The New Church (Swedenborgian)

The New Church (or Swedenborgianism) can refer to any of several historically related Christian denominations that developed under the influence of the theology of Emanuel Swedenborg (1688–1772). The Swedenborgian tradition is considered to be a part of Restorationist Christianity.

Swedenborg's writings focus on a narrative of Christianity's historical decline, due to loss of the “inner sense” of Scripture, into a purely exoteric understanding of faith. In this state, faith and good acts become external displays motivated by fear of hell, desires for material blessings, personal recognition, and other worldly things, devoid of true spiritual essence. Swedenborg also wrote extensively about Salvation through a process of "regeneration” (rather than through faith or acts alone), wherein individuals accept divine truth from the Lord into their “inner self” (or higher faculties), controlling the “outer” (or earthly) self by placing their highest love in goodness and truth rather than in worldly desires and the evils and falsehoods which serve them.

It follows that Christianity in its present condition, as described by Swedenborg, fails to facilitate man's regeneration, contributing to a perceived descent of mankind into ignorance and sin. Swedenborg held that a spiritual second coming of Christ had begun, marking the start of the New Church and offering a renewed path to regeneration.

The New Church presents a theology built upon these beliefs, and, while presenting many ideas and themes expressed by various early and contemporary Christian thinkers and theologies, the tradition diverges from standard Christianity not only in its eschatology, but primarily in its rejection of the notion of a trinity of persons from eternity as Polytheistic, instead holding that Christ was born with a “divine mind” or “soul” and human body, absolving his distinct personhood and glorifying his human form through kenosis. The New Church has influenced several other spiritual and philosophical movements including New Thought and American Transcendentalism. Provided by Wikipedia

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Published 1791
printed and sold by R. Hindmarsh, Printer to His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, No. 32, Clerkenwell-Close
...New Jerusalem Church...

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Published 1790
printed by R. Hindmarsh, Printer To His Royal Highness The Prince Of Wales, No. 32, Clerkenwell-Close
...New Jerusalem Church...

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Published 1789
printed by R. Hindmarsh, Printer to his Royal highness the Prince of wales, No. 32, Clerkenwell - Close
...New Jerusalem Church...

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Published 1794
printed for the Society, and to be had at the Temple, Red Cross Street, and of M. Sibly, No. 35, Goswell Street. 1794=38
...New Jerusalem Church...

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Published 1788
Printed by R. Hindmarsh, printer to the Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, No. 32, Clerkenwell-Close
...New Jerusalem Church...

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Published 1800
Printed by J. Hodson and Co. at the Aurora Press, Cross-Street, Hatton-Garden
...New Jerusalem Church...

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by Peacock, Henry Barry
Published 1799
printed by J. Belcher
...New Jerusalem Church...

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Published 1800
printed by James Belcher
...New Jerusalem Church...

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by Hargrove, John
Published 1800
Printed for the acting committee, of the new church
...New Jerusalem Church (Baltimore, Md.)...