Tulk is best known as a leading theologian and founding member of the English Swedenborgian Society established in 1810, a radical christian movement centred around spiritual and mystical interpretations of the New Testament, and for his connections to William Blake, Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, among others.
A regular attender, accused of entertaining ‘extreme liberal opinions’ by a commentary of 1837, he backed the reappointed Melbourne ministry on most major issues, but resumed his general support for his friend Joseph Hume’s radical motions and also often sided with the Irish radicals.
At the 1837 general election Tulk retired, apparently without explanation, but probably in order to accommodate the leading local Whig’s son, who had just come of age. He had promised to ‘retire into private life’ if unsuccessful in 1835 and apparently made no attempt to find another berth, throwing himself into his religious writings and further doctrinal tussles with members of the Swedenborgian Society, of which he again served as chairman in 1843. The publication in 1846 of the first intalment of Spiritual Christianity, a digest of his numerous religious articles, however, prompted an irrevocable rift with the movement, and ‘so noxious was he to the Swedenborgians that his death [in 1849] was not even mentioned in their magazine’, the New Church Advocate, whose editorial board he had been forced to quit.
