Sermons On The Word
(Part 4)
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Yet every man is apt
to have the idea that he is able to regard the Word without any prejudice;
even when this teaching is known, he is apt to think that he is, or has
become, an exception and is able to read the Word and receive teaching
therefrom in an altogether unprejudiced manner. Let each mark, therefore,
that this is only so with an altogether
regenerated man; but that the unregeneratcd natural in each is always more or
less under the influence nl' false doctrine. For doctrine is falsified in many insidious ways
and takes on most plausible forms. The test is does 11 favor
self, or does it lead to the denial of self; does it lard us to be satisfied
with ourselves or does it even make I more evident to us that
the Lord's thoughts and ways are entirely different to the
thoughts and ways which we naturally cherish and seek. Unless it does the
latter we may be sure that the doctrine we are influenced by is Like in some
way. Doctrine of whatever quality it be has always the tendency to confirm
itself both by the Word and by experience. How necessary therefore it is to
be on our guard against false doctrine; and we cannot be sufficiently so
unless we recognize that it is in everything which makes us satisfied with
ourselves as we are, in everything which confirms our natural tendencies. “From these things
it can appear that they who read the Word without doctrine are in obscurity
concerning every truth, and that their mind is wandering and uncertain, prone
to errors and also easily falls into heresies, which also they embrace, if
favor or authority agrees, and if reputation is not endangered. For the Word
with them is like a candelabrum without light and they see as it were many
things in the shade, and nevertheless scarcely see anything, for doctrine
alone is the lamp. I have seen such explored by the angels and it was found
that they are able to confirm from the Word whatever they wish, and that they
do confirm those things which are of the love of self, and of the love of
those things which they favor; but I saw them stripped of their garments, a
sign that they were without truths, —
garments there are truths”, T.C.R.
228. So far as
a man is without clear doctrine he is in obscurity as to the truth and his
mind is wandering and uncertain: but if he be influenced by the false
doctrine which favors self-love and the love of those things which it favors,
so far he seems to himself to be in clearness and certainty, although it is
as to his false persuasions, and therefore is really in obscurity as to every
truth. Let none therefore conclude simply because he does not seem to
be in obscurity that he is led by true doctrine, for it is only those who read without teaching, true or false, who are
consciously in such obscurity. (151) We may by the name of other gods,
especially the name of those gods of self and the world which rule in every un
regenerated mind, come into fancied clearness as to the truth, and it is to
save us from such an error that the command of the text is given: And the name of other gods ye shall not mention. “It shall not be heard upon thy
mouth, that it signifies that it is not to be obeyed with any
affirmation, appears from the signification of to hear, that it is to obey,
and from the signification of not to be upon the mouth, when concerning the
doctrine of what is false, which is signified by the name of other gods, that
it is not to affirm”, A.C. 9284. False doctrine is not to be obeyed
with any affirmation. This implies that it is one thing to obey it without
any affirmation and another to obey it with any affirmation; for it is the
latter which is specifically forbidden here. This distinction can only be
understood when it is seen that the natural man is entirely under the
influence of false doctrine, and that everything done from the natural man therefore
is done from obedience to false doctrine. This is so with every man until he
has ceased to have a merely natural part of his mind, that is until he is
fully regenerated. In the meantime, however, if he is seeking to become regenerated,
let him beware of obeying false doctrine with
any affirmation. Every regenerating man
must see and humbly acknowledge that much of what he does is from the natural
man only, and from the teaching (necessarily false) which the natural man in
him favors, but let him beware of affirming that teaching as a right
principle of life, which he is apt to do because it is his own, for if he
does, it will so far become the more difficult, if not altogether impossible,
for him to escape from its dominion. Affirm only such doctrine as involves
denial of self, that the Lord may be obeyed instead of self, and as
teaching what is altogether opposite to what self favors. And the name of other gods ye shall not mention, it shall not be
heard upon thy mouth. (152)
“That doctrine is to be
drawn from the sense of the letter of the Word and to be confirmed by it”,
T.C.R. 229. This is to be understood in agreement with what is
elsewhere taught — that the Lord's teaching is to be found nowhere
else than in the written Revelations which He has given. He never teaches man
by internal influx, neither do the angels, who in this, as in all respects,
are governed by His example. The teaching by which the Lord saves those who
are guided by it, is all given in the form of written Revelation, wherein all
who will can directly approach it that they may observe to do according to all that is written in it. “The reason is because the
Lord is present there and Leaches and
enlightens, for the Lord never operates anything except in fulness,
and the Word is in its fulness in its sense of the letter, as has
been shown above; hence it is Illat, doctrine is to be drawn from the sense of the letter”, T.C.R.
229. (153) |
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The Lord is in the internals of man altogether
according to reception, which reception is always more or less imperfect, if
not altogether perverted. Hence if the Lord taught by internal influx, there
would unavoidably be imperfection in the teaching. For not only would the
teaching be imperfectly received which is always the case, but there would be
nothing to prevent the imperfections from being confirmed in such a way as to
prevent any advance in the reception of genuine teaching. That is, unless the
Divine teaching for men rested upon some basis independent of himself and his
own states, the teaching could only be used to confirm the states he as
already in and would not serve to lead him out of those states into higher
ones. This would be an evil even if the state to begin with were good as a
step to a higher one — much more so
when man has to begin from an altogether inverted
state. Thus the Lord in His Providence has
provided a base for His teaching such as is perfect in its adaptation
to the purpose — namely the literal forms in which He reveals Truth. When
teaching is drawn from this written source, being founded upon a perfect
correspondential basis, the reception of it, however imperfect at first,
can be gradually perfected, that is made to more and more approximately agree with Truth Itself.
The literal basis being perfect the Lord is fully present in it, and therefore
can become ever more manifest therefrom to all who regard it from innocence. Other expressions of truth
— thus such expressions as a Priest uses in his teaching, may be of temporary
use to lead to a better understanding of Truth, but no other expressions can
continue to express Divine Truth in an increasing degree for ever,
without limit on its part, limited only by the
finite states of the recipients. If truth were taught by an internal. way,
man would never be able to realize how opposite the Lord's
thoughts are from man's thoughts.
He could be led only to try to improve; his own natural ideas — which
nevertheless are essentially opposite to the Divine, however plausible they
may externally appear. Even as it is, man is naturally averse to recognizing
this, and can only do so when he suffers the Divine to elevate his
understanding clearly above his will, and humbly expect to be taught
something quite different from what he naturally inclines to believe. To this
end it is necessary not only to look to a source of Divine Teaching outside
of himself but it is also necessary that the ultimate basis of that teaching
should be outside of himself and of a form not controlled by himself. The
Lord Himself must provide and be the First and the Last, and when man
approaches Him in the right spirit as the First and the Last, he can be led
to receive those intermediate forms of good and truth which make heaven, and
which though always intermediate, forever continue to approximate more
closely to the Divine. Thus the Lord as the Word appears in the lasts or
ultimates of written Revelation. That thou mayest observe and do according
to all that is written therein. (154) “The doctrine of genuine Truth can
also be fully drawn from the literal sense of the Word",
T.C.R. 229. Consider what is meant by the word "fully"
here. It cannot mean that it can be infinitely drawn thence by the recipient
at any given time, for what man receives, what even the highest angel ever
receives at a given time, is limited or finite. It cannot therefore be fully in the exhaustive sense of the
word, but fully in regard to its entire fitness to meet man's
needs. If it were true that in an exhaustive sense of the expression that
doctrine could be fully drawn from the literal sense of the Word of
the Old Testament, for what purpose did the Lord again ultimate His Word in
His New Advent in the form of the Writings? For the purpose of meeting the
needs which it is given to satisfy doctrine can be fully drawn from the
literal sense of each Divine Revelation ever given. For the plane of life for
which the Old Testament was given, doctrine can be fully drawn from the very
letter thereof. But although
essential general truths are most plainly set ford, in the letter there, the
specific doctrines necessary to form the spiritual rational in man, could
never have been drawn thence. The Lord had to give a written Revelation for
that purpose also, from the letter of which again doctrine for the rational
mind can be fully drawn. Not only could this teaching not have been drawn
from the previous forms of Divine Revelation, but even the general Truths
there set forth in the letter were on the point of being entirely lost to man by perversions. But still it was not
merely to restore the knowledge of these that the Lord came again, but also to provide a New Revelation
of Himself from the letter of which
teaching for man's rational mind could be fully drawn. As the Lord
provides specifically for the needs of each plane of life in the world, so He
does for each discrete plane of life in heaven; for each He provides a
Written Revelation from the very letter of which each respectively can fully draw the teaching needed there.
So it is true in regard to each plane of life, both here and in the spiritual
world, that the Lord has provided for each that a literal sense of His Word
should be plainly ultimated in just the way best fitted for each, in order
that thou mayest observe
to do according to all that is written (155)
“For the Word in that sense is like a man clothed, whose face is bare
and also his hands are bare — all the things which pertain to the faith and
life of man, thus which pertain to his salvation are bare
there; but the rest are clothed; and in many places where they are clothed
they show through like objects appearing to a woman through thin silk before
the face”, T.C.R. 229.
The face and the hands bare — the face expressing the essential affection
and the hands standing for application to actual work. The essential
affection of the Lord that it is for man's salvation is plainly
manifested in the letter of every Divine Revelation — as is also the
practical work which the Lord would have man do, especially that which lie
should not do. The expression of these can be seen expressly declared in the
letter of each form of the Word by everyone who is willing to see them and be
governed by them — as it is further said: — "All
things which pertain to the faith and life of man, thus which pertain to his
salvation, are bare; but the rest are clothed". The things
which really pertain to man's salvation are bare — the rest are
clothed. Thus what is concealed from man at any given time, is only that
which is not yet necessary to his salvation. Of course this does not apply to
that which he cannot see only because he is not willing to see or is not
willing to do. But if he be really willing to be led in all things by the
Lord and not by self, all of genuine truth that he is prepared to receive
will appear bare to him in the letter of Divine Revelation. Only the rest
which he is not yet prepared for is clothed and hidden from him. Thus as he
advances in preparation to receive genuine truth it becomes increasingly
realized that genuine truths, even where they are clothed, shine through,
like objects appearing to a woman through a thin silk before the face.
