Sermons On The Word
(Part 4)
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The
letter of the Word is called a two edged sword be-cause there are essentially
but two ways in which it can be, turned — against the Lord and against self.
If a man does not turn it against self, he does turn it against the Lord; and
he can only avoid turning it against the Lord by continually endeavoring to
turn it against self, being willing to lose his own life or love in order
that he may receive the Lord's instead. The Lord has not come to
bring peace in the first place but a sword, a. sword to be turned against the
foes which are within a man's own self. Thus in order to avoid
spiritually injuring himself by this two-edged sword, he must to appearance turn
it to the destroying of his own life, though it is really
for the salvation of the life for which the Lord has
created him. The letter of the Word is for the defence of genuine truth
against those who would abuse it. Hence if man would retain its real use in
itself he must remember that it is for defending the genuine truth which he
has received against his own self-will which is continually,- endeavoring,
often with ingenious cunning, to ture it back so
that it may defend self against the interference of truth with it. The
natural man calls non-interference with his self-love peace, and is indignant
against the breaking thereof which is necessary before even a beginning is
made in the practical work of regeneration.
And even the regenerating man is often brought into states of
temptation doubt, because of the continual trials and disturbances which
regeneration involves. At every combat which threatens or troubles his
self-life, lie is infested with regret for having started out for the
promised land and with the longings to be back in his old state in Egypt. Whenever
the edge of the sword is applied to his self-love he is tempted to turn it to
the defence thereof instead. (195) Many openly make it a. condition of their
acceptance of Divine Revelation that it shall defend their own natural
beliefs which all favor their self-love. How often has the remark been heard,
I believe the Writings because I find that they teach what I have always
believed! Such do not see genuine truth. For when the letter is used to
defend a mail's own love, it at the same time really guards
genuine truth from him, from his very approach. But there is often the same
tendency even inhere it is not openly expressed or acknowledged even to one's
self. While persuaded that they receive it because it is the truth, it is
really because they find much therein that can readily be turned to the
defence of the states in themselves which they love. Both the former and the
latter in effect stipulate in their acceptance of Divine Revelation, that it
shall guard them in the way which they are already going, give them what they
regard as good and lead them to a. state of peace in the carrying out of
their self-will even as Jacob made similar conditions for his acceptance of
the Lord as his God, saying: If God will be with, one
and guard me in this way
in which I am walking, and will give me bread to eat and clothing to clothe
me, and I return in peace to the house of nay father, theca Jehovah shall be
to me for a God, Gen. 28 : 20—1. Not only do men often
make a similar condition for their acceptance of the Revelation in which the
Lord has come anew; but even when they have received Min intellectually, they
will find that there is still the same tendency in themselves in regard to
the reception of Him into their will. That
tendency is to receive into the will only those things which will guard the
self-love there. Indeed that is all that is ever received easily or as a
matter of course. Genuine Truth always comes as a sword turned against
self-love and is never received into the will without a combat caused by the
resistance of the natural man. The Word must therefore be received as a
sword, which will not bring peace except as the result of combat in which
self-love is defeated. But also it must be received as a two-edged sword
which can be turned either against self-love or against what opposes
self-love, or in other words either against what are really our spiritual
foes within us, or only against what we naturally feel to be our foes, namely
whatever opposes our self-love. Our real foes we naturally and sincerely love
and desire to guard them by all means. Compel yourselves to turn from them to
look to the Lord and behold the sharp two-edged sword going forth out of His
mouth, and take heed that it be turned against those foes which are enthroned
in your natural love. (196)
The Divine of the Lord makes
Heaven, both in its greatest form and in its least forms in each individual.
The Divine of the Lord is what belongs to Him and is Himself. And He can only
dwell in what is His own in man. In order to receive heaven therefore
man must receive what is the Lord's into his will and by
confirming it by voluntary acts appropriate it to himself, so that what is
really the Lord's own, may become also as if it were his. Nothing which is
man's own in the first place is or can be receptive of heaven. The
very forms of truth are not, if they even seem to man to be self-derived. For
in that case innocence has no place therein, and innocence is an essential
without which nothing of heaven is givable. Man must both receive what is the
Lord's own and acknowledge it to be so before he can become
receptive of heaven. In order that man may be able to do this as of himself
the Lord has provided written Revelations of Divine Truth, where man may
learn if he will what he could not possibly have known otherwise. But still
the truths there revealed as they are first received by man into his memory
are merely empty forms without any life. They need to be fulfilled, or as it
is literally expressed in the Writings, infilled with life. This may be done
in two opposite ways — they may be infilled with a man's own life,
that is with just that which is good in his own eyes, or they may he infilled
with innocence, that is, with endeavor to obey them just because they express
the Lord's will. Choosing between these two ways is what
determines the individual life either to hell or to heaven. The Lord Himself
set the example of how the latter determination should be effected, by
infilling all things of the Word with the Divine Good of which Truth is the
form. (197) |
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“That
the Lord in the world infilled all things of the Word, and that by that He
became Divine Truth or the Word, even in ultimates, is meant by these words
in John : And the Word was made flesh
and dwelt among us, and we saw His glory, the glory as of the Only-begotten
from the Father, full with grace and truth, 1 : 14. To be made flesh is to be made the Word in
ultimates”, T.C.R. 261. Thus to be the Word is to be the Divine Truth in act and
deed. This the Lord's life on earth was perfectly — a perfect
ultimation of Divine Truth. Truth regarded as to its form is intermediary
between the life it receives within it which is the sole cause of all things,
and the life which flows from it as a
result. So far as it is infilled with genuine life, which is the love called
innocence — life according to the truth grows from it as a matter of course.
