L. 114.) In revealing the third state of men after death, "which is the state of instruction of those who come into heaven," our church thus describes the character and genius of the heathen nations: they "who, in the world, have led a good life in conformity with their religion, and have thence de- rived a species of conscience, and have done what is just and right, not so much on account of the laws of their government, but on account of the laws of religion, which they believed ought to be kept holy, and in no respect to be violated by overt acts— all these, when they are instructed, are easily led to acknowledge the Lord ; because it is iu)prcssed on their hearts IN THE LIGHT OP THE NEW JERUSALEM. 81 that God is not an invisible being, but a being visible under a human form. These, in number, exceed all the rest. The best of them are from Africa." (H. &H. 514.) " Such among the Gentiles as, in the v?orld, have worshiped God under a human form, and have Jived a life of charity according to their religion, are conjoined to Christians in heaven; for they acknowledge and worsliip the Lord more than the rest. The most intelligent of them are from Africa." (Last Judg. 51.) " The Gentiles are also distinguished according to their genius, and their different capacities of receiving light through the heavens from the Lord ; for there are among them both interior and exterior men, which arises partly from climate, [does not this confirm our argument above]] partly from parentage, partly from education, and partly from religion. The Africans are a more interior peojjle than any other of the Gentiles."\\].T. S35.) All who acknowledge the verity of these revelations, cannot entertain any doubts on the subject before us. They now know that the Africans are men of a celestial genius. They know that, in the central regions of Africa, — as yet unexplored by Europeans, — there is a celestial church, winch has the imme- diate revelation of truth by angelic spirits. Hence Africa in its confines, or in its circumferential regions, must be the celes- tial man in a degenerate state. This man, in a good degenerate type, must be a willing obedience to some master;* and, in a bad degenerate type, must be the most revolting combatant for dominion over his fellows — merging every vestige of true hu- manity in the most barbarous cannibalism. Now, although, to us here, with our vision extended to very narrow limits, it may seem a great evil that innocent and well- disposed Africans — men, women and children — should have been brought to this country and sold into bondage to the whites; yet this is a far less evil than that they should have been butchered and eaten, as captives in war, by their savage conquerors in their own country : it is certainly not a greater evil than that inflicted upon Joseph by his brethren — his own flesh and blood — who sold him, through the Ishmaelites, into egyptian bondage. And may we not see that the bondage of Africans in this country is as much in the providence of the Lord for final good to Africa, as the bondage of the Children of Israel in Egypt was for the final good of the church of G od in its restoration to Palestine? The science of Egypt was in- dispensably necessary to that restoration. It was equally indis- pensable in that august restoring of lost humanity by GoD- wiTH-us, when he became ^' Jehovah our righteousness." * "Among all the nations in heaven, the Africans are most beloved, for they receive the goods and truths of heaven more easily than others. They wish especially to be called obedient, but not faithful. They say tJiat Christians, because tiiey have the doctrines of faith, may be called faithful ; but not they, unless they receive it ; or, as they say, are able to receive it. Cn.&H. 32H, A.C. 2G04.) 82 SOxME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY And it ever -will be indispensable in the restoration of the ce- lestial church. Wherefore, it has been, and still is, needed in the restoration of the celestial church throucrhout Africa. lis celestial centre needs a scientific reactive plain from Europe, or America, which is Europe transplanted, to extend it to, and form it fully on, the sea coasts. Only in this way can the de- generate celestial character of Africa be restored throughout her borders. AYhen the celestial church falls, the old or natural will is destroyed, and the understanding is separated from it and sci- entifically enlightened, so that a new will may be formed in the intellectual principle of the mind. For this purpose, Afri- cans of the better degenerate sort, have been sold, by their brethren of the worst degenerate sort, into slavery; and, in the Lord's permissive providence, have been brought to America as a relative Egypt. Here, by mingling with a more scientific, rational, intellectual and enlightened race, they are in the way of receiving that christian understanding of truth, which is necessary for the development, perfection and defence, in the circumference of Africa, of that celestial will of good which is now nascent in its centre. The two-edged sword of african intellect needs tempering and sharpening by european science, to do efifcctual battle with the evils and falsities that afflict mankind. While here, the Africans must be .the servants or slaves of the Europeans; because, in degenerate man, the darkened will must be subject to, and governed by, the en- lightened understanding as a master. J^ut, in the fulness of time, — and the purposes of a Good Providence seem now to be ripening fast, — the enlightened African, restored by coloniza- tion to his father land, will carry back those vital influences which are to revivify his country, and cause /ze;-, perhaps, to " arise, The queen of the world, and the child of the skies " ! The black blood of Africa has been sent from her eastern celes- tial heart to these western countries as sijiritual luns:s. Here it is brought in contact with the air and ether of ch'ristianity, to give out its eflfete earthly carbonaceous matters and take in the oxygen of heaven. And when it is thus suflSciently vita- lized, it will by and by be seen to pour its encrimsoned flood refluent, for that potent arterial action, by which Ilumaniti/ will stand forth disenthralled, and, full developed in celestial purity and perfection, will stretch her arms from Afric's shores, in heavenly benediction, over a regenerated world! The part of true wisdom here, then, is to rcgjird slavery in IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 83 refoience to this end. Viewed in this light, its amorphous and unsightly stones become luminous and beauteous with the pris- matic hues, and fall into the orderly forms, of a heaven-directed kaleidescopal arrangement. Its evil becomes mellowed into good. And if the American, knowing that a nation is not born in a day, shall not spoil his work by impatience — if he shall work in faith while he waits in hope — if he shall look to the sure effectuation of high and holy ends by the gradual means of long protracted time — he will perform that work of genuine charity, in such a suitaUe preparation of the african slave for the right use and enjoyment of natural, civil, social and political freedom, as shall doubly bless, both him that gives and him that receives it, when ''the set time is full come'' for the reception of the boon. Yes, we repeat, all nature is abhorrent to sudden changes ! And slavery, as an hereditary political evil, long developed in chronic disease, cannot possibly be corrected or cured in an instant. In demonstrating the evil of slavery, we have shown this already. But we must repeat what we said there, because it is essential to our argument here. African slavery has been gradually ingenerated, and has gradually grown up, in long time; and equally long time is requisite for its safe and thorough eradication from the body politic. Men who have been begotten and born slaves for a long course of years, can only be rebegotten and reborn freemen by the processes of correspondingly protracted reformation and regeneration. And hence the instantaneous manumission of the slave, and the sudden abolition of slavery, would be no less unkindness to the slave, than injustice to the community. We must not forget the distinguishing characteristic of man- hood. As we have before shown, that which distinguishes the Creator from the creature, as well as assimilates the creature to the Creator, is providence and providence. God foreknows or foresees all things, and incessantly provides that good shall be done, and evil be averted, restrained or so arranged as to con- duce to good. Man knows nothing or little of the future, and can but imperfectly provide for that little in the present. But so far as man resembles Grod, he comes into the enjoyment of intelligent foresight, and into the exercise of that wise prudence which consists in providing in the present for the future. And herein the slave differs essentially from the freeman. In fact, he is rather in the condition of a child. He is in a worse condition ; for he is not in the way of ever coming to the state of acting in his own right. Trusting to his master's foresight, and feil by his providings, he becomes himself improvident; 84 SOME VIEWS OP FREEDOM AND SLAVERY and, only regarding his own pleasure in the present, he eats up all lie has to-da}', without laying by any thing for the morrow. IJence, if slaves are suddenly manumitted, and thrown out of the sphere and patronage of intelligent and provident freemen, they ere long deteriorate in character, become destitute and miserable in condition, and decrease in numbers. So that it is as unkind and unmerciful to set a slave free at once, without preparing him gradually for the use and enjoyment of liberty, as it is to let loose a bird that has been hatched and reared in a cage, and constantly fed, and every way cared for, by the as- siduous attentions of its human possessor — in which case, it is well known that the creature perishes from its incapacity to take care of itself. Consequently, the true duty of America in regard to slavery, and her genuine charity to the African in the emancipation of him from it, must consist in all those constitutional provisions for the abolishment of the evil, which not only look to the eman- cipation of the slave in some future time, but shall also make it obligatory on his master or the state to qualify him, in the mean time, by suitable education and the development of useful ca- pacities, for the right and profitable use of freedom when it shall become his portion. Any thing short of this, would be unkindness to the slave, and injustice to the community. Well, then, may it be said to our countrymen — " If ye know these things, happy are ye, if ye do them.