Out of the Witch’s Castle

Intern’s Note: This story was so full of correspondence and imagery that I couldn’t fit everything I thought into a short article! If you are up for a longer read,  here is the uncut version.

A child sees the world in terms of bad and good, wrong and right. When she grows up she can see the nuances of morality and ethics and sometimes must argue over the distinction between bad and good. This transition can be a difficult and long road but it can lead to a strength and courage that would be impossible to find without the experience of growing up.

In the writings of Emanuel Swedenborg it is revealed that the stories of the word are representative and hold an inner meaning. Using Swedenborg’s science of correspondences I have found one possible inner meaning for another ancient text; the story of Jorinde and Joringel, a German folk story which was first recorded in writing by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm.

Seeing as this German fairytale is less well known, here is a brief summary:
A betrothed couple go for a walk in the woods near the castle of a witch who is notorious for turning young maidens into birds. When they wander too near her castle, she attacks, making the young man, Joringel unable to move and turning the young maid, Jorinde into a bird and hides the bird in her castle.

Joringel despairs and wanders into a strange village where he becomes a shepherd. He then has a dream which shows him a red flower with a pearl at its center that has the power to undo any enchantment. When he wakes he searches everywhere until he finds the flower and carries it to the witch’s castle. He uses the flower to open the door, finds the room which holds all the birds that were once maidens, disenchants the witch and all the birds. He and his Jorinde are reunited and live happily together for many years.

The full story can be found at this website.

Now for a spiritual interpretation of this story.

The witch represents the perversion and falsifying of law and order through deception (AC 7296). Her choice disguise is an owl which represents reasoning based on falsity (AE 650). The young maidens targeted by the witch correspond to an affection for truth (AR 620) and the birds which the witch transforms them into correspond to affection for the natural (AR 684). In other words, the witch corresponds to those who take the truth and twists it with false reasoning because all they care about are things like reputation and worldly wealth.

Jorinde (a young woman) represents affection for truth while a Joringel (a young man) represents truth (AR 620). The significance of their betrothal is that they are in the state of preparation before the marriage of good and truth within us. Together, Jorinde and Joringel represent one human being. They are the motivation and understanding that govern all our actions. As we work on ourselves and go through the process of regeneration we are working to create an inner marriage of good and truth. But we can be on the very edge of completing this process but then we wander into the wood.

To wander represents having feelings of indecision or uncertainty in doctrine (AC 2679). A thick wood or forest corresponds to dim perception while a castle corresponds to rational and natural truths (AC 3271). Entering the woods symbolizes the time of life when you feel sure in your understanding of the world. You have confidence in yourself and think you can do anything. When Jorinde and Joringel have wandered a while, Joringel warns that they should not get too close to the witch’s castle. We know that there is falsity out there and yet we have confidence that we could never fall into it.

The sun is setting on the woods which symbolizes a loss of charity as well as a person coming into the use of their own judgement (AE 187). Every person must come into their judgement and leave behind our childhood. Yet it can be a dangerous time when we start to stray too far from the doctrine we learned as children, creating just enough room for falsity to creep in.

When the sun has set and it is night, this represents a complete state of falsity. The witch in the form of an owl changes Jorinde into a bird. This represents how perversion of the truth has the power to use false reasoning to convince us that our affection for truth is unfounded and unreasonable. If our understanding of the truth wasn’t tenuous enough, the introduction of falsity makes us lose all affection for the “truth” as we now understand it. In reality the truth that we have loved and wish to possess still exists represented by Joringel but he is immobile and we become spiritually paralyzed. Truth without affection for truth loses all motivation and there is no way for that truth to be of use.
Now the witch takes her true form and carries Jorinde away to her castle, hiding her there. This is the falsities hiding any affection we may have had for the truth away behind false doctrine and teachings.

When the witch returns to Joringel, she releases him from her spell. He begs and pleas with the witch to return his Jorinde but she refuses. Without an affection for truth or a sense of good our state of preparation for regeneration dissipates and any progress we have made is lost. Without any affection for the truth and no sense of faith or doctrine left, Joringel is left to wander the world alone.

Strange or stranger represents a separation from good and this is Joringel’s state as he aimlessly wanders into a strange village, pining for Jorinde (AC 4098). Thankfully rather than wallow in self pity he takes up the occupation of a shepherd which symbolizes the act of distinguishing between truths of the church and knowledge that has been perverted (AC 6053).