Also reciprocally when obedience to the truth is rendered by self-compulsion,
because it is from the Lord, then the Truth receives the internal life with
which it must be infilled before it is more than the mere form of Truth.
Thus, though infilling the Truth is not just the same as obeying the Truth it
does practically make one with the obedience which is of innocence. Such obedience
is indeed the means by which that infilling is received --it is what opens
the forms of truth to the influx of life from the Lord, which thereafter
causes them to be the Lord in man. So far as Truths thus infilled with life
from the Lord have place in man, external life of a heavenly quality is
naturally produced therefrom and is the fruit by which they may be known. But
it must be known and kept in mind that such fruit never grows naturally with
man in the first place — if it does come naturally it can-not be genuine
internally, or if it be brought about by any other means than self-compulsion
in the struggles of spiritual combat it is certainly spurious, Genuine good
of life only comes naturally so far as something of regeneration has
actually been accomplished, and this is never done without a life and death struggle with those natural tendencies
within ourselves which we cherish as our life. Such struggles emulate in a
finite degree the infinite agony with which the Lord endured them in
Gethsemane, as He as it were compelled Himself to put off the merely human
tendencies inherited from the mother that even the ultimate forms which He
had thus assumed might be infilled instead with Divine Life. (198) “Of what quality the Lord was as the Word in
ultimates, He showed to the Disciples when He was transformed, Matt. 17 : 2 seq., Mark 9 : 2 seq., Luke 9 : 28 seq.; and
there it is said that Moses and Elias were seen in the glory — by Moses is
meant the Word which was written by him, and in general the Historic Word and
by Elias the Prophetic Word. The Lord as the Word in ultimates was also represented before John, in the Apocalypse, 1 : 13—16, where all things of the description of Him
signify the ultimates of Divine Truth or of the Word”, T.C.R. 261. The Lord when He was transformed
represented the Spiritual Sense of the Word brought down into ultimates —
that is, the Word in ultimates when they are infilled with the Spiritual
Sense. In order that the forms of Truth in us may be thus infilled with their
Spiritual Sense, it is necessary that the Spirit of the Divine Law should be
obeyed and not its mere letter. The Lord's words are spirit and
are to be obeyed as such. Relatively to the Old and New Testaments the
Writings present the spirit of Truth. But each Divine Revelation in its
place, the Writings themselves as well as the rest, need to be obeyed as to
their spirit. The mere letter can always be turned into agreement with
self-love — a man may shun stealing from self-love as well as from love to
the Lord, and the same with regard to obedience to the teaching of the
Writings. To obey the spirit thereof is the same as to obey them as
understood in their own light, as distinguished from the meaning which would
naturally be attributed to them by all who view them in the light of
self-intelligence, or according to the promptings of their own will. The
spirit of the Word is in general summed up in the two great commandments
concerning love to the Lord and love towards the neighbour. No Divine command
can be obeyed as to its spirit unless it be done from the love of being led
by the Lord rather than by self. Unless this be in the obedience the very
spirit of it is not there, however spiritual the form of the truth obeyed may
be. Again in regard to those laws which regulate the relation of men to each
other — the laws of charity — unless our obedience to them involve as much
consideration for our neighbour's welfare as for our own, the
spirit of them is not obeyed, and where the spirit of truth is not obeyed the
forms of truth as received by man are not infilled with heavenly life. (199) “The Lord indeed was the Word
or Divine Truth before, but in Primes, for it is said: In the beginning
was the Word and the Word was with God and God was the Word, John 1 :
1—2; but when the Word was made flesh then the Lord became the Word even in
ultimates; from this it is that He is called the First and the Last”, T.C.R.
261. Obedience to the Spiritual Sense, or
to the spirit of the Word is not of a kind that concerns the internal first,
though it must begin from there; but it must be brought down
into external ultimates before that of regeneration can be accomplished -which
corresponds to the Lord's glorification. The exercise of power
depends upon its being based upon ultimates, and so the power which is
inherent in the Doctrines of the Nevi Church can only become manifest in
proportion as the very spirit of them becomes manifested in ultimates, for
only so far can they become infilled with life. (200) |
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“How
the Lord is the Word is understood by few, for they think that the Lord can
enlighten and teach men by the Word and nevertheless He cannot thence be
called the Word; but let them know that each man is his own will and his own
understanding, and thus one man is distinct from another; and because the
will is the receptacle of love and so of all the goods which are of that
love, and the understanding is the receptacle of wisdom and so of all things
of truth which are of that wisdom, it follows that each man is his own love
and his own wisdom, or what is the same his own good and his own truth; man
is man from no other source and nothing else with him is man. As concerns the
Lord, Hers love itself and wisdom itself, thus Good Itself and Truth Itself
which He became by that He infilled every good and every truth which is in
the Word, for he who thinks and speaks nothing but the truth becomes that
truth, and he who wills and does nothing but good becomes that good; and the
Lord because He infilled all the Divine Truth and Divine Good which are in
the Word, as well those which are in its natural sense as those which are in
its spiritual sense, He became Good Itself and Truth Itself, thus the
Word", T.C.R. 263.
