New Church Life May/June 2016 | Page 105

  thomas jefferson and emanuel swedenborg Thomas Jefferson stepped out of history and onto the campus of Bryn Athyn College on April 1 – and it wasn’t an April Fool’s stunt. This Jefferson is actually Bill Barker, who has devoted his life to being a Thomas Jefferson “interpreter” at Colonial Williamsburg in Virginia. He is amazingly good at it, staying in character whenever he is dressed for the role. He was born just a few miles from Bryn Athyn and attended a private school that competes with the Academy of the New Church. He not only feels at home in Bryn Athyn – “just off the old York Road when I used to travel to Philadelphia from my home in Monticello.” He also feels at home with Emanuel Swedenborg. Jefferson has visited the College and the Bryn Athyn community several times since the College developed a special relationship with Colonial Williamsburg several years ago. During an engaging talk and question-andanswer session on this visit he noted that he had great respect for Swedenborg and valued several of his volumes in his own library. Jefferson is not the only American President believed to be familiar with Swedenborg. There was also John Adams and Abraham Lincoln, plus Benjamin Franklin, one of the Founding Fathers. It was not unusual that wellread people in the 1800s knew Swedenborg – including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, William James and Robert and Elizabeth Browning. Jefferson is best remembered as the author of the visionary Declaration of Independence, as a firm believer in individual rights and limited government, and as an outspoken advocate for religious freedom. He was raised in the Episcopal Church but abandoned it in his youth. As did Lincoln he shunned organized religion but considered himself a devout Christian. He once wrote: “I am Christian, in the only sense in which Jesus wished anyone to be.” He created his own somewhat controversial “Jefferson Bible,” which focused on “The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth.” He believed that God was the Creator of the universe and that “all evidence of nature testifies to His perfection.” We can only guess at how much he was influenced by the revelation given to Swedenborg by the Lord but Jefferson did believe in the afterlife and was confident that Jefferson outside the Mitchell Performing Arts Center with Bryn Athyn College history the “sum of all religion is loving God and the professors Drs. Greg Rose and Wendy neighbor.” Closterman (Photo courtesy of Jane Blair) 307