Liturgy of the New Church: Difference between revisions

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}}[[wikipedia:Emanuel Swedenborg|Emanuel Swedenborg]] (1688 – 1772) was a Swedish scientist and theologian. Following a prolific career in the natural sciences and engineering, Swedenborg began having religious visions. Although he was always a spiritual person, these visions elicited a crisis which drove Swedenborg into a more mystical phase. During the last 28 years of his life, beginning at age 57, Swedenborg published 18 works on Christian theology, believing that Christ had appointed him to reform Christianity.<ref>Alexander James Grieve, [https://archive.org/details/Encyclopaediabri26chisrich_201303/page/n243/mode/2up|"Swedenborg, Emanuel."] ''Encyclopædia Britannica,'' vol. 26, Hugh Chisholm, ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1911), 221-223.</ref>
}}[[wikipedia:Emanuel Swedenborg|Emanuel Swedenborg]] (1688 – 1772) was a Swedish scientist and theologian. Following a prolific career in the natural sciences and engineering, Swedenborg began having religious visions. Although he was always a spiritual person, these visions elicited a crisis which drove Swedenborg into a more mystical phase. During the last 28 years of his life, beginning at age 57, Swedenborg published 18 works on Christian theology, believing that Christ had appointed him to reform Christianity.<ref>Alexander James Grieve, [https://archive.org/details/Encyclopaediabri26chisrich_201303/page/n243/mode/2up|"Swedenborg, Emanuel."] ''Encyclopædia Britannica,'' vol. 26, Hugh Chisholm, ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1911), 221-223.</ref>


The Reverend Joseph Proud (1745 – 1826) was a Baptist minister in England, who joined the New Church in 1788.
The Reverend Joseph Proud (1745 – 1826) was a Baptist minister in England, who converted to Swedenborgianism in 1788.


==Evidence for Inclusion in Wythe's Library==
==Evidence for Inclusion in Wythe's Library==

Revision as of 19:07, 2 October 2025

by Emanuel Swedenborg and Joseph Proud

The Liturgy of the New Church
Title not held by The Wolf Law Library
at the College of William & Mary.
 
Author Emanuel Swedenborg and Joseph Proud
Editor
Translator
Published Baltimore: Samuel and John Adams
Date 1792
Edition Fourth
Language English
Volumes volume set
Pages xxi, 342
Desc. Duodecimo (17 cm)

Emanuel Swedenborg (1688 – 1772) was a Swedish scientist and theologian. Following a prolific career in the natural sciences and engineering, Swedenborg began having religious visions. Although he was always a spiritual person, these visions elicited a crisis which drove Swedenborg into a more mystical phase. During the last 28 years of his life, beginning at age 57, Swedenborg published 18 works on Christian theology, believing that Christ had appointed him to reform Christianity.[1]

The Reverend Joseph Proud (1745 – 1826) was a Baptist minister in England, who converted to Swedenborgianism in 1788.

Evidence for Inclusion in Wythe's Library

A 1792 letter from Robert Carter to George Wythe is reprinted in an article by John Whitehead in a Swedenborgian newsletter, the New-Church Messenger (Chicago) from 1917, "The Early History of the New Church in America, VIII." In the letter, dated October 11, 1792, Carter states he is sending Wythe four volumes of Swedenborg's writings: Nine Queries Concerning the Trinity (1786, or 1790), A Short Account of the Honourable Emanuel Swedenborg and His Theological Writings, by Robert Hindmarsh (1792), The Liturgy of the New Church Signified by the New Jerusalem in the Revelation (1792), and the first volume of True Christian Religion, published in Philadelphia by Francis Bailey, 1789. Carter also mentions Swedenborg's A Treatise Concerning Heaven and Hell (London: W. Chalklen, 1789) being sold by a local merchant in Richmond:[2]

Under a particular Influence I present to you the following Books, viz., the first vol. of the True Christian Religion, 9 Questions concerning the Trinity proposed to E. S. by the Rev. Thos. Hartley, also, His Answers. A short account of the honorable E. S. and His Theological Writings, and the Liturgy of the New Jerusalem Church. The Liturgy is a Production arising from the Baron's Writings; for Societies are established in several of the most principal towns in Great Britain, styled members of the New Jerusalem Church, which was foretold was to be by the Lord, by the Prophet Daniel and the Evangelist John in the Revelation.

It is said that many copies of a Treatise on Heaven and Hell by E. S. were imported by a merchant of Richmond Town, which work communicates much comfort to Believers.

Wythe replied in October, 1792, thanking Carter for the books and stating, he wished "I had power to remunerate your beneficence by sending books to you which would do to you no less good than those handed to me by Mr. Dawson ought in your opinion to do to me."[3] Swedenborg's works do not appear in Thomas Jefferson's inventory of books received from Wythe's estate after his death in 1806. Wythe may not have kept the four books gifted from Carter, giving them away or otherwise disposing of them. To date, the Wolf Law Library has been unable to locate a copy of The Liturgy of the New Church.

See also

References

External Links

  1. Alexander James Grieve, "Swedenborg, Emanuel." Encyclopædia Britannica, vol. 26, Hugh Chisholm, ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1911), 221-223.
  2. Robert Carter to George Wythe, October 11, 1792. Reprinted in John Whitehead, "The Early History of the New Church in America, VIII," New-Church Messenger (Chicago) 112, no. 10 (March 17, 1917), 186-187.
  3. George Wythe to Robert Carter, October 17, 1792, in Library & Archives, Maine Historical Society.