Truth infilled with Good elevates a man to heaven. Truth alone, thus
not infilled with good, damns man to bell. It is the same with merely
external good, which, if not infilled with Divine Truth and Good, only fits
man for hell, that is, it leaves him in a state which makes the government of
compulsory laws of restraint necessary. Wherever such laws are necessary —
there is the state of hell. Such laws do exist around us in this world and
include not merely the code of civil law, but all the external restraints
which are imposed by society and by a man's love of himself. The
Lord has come to save us from the necessity for external restraints; but they
can never be wisely removed until a man comes into
obedience to the very spirit of the Divine Law, according to which the Lord
is regarded more than one's
self and the neighbour as much as one's self. In striving to do
this by the guidance of Divine Truth a man's life becomes
essentially, though of course finitely, identified with that Truth, for thus
the Truth becomes infilled with life and that becomes the life of the new
will and understanding which the Lord then gives him. (201)
But when the Lord interpreted the Word to His disciples, that it was
all concerning Himself and that all needed to be infilled in Himself, He
first rebuked them for their foolishness and slowness in believing what the
Prophets had spoken, especially for their being disturbed and disheartened by
the suffering which it entailed upon Him. The rebuke is still often needed,
and stands there in the Word for all those whose faith in the New Church
wavers because of the trials which she has to suffer, the differences and
disturbances which so often afflict her members. Slow in heart must he indeed
be, who, knowing what the Lord has revealed in the Writings concerning the state
of the Old Church and of the hereditary which the man of the New Church
inevitably derives thence, is disturbed, or even surprised, because nothing
is accomplished without conflict. The Lord in the course of His glorification
met troubles and trials of every kind; He was misrepresented, reviled, mid
despised and at last was deserted even by His followers, before He
accomplished the work of infilling all things of the Word with life even to
the ultimates. The disciple cannot expect to fare better than his Lord except
that his suffering and trials are comparatively finite. Still in their degree
such things must be met by everyone who is really endeavoring to attain
regeneration and also by every Church which is composed of such men. The Lord
has not come to call the just but sinners to repentance. The Church is not
for regenerated men, but for those who are slowly and gradually and often
painfully undergoing the beginning of.' regeneration. It is necessary for
them that the evils of their hereditary be excited, sometimes by each other,
sometimes by those who are only externally of the Church and are not really
seeking regeneration, and sometimes by evil spirits. Unless their evils were
excited they could not be seen, if not seen they
could not be removed by self compulsion and so the way for regeneration could
not be opened; but being thus excited they cannot but cause some degree of
disturbance. Let not any be surprised therefore that disturbances exist; let
each instead try to turn it to good account by attending principally to the
evils which the disturbance may excite in his own self, by earnestly striving
to overcome them. External trials or even internal temptations are not evils
to the man of the Church — for him the only evil is in succumbing to such trials,
in his allowing them to form an excuse for his being less loyal to the
Church, or less eager to avail himself of her support. Let each therefore
strive to become less deserving of the Lord's rebuke: 0 ye foolish and slow in heart to believe all which the Prophets have spoken. Did it not behoove.
Christ to suffer and to enter into His glory. Is not the Word full of wars and treacheries, of plagues
and cruelties — of trials and conflicts of all kinds? And yet the Word from
beginning to end is a history of the Lord's glorification and
thence it is also a history of the regeneration of every man who undergoes
it. He in finite emulation of the Lord's example must strive to
infill all things of the Word and meet the many combats and trials there that
he is sure to become in something of the same spirit in which the Lord met
them, when He prayed: Nevertheless, not
my will but Thine be done. It was in that spirit that He infilled
all things of the Word. And beginning
from Moses and all the Prophets He interpreted to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning
Himself. (202)
Thus in the time of Abram with whose life
the historicals of the Word of the Old Testament begin, priesthood was established which served the Lord, and ministered to a genuine
Church long before the Israelitish Church or even the Israelitish people
existed. Beyond similar references to it however the Word of the Old
Testament gives no information about either that Church or its Priesthood.
Jewish tradition identified Melchizedek with Schem, and the Old Church has
favoured various guesses and opinions concerning him, as that he was an
incarnated angel or other superhuman
creature, and there has been a. sect who named themselves from him and
held that he was an incarnation of the Holy Ghost. This is one of the many
instances which illustrate the futility of guessing where Divine Revelation
is silent. When truth is revealed to man by the Lord it is to supply him with
those means of regeneration which he cannot in the least degree acquire for
himself. By their very nature they are
such that they cannot be supplemented by the suppositions or
discoveries of self-intelligence, except so far as such are used merely to
confirm what is revealed. Man can find out facts, but he can never discover
truths as distinct from facts — and facts in themselves can teach nothing of
regeneration, however true the facts may be as facts. If actual facts be
useless for this purpose, how much more so
must the mere guesses as to fact which men indulge in and which
receive so much consideration in the Old Church. (203) |
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The Writings reveal to man many things which were not known
before. They reveal all that is necessary for the New Church. But although
they contain infinite Divine Truth, still what is able to appear to man must
always be limited, though capable of for ever becoming less so. It is a temptation to the man of the New
Church, as it has been to the men of' former Churches, to busy himself rather
with what Revelation has not made clear to him than with what is already
quite evident to him. The things which man needs most are so very clear,