“Also the truths of the Word as they are multiplied from the love of
them, and as they are ordered by this, so they shine and appear more and more
clearly”, T.C.R. 229. (156)
Thus the clothing of the Word, that which is called the letter of
Divine Revelation, is of such a nature, that it leaves bare to those who
rightly approach all the genuine truth that practically pertains to their
life, and as they be-come able to bear and do more, the clothing itself
becomes more and more transparent to the genuine truth within it. Thus though
there is actually an infinity of Truth hidden from us, compared to what we
can sec, the things which it is needful for us to apply to life, if Ave would
be saved, can always be seen to be plainly written — to be bare to our sight.
It is thus that the Lord gives us our daily bread — ever enough for today's
use — neither more nor less. What the Lord has given us to see now as plainly
set forth in written Revelation, that much is His command to us for today —
if we observe to do that much now, we will be prepared to use more to-morrow
and it will be given us to see more. To everyone who is really willing to do
the Lord's will rather than his own, there is enough of Divine
Revelation bare to his sight for him to do — if he is faithful and advances,
the very clothing will become more and more transparent, but whether it be
little or much that it is thus given to you to see as plainly written — it is
that you try to do all that
you see: That thou mayest observe to do
according to all that is written therein. “It can be believed
that the Doctrine of genuine truth can be acquired by the spiritual sense of
the Word, which is given by the knowledge of correspondences: but doctrine is
not acquired by that, but is only illustrated and corroborated, for as said
before, man is able by some known correspondences to falsify the Word by
conjoining and applying them to confirm that which inheres in his mind from
some adopted principle”, T.C.R. 230. (157) |
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It is a popular error among some
members of the Church, that genuine truth is acquired in just the way
which is here condemned —
namely that it is from the spiritual sense of the Word
of the Old and New Testaments which they draw forth thence, by means of the
knowledge of correspondences which they have obtained from the Writings. But
here the genuine truth is laid bare to us in the very letter of the Writings that the knowledge of correspondence has
not been revealed to us for that purpose at all; but only illustrating
and corroborating, thus for confirming the genuine truth which is literally
revealed, and which manifests the spiritual sense to all who are really
willing to see and obey it. It is legitimate to confirm the Truth by any
means. Truth is truth simply because it is what the Lord says — being
received thus from the written Revelation which. He has given us, and in
which it lies sufficiently bare for all our present needs, at any given time
now or in the future — it is lawful to use the knowledge of correspondences
for the confirmation of it, by whatever we meet with — by the objects
of nature, by our experience and also by the letter of Divine Revelation. If
these are not used by us to confirm what the Lord says, that is, what He has
written — they will be used, as they most commonly are, to confirm the
conceits of mere human prudence, and intelligence, which invariably confirm
only mere human self-will. If a man depends upon what he can draw from the
Word by means of his knowledge of correspondence for acquiring the spiritual
sense of the Word, what he does acquire as such will be really only a confirmation
of those principles which he naturally favors — and the principles a man naturally favors are always false and
evil until their determination is changed by regeneration. In order to
change their determination he must learn to put his trust solely in the
genuine truths which are laid bare to his sight in what the Lord has written
for his guidance. “Moreover the spiritual sense is not given to anyone except by the Lord alone and it is guarded by Him as the angelic heaven is guarded, for that heaven is in it”, T.C.R. 230.
Man cannot discover the spiritual sense himself — nor can he acquire
it by any effort of his own — even though he be thoroughly familiar with the
science of correspondences — it is given by the Lord to those who sincerely
and honestly try to do what they plainly see the Lord has writ-ten for their
guidance. This is the way to the spiritual sense, and the only way, which the
Lord Himself has provided. All who try to climb up by some other way are
spiritually thieves and robbers. If a man is really willing to follow that
way, he will see the truths which express the spiritual sense as bare to his
sight in written Revelation, and there is no limit to the gradual increase of
what will thus be made clear to him as expressed in the very letter of Divine
Revelation, either altogether bare there, or as transparently clothed. Only
do, or sincerely strive to do, all that you see to be plainly written for
your guidance in what the Lord has revealed and continue in the same endeavor
as it is given you to see more and more, as in that case it surely will. For
the Word is given, each form of the Word is given, In order that thou mayest
observe to do all that is written in it. (158)
As
long as the error of predestination is avoided, there cannot be too strong a
realization of how all-pervading is the government of the Divine Providence.
Every man is born for heaven — and every man ultimately attains heaven unless
he leads the kind of life which is incompatible with heavenly order. The Lord preserves in everyone full freedom
in determining his own life according to his own choice. But so far as it can
be done without interfering with the free determination which belongs to each
individual— the Divine Providence is in
finitely active in every detail of life to do whatever can be wisely done to lead each and
everyone to heaven. Yea even if man chooses self-government above heavenly government, Divine
Providence still does all that can be done
to lead to the greatest possible amelioration of his eternal state. Thus in every case where a man’s eternal
lot fails to be that
which the Lord would have him to fill in heaven, the responsibility rests
absolutely on the free choice exercised by the individual himself. In
preserving individual freedom of choice and at the same time doing all
compatible with that for him, there is no imperfection in the Divine
Providence. And although human instrumentalities are used, it is not because
they are necessary, but because the human instruments themselves are
benefited by having uses which they are permitted to do as of themselves, but
which nevertheless are so controlled that they become the acts of Divine
Providence in their effect upon others. This is not only so with angels and
regenerating men, but with all — even the activities which devils are
permitted to enter into, are of Providential use in regard to all who are
effected by them. However men may appear to do injury to others, and however
much external injury they may actually do, it is
impossible for anyone to do the least spiritual injury to another beyond what
that other freely chooses to bring upon himself. It is the same with
spiritual benefits — they cannot be conferred upon anyone except so far as
each, individually for himself, chooses in full freedom to appropriate them.
If it were possible for men to be saved in spite of their own choice — all
would be saved by the Lord. But He in His Infinite Wisdom only saves man as
far as it can be done without interfering with his own freedom of choice. (159) Therefore it is, that as a rule, the
Lord does not permit others to see, that is, understand, Divine Truth than
those who are willing
to be led by it. If it be a man's choice to be self-guided, it is of the Divine Providence
that he is neither able to see nor hear Divine Truth, so as to understand it.
Such a one only sees the appearances of Truth — not the genuine Truth within
them. As the Lord Himself declares in the text: Wherefore I speak to them
in parables, because seeing they do not see, and hearing they do not hear,
neither do they understand. In this morning's lesson the Lord
presents the same teaching in rational form. “That the genuine truth in the sense
of the letter of the Word which must be of doctrine, does not appear to
others than those who are in enlightenment from the Lord. Enlightenment is from the Lord alone, and
is with those who love truths because they
are truths, and who make them uses of life — with others enlightenment
in the Word is not given”, T.C.R. 231. To love truths because they are truths
is to love them be-cause they are of Divine authority, hence it involves
choosing to be led by the Lord. Only to such as do so does the Lord give
enlightenment. Those who do not He leaves in the darkness of their own
intelligence, and keeps genuine Truth hidden from them in the appearances of parables. (160) |
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“That
enlightenment is from the Lord alone, is because the Word is from Him, and
hence He Himself is in it; that enlightenment is with those who love truths
because they are truths, and make them uses of life, is because they
are in the Lord and the Lord in them, for the Lord is Truth Itself, as was
shown in the chapter concerning the Lord: and the Lord is then loved when
there is life according to His Divine Truths, thus when uses are done from
them, according to these words in John: In
that day ye shall know that ye
are in Me and I in you. He
who has My precepts and does the,
he loves Me and I will love him, and
will manifest Myself to him. And I will come to him, and will make an abode with him, 14 : 20—23. “These
are those who are in enlightenment when they read the Word and with
whom the Word shines and is translucent”, T.C.R. 231. Some have the conceit that they are
themselves able to see and understand Truth; others try to excuse themselves
from the study of it on the ground that it is too difficult for them. Both
are wrong. On the one hand no one by any effort of his own can attain the
understanding of genuine truth; but on the
other hand to anyone who really desires to be led by the Lord nothing
is simpler or easier to understand the Truth by which the Lord would lead
them, for the Lord Himself gives them enlightenment. “That the Word
with these shines and is translucent is because in the single things of the
Word there is a spiritual and a celestial sense, and these senses are in the
light of heaven wherefore the Lord by them and their light inflows into the
natural sense of the Word, and into its light with man; hence a man
acknowledges Truth from interior perception and afterwards sees it in his
thought, and this as often as he is in affection of truth for the sake of
truth; for from affection comes perception, from perception thought and thus
the acknowledgment is made which is
called faith”, T.C.R. 231 Thus ability
to understand truth does not depend upon the acuteness of the intellect, but upon the right determination
of the affection. The ability to see Divine Truth is from the Lord and comes
to those who strive to determine their affection so that it may flow in the
stream of Divine Providence. This gives a perception of the truths which
guide that stream, and opens their eyes to see the hindrances themselves that
need to be removed. (161) “The contrary
takes place with those who read the Word from the Doctrine of a false religion, but more with those
who confirm that doctrine from the Word, and then have regard to their own
glory and to the wealth of the world; with these the truths of the Word are
as if in the shade of night, and falses
as if in the light of day — they read truths, but they do not see them, and if they see
their shadow they falsify them. These are they concerning whom the herd says
that they have eyes and do not see, and that they have ears and do not
understand, Matt, 13 : I4, 15. Hence their light in the spiritual things
which are of the Church be-comes merely natural, and the sight of their mind
like that: of one seeing spectres in bed when he awakes, or like that of a.
sleep-walker who believes himself to be awake when he sleeps", T.C.R.