^^ They will be happy, not merely in getting rid of an evil which is endangering their political safety and social prosperity, but, what is far more de- sirable, they will be happy in that political, civil and moral elevation of character which results from a high and noble nature brought into full form and vigor by the long-continued and consistent exercise of great virtues. God grant that our country may, in this respect, enjoy the exceedingly precious blessing of his divine favor ! We are aware how repugnant these views must be to the principles and feelings of those who hold to the right of pro- perty in human beings, and how much they are against what they now regard as their interests. But our argument is not addressed to them. We too well know the fruitlessness of reasoning for truth and justice in those matters wherein the selfish and worldly interests of mankind are at stake. Our ar- gument is addressed to those who regard slavery as a civil and political evil, which is to be gradually worked out of the body politic^ by wise, prudent and prospective constitutional provi- eions. And^ with this end in vieW; we maintain.; that african IN THE LIGHT OP THE NEW JERUSALEM. 81 bondage in this country must be put upon the footing of slavish apprenticeship. It is presumed that Africans have been suffered to come here, by Divine Providence, for their own reformation and their country's regeneration. The slave state, which alone has the power to determine whether slavery shall or shall not be an institution of its polity, is to take to itself, in its collective capacity, an entire wardship of the slaves; and it is to found institutions, and provide all means, for their education and entire social improvement. It touches not the right of indi- vidual property in any that are slaves now; but it decrees that every child, begotten by slave parents after a certain period, shall be born free; and it apprentices the child so born, when nurtured and reared by its parents to a suitable age, and pro- perly educated at free schools to be established and main- tained by the state for the purpose, to some master or mis- tress, either the owner of the parents, or some other person, as the case may seem to require, and as may be agreeable to the owner — to learn some useful handicraft or occupation — to serve till thirty years of age, and then to receive a suit of clothes and enough money to take him or her to Africa — the state pro- viding for and securing both transportation to and settlement in that country. It is presumed, that the value of the services of the appren- tice to the master or mistress, during so long an apprenticeship, is a full equivalent for all he or she receives both before and at the day of freedom. And the only sacrifice the slaveholder makes is of the institution of slavery — which he gives up for the good of the country — and of the increased value of the enfranchised workman's services during the remainder of his life. It should be observed, however, that he as an individual has no just right to a value which has accrued from the collec- tive body's emancipating measures; and, as an offset, he is relieved from the burden of maintaining the superannuated slave. Of course, there is no weight whatever in these observations, if african slavery in this country is a civil and political blessing to both the blacks and the whites. But, if we mistake not the signs of the times, the days of slavery, in this and in all coun- tries, are numbered. If there was a final general judgment in the world of spirits in the year 1757, as we believe — if, in con- sequence of this, a new heavenly arrangement of Christians has taken place in the spiritual world — if, from this new heaven, a new and true christian church is now descending to earth — and if sevenfold light and heat, from the Sun of Heaven newly SG SOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY rising in the minds of men, are pouring down upon all the marshy grounds, foggy valleys and dark places of human de- generacy — then an explosive force, a mental, moral and spiritual nitric oxide compound, is generating, which will dissipate into thin air the bonds of slavery wherever they exist ! And wo be to the hand that attempts to stay its rendings! Yes, a de- cree, infinitely more irrevocable than that of the Medes and Persians, has gone forth, that, in due time, slavery in our southern states shall cease : and as well might a man try to prevent the explosion of a locomotive steam boiler by putting his arms round it, as the South attempt to array herself against the fulfilment of this divine decree ! All her measures for perpetuating slavery against the spirit of the present age, are gradually laying a train which will thoroughly undermine her constitution, and ultimately explode, to her inevitable destruc- tion. And it is the part of true wisdom in her, to provide this catastrophe, and to forfend it by the instant and constant pro- vision of all requisite present and prospective means. In this view of the subject, we are satisfied that the true way is to regard slavery as a spiritual evil — as a counteraction of the laws of the Divine Governor of the Universe, who will have all men come to the knowledge of the truth, and decrees that the truth every where shall make them free! This makes the eradication of this evil from the body politic, more a spiritual function, and the task rather a mission of the church. In this view, the abolition of slavery is certainly not a governmental work. So far as it comes within the province of the civil polity, it is the work of the nation. It is the work of the people as a whole. The people of America, as one man, are just as much bound to give money — each and every one of them a portion — to indemnify the slaveholder for the constitutional property which he gives up for the good of the nation, as they are to erect a monument to Washington, or to do any other purely national or truely patriotic work. And they are bound to do it by voluntary contribution — not by government tax. The grand principle is, to develop a national virtue by a national action : and neither the South, nor any other p«?-< of the nation, has a right, in divine justice, to monopolize the virtue by as- suming the action wholly to itself. If the South would so per- mit and decree, it might, as we suppose, be the function and duty of the christian churches prevalent throughout our whole country, to educate and prepare the children of the slaves for freedom; and, if necessary, to purchase them for the jourpose. This is on the ground of slavery's being regarded as a spiritual evil; and is instead of the state's establishment and support of IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 87 free schools for the education of slaves' children, on the ground of its being regarded as a merely civil or political one. In our humble opinion, this is the more appropriate duty of the pre- valent churches; and it is a more incumbent and more noble charity, to instruct the children of the slaves in the most general and wholly unsectarian principles of the christian religion, as well as to train them in the agricultural, mechanical and com- mercial arts, than it is to civilize and christianize the Indians, or to send missionaries to the Heathen of foreign lands : for this is one mode in which ^' charity should begin at home." And it is just as feasible for all the christian sects to unite in this work, as in printing and publishing the Sacred Scriptures without note or comment. When the offspring of the slaves are prepared for freedom, then, unquestionably, it will be the civil duty of the american people, in their collective capacity, to send them to Africa. But there are certain principles on which alone the emanci- pation of the slave can be safely and securely effected. No plan of j^reparing the slaves for freedom will be effectual, which is not founded on marriage. We must go to the very fountain- head of human improvement. We must go to the plain on whi^h the first or inmost changes are made by the plastic hand of regeneration in the moulding reformations of the human soul. We must yield to the awards of common sense, and improve the african race as the races of animals are improved. Mar- riage among the blacks should be most strictly regulated by wise rules. No adult apprentice that is morally vicious or physically deformed or mortally diseased, should be allowed to marry at all. Marriage might be allowed to the apprentices as a reward of exemplary virtue, piety and true religion. In the case of those of ordinary character, it should be postponed till after their freedom. For the functions, duties and responsibi- lities of the marriage relation are of the highest order and the greatest use, and should be devolved on none but the best class in such a state of tutelage. In no case, should the appren- tices be allowed to contract marriage before the age of twenty- five in the male and twenty in the female; and, when married, they should be set up in business, and taught to discharge with propriety the duties of the family relation, in near proximity to the families of their masters, and under their intelligent and paternal supervision. Thus will young families be prepared for Africa. And, by crossing the various tribes, as well as by pairing the more noble and generous sorts, vast improvements of the race in general might be effected. 