altogether too clear indeed to please the natural man, which would rather
evade the duties made so plain to him, and involved in the repenting of the
evils of self-love and love of the world, by giving attention instead to matters which are not so clear and which
he can therefore excuse himself from putting into practical application for
the present. The Revelation given to the New Church leaves no obscurity any
longer as to the Church of which Melchizedek was a priest, which Church, like
every spiritual Church, was founded upon a written Revelation of Divine Truth
called the Ancient Word, and this is now revealed because it is practically
necessary to a rational faith to know that there has always been a Church in
the world, not as a mere incident in the history of the world, but because
the world was created for no other purpose than to be the basis of a Church
to prepare men for heaven. No history of the world therefore, nor history of
any country in it, can be more than most superficially true unless it be
primarily a history of the Church therein. Other matters are essentially
important only from their relation to the Church. Take the Church away and
the world has no importance, yea no raison
d'etre at all — and without there were some genuine Church therein
it would vanish away as something of no use in the Divine Economy. The
Writings make this quite clear to the New Church, because the Church cannot
be rationally thought of at all unless its supreme importance be in some
degree grasped. In the history of the Churches which have existed in this
world from the beginning and for the sake of which the world was created,
that of the Ancient Church has an especial interest to us because it was more
like than the others what the New Church is to be, though like the rest it
differed in passing through periods of decadence which the New Church as a
whole can never do. It was a representative Church; but not merely so, for
its essential was Charity. It was representative in that it sought in worship
to ultimate spiritual things correspondentially; but it was only in its
decline that it made use of sacrifices. They did not attend to the external
correspondences themselves but only used them as the ultimates on which to
base spiritual thought. Thus it is written: (204) “If a
man of the Most Ancient or the Ancient Church lived at this day and read the
Word, he would not attend at all to the sense of the letter, which would seem
as nothing, but to the internal sense. They wonder exceedingly that anyone
should perceive the Word otherwise. Wherefore also all the books of the
Ancients were so written as to bear a different meaning in the interior sense
from that in the letter”, A.C. 1539. “The Most Ancients who were before the
flood, in all and single things, as in mountains, in hills, in plains, in
valleys, in gardens, groves, forests, in rivers and waters, in fields and
seeds, in trees of every kind, also in animals of every kind, in the
luminaries of heaven, saw something representative and significative of the
Lord's Kingdom, but they never adhered with the eyes still
less with their minds in the objects, but they were to them means of thinking
concerning the celestial and spiritual things which are in the Lord's
Kingdom; and this even to that degree that there was nothing at all in
universal nature which did not serve them for means; in itself also it is so,
that all and single things in nature represent, which at this day is an
arcanum and is scarcely believed by anyone. But after the celestial, which is
of love to the Lord, perished, then the human race was not any more in that
state, namely that Icy objects as means it should see the celestial and spiritual
things of the Lord's Kingdom; but still the Ancients after the
flood knew from traditions and collected accounts that those things signified
and because they signified they also had them holy; hence was the
representative worship of the Ancient Church, which Church because it was
spiritual was not in perception that it was so, but in knowledge, for it was
in obscurity respectively, still nevertheless they did not worship external
things, but by externals they remembered internal things, and hence when they
were in those representatives and significatives they were in holy worship;
also they were able, because they were in spiritual love, that is in charity,
which they made essential worship, wherefore holiness from the Lord could
inflow into their worship”, A.C. 2722. "Such was the wisdom of the
Ancient Church. Their hooks also were written so, and this manner of writing
emanated from them to the gentiles themselves for they wished to express the
things which are in heaven by means of those things which are in the world,
yea to see spiritual things from natural", A.C. 3179. The books of the Word, which
certain of them were inspired thus to write from the perceptions of the Most
Ancient Church, were of two kinds — historical and prophetical. The historical
portion, like the historicals of the Word with us, was principally concerning
wars and combats and hence was called the Wars of Jehovah. (205)
“By the Wars of Jehovah in that Word as in ours, are meant and
described the combats of the Lord with the hells and victories over them, when He would come into the world;
those same combats are also meant and described in the historicals of our
Word as in the wars of Joshua with the nations of the Land of Canaan, and in
the wars of the Judges and Kings of Israel”, T.C.R. 265.
The prophetical portion was of course concerning the coming of the
Lord.
“That Word is still preserved in heaven and is in use with the
Ancients there, with wham that Word was when they were in the world. Those
ancients with whom that Word is still in use in heaven were as to part from
the land of Canaan, and from the confines of it, as from Syria, Mesopotamia,
Arabia Chaldea, Assyria, from Egypt, from Sidon, Tyre, Nineveh, the
inhabitants of all of which kingdoms were in representative worship, and
thence in the knowledge of correspondences. The wisdom of that time was from
that knowledge and by it they had interior perception and communication with
the heavens. They who knew the correspondences of that Word were called wise
and intelligent and afterwards Diviners and Magi. But because that Word was
full with such correspondences, as remotely signified celestial and spiritual
things and hence by many began to be falsified, therefore from the Lord’s
Divine Providence it vanished away in process of time and another Word
written by correspondences not so remote was given and this by the Prophets
with the sons of Israel”, T.C.R. 279. (206) |
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Here is indicated the difference
between the various forms of the Word
which are all written in pure correspondences , but in correspondences more or less remote.