232. The blindness to genuine truth which
thus comes in is all the worse because it
is accompanied with the persuasion that they see better than others,
and this because falser seem to them to be clearly true. Remember, however,
that this is of Divine Providence and do not strive against it. If
there are indications of this state in others do not strive to convince them of the Truth in spite of
themselves. If you fund difficulty in understanding the truth yourselves, do
not try to overcome it by sheer effort, but rather by combating the love of self,
and determining your affections from self and the world towards the Lord and
His Kingdom. Above all be on your guard against the self-deception which
leads you to regard falses as truths which is invariably done whenever the
love of self-leading is allowed to govern. This morning's
lesson describes those who are thus self-deceived, thus: (162) “It has been given to speak with many
after death who believed themselves to be as stars about to shine in heaven,
because as they said, they had the Word holy, they read it through often,
they collected many things thence by which they confirmed the dogmas of their
faith, and on account of that they were celebrated as learned, from which
they believed themselves about to be Michaels and Raphaels. But many from
them were explored, from what love they had studied the Word, and it was
found that some from the love of self that they might be worshipped as
primates of the Church and some from the love or the
world that they might gain wealth. When these were also explored as to what
they knew from the word it was found that they knew nothing thence of genuine
truth but only such as is called truth falsified which in itself is putrid
false, for it smelt putrid in heaven; and it was said to them that they had this
from the cause, that themselves and the world were their ends when they read
the Word and not the truth of faith and the good of life; and when themselves
and the world are their ends, then the mind when reading the Word adheres in
themselves and the world, and thence they think constantly from the proprium
and the proprium of man is in thick darkness as to all the things which are
of heaven and the Church; in which state a man cannot be led up by the Lord
and be elevated into the light of heaven, therefore cannot receive any influx
from the Lord through heaven. I have also
seen these admitted into heaven and when it was there found that they
were without truths they were cast down, but there still remained with them
the pride that they merited”, T.C.R. 233. (163) The great bulk of those in the Old
Church are in this state, providentially blinded to the truth, because of
their lack of affection which would make the right use of it. But it is for the members of the New Church
to learn to see that the teaching has application to themselves also. So far
as they are still unregenerated they too are providentially blinded from much
truth which they would otherwise see. As long as there is any of the natural
man left unregenerated there is so far blindness to spiritual truth. Even
when there is much intellectual grasp of the truth, the natural man always
tends to be blind to application to his own self — and when there is
blindness to this, the truth itself is not seen. The Lord comes to man in
Truth in order to save him if he will. But to save him is to expose his own
evils to him in order that he may combat and shun them as sins. If a man
therefore does not see in them their application to his own evils, he is
blind to what is the very spirit and essence of the truth for him, he is deaf
to just that which the Lord has come to teach him in particular. Let
each reflect upon this, and he will find that his natural tendency is to be
blind in this respect. A man may clearly see the truth in its application to
others and yet be blind to its application to his own self, and that is to be
blind to the truth which the Lord has given for him. There is infinity in
every Divine Truth; but however much of this a man may see, if he does not
see that in it which has particular and practical application to himself, he
is blind to the very means in which the Lord has come to save, he is blind to
the only means by which he can be saved. Is not
this for all practical purposes as fully blindness to the truth as it is with
those who reject it externally also. It
is important therefore that each examine himself in this respect, and seek
the means by which his blindness can be cured. In faithfully examining
himself he will find that the heart of man is deceitful above all things,
that the natural will exercises the greatest cunning in regarding the truth
in all aspects but just the one which will condemm itself — it will most
skillfully fence with every endeavor of the conscience to bring it home —
even when the external application is recognized, there will still be a
constant tendency to evade seeing its internal application, for this it is
which touches the very life of man — that life however which he must be
willing to lose if he would become truly the Lord's disciple. In seeking the
means by which such blindness may be cured, let it be always remembered that
the blindness itself is of the Divine Providence, and cannot be wisely
removed unless the natural determination of the affection be inverted. Unless
therefore men individually strive to be actively willing to give up their own
will that the Lord's will may be done instead, they will he blind
to just that in the truth which is necessary to save them, and that however
fully they may enter into it intellectually; and they will be of those of
whom the Lord declares now as much as ever: Wherefore I speak to them in
parables, because seeing they do not see, and hearing they do not hear,
neither do they understand. (164) |
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How fully man's
life depends upon the Word of God is little realized. By the man of the world
it is not realized at
all; and the man of the Church is tempted
as the Lord was to believe that life may be acquired by good alone, even by
such good as is taught by natural truths — that stones may be turned into
bread. But man is not only not sustained by that good, but is not sustained
as to his spiritual life by the good which proceeds from the Lord except so
far as it is appropriated from the Word going forth from His mouth. Man
shall not live by bread alone, but by every
word going forth through the mouth of God. Moreover in answering
the temptation to sustain life from other good, the Lord answers by appeal to
the written Word. It is written
He says; that is, He appeals to the letter
of the Word, and declares that life will be sustained by every word which goes forth from the
mouth of God. The same teaching is written in His Word to the New Church, as
read in this morning's lesson: “That by the sense
of the letter of the Word there is conjunction with the Lord and consociation
with the angels”, T.C.R. 234. This conjunction
and consociation is spiritual life to all who have part therein. “That by the Word
there is conjunction with the Lord is because He Himself is the Word, that
is, the very Divine Truth and Divine Good therein. That there is conjunction
by the sense of the letter is because the Word in that sense is in its
fulness, in its holiness and in its power... That conjunction does not appear
to man, but it is in the affection of truth and the perception of it”, T.C.R.
234. Every man has a
certain affection for truth, for what he regards as truth; but naturally he
regards as truth only what can be made subservient to his own will, or what
is flattering to his own intelligence, because he seems to have searched it,
out for himself. But the affection of truth which alone effects conjunction
with the Lord, is one with affection for His Word, that is, affection for
what the Lord says, which regards truth as truth simply because it is what
the Lord has said and caused to be written for man’s guidance. (165) “That by the sense
of the letter there is consociation with the angels of heaven is because in
that sense is the spiritual sense and the celestial sense, and in these
senses are the angels, the angels of the Lord's Spiritual Kingdom in the Spiritual Sense of the Word, and the angels of His
Celestial Kingdom, in its celestial sense. These two senses are evolved from
the natural sense of the Word when a maxi who has the Word holy, reads it.
The evolution is instantaneous, therefore the consociation is also”,
T.C.R.234. The word
evolution is used at this day to express the common notion that higher things
are gradually produced from lower, a notion that is favored by many
appearances, but which is nevertheless diametrically opposite to the truth.
Moreover evolution means unfolding, and nothing can be unfolded which has not
first been folded up — involution must always precede evolution. Thus it is
with the Lord's Word which has been successively folded up in
coverings to accommodate it to the various needs of angels and men — in
celestial and spiritual coverings for heaven and in various natural coverings
for men in the world. Now it is said that when a man reads the Word who has
it holy, there is an instantaneous unfolding or evolution of its internal
senses, but this unfolding is not to man's conscious thought; for
as taught in the concluding number of this morning's lesson, man does not
come into the spiritual sense itself until after death, but the unfolding is
such as practically to effect consociation with the angels who are in the
internal senses. Neither men nor angels have any particular perception of
this consociation but only a general one, nevertheless it is fully effective
as a mediate source of life for men, and as the most ultimate basis for the
reception thereof by angels. This consociation
is various, that is, the different portions of the letter communicate
respectively with corresponding portions of heaven — the Word as well as
Heaven being in the human form — every part of the letter therefore
corresponds and immediately communicates with some particular part of the
Greatest Man. Just which is which -c e do not know. Similarly we know that
the various nations of the world now have a like correspondence with the
various parts of the human form; but it has not been given us to know what
that correspondence in each case is. If it were useful it would have been
revealed — and unless the use is clear,
the very endeavour to obtain such knowledge is an abuse. Notice what
is said about those in the other world who set themselves to
discover which particular societies of heaven particular portions of the
letter of the Word communicate with: (166) |
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“There are also spirits who
are below the heavens and n ho abuse this communication, for they recite some
savings Front the sense of the letter of the Word and immediately observe and
note the society with which communication is effected”, T.C.R. 235. The acquiring of knowledge for any purpose, but the
single one of knowing what the Lord wishes
one to do, in order that one may do it, is an abuse. This is
especially so in regard to spiritual knowledges. Men, like the spirits, are
fond of prying into various spiritual things for quite other reasons. Such
things as mesmerism, spiritualism, occultism, have quite a charm for many.
Men crave such knowledges as will give them control over others, such as will enable Hein
to put themselves in place of Providence, and interfere ill matters which can
only be rightly regulated by Divine control. Let those therefore who would be
truly the Lord's disciples beware lest they seek even knowledges of
the Word for such ends as these, for to do so is to abuse them. The interior
knowledges revealed in the Writings lend themselves to such abuse more fully
than the comparatively external knowledges revealed in other forms of the
Word. Seek in the Word, search the Scripture, only For the end of finding
there what the Lord would have you do, especially to learn what He commands
you not to do. Shun using knowledge thence to acquire power for yourselves,
or to feed conceit of superior intelligence, or indeed for anything but the
rendering innocent obedience to the Lord — otherwise you will not receive
spiritual life from the Word, you will not obey the command that Man shall lire by every Word going forth out of
the mouth of God. As example a
brief statement is given in this morning's lesson of the various senses of
four of the commandments. As the commandments are dealt with particularly in
the uex1: chapter of the Trine Christian Religion, it will suffice now just to notice what is the general
distinction of the various senses. The natural sense treats of man's
external set; the spiritual sense treats of man's internal
attitude towards the neighbor, and the celestial sense treats of man's
attitude towards the Lord. This shows that there is a celestial and a
spiritual sense for men, as well as the more distinctively
celestial and spiritual senses which are respectively for the celestial and
spiritual angels, and moreover that there must be regard to all three senses
in all living reception of the Word. Thus the Word cannot be obeyed so as to
effect salvation, unless its celestial sense be obeyed — that is unless man
takes the right attitude towards the Lord. Man cannot spiritually live from
the Word unless he do this. He must shun self-leading and humble himself
before the Lord with the desire that His will and not his own may be done.
This is to obey the celestial sense of the Word, and opens man to the
reception of what is the inmost of all heavenly or regenerate life. The
lowest angel has something of this life, as also does the man who is at all
regenerated. The celestial angels differ from the others only in having it in
a discretely higher degree; but in some degree it must be the inmost of all
who would live by the Word going forth from the mouth of God. (167) Examples are also given from the three
kingdoms of nature, how each thing therein draws from the general stock what
it needs for its own life, illustrating how it is with angels and men as to
their reception of life from the Word, that each can take from the infinity
there just what is necessary for his own regeneration and spiritual life, and
that in like manner, each part of the individual man can take its own life —
the new will lives from the celestial sense of the Word, the new
understanding lives from the spiritual sense of it, and the external man from
its natural sense — thus all three are necessary to the complete life of each
individual. In this way, while each regenerating individual is associated
with his own society of heaven in particular, he is in general associated
with all the heavens, for together they are as one before the Lord, of which
one all the parts contribute to the welfare of each single part, and each
single part contributes to the perfection of the whole, for all live from the
same Word, and like the Word they are all one internally although so various
in external form.