88 SOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY Of course, there should be nothing arbitrary or capricious in these matrimonial allotments; but a free and rational restrain- ing of passions, and guiding of inclinations, by sensible advice, moral suasion, and kindly authority, as in the best regulated modes of society among the whites. The affinities and draw- ings of interior conjugial affections must never be outraged by the forced determinations of factitious law or arbitrary autho- rity. Perhaps those who ought not to intermarry, should never be thrown together, either in the school room, the place of labor or the field of recreation. This would prevent early attachments among such as ought not to be united in wedlock. It might be difficult to draw the line marking properly the degree of moral or physical defect prohibitory of marriage. But there would be no ground for wisdom to exercise herself on, if there were no difficulties; and this difficulty, true wisdom could easily overcome. In the case of idiots, the principle and the case are manifest. And it only seems hard, that those who are physically deformed or diseased — so as to be impotent, or able to have only a physically degenerate progeny — should be debarred from the sweets and comforts of conjugial and domestic life, when they are possessed of the higher order of mental powers and virtues. Jhit this is a case for that species of noble self-denial, which has led superior minds of the white race, tainted, for instance, with hereditary insanity, to doom them- selves to celibacy, or to immolate themselves on the altar of their country's battle-field, that they might die childless, and so stop the propagation of a defective form of humanity. It is clear, that the african race, like any other, cannot be radically, thoroughly and highly improved, without wise and intelligent regard to the marriage principle as here suggested. And it must never be forgotten, that any decided elevation of the african character by these means, must only be looked for in long courses of time, and by the most gradual steps of ascent. iVor will any plan for abolishing african slavery in the southern states be practicable, effectual or secure, which does not contemplate radical changes in the manners, customs and entire social economy of the whites. This, indeed, is the great and inherent difficulty of the subject. For it is almost impos- sible to make communities give up principles of pride, which underlay their honor, and to submit to entire changes of their social organization, however gradual and prospective they may be. Nay, they at once resist the inceptive measure, in strongest opposition to its final result. Therefore, all theories for the abolition of slavery are chimerical, which do not rest on organic changes of the slave communities^ brought about by their owu IN THE LIGHT OP THE NEW JERUSALEM. 89 free and rational action, in giTing up former principles, and in adopting such new ones as alone can sustain an unmixed and politically and socially equal population in the various relations of mutual and reciprocal service. The hands and the head of the South must be washed, before she can be made every whit clean by the washing of her feet. There must be as great a change in the character of the ■whites as in that of the blacks, in preparing the slave sptate for so total a metamorphosis. White children must be reared and educated on different principles. The notion that a white man is degraded by doing a negro's work, must be exploded: for, in a homogeneous and truly free community, there is no negro's work to be done. The idea that it is more honorable or respec- table to receive service from others than to render it to them, must be dissipated at once. This is the corner-stone of feudal- ism and of imperious sway. It is both anti-republican and anti-christian. The christian maxim is a political truth — '' it is better to give than to receive'' service. Higher and lower service, in wider and narrower spheres of usefulness, is the only honorable distinction in a true republic as in the true church : and the instruments of low and common labor must be rela- tively the community's own foot, and not an African's neck under it. Then will even low and common labor be dignified with all the honor of the whole body. The community will regard its common laborer with some thing of the feeling of a father who kisses with fond affection the tiny foot of his prat- tling infant, or of a man who admires the well formed foot of the woman that he loves. In the words of an apostle, the com- munity can then practically say — '^ our uncomely parts have more abundant comeliness; for our comely parts have no need : but God hath tempered the body together, having given more abundant honor to that part which lacked; that there should be no schism in the body, but that the members should have the same care one for another : and, whether one member suffer, all the members suffer with it; or one member be honored, all the members rejoice with it." (1 Cor., xii, 23 — 26.) When labor is thus dignified, and the laborer is thus honored, in the South, tlicn there will be no difficulty in abolishing slavery there, and its abolition will be most safely and securely effected. Free white men will freely go thither to do the work which is now done by slaves. Small property holders will more divide the soil. Other sources of wealth will be developed. New kinds of business will be set on foot, requiring a greater variety of labor and of talent. The present vast and almost exclusive production of cotton, rice and sugar will undergo 8 =K 90 SOME VIEWS or FREEDOM AND SLAVERY great modifications — lessening in amount indeed, and so ceasing to enrich the few, but conspiring with a greater variety of pro- ductions to enrich the many, and, by multijolying a greater number of kinds of wealth, and aggregating a greater total from very many small amounts of wealth, to increase vastly in quality and degree the prosperity of the commonwealth. And as all this is to take place gradually, in long courses of time, afforded by the gradual preparation of the black population for an advantageous removal to Africa, there may be such a slow and quiet infiltration of white laborers into the renewed and bettered forms of society, pari j^cissu with the black laborers' leaving them, as will not only save the institutions of the states from any kind of convulsive or injurious change, but give to them the solidity, transparency and polish of a sort of social petrifaction. CHAPTER ly. Precdom and Slavcri/ very Itriefly and cursorily viewed in their Spiritual Aspect. It is far more incumbent on us to regard spiritual freedom as a good, in contrast with spiritual slavery as an evil. And this leads us to view the subject before us in its spiritual aspect. The spiritual aspect of a thing is the view it presents when seen in the light of God's Word. Or, as the true church is the only right interpreter of the AVord of God, the spiritual aspect of freedom and slavery is what the doctrines of the true church teach concerning them. xsow Jesus said, to the Jews who believed on him, ^' Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free. They an- swered him, AVe be Abraham's seed, and have never been in bondage to any man: how saycst thou Ye shall be made free? Jesus answered them, Yerily, verily, I say unto you, AVhosoever committeth sin, is the servant of sin. And the servant abideth not in the house for ever: but the son abideth for ever. If the son, therefore, shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed." (John, viii, o'l — oO.) It is manifest that the Lord, in this passage of his Word, ig treating of spiritual freedom in contrast with spiritual bondage; IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 91 for he is showing the Jews how they might be made free, and they, confessedly, were not slaves in the natural sense. The conclusion is, that the Jews were slaves only in the spiritual sense; and that the Lord points out to them the source of spiritual servitude, and of spiritual freedom. The Lord, in this text, most clearly indicates the spiritual fountain-head of both slavery and freedom by these sentences : Whosoever commifteth sin, is the servant of sin; and. If tlie son shall make you free, ye shall he free indeed. The source of slavery is the commission of sin : the source of freedom is the practice of truth. Hence, in the spiritual aspect of our subject, slavery is the bondage of sin, and freedom is the service of the Lord. The service of the Lord h perfect freedom. For the Lord is love and wisdom itself; and what a man does from love by wisdom, is most spontaneous and free. Wisdom is good in form, that is, truth made good by virtuous activity. Love is good in essence, that is, essential good formed and qualified by the truth which corresponds to it. The service of wisdom is the loving obedience of its precepts — is the doing of truth for truth's sake. This service is always the more or less constrained subjection of the natural man to the spiritual man: because truth "reproves the world of sin" — condemns the natural man's evils, and requires the spiritual man to renounce them as sins. This idea of se{/-constraint is not really repugnant to true free- dom, although it seems so. That which is really repugnant to freedom is the being constrained hy others. Hence, when v/e said, in the last chapter, " no true man will be forced to do even what is right,"* we did not mean to imply that every true man is not willing io force himself to do what his enlightened reason tells him he ought : for such self-constraint is altogether compatible with the free principle of his nature. f But this idea of constraint characterizes the free service of the child of light, and distinguishes it from that of the child of love. For, while that service is the constrained doing of truth for truth's sake, which is the result of divine reformation ; the service of * " Unless it was left to man to act according to his reason from freedom, he could not in any wise be disposed to receive eternal life; for tliis is in- sinuated when man is in freedom, and his reason is illustrated: for no one can be compelled to good ; because nothing which is of compulsion inheres; lor it is not his. That becomes his, which is done from freedom ; for that which is done from the will, is done from freedom ; and the will is the man himself. ' Wherefore, unless man be kept in the freedom even to do evil, good from the Lord cannot be provided lor him." (A.C. 10.777.) t In A. C. 1937, 1947, 7914, we are taught, that man ongJit to compel him- self; and, when he does so, that it is the effect of freedom : but not, when he is compelled. 