Light
In My Darkness
by Helen Keller
Reviewed
for The Whole Life Times by Lorrie Kazan
Light In My Darkness is the re-edited edition of Keller’s
popular 1927 manuscript, My Religion. This is her tribute to
Emanuel Swedenborg, the widely diverse and original 18th century
scientist and mystic whose discoveries, to name only a few,
included the functions of the cerebral cortex and the ductless
glands, the design of the glider-type airplane, the submarine
and the slow combustion stove. He also experienced angelic
visions, to which he devoted his writing during the last 27
years of his life. Such theological works as Arcana Coelestia
and Heaven and Hell would dramatically impact William Blake,
Samuel Coleridge, and the transcendentalists, among others.
The premise: God is Divine Love, Divine Wisdom and Divine Power
for use. Where we think life happens from the outside in, Swedonborg
claims that the “influx is of the interiors into exteriors,
and by means of this influx man has perception.” The
Seth books came along centuries later to astound us with that
same information that your perceptions color your reality.
We have to ask ourselves “what’s real?”
Keller reminds us that without the faculties of sight and sound,
(lost from illness at 19 months), she is not blinded by matter
the way most of us are. She has had to discover, develop and
rely upon her inner life. Swedenborg’s celestial visions
were therefore no more unreal for her than descriptions of
our physical world. For her even to speak takes such rigor
and control that it’s almost otherworldly in itself.
Swedenborg’s depiction of the afterlife imbues her with
the sense that in the hereafter she will be able to see, hear,
and speak the same glorious language as all other souls in
God’s kingdom. To live a life of goodness and service
is to bring one’s self closer to God and to recognize
that the source of happiness is within.
Publisher: Chrysalis Books, 2000
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