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Re: Emanuel Swedenborg's revelations
Reply #3 - Mar 12th, 2017 at 7:18pm
I read Heaven and Hell, and found it to be impressive, but also much of what he wrote felt "true" to me. The stages of man/woman after death, initially where the ego is still attached, then the fading of the memory of the physical world and the "second stage" where the person pursued their true loves, without the need to pretend or wear a mask as people do in the real world. It is often said that spirits of a similar mindset gravitate toward a similar afterlife plane, without being condemned there. Yet who would willingly choose a hellish plane? Well, according to ES, those who turn away from God (that which is true, and which is good) do so again in the second stage of death, when they don't have to pretend to be something else. So if they enjoyed hurting others, or getting their ego stroked, etc., they sought out others who felt the same way. From ES's point of view, these spirits turned away from God/heaven and willingly flung themselves into a hell, not out of atonement or a punishment, but it is where they truly wanted to be.
On reading and rereading some text, I found that ES wanted to take the bible so literally, that he had to make up a spiritual meaning or equivalent for literally every word in the NT and old T. Some of his spiritual meanings were beautiful, and others appeared forced. He reasoned that if the text were divinely inspired, than every word must have a spiritual meaning.
Keep in mind, ES had a brilliant mind, as a scientist, and scholar. In some ways, he was on par with Davinci, and other geniuses in terms of his intelligence.
His paranormal documented experiences (knowing that a fire was burning on the other side of Europe, and his relating conversations from the deceased back with accuracy) was fascinating to say the least.
Also, keep in mind that much of ES's experiences in heaven went against church doctrine at the time. So much so that many considered his expositions to be heretical.
I believe that much of what he wrote about was a cosmology which made sense/rang true. But some of the writings strike me as an attempt to perfectly match scripture to spirit and so I am forced to wonder how much of his writings is his genuine experience, and how much was his amazing intellect extrapolating the way he thought things should be?
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