Swedenborg claimed in
The Heavenly Doctrine that the teachings of the
Second Coming of Jesus Christ were revealed to him. Swedenborg considered his
theology a revelation of the true Christian religion that had become
obfuscated through centuries of theology. However, he did not refer to his writings as theology since he considered it based on actual experiences, unlike theology, The foundation of Swedenborg's theology was laid down in
Arcana Cœlestia (
Heavenly Mysteries), published in eight Latin volumes from 1749 to 1756. In a significant portion of that work, he interprets the Biblical passages of Genesis and Exodus. He reviews what he says is the inner spiritual sense of these two works of the Word of God. (He later made a similar review of the inner sense of the book of Revelation in
Apocalypse Revealed.) Most of all, he was convinced that the Bible describes a human's transformation from a materialistic to a spiritual being, which he calls rebirth or
regeneration. He begins this work by outlining how the
creation myth was not an account of the creation of Earth, but an account of man's rebirth or regeneration in six steps represented by the six days of creation. Everything related to mankind in the Bible could also be related to
Jesus Christ, and how Christ freed himself from materialistic boundaries through the glorification of his human presence by making it Divine. Swedenborg examines this idea in his exposition of
Genesis and
Exodus.
Marriage One often discussed aspect of Swedenborg's writing is his ideas on
marriage. Swedenborg himself remained a bachelor all his life, but that did not hinder him from writing voluminously on the subject. His work on
Marriage Love (
Conjugial Love in older translations; 1768) was dedicated to this purpose. A central question with regard to marriage is whether it stops at death or continues into heaven. The question arises due to a statement attributed to Jesus that there is no marriage in heaven (Luke 20:27–38, Matthew 22:23–32, and Mark 12:18–27). Swedenborg wrote
The Lord God Jesus Christ on Marriage in Heaven as a detailed analysis of what he meant. The quality of the relationship between husband and wife resumes in the spiritual world in whatever state it was at their death in this world. Thus, a couple in true marriage love remain together in that state in
heaven into eternity. A couple lacking in that love by one or both partners, however, will separate after death and each will be given a compatible new partner if they wish. A partner is also given to a person who loved the ideal of marriage but never found a true partner in this world. The exception in both cases is a person who hates chaste marriage and thus cannot receive such a partner. Swedenborg saw creation as a series of pairings, descending from the Divine love and wisdom that define
God and are the basis of creation. This duality can be seen in the pairing of good and truth, charity and faith, God and the church, and husband and wife. In each case, the goal for these pairs is to achieve
conjunction between the two component parts. In the case of marriage, the object is to bring about the joining of the two partners at the spiritual and physical levels, and the happiness that comes as a consequence.
Trinity Swedenborg
rejected the common explanation of the
Trinity as a Trinity of Persons, which he said was not taught in the
early Christian church, as there was, for instance, no mention in the
Apostolic writings of any "Son from eternity". Instead he explained in his theological writings how the Divine Trinity exists in One Person, in One God, the Lord
Jesus Christ, which he said is taught in Colossians 2:9. According to
The Heavenly Doctrine, Jesus, the
Son of God, came into the world because of the spread of evil here. Swedenborg spoke in virtually all his works against what he regarded as the incomprehensible Trinity of Persons concept. He said that people of other religions opposed Christianity because of its doctrine of a Trinity of Persons. He considered the separation of the Trinity into three separate Persons to have originated with the
First Council of Nicaea and the
Athanasian Creed.
Sola Fide (Faith Alone) The Heavenly Doctrine rejects the concept of salvation through
faith alone (), since he considered both
faith and
charity necessary for
salvation, not one without the other, whereas the Reformers taught that faith alone procured justification, although it must be a faith which resulted in obedience. The purpose of faith, according to
The Heavenly Doctrine, is to lead a person to a life according to the truths of faith, which is charity, as is taught in 1 Corinthians 13:13 and James 2:20. In other words, Swedenborg spoke sharply against the
sola fide doctrine of Luther and others. He held that justification before God was not based solely upon some imputed righteousness before God, and was not achievable merely by a gift of God's grace (), granted without any basis in a person's actual behavior in life.
Sola fide was a doctrine averred by Martin Luther,
John Calvin,
Ulrich Zwingli and others during the Protestant Reformation, and was a core belief especially in the theology of the Lutheran reformers
Martin Luther and
Philip Melanchthon. Although the
sola fide doctrine of the Reformers also emphasized that saving faith was one that effected works (by faith alone, but not by a faith which is alone), Swedenborg protested against
sola fide being the instrument of justification, and held that salvation is only possible through the conjunction of faith and charity in a person, and that the purpose of faith is to lead a person to live according to the truths of faith, which is
charity. He further states that faith and charity must be exercised by doing good out of willing good whenever possible, which are good works or good uses or the conjunction perishes. In one section he wrote:
Decalogue and Revelation In Emanuel Swedenborg's theology, the
Decalogue presented in
Exodus 20 holds a central position as the universal moral foundation of the
Christian religion. In his exegetical works, particularly
Apocalypse Revealed and
Doctrine of Life for the New Jerusalem, Swedenborg asserts that the lists of evils excluded from God's kingdom in the
Revelation correspond spiritually to the commandments of the Decalogue, even if expressed in different terminology. According to this interpretation, passages such as
Revelation 21:8 and
Revelation 22:15 describe moral categories — murderers, adulterers, idolaters, liars, and others — which reflect, on a spiritual level, the prohibitions already established in Exodus 20. The Swedenborgian interpretation understands this recurrence not as mere literary repetition but as confirmation of the Decalogue's permanence as an eternal divine law, now revealed in an internal and universal sense. Academic studies on Swedenborg recognize the centrality of the Decalogue in his religious ethics. Scholars note that his moral theology is structured around the idea of correspondence between biblical law, spiritual life, and human regeneration. Similarly, historical analyses indicate that Swedenborg interprets Revelation as a symbolic depiction of the spiritual state of humanity and the Church, in which the exclusion of evils corresponds to the internal observance of the commandments. Thus, within the field of Swedenborgian studies, the relationship between Exodus 20 and the moral lists in Revelation is understood as a theological continuity between the Old and New Testaments, reinforcing the thesis that true religion consists of avoiding the evils prohibited in the Decalogue, because they are sins against God. == Later history ==