“That the consociation of man with the angels is effected by the
natural or literal sense of the Word, the reason also is because in every man
there are from creation three degrees of life, the celestial, spiritual, and
natural; but man is in the natural as long as he is in the world, and then he
is so far in the angelic spiritual as he is in genuine truths, and he is so
far in the celestial as he is in life according to them; but still he does
not come into the very spiritual and celestial until after death, because
these two are shut in and hidden in his natural ideas; wherefore when the
natural goes away after death, the spiritual and celestial remain, from which
the ideas of his thought then are. From these things it can appear that in
the Word also is spirit and life,
as the Lord says: ‘The words which I speak to you are
spirit and are life’, John 4 : 63. ‘The water which I will give to you, will
become a fountain of water leaping up unto eternal life’, John 4 : 14. ‘Man
does not live from Bread alone, but from every word going forth from the
month of God’, Matt. 4 : 4. ‘Work for the food which remains into life eternal,
which the Son of Man will give to you’, John 6 : 27”, T.C.R. 239.
Man is in the natural as long as he is in the world — and therefore
each form of the Word in the world is of necessity natural externally. But
just as the angels of the natural leaven are distinguished into those who are
relatively celestial-natural and spiritual-natural, so men in the world are
distinguished into three degrees of the natural, the celestial-natural, the
spiritual-natural, and the merely natural. And likewise the Word in the world
has three forms similarly distinguished, to provide life for the corporeal,
the sensual, and also for the rational mind. Mark the Lord's
expression that man shall live by every word
going forth from the mouth of God, and consider how fully this confirms the
teaching that the Writings are the Word for anyone who receives their
authority at all, for Swedenborg is caused to solemnly declare in them:
“As regards myself I have not been allowed to take anything whatever
from the mouth of any spirit, nor from the mouth of any angel, but from the
mouth of the Lord alone”, DE VERBO 13.
Either the Writings which make this
declaration are false, or they are the Word going forth from the mouth of the
Lord to give spiritual life to man's rational mind, and that by
the letter thereof the rational too may have conjunction with the Lord and
consociation with the angels. (168) |
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“That
the Word is in all the heavens and that angelic wisdom is thence”, T.C.R.
240.
That the Word here means a written Word, or the Word in a literal form
is fully shown by the context of this morning’s lesson. That there
is such a Word in all the heavens is because thence and thence only does the
Lord teach those who would be led by Him. Wisdom does not come to the angels,
anymore than to him, in any hidden and mysterious —way it, is acquired from
the study of the Lord’s written Word, read with the end of
applying it to life. Even in heaven the Lord does not teach by internal
influx, but only from His Word so far as the angels voluntarily apply
themselves to learn therefrom. Some apply
themselves more and some less and
hence some acquire more wisdom than others.
Those who study the Word least are in the
lowest or most external parts of heaven, while those who study it most
deeply are in the highest. This results from the degree of their love to the
Lord. All in heaven love Him, that is, love to do what He teaches so far as
they know it; but some are
satisfied with learning comparatively little, while others
are ever eager to learn more, so that their work may be done
in ever closer and closer conformity with the Lord’s will. With even the
highest angels there is room for improvement in the way they do their work,
and they more than all are in acknowledgment that it is so, and in the
endeavor to learn from the written Word to effect improvement in it. How much
more must this be the case with even the least imperfect of us! To learn from
the Lord how to rightly perform the work of one’s own calling is
what the Word is given for, both to angels and men. Angels are but men who
have fully begun to do their work so, and men are really of the Church just
so far as they are trying to initiate such a beginning in their own work. (169)
“That the Word is in the heavens has not hitherto been known, neither could
it be made known, as long as the Church was ignorant that angels and spirits
are men, al-together similar in face and body to men in our world, and that
with them are similar things as with men in all respects, with the sole
difference that they are spiritual and that all things which are with them
are from a spiritual origin, and that men in the world are natural, and that
all things with them are from a natural origin. As long as this
was hidden it could not be known that the Word is also in the heavens, and
that it is read by the angels there, and also by the spirits who are under
the heavens”, T. C.R. 240.
Thus there is the same single difference between the Word as it is in
the heavens, and the Word as it is in the world, in the one it is spiritual
and in the other natural. But these terms like most in human language have a
relative rather than an absolute meaning. This is indeed necessarily the
case, more or less, with all finite languages, even that of the heavens, as
well as those in the world. The absolute is in the Lord alone; finite
creatures become rational just in the degree in which they learn to know the
true ratio between different things, that is, their relative,
value, and the proper proportion which should obtain
between them. The words reason and rationality literally mean this ability.
All that finite beings learn is based upon comparisons and contrasts. Good
is clearly recognized only by contrast with its opposite evil. The varieties
of good which are from the Lord are understood by learning their true
relative value, the ratio and proportion which they bear Lo each other as
parts of the human form. It is from the lack of a proper recognition of this
that the Lord's teachings appear contradictory to some. In
necessary accommodation to man's finite capacity the Lord in His
teaching has to deal with things in their relation to one series at a time.
But the same thing may form the beginning of one series or the last of
another, or the middle of yet another. Thus the world of spirits is internal
in relation to this world, it is external in relation to heaven, it is
intermediate in relation to the whole spiritual world. Again the lowest
heaven is celestial and spiritual in relation to this world; but it is
natural in relation to the two higher heavens. Hence
discrimination must be exercised in our under standing of all such terms —
and the ability to rightly discriminate their use in the Word depends upon
the state of willingness on the part of the one studying it to give up his
own will, in order to learn to do the Lord's instead. If
willingness to do this be absent, either confusion manifestly results, or
else what seems to be clearly seen is only seen with its relative value
inverted and its proportion distorted. Now the Word in the heavens is
spiritual, compared to the Word in this world; but in relation to those to
whom it is given the Word is always natural, that is, its form is always
perfectly accommodated to the nature of those to whom it is given. The Word
in relation to the angels is just what the Word with us is to the men of the
Church — the Lord Himself as He ultimately appears to teach them. Hence it is
that it could not be made known that the Word was in the heavens as long as
it was sup-posed that the angels were an altogether different order of beings
from men; until it was known that angels are simply men who have become what
the Lord creates all men to be, and which all those are actually becoming who
are really in the endeavor to deny themselves that they may follow Him. The
Word in the heavens is to the angels just what the Word with us is to the men
of the Church — knowledge concerning the Word in the heavens is therefore
inseparable from knowledge concerning the angels that they are men in all
respects, except the gross bodies by means of which men enter into the uses
of the material world. Hence our lesson continues in regard to knowledge
concerning the Word in the heavens: (170)
“But lest this should be hidden in perpetuity, it has been given to me
to be in company with angels and spirits and to speak with them and to see
the things which are with them, and afterwards to report many things which I
have seen and heard. This has been clone in the work concerning HEAVEN AND HELL, published in
Londen in the year 1758; from which it can be seen that angels and spirits
are men, and that all things are in abundance with them which are with men in
the world”, T.C.R. 240.
They have similar things for similar reasons and purposes as men have
them, that is, men of the Church. They as finite beings are all imperfect in
relation to the Lord, and need to constantly realize and to advance from that
imperfection for ever. They have Divine worship that they may cultivate a.
right attitude toward the Lord, and come into ever fuller humility before
Him. They have preachings in temples, that they may be led in their study of
the Word by those whose use it is to apply themselves more systematically
than others to that study, and also that they may receive the Lord's
teaching through the hearing as well as through the sight. They have writings
and books for the game reason that such exist in this world,
namely for the sake of the Word, for it is specifically taught that that is
why the Lord has provided that there are writings in the heavens and that
also was the real reason why printing was invented in this world. They have
Sacred Writings or the Word in literal form for the same purpose for which
the written Word is given to the Church here, that each may therein directly
approach the Lord and see for himself that what is taught is from the Lord.
Concerning the Word in the heavens it is further written:
“The Word is from the Lord, Who is the supreme, let down through the
three heavens in order even to the earth, and hence it has been made
accommodated to each heaven; wherefore also the Word is in each heaven, and
almost with each angel in its own sense, and it is read by them daily and
also preachings take place from it as in the earth. For the Word is Divine
Truth itself, thus the Divine Wisdom proceeding from the Lord as a Sun, and
appearing in the heavens as light; the Divine Truth is that Divine which is
called the Holy Spirit; for it not only proceeds from the Lord but also
enlightens man and teaches him, as it is said concerning the Holy Spirit.
Since the Word in its descent from the Lord has been made accommodated to the
three heavens, and the three heavens are conjoined as inmosts through means
with ultimates, thus also there are three senses of the Word. Hence it is
evident that the Word has been given that by it there may be conjunction of
the heavens with each other, and also that there may be conjunction of the
heavens with the human race, for whom is the sense of the letter which is
merely natural, and hence the basis of the three remaining senses”, A.E.
