New Church Life Jan/Feb 2014 | Page 22

new church life: jan uary / february 201 4 Church on earth. As a previous Charter Day speaker from more than 70 years ago noted: “The Academy has, from its beginning, been intimately bound up in the life of the Church, and this so much so that to speak of the one is to imply the other.” (Nathaniel D. Pendleton, New Church Life 1931, page 68) With the Old Testament charge to “teach [the laws and statutes] to your children and your grandchildren” (Deuteronomy 4:9), and the wealth of information on the development of the mind and the nature of learning in the teachings of the New Church, it is no wonder some of the earliest adherents envisioned a complete educational system that could bring together all spiritual and natural knowledge and share it with the world. In the 1800s those who would become the Academy movement saw that Sunday Schools were of very limited value in conveying and supporting this vision. And they saw that the piecemeal and inconsistent training clergy received, primarily under an apprenticeship program, was wholly inadequate to provide the church with clergy “skilled in the [Divine] law, wise and God-fearing.” (New Jerusalem and its Heavenly Doctrine 313) On June 19, 1876, some of these dedicated adherents asked Bishop Benade, the leader of the group, to give a statement of purpose. In it Benade declared the Academy was: The founders of the Academy had a vision from the Lord of what life could be – in this world and the world to come. They saw in the revelation to the New Church the Lord’s purpose in all of creation, a heaven from the human race . This is why we are here – to support and promote a heavenly existence. to cultivate and promulgate a knowledge of those Divine revelations in their spiritual purity, and to engage in those uses of spiritual charity which have respect primarily to the growth and development of the Spiritual Church. The provisions of our Charter grew out of this. And from this seed the “uses of spiritual charity,” as he put it, grew into these institutions. A few months later they set up a coordinated curriculum for theological education, the first beginnings of this educational system. The next year formal classes opened in Philadelphia for on-site instruction for the Theological School and College. By 1880 a library was being established 18