The most remote correspondences were used in
the Ancient Word, less remote ones in the Word of the Old Testament, still
less remote ones in the Word of the New Testament, and less remote ones yet
in the Writings. In the latter they are so much less remote that some fail to
recognize that they are written in correspondences, when nevertheless
reflection on the nature of the Word as now made clear by Revelation will
show that the Word, that is, Divine Revelation, cannot be given otherwise
than in correspondent forms, and that this is so even in the heavens although
the correspondences there
all even less remote than in the Writings — in the highest heaven least so of
all. The Word is also always given in ultimates, but these ultimates are more
or less remote. The Word of the Old Testament is not given in as remote
ultimates as the Ancient Word except as to the portions taken therefrom like
the first chapters of Genesis, and the passages quoted in this morning's
lesson. “Concerning that Ancient Ward which was in Asia before the
Israelitish Word, it is allowed to report this new thing — that it is still
preserved there with the peoples who dwell in Great Tartary”, T.C.R. 279. In the APOCALYPSE REVEALED it is added: “Seek concerning it in China and
perchance you will find there with the Tartars”, A.R. 11. (207) The Writings are addressed to the New Church — the APOCALYPSE
REVEALED perhaps
most immediately so, and therefore it seems to be
a duty pointed out here for the New Church to do, namely to seek for this
Word, that so the New Church may possess all the written forms of the Word
that have been given in this world. It must be that it would be an added use
to the New Church, for otherwise it would not
have been thus commanded to seek it. On the other hind, it is shown
that the protection of these Sacred Writings is what underlies the
exclusiveness of the Chinese, which will be successful in keeping them hidden
until such time that they may he safely trusted into Christian hands. When
that time comes more still will be known concerning the Ancient Church, for
it will be seen then just what was the form in which Truth was taught to the
Ancient Church by Melkizedek and other of that Priesthood and thus the very
quality of the bread and wine which he brought forth thence “Jehovah was called God Most High in the Ancient Church
from the cause that height represented and therefore signified what was
internal, thus the most high the inmost”, A.C. 1735. Melkizedek therefore was a priest to God Most High, because
he endeavored to bring forth from the Word and leach the very spirit thereof,
to lead men not to dwell in the mere letter of Divine Revelation, but to ever
seek to know more and more of the
spirit which that letter is intended by the
Lord to convey. Hence Malkizedek, King of Salem, brought forth bread and wine, and he was a priest to
God Most High (208)
That the
Lord is the source of all spiritual light is familiarly known in the Church,
and also that the Divine Truths of Revelation are the forms by which that
light is conveyed into human minds. Such Divine Truths as a whole are meant
by the Word — by the Word is meant all the Divine Truth of Revelation. The
Church has light from the Word, that is, the Church is composed of those who
are receptive of the light of Truth from the Word. But the subject which our
lesson brings before us this morning is that the Word is also the source of
light for those outside of the Church as well; that that light indeed
enlightens every man coming into the world. “That by
the Word there is also light to those who are outside of the Church and do
not have the Word”, T.C.R. 267. Of course
in the widest sense all light, natural as well as spiritual has its first
origin from the Lord. But al-though it is true that every man is thus
indebted to the Lord for the natural light which he enjoys, the further truth
still remains that as to the spiritual light of the Word, also the Lord
enlightens every man coining into the world. The light from the sun of the
world by itself can convey no rationality, not even that which is called
natural, because it is principally thence. It is spiritual light in-flowing
into that light which endows man with rationality. Indeed rationality is
defined in the Writings as the faculty of receiving spiritual light. Thus: (209) |
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“The faculty of receiving spiritual light is what is
meant by the Rationality which every man has from the Lord and which is not
taken away from him, for if it were taken away he would not be able to be
reformed. From that faculty which is called Rationality it is that man can
not only think but also speak from thought, differently from a beast, and
afterwards from his other faculty, which is called liberty, he is able to do
those things which he thinks from the understanding”, D.L.W. 247. Thus the
fact that man has rationality at all differently horn beasts is from his being
able to receive spiritual light from the Word, and that to some extent also
every man does receive something of that light, otherwise he would not
be able even to abuse his rationality by reasoning falsely. This appears very
clearly from what is taught concerning light in Hell. Thus: “Light in
hell is also of three degrees, light in the lowest hell is like light from
burning charcoal; light in the middle hell is like light from the flame of
the hearth; and light in the highest hell is like the light from candles, and
with some like the nocturnal light from the moon. Nor are these lights
natural, but they are spiritual, for all natural light is dead and
extinguishes the understanding, and those who are in hell have the faculty of
understanding which is called rationality as was shown before, and
rationality itself is from spiritual light and not at all from natural
light”, D.P. 167.
If therefore even the devils in hell could not have their faculty of
rationality except from spiritual light, rationality in this world can be
from no other source either. But:
“The spiritual light from which they have rationality is turned into
infernal light, as the light of day is turned into the darkness of night”, D.P. 167. (210) Thus
infernal rationality is all from perverted spiritual light. So in this world
all false and misleading rationality comes from the perversion of spiritual
light confirmed by and to appearance drawn from the mere appearances revealed
by natural light. But again there is a further truth beyond this in the text
and is this morning's lesson. Not only is the Word the source of
all rationality, and even of the spiritual which perverted becomes the false
rationality of selfish and worldly men; but in this world differently from
hell there is spiritual light from the Word, to some
degree at least unperverted with a11. That is, every man has with him some
measure, however small, of genuine truth, from which if he hearkens to its
teaching he is able both to begin the formation of genuine rationality, and
to begin the
reciprocal work of his own salvation. There is a true doctrine of permeation
as well as a perverted one. There is indeed no, permeation of truth into the
Old Church itself, no permeation that can ever restore life to a body judged
and condemned by the Lord as spiritually consummated and dead; but there is
sufficient permeation of truth into the minds of all individuals even in the
Old Church to light and lead them out of that Church if they were willing to
heed it, and if they did not prefer the darkness instead. From all that is
revealed concerning the Divine Providence it can be seen that the teaching
here given that those outside of the genuine Church also have spiritual light
from the Word must be true as to every adult man that has attained any
rationality whatever. That is, every one has something of truth in his mind
which if he obeyed from any principle of innocence, would prepare him to
receive more truth, and ultimately all the truth needed to fit him for his own
particular place in heaven. No man is condemned for not obeying the truth he
does not know, but every man who goes to hell is condemned thither be-cause
he has deliberately rejected voluntary obedience to that of truth which he
did know. And it cannot be too clearly recognized that there is no man who
has attained any state of rationality that does not have enough of truth in
his mind to enable him to exercise his free determination as to whether he
will obey that truth from a principle of religion or whether lie will reject
it for the sake of following his own natural impulses instead. Thus every
adult determines his life either for heaven or for hell while in this world,
which could not be done unless something of spiritual light from the Word
reached each one. (211) “Conjunction
with heaven cannot be given unless some-where on the earth there is a, Church
where the Word is and by it the Lord is known, because the Lord is the God of
heaven and earth, and without the Lord there is no salvation”, T.C.R. 267. The Church is thus the principal
recipient of the Word; but it is also the custodian of it, that it may be a
source of light to the rest of the world. It should always be remembered that
every idea of truth there has ever been in the world has come in the first
place from the Word as revealed to man, however disconnected therefrom it may
appear to be in the connections in which it is found. But there is always
with man a tendency to pervert the truths received,
and it is necessary that the fountain of truth should be kept intact
in the Word. To do this is the duty of the Church and is one reason for its
establishment. “It is sufficient
that there be a church where the Word is, although it is of few respectively,
still by it the Lord is present in the universal orb of earths for by it
heaven is conjoined to the human race”, T.C.R. 267.