1024. (171) |
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That there may be no doubt that the Word exists in each heaven in
literal or written forms, the kind of letter in which it is there written is
described:
“As concerns the Word in the heavens this
is written in a spiritual style, which altogether differs from the natural
style; for the spiritual style consists of mere letters, of which each
involves a certain sense, and there are little lines, marks and points, above
and between the letters and in them which exalt the sense. The letters with
the angels of the spiritual kingdom are similar to the typographical letters
in our world (In the Diary it is said that the writing in the spiritual
heaven is similar to the writing in the world in Latin letters, 5561, which
are the same that are used in English) ; and the letters with the angels of
the celestial kingdom are with some similar to Arabic letters, with some
similar to ancient Hebrew letters, but inflected above and below, with signs
above, between, and within, of which also each involves a complete sense”,
T.C.R. 241. Here we have
Hebrew and Latin letters specifically mentioned, making it probable that the
intermediate Greek letters are also included in the expression "typographical
letters in our world". Moreover no names of persons, or
places, are mentioned but in place of them, the signification given to them
in the Writings. “From these things
it can appear that the Word in heaven is as to the literal sense similar and
at the same time corresponding to our Word, and thus that they are one”,
T.C.R. 241. The similarity
here concluded cannot be seen to be nearly so full if the Writings are not
regarded as being included as a portion of our literal Word, for otherwise
Latin letters do not appear with us in that connection, nor do spiritual
significations take the place of names. “This is
wonderful that the Word in the heavens is so written that the simple
understand the Word simply and that the wise understand it wisely; for there
are many marks and signs which as was said exalt the sense; the simple do not
attend to these neither do they know them; but the wise do attend each according
to his wisdom, even to the highest. A copy of the Word written by angels
inspired by the Lord is with every larger society, kept in its Sacrarium,
lest the Word elsewhere should be changed as to any point. The Word which is
in our world is similar to the Word of heaven in this, that the simple
understand it simply and the wise
wisely, but this is effected in a different manner”, T.C.R. 241. (172)
Every person who approaches the Word with anything of angelic
innocence does so in order that he may discover therefrom what are the evils
in himself which he should combat and shun. Hence if his evils be simple in
their nature, he only needs to understand the Word simply; but if they are or
a more insidious kind he needs to enter into wiser understanding of the Word
in order to expose their real quality. Thus also external evils are
plainly pointed out in the Word of the old Testament; but spiritual evils are fully exposed in the
Writings. These evils are carefully defended by man's natural
rational which causes them to appear as good, which false appearance can only
be penetrated when the rational is reformed by the rational truths of the
Writings. Here as last week, it is made evident that the Word is not
given to provide men with knowledges merely regarded as such, but is
accommodated in such a way, that each one may find his own evils exposed
there if he will, and if he does not will this his attitude is not like that
of either the wise or the simple angels.
“That the angels have all their wisdom through the Word, this they
themselves confess, for so far as they are in the understanding of the Word
so far they are in light. In the Sacrarium in which a copy of the Word
is kept, there is a and bright white light exceeding every degree of light
which is outside
of it in heaven”, T.C.R. 242.
A sacrarium simply means a
sacred place, which we in adopting the custom
call a repository. That in heaven the light shining with the sacrarium where a copy of the Word
is kept, exceeds every degree of light outside of it in heaven, shows that
the Word manifests light more abundantly than even the angels receive it: “The wisdom of the
celestial angels exceeds the wisdom of the spiritual angels almost as the
wisdom of these angels exceeds the wisdom of men.... This is the cause
that the Word in the Celestial Kingdom of the Lord is written differently
from that in His Spiritual Kingdom”, T.C.R. 242 The cause I similar why the Word in the Writings is written differently from the Word in the Old and New Testaments, namely because the rational mind, for which the Writings are, is receptible of higher wisdom than the lower planes of the mind to which the other forms of the Word are accommodated. “From these things it can be concluded of what quality is
the wisdom which lies hidden in the Word which is in the world, for in it
lies all angelic wisdom, which is ineffable, and into that wisdom man comes
after death, who has been made an angel by the Lord through the Word”, T.C.R.
242. In it lies all angelic wisdom and within that the Divine
Wisdom itself; but there is no wisdom there lower than angelic wisdom except
in the mere appearances of the letter. It
has not been given to convey worldly wisdom though this may he read into it by those who read it from
themselves. Indeed the Word may be said to be given solely for the angels and
thus for heaven — in the first place to make angels and afterwards to perfect angels
to eternity. Without this latter use the first world be incomplete. Into
eternity, O Lord, Thy Word is settled in the heavens. (173)
“By
Ephraim in the Word is signified the understanding of the Word in the Church.
Since the understanding of the Word makes the Church therefore Ephraim is
called a Precious Son and a Child of Delights, Jer. 31 : 20; the Firstborn,
Jer. 31.: 9; the Strength of the Head of Jehovah, Ps. 60 : 9; 108 : 9; the
Powerful, Zech. 10 : 7; filled with the Bow, Zech. 9 : 13; and the sons of
Ephraim were called the Armed and Shooters with the Bow. Ps. 78 : 9; for by
the Bow is signified Doctrine from the Word fighting against falses.
Therefore also Ephraim was transferred to the right hand of Israel and was
blessed, also he was accepted in place of Reuben, Gen. 48 : 5, 11, seq. And
therefore Ephraim with his brother Manasseh in the blessing of the Sons of
Israel by Moses was under the name of Joseph, their father, exalted above
all, Dent. 32 : 13, 17", T.C.R. 247. (174) |
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By Joseph
in the Word is represented the Lord's Spiritual Kingdom — specifically the
internal or celestial of that Kingdom and by his two sons, Ephraim and
Manasseh, the truth and good from that internal. Thus Joseph
represents the internal good and Manasseh the external good, while Ephraim represents that
understanding of truth which brings internal good forth into the external,
thus the very means by which the external is reformed and regenerated. It is
because of this, because he represents the very means by which all
regeneration is effected in the spiritual Church, that Ephraim was exalted
above all in the blessing of Moses. The Church is provided by the fiord for
the sake of man's regeneration, and its quality therefore
altogether depends upon its effectiveness in accomplishing this purpose,
which accomplishment again depends upon this understanding of truth which
prevails in the Church, thus upon the extent to which Ephraim, accompanied by his brother Manasseh, predominates
therein. In this series the truth represented by Ephraim comes before the
good represented by Manasseh, because the quality of all external good is
determined by the quality of truth which guides and forms it and therefore
ten thousands or myriads are predicated of Ephraim and thousands of Manasseh.
“Ten thousands signify innumerable things, similarly thousands; but
ten thousands are said concerning truth and thousands concerning goods…. That
myriads and thousands signify innumerable things, is because ten signifies many
and thence also a hundred, a thousand, and ten thousand, for numbers
multiplied by a similar number
signify what is similar with the
simple numbers by which they are multiplied. ... Moreover when two numbers
multiplied, the one greater and the one less, which signify what is similar,
are said together, as when ten and a hundred, or a hundred and a thousand,
then the less number is said concerning goods and the greater
number concerning truths, the reason is because each good consists of many truths, for good is formed
form truths and hence good is produced by truths; from this it is
that the greater number is said concerning truths and the
less number concerning goods.... That
thus it is may be illustrated by this — one delight of affection can be
presented by many ideas of thought, and be expressed by various things in speech; the delight of affection is what is
called good, and the ideas of thought and the various things in speech
which proceed from that delight or good are what are called truths; it has itself similarly
with one thing of the will and many things of its
understanding, and also with one thing of the love towards the many things expressing it. Hence also
it is that much and multitude in the Word are said concerning truths, and
great and magnitude concerning good, for what is great contains many things
in itself. But these things are said to those who can be enlightened by examples, that they
may know whence it is that myriads signify innumerable equally as thousands,
but still that myriads are said concerning truths and thousands concerning
goods", A.E. 336. (175)
“That the Church is according to the understanding of the Word is because the Church is according to
the truths of faith and the goods of charity and these are the two universals
which are not only spread through the whole literal sense of the Word, but
also lie within like precious things in treasuries; those things which are in
its literal sense appear before the eye of every man, because they inflow
directly into the eyes, but the things which lie in the spiritual sense, they
do not appear except to those who love truths because they are truths and do
good because they are goods; before these
there is manifested the treasury which the literal sense covers and
guards and those are what essentially make the Church”, T.C.R. 244, That goods and truths make the Church
is a literal statement of the Word which is familiar to everyone in the New Church; but still it is a statement which is
capable not only of various
understanding but of opposite understanding. For it may he understood
more or loss according to genuine doctrine or it may be understood only
according to the natural impulses which prompt man to regard whatever he loves as good and whatever favors that good as truth.
This leads to the putting of the good of the external first and the truth second, even as Joseph wished to put Manasseh first and Ephraim second. But
as all external good needs to be, regenerated
and to receive an altogether new quality from the internal before it can be heavenly and as this new
quality can only come from the internal by means of
genuine truth, it follows that external good can only be heavenly and thus good
of the Church so far as the genuine truth of doctrine enters into and forms
it. That the Church is according to its doctrine
is known, but still Doctrine does not establish the Church, but the integrity
and purity of the doctrine, consequently the understanding of the
Word”, T.C.R. 245. (176)
The Church is established by the doctrine or teaching of the Word, so
far as that teaching is presented
and received in its integrity and purity. There are those who trust more in
their own prudence than in integrity of doctrine for this end, and who would
therefore pick and choose from the teaching of the New Church what they think would be most acceptable to their hearers, some with the idea
that the other things can be
presented later when some beginning has been made, and others with the
idea that these unacceptable things are already out of date. But from the
first it is integrity of doctrine and that only which can establish the
Church on any permanent basis, or indeed in any way that is not merely an appearance. But
what does this integrity of doctrine involve, for clearly it cannot mean that
all the teachings in their completeness should be presented at once -- for
man can only learn step by step and little by little and therefore there must he accommodation to his
under-standing. Each general truth however when taught in its integrity is so fully an expression of innocence
that it involves the potential reception of all the rest. Thus from
the first such teaching involves the attitude towards Divine Revelation that
whatever is there, is to be received as a matter of course, not only in spite
of its
contradiction of man's own ideas, but with the expectation that such
contradiction must be met there and accepted. How could a Revelation he the
Divine expression of infinite wisdom, without contradicting the natural ideas
which man forms for himself? If Divine Revelation did not contradict man's
natural ideas, there would be no need thereof. Divine Revelation
is given to teach men that which they would never have
learned of there selves and without which they would have
believed the very opposite. Doctrine or teaching of Divine
Truth must keep this principle ever before men, in order to have integrity.
By this means an affirmative attitude will be taught to-wards the innumerable
particulars of teaching which the man of the Church has yet to receive.
Without this affirmative attitude his understanding of the Word cannot grow,
nor can the Church which is altogether according to the understanding of the Word increase
with him. Thus while the right understanding of many points of doctrine
cannot be taught until they are reached step by step, and the teaching of such must therefore be deferred till then, there
should not be even the appearance of avoiding any
statement of doctrine because it might offend men's natural
ideas, because such an idea is injurious to a proper
affirmative attitude, and is therefore detrimental to the reception of any
teaching in its integrity. The man of the Church needs
to realize more and more fully that every genuine spiritual
truth, spiritually understood, is contrary to his natural ideas, and the
right application thereof is always in diametrical opposition to his natural
inclination. There can be no integrity of teaching or
reception, even of the most elementary doctrines unless innocence be thus therein.
