New Church Life September/October 2015 | Page 112

new church life: september/october 2015 from the creation story to the strange symbols and images of Revelation. Many of them assume there must be a deeper meaning to all this and speculate on interpretations, but much that cannot be explained is just accepted on faith. There is great beauty and power in just the letter of the Word, but much as well that people find hard to reconcile with a loving God. When the 400th anniversary of the King James Version of the Bible was celebrated in 2011, a reporter for The Philadelphia Inquirer praised it as “a mighty collection of wisdom, holiness and comfort – a warning against extremism in religion and secular life.” This prompted a scornful letter from a reader wondering if the writer had been “so caught up in the language and translation that he’d missed all the violence: the jealous God full of wrath and vengeance; the genocide; the denigration of women; the approbation of slavery; and the approval of incest and infanticide? Extremism to the max! Most of us are taught to revere the Bible, not read it. When I actually did read it, I became an atheist.” That is a sad reaction to the letter of the Word, but understandable. With so much in the Old Testament especially about a jealous, vengeful, punishing God – and without the clear explanations from the “Spirit of Truth” – it can be challenging to reconcile all the apparent ugliness there with an all-loving, merciful God. One of the gems of New Church collateral literature is The Bible that was Lost and is Found by John Bigelow. He was a prominent lawyer, statesman and publisher in the mid-19th century who found himself stranded in Haiti by a smallpox epidemic. As was his custom, he studied the Bible regularly. He complained one day to the only other occupant of his hotel about the passage in Genesis where Abram asks Sarai to lie to the pharaoh, saying she is his sister, not his wife. Bigelow wonders why an honorable man should so such a thing. His Danish companion quietly asked if he had ever read Swedenborg and handed him a copy of the Arcana with the explanation of the spiritual sense of this story. Bigelow was intrigued and began reading everything of Swedenborg that he could get his hands on. But he brought a skeptic’s zeal, certain that he would come across something outrageous that would expose Swedenborg as a fraud. That never happened. Instead Bigelow became convinced that this had to be revelation from God, not the product of a mortal mind. He had the epiphany that “once I was blind and now I see.” Even though we have the gift of the second coming, unlocking all of the mysteries of the Word, we may still read it at times with the sudden enlightenment of John Bigelow – like Jacob awakening in the wilderness after dreaming of angels ascending and descending a ladder to heaven and saying: “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I knew it not. . . . This is none other but the 544