92 SOME VIEWS OP FREEDOM AND SLAVERY love is the spontaneous doing of good for goodness' sake, wliich is the result of divine regeneration. The service of wisdom or truth, \?, formal, and the service of love or good, is essential, freedom. For, as man obeys the precepts of wisdom, he comes into the experimental or vital understanding of truth, in consequence of putting aM'ay from his life all the evil of false principles; and thus is delivered from the bondage of sin, so as to become the Lord's, or " the Truth's," freeman, by spiritually constrained action. For all obedience of truth, which subjects man's selfish and worldly loves to the behests of celestial and spiritual love, is at first undelightful, because a cross to the natural man : yet still it is freedom; because, although a man is a slave when forced by others, he is most truly or formally free when he forces him- self.* This, therefore, is what we c^W forynal freedom; because truth is the /o7nn of all things that are in order, while good is the essence of all things that are in use. But the service of love is man's spontaneous action from the ruling end of doing good to others for their own sakes. So far as a man acts consistently from this end, he comes himself into the enjoyment and the living perception of the good which he seeks to do to others. In the delight of making others happy, he is most happy himself. Hence, in the love of good for its own sake is essential delight; and therefore essential freedom; for whatever is done with delight, or whatever produces delight in the doing it, is most freely done — the essence of freedom being the happiness of delightful emotions with their calm and peaceful content. On the other hand, " in the love of evil is [essential] servi- tude; " and the essence of slavery is the misery of undelightful emotions with their restless discontent. For the love of evil, that is, the love of self and the world as a final end of action, constantly tends, in its activity, to injure others, instead of doing them good. Thus it runs counter to all the laws of the divine economy. Consequently, it is perpetually subject to the coun- teraction of those laws. In short, the universal law of the divine economy is, that evil shall react upon itself for its own correction. So that, whenever evil goes forth in any of its corresponding activities, it comes, more or less immediately, into bonds : while, nevertheless, the yearnings of its infernal desires arc increased in the ratio of the restraining weights which are made to impend upon them — as smothered fires burn with a more intense heat. All a man who is actuated by evil love docs, is attended with misery, in order that his action from * See the references in the second note on the preceding page. IN THE LIGHT 0¥ THE NEW JERUSALEM. 93 that love may be restrained. Hence, in action from that love, there is the veriest servitude or slavery. For, as that which a man does with delight is free; so that which a man does with misery is constrained. There is, indeed, an infernal delight at first in the commission of evil; but it is invariably followed by corresponding misery in the reactions upon it. The activities of an evil love gnaw as a deathless worm, and burn as a quenchless fire. Constantly urged to work, and yet flogged as with scorpions when he has worked, the man of evil passions is subjected to the most galling task, and the most relentless task- master. The activities of evil love produce, in the substance of the human soul, or in man's spiritual body, a sort of cancerous diathesis, which breaks out in " putrefying sores. ^' (Isa., i, 6.) The delights of this evil love are as the itching of these cancer- ous sores, and as the pleasure felt in their friction. But the pain which follows such friction, and the increased cancerous action consequent on the greater afilux of blood and nervous fluid to the part, emblem too truly the bondage and burden of sin. And so it is that " in the love of evil there is servitude.'' And they who are in such servitude can never come into good, so as to feel delight in doing it purely for its own sake : thus cannot enter into heaven, which consists in that delight, and which is open to those only who are in divine truth by obe- dience to its precepts. And so it is that '' the servant of sin abideth not in the house for ever.'^ The house here mentioned, is that " building of God, not made with hands,'^ which is '' eternal in the heavens. '^ It is that body of external goodness with which the reformed and regenerated soul is " clothed upon '' as it " shifts this mortal coil.'' The servitude of sin is compelled action from the ends of selfish and worldly loves. In this action, these loves put on the external semblances of even spiritual and celestial goodness, to promote their interests or suit their sinister purposes. But, as " there is nothing covered which shall not be revealed, nor hid which shall not be known,'' these merely skin-deep semblances of external goodness will, in the developments of the eternal world, be put off from those loves, and they will come into and abide in such external evils as correspond to their infernal desires. And so will it be fully proved that " the servant of sin abideth not in the house for ever." But " the son abideth for ever." For the son is " the way, the truth and the life;" and ''no man cometh unto the father but by the son." The son is '' the truth," because truth 13 tiio first and only begotten of good as its father; and is the bright- ness of its glory and the express image of its substance; just 94 SOME VIEWS OP FREEDOM AND SLAVERY as light is the first and only begotten son, the brightness, the glory, and the express image of heat. And as light conveys heat and develops it in the earth, so truth conveys good and develops it in the soul. Nor can genuine good be developed in homogeneous external goodness by any other means than the practice of the truth which flows from and corresponds to it. But when love to God, and love to the neighbor, are implanted ill the human soul, by divine reformation and regeneration, and truth, proceeding as a son from those loves, and bearing them as heat in its bosom, is so out-born as to become flesh in man's conduct, then the external structure of goodness which the truth thus becomes in this out-being or out-formation of itself, is the wise man's founding of his house, which, when ^' the rain descends, and the floods come, and the winds blow, and beat upon it, falls not, because it is founded on a rock.'' The truth for ever abides in the good which it efi'ects. And so '' the son abideth for ever.'' "If the son, therefore, shall make you free, ye shall he free indeed." For, if the truth of good release you from the bond- age of sin, it will most efi'ectualiy and most abidingly open in your soul that gushing and perennial fountain of love, which will carry you most spontaneously along to the doing of good for goodness' sake. In this passage of the Word, the son means the Lord as to his divine truth. The son also means the divine truth which proceeds from him and is himself derivativel}'. As we have seen above, the house in which this son abides for ever, is the good which it incessantly efi'ects. The thought of the mind dwells constantly on and in what the man loves to do. The thought, flowing from the will and afi'cction of the love, brings them out into corresponding form and activity in the speech and action. And in the speech and action which correspond to it, the cud or purpose of the love finds a funda- ment, continent and resting place, so as to give to the love therein ''a local habitation and a name." It was thus that the divine love, in the Lord's glorification of his humanity, found a thorough outbirth and permanent abode. And it is ever thus that the divine truth from him, flowing by reformation and regeneration into the souls of men, causes them to abide in the good that corresponds to it. For none can pluck out of his father's hands, them whom the father giveth to the son. No evil or falsity can cause them to swerve from the rectitude of divine truth, who have, in the potency of that truth, brought the good from whence it flows, correspondently out into ultimate life. For thus good by truth is founded on " the Hock of Ages." And hence^ as the son's abiding for ever is the same as evil's being IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 95 finally removed from, and good's being brought into, ultimate life, and fixed there by constant action from the love of doing good for goodness' sake ; and as action from love is in consum- mate freedom; it is said, ♦' tlicrefore^ if the &on shall make you free, ye shall be/;'ce indeed.