Representatively it was the innocence of wisdom
that caused the aged Israel to put Ephraim before Manasseh, attributing to
the first tens of thousands and to the second only thousands. (177) |
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“Both
integrity and purity of doctrine are necessary to the understanding of the
Word which establishes the Church. Integrity as just shown involves that it
must include innocence: purity involves that it must exclude the promptings
of man's own intelligence. Just as the integrity or completeness of doctrine can only be received
potentially by man, to be actually received step by step, so with
regard to the purity of his reception from the promptings of his own
intelligence it is actually attained only by slow degrees, but yet there
ought to be from the first that denial of self which is the denial that self
intelligence has any ability to teach the way to heaven, and the constant
acknowledgment therefore that its promptings ought to have no weight in the
study of doctrine. For man is naturally full of the life of his own intelligence and its actual removal can only be done little by little, even as the
Canaanites were not removed from before the Israelites in one year lest there
should be a desolation. Nevertheless the truth that it needs removing should
be kept continually before the mind in order that there may be any purity in
man's reception of doctrine. For unless the promptings of
self-intelligence are constantly resisted they are sure to defile the
doctrine received by turning it into
compliance with the unregenerate will. [Marginal note here: "good
not first"]. So far as there is the practical endeavor to
resist self-intelligence, a man will be potentially in purity of doctrine,
and will also be-come increasingly receptive thereof actually. These two
then, integrity and purity of doctrine, give the under-standing of the Word
which establishes the Church and which is meant by Ephraim who is exalted in
the text: And these are the
myriads of Ephraim, and these are the thousands of Manasseh. “But Doctrine does
not establish and make the special Church which is with man in the singular,
but faith and life according to that Doctrine; similarly the Word does not
establish and make the Church specifically with man but faith according to
the truths and life according to the goods which he derives thence and
applies to himself”, T.C.R. 245 (178)
It is the life which a man really lives which makes the Church in him
individually. How often this doctrine has been perverted into the idea that a
man can form the Church in himself by leading a good life without much regard
to doctrine. But the life which makes the Church in man is the life which is
according to doctrine in its integrity and purity. The idea is too commonly
entertained that a man can live–I cotter than he believes. When
this is so it is only an appearance. A man may, like many heathens, be
potentially better than the faith which he intellectually holds. But as to
actual spiritual life a man cannot live better than is the quality of his
understanding of the Word. The best he can do is to constantly reach after
this attainment of life which will be in accord with his understanding of the
Word and if he attains some approximation thereto he will do well. So far is
it from being a fact that he can live in advance of his understanding of the Word that actually he can never live perfectly up
to even that degree of
understanding of the Word which he has. Unless indeed his understanding of
the Word be a perverted one. When the understanding of the Word is perverted
it is at bottom in order to make it agree with the desires of man's own will. It
is easy to live up to such a perverted understanding of' the Word. But if the
understanding of the Word he formed, as all genuine understanding of it is,
from doctrine received in the integrity and purity which it has from the
Lord, man can only follow it, seeing it ever before him, but never absolutely
reached even to eternity, and yet at the same time so accommodated to each
individual that it is never further in advance of him than he is prepared to
endeavor to follow it if he will. The Lord ever leads gently, but He does lead — He is always in advance of His
followers in the doctrine which He enables them to
see, teaching them a quality of life which they have not yet actually
attained. Thus with the regenerating man the understanding of the doctrine of
the Word in its integrity and purity must always be exalted and humbly
followed. For:
“The Church is of such quality as is the understanding of the Word, i.e. it is
excellent and precious if the under-standing be from genuine truths from the
Word, but destroyed, yea filthy if it be from falsified truths”, T.C.R. 247.
Nothing causes the falsification of truth but the inclinations of man's own will
which constantly incite his self-intelligence to justify them, even by
truths if possible. The inclinations of man's own will
are the good which the world seeks and cultivates with more or less
refinement and skill. Man can never escape from the worship of the good which
the world regards as such unless the necessity of under-standing the genuine
truth of the Lord's Word be exalted, and made the sole standard of what
should be striven after, and unless that good of life alone be given a place in
the Church which results from striving after that standard
regarded in its integrity and purity. Ephraim must go before Manasseh and be
exalted above all the sons of Israel. They are the
ten thousands of Ephraim and they are the thousands
of Manasseh. (179) |
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In the SUMMARY
EXPOSITION it is said that the two verses from which
this text is taken are concerning those who will worship the Lord from the
affection of truth and of good. Both these affections must be in all genuine
worship. The one affection without the other, or unless it lead to the other,
is without any value. It is to no purpose that the affection for truth is
cultivated unless the affection for good is also. And it is just as fully
useless to cultivate the affection for good without the affection for truth
being cultivated also. Neither is it possible by cultivating them as two
independent things to attain heaven, for heaven is from and according to the
marriage of these two affections. Thus it is to no purpose that there should
be, as there appears to be with some, on the one hand an affection for
certain truths and on the other hand an affection for a certain kind of good
of life, each. affection going forth in practical independence of the other,
however they may be externally associated together in the same mind. There must
he the marriage of those two affections and genuine marriage can only be
effected between such affections as are capable of entering interiorly into
the most intimate relations with each other so that one may contribute the
form and the other the life of what is essentially one quality — truth must
contribute the form thereof and good the life. Thus there can be conjoined in
marriage to a truth only that good which is the actual practice of what that
particular truth teaches. The relation of marriage is incompatible with
anything of a promiscuous nature. This is because it is altogether so in the
spiritual marriage of good and truth — Goods and truths cannot be conjoined
promiscuously so as to form the heavenly marriage, and that however genuine the truths may be as such, or however
desirable the good may seem to be. That each truth must be married to its own
good and no other, is made very evident even in the very letter of every form
of the Word to all who regard the Word according to the rational teaching
presented in this morning's lesson. (180) “That in the single things of the Word
there is the marriage of the Lord and the Church and hence that of good and
truth, has not been seen hitherto, neither could it be seen, because the
spiritual sense of the Word was not disclosed before, and that marriage could
not be seen except through that sense; for there are two senses in the Word
lying in the sense of its letter which are called the spiritual and the
celestial sense; and in the spiritual sense all things which are of it in the
Word refer themselves chiefly to the Church, and those in the celestial sense
chiefly to the Lord; also in the spiritual sense those things which are of it
refer themselves to Divine Truth and those in the celestial sense to Divine
Good; hence it is that in the Word there is that marriage”, T.C.R. 248. The revealed Word is the means by which the marriage of the
Lord and the Church is effected, or what is the same thing, the marriage of
the Lord and the regenerating of the human race. Therefore that marriage is
expressed everywhere in the single things thereof — not just here and there,
inasmuch as every single detail has reference to the Lord on the one hand and
to man on the other. For every detail is about what the Lord has done and
what He desires to teach; and every detail is also about man and what he
ought to do. Acknowledgment of this marriage in the Word therefore involves
acknowledgment of the Divine authority of the Word on the one hand, and
acknowledgment that it has application to a man's own self on the
other. Both these are essential to any genuine reception of the Word.
Acknowledgment of its Divine authority does not avail anything towards
regeneration unless there is also acknowledgment that all its details have
practical application to each man's own self. The natural tendency is to
think of this detail of the Word us having application to such a one and that
detail to someone else; but just as they all apply to the Lord's
glorification, so in a finite degree they all apply and are necessary to the
regeneration of each and every individual. On the other hand it avails
nothing to regeneration if the Word is obeyed and applied to oneself, unless it be done
because of its Divine authority. Thus a man may on the natural plane obey the
command not to steal, yet unless stealing be shunned simply because it is
contrary to the Divine command, shunning it contributes nothing to spiritual
salvation. Thus while there is a celestial sense which is specifically for the
angels of the highest heaven, there is also a celestial sense as well as a
spiritual sense for every man of the Church, who regards the celestial sense
of the Word which is for him, when
He considers its Divine Authority, and who regards the spiritual sense which
is for him only when he considers the application thereof to his own
spiritual states. Only when he has regard to both these does he look to the
Lord as the Bridegroom and the Church in himself as the Bride, only so far
can there be spiritually heard in him the voice of joy and the voice of
gladness. (181) “But
this does not appear to anyone except to him who from the spiritual and
celestial sense of the Word knows the significations of words and names, for
certain wards and names are predicated concerning goad, and certain
concerning truth, and certain ones include both; where-fore without that
knowledge, that marriage in the single things of the Word could not be seen.
This is the cause that this arcanum has not been disclosed before”, T.C.R.
248. Before the Writings
were given the Word was not revealed to man's rational mind and
therefore there could be no rational understanding of what marriage involved.
Without the spiritual sense which alone can form the rational spiritually,
the relation between good and truth was not clear the natural mind indeed
tends to resist the reception of the clear leading concerning it—it prefers to be its own judge of what
is good, and to accept truth only so far as it seems to him to agree with
that good. It is therefore only from that sense of the Word which reveals
what spiritual marriage essentially is, that the ultimation of it in the Word
can be seen. Otherwise he regards those ultimations as mere repetitions, even
as he regards woman as merely a repetition of man, different from man only as
the result of different circumstances and surroundings. And he regards those
apparent repetitions as having only the most external relation to each other, even as
he regards the marriage of man and woman as only an external relation which
has no place in the spiritual world, still less in heaven. But not only is
the Divine Marriage involved in the conjoined celestial and spiritual sense
which is in every single expression of the Word, but it is also manifested in
the numerous pairs of expressions which occur — and in which each expression
has its own proper partner. (182) |
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“Since
there is such a marriage in the single things of the Word, therefore many times
in the Word there are two expressions which appear as if they were
repetitions of the same thing; nevertheless they are not repetitions but the
one refers itself to good and the other to truth and both taken together make
the conjunction of those, thus one thing. Hence also is the Divine sanctity
of the Word, for in every Divine work there is good conjoined to truth and
truth conjoined to good”, T.C.R. 248. Hence in everything there is some
appearance of sex and marriage. Good and truth are indeed one in the Lord,
but because man is so created that he can think one way and act another, his
will and understanding thus acting separately, therefore the Lord could not
accommodate Himself to man's comprehension unless He spoke of
Him-self as if Divine Good and Divine Truth in Him were two, and likewise
unless He presented good and truth to man as two. For man must accept heaven
voluntarily and there-fore he must effect the marriage of good and truth
which makes heaven in himself voluntarily and as of himself. “It is said that in the single things
of the Word there is the marriage of the Lord and the Church and hence the
marriage of good and truth, for this latter marriage is from the former; for
when the Church or the man of the Church is in truths, then the Lord in His
truth inflows with good and vivifies them or what is the same, when a man of
the Church is in the understanding of truths then the Lord by the good of
charity inflows into his understanding and infuses life into it”, T.C.R.