After all this spiritual work of separating the truth from falsities, the Lord gives us the one last thing we need to get back out affection for truth. That thing is the flower which Joringel sees in a dream. Flowers represent memory-knowledge of the truth (AC 9553). The blood-red coloring of the flower and the pearl at its center all symbolize charity and the good of love, even the essence of love itself (AC 1000, 6379, 2967). Sometimes, it is the simple truths that are often taught to children that have the most power. Ultimate truths like: Love your neighbor, can take away the power of any falsity. Just as the flower undoes any enchantment, so does the teaching of charity rectify all evil. But just because Joringel has realized that this memory-knowledge of love and charity can reunite his truth with Jorinde’s affection for it, doesn’t mean his work is done. He has to find the flower first.

Joringel searches over hill and valley which correspond to loving the neighbor and external worship respectively (AC 795, 1292). The practice of love to the neighbor and worship even if it is all external can lead to genuine love, charity and internal worship. Finally, Joringel discovers the flower but still his mission is not complete. He carries the flower night and day until he reaches the castle in the middle of the woods. Day and night corresponds to a alternation of states in the intellect (AC 936). Even in the face of dark times or in places of difficult perception, our truth armed with a knowledge of charity keeps us from wavering in our doctrine and leads us straight on to face the falsity that first led us astray.

The flower opens the door representing charity allowing that which had been concealed to come out into the open (AE 303). Joringel hurries to find the room where the witch keeps her birds. When he comes upon her, the witch spits poison and gall which represents acting against divine order with a motivation of self-love and contempt for what is good and true (AC 4839, 195, 5186). But the witch dares not come close to Joringel because of his powerful flower. Her power lies in falsity and evil so if she were to be touched by his charity (the flower) then she will lose that power. But Joringel is only concerned with rediscovering his Jorinde. It is not until the witch tries to escape with one of the birds that it becomes clear to Joringel which is the one he is looking for. This is the final test for our understanding of the truth after all this spiritual discovery. The wavering of doctrine, the separation of truth and falsity, and the revelation of the ultimate truth have all led to this last temptation. Falsity tries one more time to take away our love of the truth and our understanding of doctrine. But this time, Joringel is not powerless, he is not immobile. He stops her and touches her and the bird with the flower. Love and charity have won out and the falsity no longer has any power over us. We have a solid understanding of the truth and an infallible love for it.

After this spiritual ordeal, we are prepared to help others see through falsity and obscure doctrine. This is represented by Joringel touching all the birds with the flower and returning them to their true state.

Jorinde and Joringel represent our complete self, our truth and our affection for the truth, our knowledge and our motivation, our faith and charity. And yet, because of this struggle, we have become stronger. We have defeated the falsity and strengthened our doctrine and discovered the importance of love, charity and an affection for the truth.

A tested faith that has stood strong is much more powerful than faith that has been taken at face value. As children we accept truth because it is what we are told, but as adults we have to find what we truly believe and why we believe it. That discovery is fraught with opportunities to wander off the path, to get tested by falsity. But it is those simple truths that help to reveal what is false and with them we can come into our own doctrine, our own affection for truth and walk out of the witch’s castle a complete person ready to enter into full regeneration symbolized by the marriage of Jorinde and Joringel: the good and truth within us coming together as one and living happily ever after.

Bibliography:

AC 9154 sec. 3
“Dtsearch Web Search”. Heavenlydoctrines.org. N.p., 2017. Web. 1 Feb. 2017.

Grimm, Jacob et al. Grimm’s Fairy Tales. 1st ed. New York: Barnes & Noble Classics, 2003. Print.

Mussell, Morgan. “Jorinda And Joringel: A Fairytale From The Brothers Grimm”. The First Gate. N.p., 2017. Web. 1 Feb. 2017.

Sechrist, Alice Spiers. A Dictionary Of Bible Imagery. 1st ed. New York: Swedenborg Foundation, 1973. Print.

“Surlalune Fairy Tales: Household Tales By Jacob And Wilhelm Grimm With Author’s Notes Translated By Margaret Hunt”. Surlalunefairytales.com. N.p., 2017. Web. 1 Feb. 2017.

About Tykah Echols

Tykah is the daughter of a New Church minister and has been learning about the church since infancy. She attended both the Bryn Athyn Elementary schools and the Academy of the New Church. She is now a student at Bryn Athyn college where she hopes to continue learning about the religion she was born into. She knows that there is much more for her to learn about the Lord, his teachings and herself.

3 thoughts on “Out of the Witch’s Castle

  1. This is so lovely! Makes you wonder if it’s a remnant of a story from the days of the Ancient Church. Somebody with a decent knowledge of correspondences could write some more fairy tales like this that would be what you might call “New Church fairytales.”

    1. That is my exact thought! I love the idea of writing new fairytales with new meanings and storylines. That’s why I love to find the spiritual meaning for these ancient fairytales. It’s practicing the application of correspondences in stories that could make it easier to write new ones! Plus it is lots of fun!

      1. Alright then Tykah, I think you should do it. 🙂 Maybe as a senior project for a degree in English, huh, huh?

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