^' The ground of this reasoning is, that the divine truth is the law of divine order — the grand complex formula by which the problems of divine love are in- cessantly solved — the all-sufficient means by which the ends of divine love are constantly effected. So that, whatever is done according to divine truth, and by its reforming efficiency, is most freely done, because such action flows in the easy proclivity of the current of iha divine providence, and never can be ob- structed or rippled by any counteraction from the laws of the divine economy. In explaining the portion of the Holy Word before us, our church teaches the following clear and satisfactory doctrine : " He who acts in any case from the affection which is of the love of good, acts from a free principle ; but he who acts from the affection which is of the love of evil, appears to act from a free principle, but in reality does not, because he acts from the lusts which flow in trom hell. He alone is free who is in the affection of good ; because he is led of the Lord. That free- dom consists in being led of the Lord, and servitude in being led of lusts wiiich are from hell," must be manifest to all spiritual discernment; "for the Lord implants atleclions in favor of what is good, and aversion to what is evil. Hence to do good is freedom, and to do evil is altogether servile. He who believes that christian liberty has a further extent, is very much deceived." (A. C. 9o9(3.) " When man's internal principle [or the spiritual manl conquers, as is the case when it has reduced the external [principle or the natural man] to agreement or compliance [with itself,] then man is endowed by the Lord with essential liberty and essential rationality ; for then man is rescued by the Lord from infernal liberty, which in itself is [the veriest] servitude, and is introduced into celestial liberty, which in itself is essential freedom, and has consociation granted him with the angels." (Ap. Ex. 409.) Thus the Lord teaches us by this text " that they are servants [or slaves] who are in sins; and that he makes those free who, by the Word, receive truth from him." Consequently, when the Jews, in reply to his saying, " Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free," '^ answered him. We are the seed of Abraham, and were never in bondage to any one; how sayest thou, Ye shall be made free ? " &c. • " By these words is understood, that freedom consists in being led of the Lord, and that servitude consists in being led of hell. By iruih ivhich makefsfree, is meant the divine truth which is from the Lord; for he who receives that truth in doctrine and in life is [indeed j free ; because he becomes spiritual, and is led of the Lord. Wherefore, also, it is said, that fhe son abileth in the house for ever, and if the son makes vou free, you shall be free indeed ,- where by the son is meant the Lord, and likewise truth ; and io abide in the house, denotes [to dwell] in heaven. That to be led of hell IS servitude, is taught by these words, every one who doeth sin is the servant vf sin; where sin denotes hell, because sin is from hell." (Ap. Ex. 409.) 96 BOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY "All that is called freedom which is of the will— thus which is of the love; and hence it is that freedom manifests itself by the delijrht of will- ing and of thinkin? ; and hence of doing and of speaking ; for all delight is of love, and all love is of the will, and the will is the esse of the life of man." (A.C. 9585.) This is the reason that, in all contests for political liberty with arbitrary powers, the first and chief thing fought for, is liberty of speech and freedom of action; and this is the reason why despots, whenever they are enslaving a people, silence the press by their censorship, and impair freedom of speech and action by their fines and penalties. "To do evil from the delight of love, appears to be freedom; but it is servitude, because it is from hell. To do good from the delight of love, both appears to be and really is freedom, because it is from the Lord. Ser- vitude, therefore, consists in being led of hell, and freedom in being led of the Lord." (A. C. 85S6.) Such is the Lord's doctrine in this passage of his Holy Word, as interpreted by the true church. And how clearly does it teach us that, '' if the son make us free, we shall be free indeed " / To what has been advanced it may be added, that to do evil from the delight of the love of evil, appears to be freedom only to the mere natural man ; and to do good from the delight of the love of good, appears to be freedom only to the spiritual man. To the natural man, — especially the corporeal and sen- sual man, — the doing good from the delight of the love of it, seems preposterous ; and any obligation he may feel under to do it, seems to him a galling yoke and a fearful bondage. The Lord, who, as a divinely human form of spiritual truth, as " the way, the truth, and the life," imposes on him this task, seems to him a hard master — reaping where he has not sown, and gathering where he has not strewed. But if, in faith, he obeys the truth of God unto the entire renunciation of all action from every evil love, the Lord, by charity, or spiritual love, implants in him a spiritual affection for truth and goodness, and so lightens the burden which spiritual truth imposes on his natural man. And then he realizes the blessedness of the Lord's divine injunction and assurance — '^ Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart; and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.'' (Matt., xi, 28—30.) IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 97 CHAPTER V. Practical Application of the Subject — A Recapitulation, setting forth, in a Varied Form of Presentation, the True Nature of Freedom and Slavery, exhibiting the Position of America in relation to the Countries of Europe, and indicating the Duties and Responsihilities of Americans, and especially of Members of the True Church, in preserving the Liberties of their own Country, and in promoting the Universal Political Good of all other Nations. Our subject is full-fraught with lessons of practical wisdom in respect to what it becomes us, as a nation, to know and to do, for the preservation of our own country's liberties, and for the universal political good of all other nations. It unfolds to us the nature of slavery in its essential or internal form, as an evil far more to be dreaded, and far more to be eschewed, than that external form of it which is now so much exciting the imaginary fears, and the spurious philanthropies, of outside patriots. In short, it unfolds to us the nature of slavery as the root and branch of all arbitrary power. And, in its wise mo- nitions, it points to duty the only pathway to our country's safety, our domestic peace and our individual happiness. Let us, then, in conclusion, make a practical improvement of the principles which have been set forth. Let us first contemplate the spectacle which our political birth-right presents. Let us consider its probable influence on the nations of the old world. Let us ponder well the obliga- tions which it imposes on us as Americans. And let us, at some length, and in a varied form of presentation, consider again, and more summarily, the true nature of freedom and slavery — to the end that we may see more clearly, and feel more strongly, our duty as Americans of the New Jerusalem. It is not three quarters of a century since political freedom had her birth-day in the broad and lovely expanse of this new- found world. A nation, conceived of God by a general judg- ment in the world of spirits, gestated in " times that tried men's souls,'' was brought forth in the feeblest infancy of poli- tical existence. The United States of America were declared 9 98 SOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY a free and independent nation. The prestige of greatness and of glory slione as a halo around the head of the new-born babe. The best of blood was in its veins. It owned the pedigree of virtuous and mighty sires. A scion of a great and glorious stock, transplanted to a more genial soil, was to grow with greater growth, flourish with new vigor, and fructify in a vastly greater development of all that pertains to and secures the best interests of mankind. The nations of Europe, stereotyped in the fixed forms of im- memorial usage, could not be reformed and regenerated with a political new-birth, without being broken up, melted over, and cast into a new mould. There was no space large enough, and free enough, in any general division of that old continent, to hold the mould of the NEW MxVN — that better, greater, grander form of political humanity, which God, in his mercy, designed and deigned to bring forth, and rear up, as the Atlas, upon whose shoulders was to be upborne all national existence, virtue and prosperity. A new continent, which the Lord had hid in the treasure-house of this western hemisphere, was, in the fullness of his times, discovered and brought forth. Here, where the towering Andes, Cordilleras and Kocky Mountains stretch, for nearly half the arc of a great circle, the huge back- bone of a mighty frame — here, where giant rivers hurl hercu- lean floods to bottomless oceans on every side — where lakes are seas like monstrous wild beasts caged in rocky barriers — where boundless prairies, like mantles studded with Flora's many- colored gems, are spread, as royal robes, over the shoulders of Nature, sitting queen and nursing mother of a countless progeny of nations — where vegetation springs up in gigantic growths — where trees grow higher and thicker, skies stretch wider, and every thing puts on the dimensions of greater magnitude, than any where else in the world — where, therefore, material repre- sentatives of new and true principles more abounded, and where less political weeding was to be done to make a