249. Truth comes to man by an external way, good by an internal way. But good cannot remain heavenly in quality unless it be received into the form of truth. The Lord gives good to all, for life is good, even the life of the natural man, but it is good perverted in its reception. In order to receive good without perverting it man must acquire truths and by endeavor to live according to them open each one In himself to the reception of that good which gives life to it, and causes it to be internally what it outwardly expresses. (183) “There
are two faculties with every man which are called the understanding and the
will; the understanding is the receptacle of truth and thence of wisdom, and
the will is the receptacle of good and thence of charity. These two faculties
must make one in order that a man may be a man of the Church, and they make
one when man forms his understanding from genuine truths and this is done to
appearance as if by himself; and when his will is infilled with the good of
love this is done by the Lord; hence man has the life of truth and the life
of good, the life of truth in his understanding and the life of good in his
will, which when they are united make not two but one life. This is the
marriage of the Lord and the Church also the marriage of good and truth with
man”, T.C.R. 249. The will and the understanding are separated in man
naturally in order that he may be able to exercise free determination in his
reception or rejection of heavenly life. If his understanding could not be
raised above his will to enable him to see temporarily truth which teaches a
different life from that of his own will, he could never know that there was
any good except what gratified his natural love, still less could he resist
his natural love, and seek a good altogether different and higher than that
which brings merely natural gratification. Nevertheless the will and
understanding must be conjoined before a man is really a man of the Church,
that is the marriage of the will and understanding must have been begun
before the Church can be said to be in a man, and it must come to a state of
fulness before he is regenerated and fitted for heaven. But again this
marriage is not the marriage of the will and the understanding which a man
naturally possesses. If a man only enters into that it is the infernal
marriage, where the understanding is the slave of man's own will,
which it always naturally tends to be. For when the understanding is elevated
above the will to see the truth which the Lord has taught, it
will fall back to the level of self-will, unless
the will is resisted and by Sell-compulsion obedience is rendered to the truth then seen. Then a new
will is given by the Lord which agrees with the elevated understanding
which is thus obeyed. Thus in the heavenly marriage the elevated
understanding leads and the will follows. Now just as the natural will and
understanding can only enter into the infernal marriage when the will leads
and the understanding is a mere slave thereto, so a man and woman who are
merely natural and not striving to be regenerated can only enter into an
infernal marriage with each other ill which the woman really rules either
obviously and openly, or else cunningly and indirectly, while outwardly
seeming not to. Hence while it may sometimes appear with tile, merely natural that the man rules, it
is only where boil, are seeking that the understanding of genuine truth and.
not their own will shall rule, that the man really leads and the woman really
loves him to do so. The spiritual state which results from regeneration is
always the inverse of that which naturally obtains. The infernal marriage has
its delights indeed, but there is no happiness therein, there is neither true
joy in the will nor true gladness in the understanding. It is only as
regeneration makes conjugial marriage possible that there begins to be heard
therein the voice of joy and the voice of gladness. (184) “That both joy as well as gladness are said is because joy is predicated concerning good and gladness concerning truth, or joy concerning love and gladness concerning wisdom, for joy is of the heart and gladness is of the spirit, or joy is of the will and gladness of the understanding”, T.C.R. 252.
This joy and gladness conjoined make heavenly happiness.
“Heavenly joy itself of such quality as it is in its essence cannot be
described because it is in the inmosts of the life of the angels and hence is
in the single things of their thought and affection and from these in the
single things of speech and in the single things of action. It is as if the
interiors were fully opened and unloosed for receiving delight and happiness
which is dispersed into the single fibres and thus through the whole; whence
the perception and sensation of it is such that it cannot be described; for what
begins from the inmosts this inflows into the single things which are derived
from the inmosts, and they propagate themselves always with increase towards
the exteriors. Good spirits who are not yet in that delight, because not yet
elevated into heaven when they perceive it from in angel from the sphere of
his love are infilled with such delight that they come as it were into a,
sweet swoon. This has been sometimes done with those who desired to know what
heavenly joy was", H.H. 409.
What heavenly joy is to the will, heavenly gladness is to the
understanding. It is into such joy and such gladness that the Lord desires to
lead all who would follow Him. Those who suffer Him to lead them into these
are in those happy states to eternity. Of what account then are the troubles
of the temptation states which must intervene but which last but a few years
at most. Now it is declared that this joy and gladness of the inmost is
propagated always with increase towards exteriors. Thus the joy and gladness
of the heavenly marriage within, comes into its fulness of conscious
realization by being ultimated in external marriage also. The marriage of the
Lord and the Church within each conjugial partner is the source of all
heavenly life; but it is realized in all its joy and gladness in the relation
which obtains in externals from internals with every angelic husband and
wife. This is the state which is meant by this place in the text: There
shall be heard in this place the voice of joy and the voice of gladness, the
voice of the bridegroom, and the voice of the bride. (185) |
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“Thou shalt not commit adultery, that it signifies
that those things which are of the doctrine of faith and charity are not to
be perverted, thus are not to be applied to confirming falses and evils; also
that the laws of order are not to be
inverted appears from the signification of adultery and scortating,
that in the spiritual or internal sense, they are to pervert the good and
falsify the truths which arc of the doctrine of faith and charity and because
these are signified by committing adultery, applying the Word to confirming
evils and fakes is also signified, for the. Word is the verimost doctrine of
faith and charity and the perversion of truth and good there is application
to falses and evils”, A.C. 8904. (186)
Thus this commandment in its internal sense forbids the evil treated of
in this morning’s lesson, the evil of con-firming heresies taken
from the letter of the Word which is declared to be damnable. Using the
letter of the Word to confirm the evils which are contrary to innocence, or
the falses which support or encourage such evils is spiritual adultery.
“That these are signified by committing adultery in the spiritual
sense scarcely anyone at this day knows, from the cause that at this day it
is known by few what the spiritual is and how this differs from the natural,
and scarcely by anyone that there is correspondence between both, and
indeed such that an image of the one is presented in the other, that is, the
spiritual is represented in the natura1; consequently that the spiritual
is as its soul and the natural as its body and thus by influx and thence
conjunction they constitute one, as in the regenerated man his internal man
which is also called spiritual and his external which is also called natural.
Because such things are not known at this day therefore it cannot be known
what committing adultery signifies further than being illegitimately
conjoined as to the body”, A.C. 8904. (187)
And yet breaking the commandments in the spiritual sense is the cause
of breaking them in the natural sense —
the spiritual sense is their soul. Man may, by external reason, be restrained
from breaking the commandments naturally; but the love of breaking them,
even in the natural sense, can never be overcome and removed in any man until
he has fought against and conquered his
love of breaking them in the spiritual sense. Thus no one can overcome
the love of adultery until he has overcome his love for confirming his own
natural ideas by the letter of the Word. For a man's own natural ideas are all essentially false,
for they all tend to justify him
in going his own way, that way which is naturally good in his own eyes
but which nevertheless always leads directly away from innocence and heaven. Let
all who would be wise therefore take heed against the tendency to use the
letter of Divine revelation to confirm the falses with which they naturally
sympathize. Let not those of the New
Church flatter themselves that falses do not exist with them, and that
therefore they are in no danger of confirming falses. The natural man,
that is the unregenerated part of
every man, is
thoroughly imbued with falses. In the New Church they are apt to be more
subtle than elsewhere in disguising themselves by confirmations from the
Word, and the Writings afford even more plausible means of doing so than the other forms of the Word. How
easy it is to confirm oneself in
merely natural good as being
sufficient to fit one for heaven —
by the many literal statements that truth becomes secondary
to good in the more
advanced stage of regeneration. How flattering
it is to a man to be able thence to regard his own preference to just do
what seems good to himself rather than to painfully
compel himself to obey, the truth, as a sign of his own
advanced regeneration when good rules rather
than truth. But let each remember that to confirm any form of self-leading
by the letter of Divine Revelation is to commit spiritual
adultery, and thereby to shut off the communication with heaven which the
Word would otherwise effect for him. Every idea which favors self-leading
is false; every genuine truth_ teaches innocence. Keeping this in mind will
enable each to recognize the tendency in himself to cherish such
falses, and also to confirm them. The Lord would teach him to shun doing
so as damnable adultery. (188)
“Because those things, as was said, are not
known at this day, it is allowed to say the cause, why to commit adultery in
the spiritual sense signified to pervert those things which are of the
doctrine of faith and charity thus to adulterate goods and to falsify truths.
The cause, which at this day is secret, is that conjugial love descends
from the marriage of good and truth which is
called the heavenly marriage;
the love which inflows from the Lord, which is between good and truth in
heaven, is turned into conjugial love on earth, and this by correspondence.
Hence it is that the falsification of truth is scortation and the perversion
of good is adulteration in the
internal sense. Hence also it is that those who are not in the good and truth
of faith, are not able to be in genuine conjugial love either; also those who take the
delight of life in adulteries
are not able to receive anything of faith anymore; I have heard it said by
the angels that as soon as anyone commits adultery on earth and takes delight in it, heaven
is closed to him, that is, he refuses any more to receive thence anything of faith and charity. That at this day in the kingdoms where the Church is
adulteries are reputed by very many
as of no account, is because the Church is of no account, and thus there is
not any faith any more, because there is not charity, for the one corresponds
to the other, where there is no faith the false is in place of truth and evil
in the place of good, and thence it flows, that adulteries are not more
reputed as crimes, for heaven being closed such things inflow from hell”,
A.C. 8904 This is the state which obtains in the
world about us, a state which though it can be kept from going forth into act by external restraints, cannot
be cured as long as genuine truth is rejected. It exists with those of the New Church too; but it is
curable there if the members of that Church only render spiritual obedience
to the truths received. In the Writings as well as other forms of the Word truths are clothed in appearances, though in rational appearances
which agree with the truth itself if only they are
understood in their own light. But if men accept those appearances only according to the light of
the natural rational they will only serve to confirm their natural rational
states, and where those are thus confirmed by the Word spiritual adultery is
committed “Heresies themselves do not damn man,
but confirmation of the falsities which are in the heresies, from the Word,
and by reasoning from the natural man, and evil life, they do damn”, T. C.R.