The use of the Church does not depend upon the numbers of those who
compose it, not therefore upon its being widely spread among others, but
rather upon the integrity of the Word which it is the Church’s
privilege to guard, and upon the purity and integrity of the teaching which
she draws thence, and according to which her members govern their lives. The
Church has no power or strength in itself – all its power is that of the
Divine Truth. Its power therefore does not at all depend upon the number of
its members, but altogether –upon the integrity of the Truth which it
receives and dispenses. That Church which puts more trust in her own prudence
than in the integrity of the Truth which she presents, is so far false to her
Divine Lord. (212) |
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The specific Church now in the world, the New Church, is the heart and
lungs to the Church in its most universal form, consisting of everyone who
from a. principle of religion compels himself to obey such measure of Truth
as he may possess. The rest of the human race who do not do that are not in
that human form at all, but have chosen to be connected instead with the
grand monster of hell. Among these, Revelation declares, is the bulk of those
who Constitute what is called the Old Church. The New Church performs the use
of heart and lungs to that universal Church composed chiefly of the gentiles
all over the world, or rather of those of the gentiles with whom there is
religion and one God is worshipped, and who thence live well. These
constitute the remaining members, organs, and viscera of the Grand Man as it exists in this world, all of
which depend for their life blood upon the New Church where
the Word is in its integrity which alone is the source and fountain of that
blood. It is hence the duty of the Church
to see that Truth from the Word is circulated in its purity, and also to
purify that which has circulated from the
falses and evils which constantly contaminate the Truth, if it be not as
constantly renewed at the fountain head where the Word is
preserved in its own integrity.
“That thus it is in the universal
heaven can be concluded from what is similar in every society of heaven, for
every society is a heaven in less form which also is like a Maas. In every
society of heaven those who are in the middle of it similarly refer to the
heart and lungs and with them is the greatest light. The Light itself and
thence the perception of truth propagates itself from that middle towards
the circumferences on every side, thus to all who are in the society, and
makes their spiritual life. It has
been shown that when those who were in the middle and constituted the
province of the heart and lungs, and with whom was the greatest light, were
taken away, those who were around were in the shade of the understanding and
then in such feeble perception of truth that they lamented; hut immediately
they returned, light appeared and they had perception of truth as before.
Comparison can be made with the heat and light from the sun of the world,
which gives vegetation to trees and shrubs even to those which are towards
the sides and stand under a cloud, if only the sun has risen. Thus the Light
and Heat of heaven from the Lord as a Sun there, which Light in its essence
is Divine Truth from which angels and men have all intelligence and wisdom;
wherefore it is said concerning the Word that it was with God and was God,
that it illuminates every man coming into the world and that that Light also
appears in the darkness, John 1 : 1, 5, 9. By the Word there is meant the
Lord as to Divine Truth”, T.C.R. 269. (213)
There have been a succession of Churches in this world for the
guardianship of the Word. As each in its decline became unfit to perform this
use a new one was established in its place. Sometimes the bringing about of a
new stale in the same Church was sufficient for a time. As when the former
Christian Church withheld the Word from the people, the Reformed or Protestant
Church was raised in order that the Word might as it were be drawn out from
hiding places and put into use. By that Church
the letter of the Word was widely distributed, but when so much falsity was
distributed together with it as to threaten a total nullifying of that use,
the Lord effected His New Advent and established the New Church to which is
given not only the literal forms of the Word, but also the doctrine of
genuine Truth, such as will suffice to preserve the integrity of the Word in
its use to mankind for ever, and thus the light of Truth from the Word almost
extinguished has been restored and made manifest even with heavenly glory. “As the Lord is the Word, also heaven is the Word, since heaven is heaven from the Lord, and the Lord by the Word
is the all in all things of heaven”, T.C.R. 272. What is true of heaven is also true in its degree of the
Church. Therefore as the Lord is the Word also the Church is the Word, since
the Church is the Church from the Lord, and the Lord by the Word is the all
in all things of the Church. That is, the Church must so identify herself
with the Word, by regarding nothing as being really of the Church but what is
of and from the Word, that she make the Word the all in all things of her
life. She must receive the Word as the only light by which her own life must be guided and as
necessary also to give light to all who are salvable throughout the world.