fitting garden- spot for the celestial sproutings of a new heaven of truly good and goodly true christian men — here, and here alone, could the mould of a newer, truer and better humanity be formed for the recasting into better political shapes all the old nations of the world. In short, here alone could a mighty republic of con- federated nations present the adequate forms, magnitudes, sym- metries and perfections of a national maximns homo! And hither have the old world's migrating myriads come, like difieront kinds of food into a healthy political stomach, to be digested into the new and better conditions of improved bodies politic. And as these foreigners have died, and their IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 99' spirits have risen into the spiritual world, their reflex influence from the world of spirits, has put the leaven into the old world, so that the whole lump of european nations is undergoing a thorough fermentation, and the batch is rising into the new forms of regenerated political existence. The spirit of truth, flowing down, as hot water, through new arrangements of the spirits of men in the spiritual world, is cracking the painted and gilded porcelain forms of ancient political organization, or is slacking the calcined crystallizations of long fixed political elements, every where in the old world — so as, by various dis- integration, to fit them for new political combinations in this land of expanding intelligence and rational freedom. Here decrepit political humanity was to find a fulfilment of prophecy; and, " waiting upon the Lord,'^ was to " renew her strength,^' to '^ mount up with wings as caglesj'''^ to " run and not be weary," and to ^^ walk and not faint/' And the infant form of this now adult mighty model for all other nations, was ushered into life, with excruciating parturient pains, only about seventy-four years ago. Not more than a century and a quarter has elapsed since the buds first swelled on our tree of liberty. An area of civil freedom was spread here in America, as a needful plain for a fuller development of that spiritual freedom which consists in the deliverance of the spirits of all mankind from the thraldom of sin. And now the New Jerusalem, or the true christian church, descends from God out of heaven, as an angel of light, to show us the obliga- tions we are under, to preserve this freedom in its purity, for the welfare of our own and of all other nations ! Let us, then, not turn our backs on her. It becomes us — it is our duty — in practical reflection upon vrhat has been ad- vanced, to consider again what is the nature of true freedom, so that our souls may more fully imbibe its spirit and its life, and impart to our country and to mankind the saving eflficacy of its healthful influences : while we, at the same time, scruti- nize more particularly the true nature of that internal slavery which we have seen is an evil so much to be dreaded and avoided; so that we may practically discern its essence and its source, and, by seeing in ourselves, individually, the root of all arbi- trary power, that root of bitterness, we may effectually pluck * It is believed that the standards, fla^s, or armorial bearings of nations correspond in some way to their distinctive internal characters, and mark their peculiar places, so to speak, in the grand man of this lower world. And the eagle, with the stars and the stripes, is supposed to indicate that Americans of the United States are to be a highly rational people— charac- terized by acute, penetrating and soaring intellect, supereminent know- ledge, indomitable enterprise, untiring energy, and critical acumen. 100 SOME VIEWS or FREEDOM AND SLAVERY it up from our own bosoms, and cast it from us; and thus do all we can to save our country and all men from its fatal sproutings. What, then, do we learn, or have we learned, from the teachings of God's Word, and the doctrines of his church, as to the true idea of freedom and slavery ? If there is any one word which expresses the true idea of freedom, it is equilihrium. The common notion is, that a man is free when he has the power and liberty to do what he likes. This, indeed, as our lesson has taught us, is natural freedom. For action is free when it is according to the ruling love. "What a man loves to do, that he does with delight; and when one is allowed to do what is delightful to him without any hin- drance, his life seems to him unconstrained, and therefore free. Hence all freedom must have a quality according to the cha- racter of the love from which it springs. And thus natural freedom, being the unrestrained activity of natural love, takes its quality, its form and its hue from natural love. But natural love is the love of self, or the love of dominion over others from the love of self; with the love of wealth as the means of ob- taining it. And the unrestrained activity of domineering self- love among men, would be the liberty to bring all men into subjection to one man, and the power and right to appropriate and possess all their property. And this, it is easy to see, would be universal slavery. For, when one man had subjected all other men to his sway, they would be all slaves to him; and he would be the greatest slave of them all, because he would be a slave to himself: for no man is so much a slave as he who cannot act contrary to his own natural passions. To love oneself above all things, and to act invariably with a view to one's own gratification, is essential sin. For sin is contrariety to divine order; and the order in which God creates man is to love others as well as or better than himself, and to find his happiness in all those acts of good use to other men by which he makes them happy. Hence the essence of sin is to act against the love of others and the love of promoting the common good. Thus self-love, which is active in the love of dominion, and seeks its own gratification in subjecting all other men to itself, is essential sin. And the servant of this sin is the essential slave. AVe have thus arrived at a point from which we clearly see the true nature of slavery, and discern its essence and its source. Hence comes the disposition to have and to exercise all arbi- trary power. ThiS; iu the individual man, makes him self- IX THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 101 willed or determined to have his own way, dictatorial and over- bearing in his conduct to others, and most cruel in his treat- ment of them, if they in any way thwart him in the attainment of his ends, or do not prove subsequient and subservient to him in the gratification of his desires. It is the bane of married life, poisoning all its felicity by contentions between the hus- band and the wife for rule. The peace of the domestic circle is perpetually disturbed, by its intestine wars, until one or the other party submits; which he or she some times does for the sake of peace. It is the universal cause of political slavery. The lust of rule has, in all times and in all places, marred the harmony, disturbed the peace, and destroyed the integrity of nations. It leads the politician to fawn and flatter the people, until, wafted by the breath of popular favor to the pinnacles of chief power, he can exercise dominion over them and enact the tyrant. It leads the people themselves to the worst of all tyrannies, when they substitute their blind will for the law which is divine justice. ^' He,'^ says the doctrine of our church, " who regards himself as above the law, places royalty in him- self, and either believes himself to be the law, or the law, which is justice, to be derived from himself. Hence he arrogates to himself that which is divine — to which, nevertheless, he ought to be in subjection.'^ And '^ the king who lives according to the law, and therein sets an example to his subjects, is truly a king.'' But " a king who has absolute power, and believes that his subjects are such slaves that he has a right to their possessions and lives, and exercises such a right, is not a king, but a tyrant." Such is the doctrine of our church in regard to tyranny — ex- pressed, indeed, in respect to kingly government; but involv- ing the principle of tyranny in respect to all governments, even that of a republic, or democracy, in which the people, as a vast collective man, are regarded as the sovereign, exercising a sort of self-government. And hence we see that the essence of tyranny consists in putting selfish will above just law, and in making the will of man the source of government instead of the justice of God. So that, when the mere will of the people, in the form and organization of any collective man, is put above the law, or is regarded as the law, or is deemed the source from whence the law is derived, there is the greatest and most per- fect tyranny, because it is the tyranny of a vast collective man, instead of that of an individual man. Hence the outbursts of popular will, not only in the various forms of mobile violence, but also in the bearing down of capricious public opinion, are often the most detestable exercises of arbitrary power, and 102 SOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY present the very worst form of that despotism which springs from the sway of unbridled self-love. The same principle leads nations to all those acts of aggres- sion by which one is subjected to the power of another, and those who exercise power in each, can have the means of exert- ing arbitrary sway over those who are dependent on them. AVe all know, or have been informed, how the lust of dominion from the love of self impelled the mother country to oppress her cis-atlantic colonies — to aggrandize herself at their expense — to tax them against their Avill and without fair representation in a legislature of their own — and most oppressively to burden them by the unjust exactions of arbitrary and mercenary go- vernors. And we well know how the reactions of a free spirit upon these oppressions of the mother country, roused our fore- fathers to the war of our revolution, nerved them to maintain it, for eight long years, by the most inadequate means, against the best appointed forces, and enabled them to wade through fire and blood to that consummation of a free, prosperous, great and happy political existence which it is now our blest privilege to enjoy ! We see, then, what true freedom is, by discerning most clearly what it is not. The liberty of the natural man to do as he pleases, is not true freedom. It is the quintessence of slavery. For, as we have now seen, it is the liberty of the selfish man to make all who are within his power subservient to himself: the upshot of which is, that all become slaves to him, and he becomes slave to himself, because he has no power, in the free volitions, or in the equilibrations of a rational mind, to control the burstings forth of his own ungovernable passions — which, however suppressed by external restraints, such as the fears of the loss of life, of honor, of wealth, or of power, are but the pent fires of a furious volcano, that ever and anon break forth in burning and desolating lavas ! '' Whosoever committeth sin, is the servant of sin.