New Church Life Jan/Feb 2015 | Page 55

   ⁄      There the paper might well have been left to gather dust had Tafel’s parents not decided to celebrate their golden wedding anniversary and gather together the very extensive Tafel family in Pennsylvania, which included several ministers (and still does). The event happened to coincide with the Annual Meeting of Convention at which Tafel was given the opportunity to address the ministers meeting. So The Authority of the Writings was aired once again and this time in a country where crazy revolutionary ideas had a better chance of survival than in tradition-bound England. No immediate judgment was passed, but it was agreed that the paper deserved serious consideration and should be published so that it could be better digested. So it rapidly acquired a wider audience. The seeds Tafel wished to sow now had a much better chance to germinate – and germinate they did. The rest is history, as they say. As a result, in 1876 a group of 12 men, including Tafel and several of his relatives, got together and formed an “academy” (discussion group) to explore the new ideas. This is the ancestor of The Academy (College) we know today. Tafel had been its instigator, but he returned to England and the main impetus was carried forward by [William Henry] Benade and [William Frederic] Pendleton, and would lead to the foundation of the General Church of the New Jerusalem. That story readers will probably be aware of, but let me return to Camden Road and the two seeds that had fallen by the wayside. Now that The Authority of the Writings had acquired fame in America, the English Swedenborgian publisher James Spiers felt encouraged to publish it in London in 1877. So Tafel’s seeds began to germinate in a number of English minds too. Because the New Church College for the ministry had temporarily closed, Tafel had grasped the opportunity to start his own New Church Educational Institute, offering ministerial training along Academy lines. Several men applied. One pupil was Robert Tilson, who was to launch an Academy-style church in England in 1890, well before one was given definite So The Authority of the Writings was aired once again and this time in a country where crazy revolutionary ideas had a better chance of survival than in tradition-bound England. The seeds Tafel wished to sow now had a much better chance to germinate – and germinate they did. 51