Thus only can the New Church be loyal to her Divine Husband who is and was
and ever will be the True Light which
enlightens every man coming & to the world. (214) |
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As long as the Word is regarded merely as to its literal sense,
it is no wonder that evils such as that described in the text should be
regarded as exceptional, and therefore as having no application to ordinary
sinners. Few if any would be so insane now as to suppose that they could
literally build a tower that would reach to heaven. But it is to be feared
that even when it is known that there is a sense within
that of the letter, there still remains a tendency to regard many of the
evils correspondentially described in the Word as being evils of an
exceptional nature, at least as being sufficiently so to cause them to have
little or no application to ourselves. This is a very great mistake.
Appearances do indeed favour such a mistake, for in ultimate form, the evils
of different men differ very widely, and the grosser evils are comparatively
absent with some. But the spiritual essentials of all abound with everyone as
to the natural man. That is, except so far as a man comes to be actually
regenerated, he is full of evils. It
is not just that some men are so, but that all are. However polished and
refined the natural man may be, internally there is no life but that of
self-love and love of the world. The natural man is really insane as to
spiritual things and it is no exception for him to attempt to build such a
city and tower and its head in heaven as is described in the text.
Every person has the natural
idea that he would be happy if he had all that he wanted — that is, that
getting all he wanted would be a heavenly state for him. He is also in the
endeavour to obtain what he considers would thus satisfy his wants and make
him happy, and in so doing he is attempting the insane task of building a
tower that will reach to heaven. Now even natural experience goes to disprove
this idea, seeing that however much be attained, happy contentment never
results; but still it never disproves it sufficiently to rid the man of the
false idea. He may come to admit the mistake theoretically, but still within
in his own mind he continues to think that if he could get what he still feels to be lacking he would be
happy — and to be really happy and to reach heaven are practically the same
thing. Now this morning's lesson exposes the very root
of such mistake by showing: “That unless there were the Word no one would know God,
Heaven, and Hell, and the life after death, and still less the Lord”, T.C.R.
273. (215) Man cannot know anything about heaven
therefore not anything as to what constitutes real happiness, unless he knows
something of the Lord, for everything that goes to make heaven or to confer
the happiness thereof is of and from the Lord alone. Heaven is from the Lord
and in no sense whatever is it from man, who can only be a recipient of it.
He becomes such a recipient just so far as he learns to know the Lord and
submit to being led by Him. So hit' as man leads himself he invariably leads
himself into states of unrest and dissatisfaction. Hence the importance of
recognizing not only that knowledge of the Lord can only come to man by
Divine Revelation, but also that that knowledge so far as it is received by
man without perverting it, is essentially different from all man's
natural ideas of what is good and of what constitutes happiness. Only as this
is realized is man able to shun as sin the evil of expecting happiness to
come as a result of self-guidance and the cultivation of what seems good in a
man's own eyes, and thus shun the insane attempt to build a tower
reaching to heaven. “Since there are they who affirm and
have confirmed with themselves that man could without the Word know the
existence of God and also of heaven and hell, also the rest that the Word
teaches, therefore it is not allowed to deal with them from the Word, but
from the natural lumen of reason, for they do not believe in the Word but in
themselves. Inquire from the lumen of reason and you will find that there are
two faculties of life with man which are called the Understanding and the
Will, and that the Understanding is subject to the Will and not the Will to
the Understanding. For the Understanding only leaches and shows what is to be
done from the Will. Hence it is that there are many who are of an acute
genius and understand the moral things of life beyond others and nevertheless they do not live according to them. It would be
otherwise if they willed them. Inquire also and you will find that the will
of man is his proprium and that this is evil from nativity and that thence
there is what is false in the understanding. When you find these things you
will see that man from himself is not willing to understand other than what
is from the proprium of his will
and that unless there were elsewhere whence he might know it, man from the
proprium of his will is not willing to understand other than what is of self
and the world — whatever is above is in thick darkness".