^' On the other hand, the best and truest teacher assures us — '' If the son shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed.'' Our church has taught us, in what is gone before, that the son is that divine truth which is the form, the efiigy, the signet of essential goodness. And when the Lord purifies the human soul, as *^ silver is tried,'' or purged of its dross, in the crucible of this truth and the furnace of his love, and then stamps on its substance the form of this truth as the seal of his love, he most thoroughly fuses all the infernal chains with which the devil and satan had bound it, and sets it free in entire celestial enfranchisement! For truth, as the son of love, imparts its father's image and IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 103 likeness to all whom it conceives in charity, and, by faith, brings forth in good works. For it is the brightness of the glory of love — that love which delights in doing good to others simply with a view to their happiness, and without selfish regard to any recompense. It is the form of that order which ensues when the wild impulses of the natural or selfish man without, are brought into subjection to the clear rational dictates of the spiritual man within. It is that order which ensues when a man, from the end to good in the adytum of his soul, can stand firm on the clear mountain top of rational conviction of duty, and, while he sees the gust of natural passion, rolling in dense and black vapors, flashing and thundering and rending all below, can determine to do what is right because it is right, and can bow down and serve the common good, even at the severest sacrifice of all the natural heart holds most dear, be- cause the common good is and should be paramount to all indi- vidual interests. In short, it is the order and freedom of a icell-halanced mind. Thus- the essence of freedom consists in the exact balancing of the natural man below by the spiritual man above. True freedom, therefore, is equilibrium. It is a state in the body politic like to sound health in the physical body. For, in health, every part of the body is nicely balanced, in a perfectly just and adequate reaction of the external limits upon the in- ternal energies. The pulse, which is the index of the body's health, is regular. Whenever the pulse is too fast or too slow, too strong or too feeble, it is a sure symptom of disease. And the basis of that health of the body which consists in the equi- librium of all its parts, is the great law that each part acts in its respective province for the good of the whole and not for its own gratification. Thus the eye sees — the ear hears — the nose smells — the tongue tastes — the hands procure and convey food, and the legs hold up the body or make it locomotive, each and all, for the good of the whole, and not for their own gratifica- tion. Each is sustained by the commonwealth, and is made happy from the common stock of happiness. Whenever any jiart begins, as it were, to think of and act for itself, that in- stant the equilibrium of the other parts is disturbed, and disease commences. Thus, for instance, when the bones, which, in health, have little or no feeling in them, become inflamed, they are exquisitely painful, and, by drawing an undue sympathy from the other parts, taking the blood from the heart, and the nervous energy from the brain, which should be given and ex- erted for the common good, and concentering them upon them- selves, they lay the whole body prostrate on the bed of sick- 104 SOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY ness. So of the eye, when it is inflamed, and there is an undue congestion of blood in it, the whole equilibrium of the body is destroyed, and every other member, and the body as a "whole, is powerless in its united and harmonious action for the common good. In short, the body is no longer free, when the self-love of any of its parts destroys the equilibrium which should reign in all its parts. And so it is that self-love is essentially de- structive of all freedom : and, we may add, of all true federal union among independent states.* If, therefore, we would be free indeed, either as individuals or as a nation, we must extract this root of bitterness from our souls, our minds and all our conduct. The mathematical axiom, that the whole is equal to the sum of its parts, applies to our country. Such as is the character of the individual men or states who compose it, such will be the character and quality of the whole country. Its common wealth is the aggregate of its individual wealths. Its common virtue is the aggregate of its individual virtues. Its common power, prosperity and happi- ness, depend solely upon the intelligence, the virtue and the true patriotism of its component parts. In view, then, of our country's freedom, greatness and true glory, the great lesson we have to learn, the great duty we have to do, is the careful heeding, by each one, of the wise monition " Physician, heal thyself!" No people can ever be oppressed by tyrants who are not themselves individually influenced by the principle of tyranny. All arbitrary or bad government is salutary reaction upon the evils of the governed; and the only efi"ectual way to get rid of the bad government is for the governed, each from himself, to remove the evils on which it is permitted to react. Americans, as a people, never can be enslaved, while they are individually free ! This grand truth applies as well to the individual states in our great confederacy as to the individual men in our groat nation. If each state is itself free from all injustice in its individual polity, and, like some particular mem- ber of the human body, acts for the common good of all the states in the healthy equilibrium of a well-balanced deference and subordination of its partial to their general interests, it is impossible that any one state can ever be oppressed by the rest, or ever domineer over them : but, if any state makes slaves of any portion of the human race, it need not be confounded, if, in the permissive dispensations of Divine Providence, it should • Sco a Now Year's Sermon, l)y the author of these Views, entitled, "T le True Nature ol National Union and Prosperity," which maybe had or E. Fcrictt Hi. Co., iikb Chestnut street, Philudelphia. IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 105 itself become the slave of some master, for the correction of its evil. The only thing that can ever impair the freedom of the col- lective as of the individual man, is some one of its component parts preferring and seeking its own interest at the expense of the common good. Therefore, in all civil and political sick- ness, the grand maxim, in reforming abuses, is, '^ Physician, heal thyself ! '' Especially, Heal thyself, American People ! Let each and every one put away his oicn j^c^'tictdar evUs as sins against the common good! If every individual or collec- tive American acts on this principle, so as to deny himself, take up his cross daily, and follow the Great Physician of Souls in laying down his life for the brethren^ then our beloved country cannot tiiil to be every thing one would wish her to be — pros- perous, great and happy ! This, then, is true patriotism. In this age, when almost every thing is got up for the people, here \s patriotism for the people, in contradistinction to the patriotism of their rulers or servants. It is the best sort of patriotism for the servants too — the patriotism of self-sacrifice. It is not confined to the tented field, the post of high honor, the arena of glory, of danger, or of death. The secluded and quiet shades of domestic life are its theatre as well as the halls of legislation or the plains of executive power. This is patriotism for the female as well as the male — in which she can excel, and rise preeminent in glory. For, whether she be daughter, sister, wife, or mother, she can, not only sacrifice herself for the best good of her country, but also infuse the spirit of self-sacrifice, in its purest forms, into men of every degree. The woman gives man his material body in the sacrifice of herself, and she may infuse spirit and life into his spiritual body by similar means. How much do we owe our love of country to our mothers ! How manifestly did the mother of Washington infuse into him his patriotism ! And every true woman and good mother can make a patriot of her son, by teaching him the lessons, and early inuring him to the duties, of self-sacrifice. She may not prove her love of country by pouring out her physical blood in gathering encrimsoned laurels on the field of earthly fame; but she