245. The falses which are in all heresies
derive their essential falsity from this, that they all teach more or less,
openly or by insinuation, that man is able to lead himself. Such falsity
confirmed makes hell. All who hold themselves in the right attitude towards
the Lord embrace genuine truths when they are presented; it is man’s
turning to himself that causes him to confirm falses, and thus the Church
in him is false to her Divine Husband. Moreover: (189) |
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“The confirmed falses remain and cannot be extirpated; for the false
after confirmation is as if one swore to it, especially if it cohere with the
love of self, or with the pride of intelligence”, T.C.R. 254.
“Every man after death is instructed by angels and they are received who
see truths and from truths falses; but only they do see truths who have
not confirmed themselves in falses, but they who have confirmed themselves
are not willing to see truths, and if they do see them they turn
themselves backward and then either laugh at them or falsify them. The
genuine cause is that confirmation enters the will and the will is the man
himself and disposes the understanding, at pleasure, but bare
knowledge only enters the understanding and this has not any authority
over the will so it is not in the man otherwise than as one stands in the
court or in the doors and not as yet in the house”, T.C.R. 255.
“Confirmation enters the will because a man only really confirms
that which he is willing to do. Confirmation as used then means very much the same as justification. Thus a
man confirms a falsity when he justifies himself in acting according to it.
Everyone who justifies himself in going his own way, confirms the false which
favors it, and if he does it by means of the letter of Divine Revelation he spiritually commits adultery.
“That it is damnable to confirm the appearances of truth which are in
the Word, since by that it is made fallacious and thus the Divine Truth which
lies within is destroyed, the very cause is that all and single things of the
sense of the letter of the Word communicate with heaven, for as .vas said
above a, spiritual sense is in all and single things of the sense of its
letter, and this is opened when it passes from man towards heaven; and
all things of the spiritual sense are genuine truths, wherefore when a man is
in falses and applies the sense of the letter to them then the fales are
therein, and when falses enter truths are dissipated, which takes place in
the way from man to heaven”, T.C.R. 258.
It is also taught that communication with heaven is effected by the
letter of the Word. This is the case where a literal statement may be
easily falsified if it be separated from other statements bearing on the same matter. The letter will
effect communication with heaven, externally for the simple, but it effects
it more internally in proportion as the genuine truth in it is understood. On
the other haul as here taught it does not effect such communication it all if
the letter of the Word in man's mind be filled with false ideas. As is further declared: (190)
“It is similar with the reading of the Word
by a man who is in falses and applies some things of the sense of its letter
to his falses, that then it is rejected in the way towards heaven lest such a
thing should inflow and infest the angels; for the false when it touches
truth is like the point of a needle when it touches the fibril of a nerve,
that the fibril of a nerve immediate revolves itself into a spiral and
retreats into itself is known, similarly that the eye at the first touch
of it covers itself with the lids. From these things it is evident that
falsified truth takes away communication with heaven and closes it. This is
the cause that to confirm any heretical false is damnable”, T.C.R. 258.
Let it be kept continually in mind what falsification
essentially is, namely that it is turning the truth to self and
causing it to confirm what self `loves — whereas truth is
genuinely understood just in the degree that innocence is therein, that is in
the degree in which the truth is seen to teach the denial of self that the
Lord may be
followed instead. “The Word is like a garden which may
be called a heavenly paradise in which are delicacies and delights of every
kind, delicacies from fruits and delights from flowers, in the midst of which
are trees of life, next to which are fountains of living water, and around
the garden are forest trees. The man who is in Divine Truths from Doctrine is
in the midst where the trees of life are and he actually enjoys its
delicacies and delights; but the man who is not in truths from doctrine but
only from the sense of the letter is in the surrounding part and sees only
the things of the forest: but he who is in the doctrine of a false religion
and has confirmed its false with himself is not even in the forest, but
outside of it in a sandy place where there is not grass either”, T.C.R. 259.
Truth from doctrine is here distinguished from truth from the
letter — Truth is from Doctrine When man suffers himself to be really
taught by Divine Revelation something entirely
different from anything he could have learned or evolved
himself. Truth is only from the letter — when litera1
statements from Revelation are taken only to confirm what a man had thought
before. Such people only see the outside of Divine Revelation and nothing
at all of the genuine truth within its letter.
From the correspondence of adultery with the confirmation of falses
by the letter of the Word it can be seen what it is that essentially
constitutes falsity. Whatever leads the Church to be false to her Divine
Husband thus whatever favors being led by self-intelligence is false and the
literal forms of truth, even those of the Writings, are falsified if they are
so understood as to make them favor self-intelligence or natural rationality.
In the command Thou shalt, not
commit adultery the
Lord speaks to you as a professed member of the Church which is His Bride and
Wife and commands you not to be unfaithful to Him. Natural tendencies and spiritual temptation both entice you to
receive the seed of truth from self or from the world, the doing of which is
the real cause of all adultery internal and external. (191)
“And a sharp two-edged sword going forth out of His mouth, signifies the
dispersion of falses by the Word and by doctrine thence from the Lord. In the
Word sword is often said and by it no other is signified than truth fighting
against falses and destroying them, and also in the opposite sense the falses
fighting against truths. For by wars in the Word are signified
spiritual wars which are of truth against the false and of the false against
truth. Wherefore by the arms of war are signified such things Icy which
fighting is done in these wars. That the dispersion of falses by the Lord is here understood by a sword is evident
because it was seen to go forth from His mouth, and to go forth from the
mouth of the Lord is to go forth from the Word, for by this mouth the Lord
has spoken”, A.R. 52 (192) |
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The truth of the Word is the sword by which all falses and evils must
be conquered by the man of the Church. Against his spiritual foes no other weapon
is of any avail —
without it man is helpless against them. But
it should always
be borne in mind that it is a two-edged weapon, and may be used to defend
falses as well as to destroy them. The fact is familiar in the New Church
that most things there have an opposite sense as well as a genuine sense; but
here this is expressed in the very letter, where the sword is called
two-edged. As also in Genesis where it speaks of a sword as turning hither
and thither to guard the way of the tree of lives. Because it can thus be
turned in the way one chooses, the letter of the Word is to a considerable extent popular among men — even among such
as have an utter aversion for
genuine truth. The letter of the Word can easily he turned to the defence
of falses and evils. The letter as given in the Writings is easily turned to
the defence of the things of self-intelligence which men love, and can be
used as a weapon to oppose every attempt to expose the evils of being led by
one's own rationality, of seeking only the good which is good in
one's own eyes and such like. But the very ease with which this
can be done is an effectual guard over the genuine truth which lies within
the letter. Seeing that the letter can be made to defend his own loves, the
natural man is satisfied to receive it thus, and is unwilling to penetrate
further, thus he never even reaches the truth itself. For he calls that
the truth which defends and supports what he loves and nothing else. This
may not always be easy as to external acts; but
it gets easier and easier as applied internally. This is because the internal
is free, while the external is more or less under restraint. The internal
of all evil is some form of the love of leading oneself; it is so easy
to bend the truth to
the defence of this, that it is done without the one doing it being aware
of it unless he be on his guard against so doing and keep a vigilant
watch over that tendency in
himself. Indeed it is necessary to know and keep in mind
that the Lord's teaching always leads in a direction contrary
to man's own natural inclinations,
acid that therefore it is this
very opposite which men should look for when they are seeking; genuine truth.
Otherwise they will take credit to themselves as being seekers of truth, when
in reality they are only seeking what will defend and support the good which
makes their natural life. Truth of the letter is a two-edged sword, it can be
used to defend the good which man naturally loves, or it can be used to
defend heavenly good. Those who only assume to be of the Church do the
former, only those who are really of the Church, that is, those who are
actually striving to become regenerated, do the latter. (193)
The sense of the letter has been given by the Lord to convey to man
that genuine truth which will fight against and destroy his evils if he apply
it to himself. Man however is apt to use it only to fight against what he
regards as evil, that is, against whatever he regards as being injurious to
his own natural life. Accordingly he is apt to understand the Word as
teaching that this should be done, which understanding is opposite to that
which is received by one who reads the Word in innocence that is, whose
object in reading is to be led by the Lord and not by self. Nevertheless variety in understanding of the Word by different people is not injurious,
indeed as the Truth is infinite, there can be infinite variety in all finite
understanding of it. Each one who
approaches the Word in innocence will be given to see that understanding of
it that will expose the particular varieties of evils which he loves, and
that will enable him to conquer them.
“That the sense of the letter is understood otherwise by one than by
another does not injure; but it does injure if man infers falses which are
contrary to Divine Truths, which is done solely by those who have confirmed
them-selves in falses”, T.C.R. 260. Here it is taught that only those who
have confirmed themselves in falses infer from the letter falses which are
contrary to Divine Truths. It is well therefore to have a clear idea as to
what kind of falses are meant as being contrary to Divine Truths. For it may
be said that all falses are opposite to truths as it is this opposition which
causes them to be falses. Falses of ignorance are not meant, however opposite
to truth they may be in form; but falses which induce upon
the mind an opposite character to that which truth does. Such falses are
inferred from the Word only by those who have confirmed themselves in falses,
which means those who have received them
into their will. Such men may indeed study the Word and appear even to themselves to be seekers of truth
thence, but, what they infer is always made to agree with their natural love, and by that is
falsified however little the form may be changed. By that also they do injury
to themselves for they thereby confirm themselves in states opposite to those
of heaven, which they then defend more strongly than ever. Thus is the letter
of the Word which should be for the defence of Divine Truth turned to the
defence of internal falses. Thus is the letter of the Word which should be
used for destroying falses used instead for destroying the forms of Truth which
such have received. Thus is it a two edged sword which if not rightly used
will injure the one who handles it and not his spiritual foes. Let the man of
the Church therefore take heed of this and resist his natural tendency to use
the Word to defend what he naturally loves, turning it instead against the
only spiritual foe which he need fear, against him who is able to destroy
both soul and body in hell — the love of self-leading. (194) |
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