can more fully prove it by co-working with the spirit of God, in silence and in secret, when he curiously fashions, in the lower parts of the earth, all the members of the human soul into the image and likeness of his own self-denying virtues, by the innocence of infancy and the noble impulses and the generous fellow-feelings of youth ! Yes, true patriotism is self-denial — is self-sacrifice ! This is 106 SOME VIEWS OF FREEDOM AND SLAVERY true devotion. This is that sacrifice of our own lives — that pouring out of our own blood — that giving of our own treasure — by which our beloved country will be most effectually served and secured in all her best and dearest and most lasting inte- rests ! Yes, in whatever time, place, circumstance, or duty — when the altar is set for the sacrifice to be bound with cords to its horns — the wood to be set in order upon it — and we have come to invoke the fire from heaven that is to kindle it, and to offer up the incense of our holy worship at the shrine of our country's good — the sacrifice we are to make is the sacrifice of ourselves — the incense we are to offer is the burning odor of broken and contrite hearts — the offering we are to heave is the faithful discharge of every known duty, in public or private life, from a supreme regard to God and our neighbor, which is the seeking, in all things, to promote the common interest by the surrendering or subordinating thereto of every and all par- tial and individual interests. This is that straight gate — this that narrow way — through which it becomes us to enter, and in which it behooves us consistently and perseveringly to walk, however few there may be found going in thereat. For the sure foundations of a nation's glory, and honor, and safety, are the vital principles of the true church. And it is only in the genuine patriotism of her members, that there can be any guarantee for our country's security from the danger that seems to impend over her through that wide gate and broad way of self-seeking and self-serving at and in which so very many are now entering and rushing to her destruction ! Finally, Freedom is the child of God, the heir of his virtues and his felicities, but apparently helpless and incapable of coming into its legitimate inheritance, unless nursed by heaven, trained by order, practised by wisdom, and perfected by love. The Lord, in his infinite mercy, has given freedom to our country as a plain and ground-work for our church. For civil freedom must precede spiritual freedom, as the earth must bo formed before man can live and do good upon it. Civil free- dom is the silk-worm, in which lie latent moral and spiritual freedom as the crysalis and the butterfly. Civil freedom is the common air, in which moral freedom and spiritual freedom lie unseen, or gradually come, or work unobserved, as the electric and magnetic fluids. And it is the duty and the privilege of the church, as a heart and lungs, to give the life of heaven to the body politic. We are, then, incessantly to make a new declaration of in- dependence. In every celebration of our country's birth day, we are to give forth a practical commemoration of the principles IN THE LIGHT OF THE NEW JERUSALEM. 107 involved and luminous in the true american freedom which was then declared. As our honored fathers declared themselves free from the sway of despotic natural dominion, and achieved and maintained their independence at every natural sacrifice; so must we declare ourselves free from the sway of despotic spiritual dominion, and achieve and maintain our independence of that, at every spiritual sacrifice. We must vitally declare our independence of all that " sin which doth most easily beset us,'' and, by holding in bondage our true spiritual man, makes us slaves indeed! Let us, therefore, while we thank the Lord for giving us this natural plain to stand and work on, fail not to work manfully in securing all that exemption from sin — from selfishness — from worldlimindedness — in ourselves as members of the truly free church, which may prove a savor of life to our countrymen around us, however much the general mass of them may be immersed in those unheavenly principles — as the ten righteous men, still found in Sodom, sufl&ced, for a time, to ward ofi" that devoted city's impending ruin. And, while we set our faces against all mob-law and mobile violence — while we resolutely oppose that freedom which consists in the natural man's license to do as he pleases, and is licentiousness — while we cease not to condemn all that partizan politics which undermines the con- stitution of our country by making the common good secondary to private interests — let us so practise ourselves, and so disse- minate among our countrymen, the heavenly principles of our Holy Jerusalem, that all the world may be enabled to exclaim, in respect to our beloved country, " Happy is that people who are in such a case ! Yea, happy is that people, whose God is the Lord!" (Ps. cxix, 15.) Extracts from Swedenborg's larger work entitled Arcana Ccelcsiia. " Genesis, xviii, 32. — ' Peradventure ten be found there ' — that hereby is signified, if there should still be remains, appeal's from the significa- tion of the number ten, as denoting remains. * "* By remains, arc meant every good and every truth, with man, which lies concealed in his memories and in his life. It is a known thing, that there is nothing good and there is nothing true but what is from the Lord ; also, that good and truth continually flow in from the Lord with man; but that the influx is received variously, and this according to the life of evil and according to the pi'inciples of falsity in which man has confirmed him- self: these are the things which either extinguish, or suffocate, or per- vert goodnesses and truths continually flowing in from the Loi'd. To prevent, therefore, the mixture of what is good with what is evil, and of what is true with what is false, — for, in case of such mixture, man would perish eternally, — the Lord separates them, and conceals the goodnesses and truths, Yfhich man receives, in his interior man; whence 108 EXTRACTS FROM ARCANA CCELESTIA. the Lord -will never allow them to come forth, so long as man is in evil and falsity, but only -when he is in some kind of lioly state, or in some kind of anxiety of mind, or in sickness, and the like. These things, ■which the Lord thus treasures up and conceals with man, are what arc called remains ; whereof much mention is made in the "Word ; but, here- tofore, it has remained unknown to any what they signified. Man, according to the quality and quantity of remains, tliat is, of goodness and truth appertaining to him, enjoys bliss and happiness in another life; for, as was said, tliey arc treasured up and concealed in his inner man, and are then manifested, when man puts off corporeal and worldly things. The Lord alone is acquainted with the quality and quantitj' of remains with man, and man can in no wise know this; for man, at this day, is such, that he can put on a semblance of what is good, when yet, iuAvardly, there is nothing but evil: and, also, man may appear as evil, when yet, inwardl}', he possesses good: wherefore, it is on no account allowable for one man to judge of another as to the quality of his spi- ritual life; for, as was said, the Lord alone knows this: nevertheless, it is allowable for every one to judge of another, in respect to his quality as to moral and civil life; for this is of concern to society. It is a very common thing, with those who have conceived an opinion respecting any truth of faith, to judge of others, that they cannot be saved but by believing as they do — which, nevertheless, the Loi'd forbids. Matt., vii, 1, 2. Accordingly, it has been made known to me, by much experi- ence, that persons of every religion are saved, if so be, by a life of cha- rity, they have received remains of good and of apparent truth. These are the things meant by what is here said, that, if ten be found, they should not be destroyed for ten's sake; whereby is signified, if there were remains, that they should be saved. The life of charity consists in man's thinking well of others, and desiring good to others, and per- ceiving joy in himself at the salvation of others; whereas, thoy have not the life of charity, who are not willing that any should be saved but such as believe as they themselves do, and especially if they are indig- nant that it should be otherwise. This may appear from this single circumstance, that more are saved from amongst the Gentiles, than from amongst the Christians: for such of the Gentiles as have thought well of their neighbor, and lived in good will to him, receive the truths of faith in another life better than they who are called Christians, and acknowledge the Lord more gladly than Christians do; for nothing is more dcligiitful and happy to the angels, than to instruct those "who come from earth into another life." 2284. " Christians who have acknowledged the tniths of faith, and, at the pame time, have led a life of good, are accepted in preference to the Gentiles; but such Christians, at this da}', arc few in number; whereas tlie Gentiles who have lived in obedience and mutual charity, are accepted in preference to the Christians who have not led a good life. For all persons, throughout every globe of earth in the universe, are accepted and saved by the mercy of the Lord, who have lived in good — good being the very essential principle which receives truth, and the good of life being the very ground of the seed, that is, of truth, which evil of life is incapable of receiving." 25'JO. " There are certain Gentiles from those countries where they arc black, who . . . said that, when they arc treated harshly, they are then black; but tliat, atterwards, they put olf their blackness, and put on wliiteness — knowing that their souls are white, but their bodies black " 2GU3.