T.C.R. 273 (216) It requires very close reflection to
recognize how completely the understanding of man is subject to his will, for
the understanding is apt to so justify what the will desires that man is able
to persuade himself that he is only following what his understanding shows to
be right, when really it is only his own will which his understanding thus
naturally justifies. Again it is difficult for man to recognize that his will
is evil — for what he loves always seems good to him. But he can see this if
he consider the natural relation of one person's will to that of
another where they are associated together, whether by the external bonds of
marriage or of society generally. He can then see that the natural tendency
of a man's will is to subdue all others to itself and to acquire
to itself as much of the world's service as possible, and that
therefore when two or more such wills become associated together mutual and
reciprocal happiness is not possible. Thus the fact that the association of
natural wills with each other inevitably produces unhappiness either
manifestly or secretly, is itself a sufficient proof of the essentially evil
nature of man's will. Now human beings are made to be associated together,
for they are all born for heaven, and most certainly cannot find happiness in
an altogether solitary life, and yet the natural will of each one is evil
because each seeks to make itself a centre for the rest, and therefore they
cannot associate happily unless each gives up his own will and submits
himself to the leading of Him whose infinite wisdom alone suffices to
harmonize all the varieties of human life which He has created. It is
essential to note here that the natural will must be given up — no
modification or improvement will answer, for it is such, and ever continues,
that from it a man is not willing to understand other than what favours self,
and acquires the things of the world. The natural will has that idea of
happiness and cannot but seek it in that way, the way which corresponds to
the building of a tower by self that will reach heaven. To meet this case man
must look to the leading of Divine Revelation and be willing to learn and be
guided by just that therefrom which he is not naturally willing to even
understand, much less to do. It is by compelling himself to obey such truth
that his regeneration is effected and the way opened for him to be gifted by
the Lord with a new will, entirely different in this respect from his natural
will, in that it can come into happy harmony with all the orderly
subordinations of life because it loves
the guidance of Him who is the only way to heavenly happiness, and who at
once confers full freedom to each individuality and full harmony among all
the varieties thereof.. By no possible means can man reach such a state of
himself. He is so certain to rush into opposite states by his own guidance
that it is altogether insane to seek happiness so, even more so than it would
be to literally undertake to build a tower whose head should reach heaven. (217) |
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It is not merely that man of himself does not understand the
things of spiritual life, but the very idea of the existence of such things
would never have had place in his mind unless it had come from Divine
Revelation in the first place. Without that there would have been no idea of
God at all, not even the question as to whether there was any life after
death would have risen. All such knowledge has come in the first instance from the Word, either that which we now possess or that given
to the Ancients. Man has never acquired even the most elementary idea
of spiritual things from himself. Nor having acquired such ideas from
Revelation has he ever done other than pervert them so far as he has thought
of them from himself and from the appearances of life about him. If this were
really kept in mind and were practically acted upon, it would save us from
many mistakes and much misunderstanding of truth. Appearances and experiences
are of no use whatever to teach spiritual things — and to think from them is
inevitably to darken our understanding of what is learnt from Revelation. The
human will always tends to turn all things to the service of building a tower
by which it may itself attain heaven in its own way. Let each one sincerely examine himself and he will find
that however well this truth is known, that tendency continues with himself
as surely as he continues to have his own natural will. Do not let the idea
have place in your mind even that appearances and experience are of secondary
value — they are of no value in teaching spiritual thing, their only use in
this respect is to confirm what, is rind, accepted
and learnt from the authority of Divine Revelation. So far as a man does not
compel himself to adhere to this law, he is not and cannot be willing to
understand other than what is of self and the world, or have any other idea
of heaven than what self and the world regard as such. (218) “That they are such is from the will
which is evil, and this as was said before, leads the understanding and takes
away the truth which is there from the Word. If man had been able to know
from himself that God is and that there is a life after death, why had he not
known that man is a man after death, why does he believe that his soul or
spirit is like wind or ether, which does not see with eyes, and hear with ears,
and speak with a mouth before it is conjoined and coalesces with its own
corpse and with its own skeleton. Suppose therefore a doctrine hatched from
mere natural lumen, would it not be that self should be worshipped as has
been done for ages, and also is done at this day by those who know from the
Word that God alone should be worshipped. Any other worship cannot be given
from the proprium of man and not even the worship of the sun and moon”,
T.C.R. 274. Thus of himself man
cannot get away from the worship of his own self and of the world — to this,
of himself, he always tends — to trust in self-guidance and to give his heart
to the things of this world. Such worship is worse than any external idolatry
— it is the internal idolatry which prevails at this day, and with which we
are infested within and without. Men are possessed with the idea that they
can make heaven for themselves and even when they accept Revelation they
continue to be infested with fear, even if they do not resist, whenever they
are called upon to give up the idea that being able to guide oneself makes
heaven, or that the devices of natural prudence are the only safeguard of
freedom. The state of happiness in heaven, or the states in emulation thereof
in the Church, are not to be attained or protected by any means of man's
own devising, but solely by obedience to those laws of order which are to be
learned nowhere but from Divine Revelation. Take heed therefore of the
warning with which the lesson concludes, to those who think to attain
heavenly states by the devices of their own intelligence, or to protect
themselves therein by "their" own prudence. “I will tell of
what quality is the lot which remains for I hem alter death — first
they become like drunkards, afterwards like fools, and at length stupid and
they sit in darkness. Let them therefore beware themselves of such delirium”,
T.C.R. 276. (219)
By silver is here meant knowledge of truth from the Word. The truths of the Word are pure in themselves — that they are wholly and fully so is meant by the silver being purified seven times. “For
numbers in the Word signify things, and seven all things and all men and
thence also what is full and perfect and it is
the Word where it is treated concerning a holy thing and in the
opposite sense concerning a profane thing; wherefore that number involves
what is Holy and in the opposite sense what is profane. That numbers signify
things, or rather that they are as it were a kind of adjectives and substantives bringing some quality to things is because
a number in itself is natural, for natural things are determined by numbers, but spiritual by things and their
states; wherefore he who does not know the signification of numbers in
the Word ... cannot know many arcana which are contained therein”, A.R. 10. (220) |
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But
although the truths of the Word are thus
described as being altogether pure, yet they are also described as
being moulded in pots of earth. That is, the forms or language in which the
truths of the Word are revealed are taken from man — even
from the external man — yea in the case of the Word of the Old Testament from
the external of that most external nation — the Jewish nation. There the
external forms of truth are so moulded that sometimes they appear to express
what is diametrically opposite to what the truth itself teaches. Thus it
there often seems to express the mere hatred and revenge of that cruel
people. But even in the forms of the Word where this is not the case, the forms
are still taken from the external man — in the Writings from the external
rational of man. Therefore if a man regard the truths of the Word as given in
the Writings only from their external, he will but confirm himself thereby in
a state of subservience to his natural rational. Natural rational
confirmed by the, Word is thus a distinctive evil infesting the
New Church, which must be met by recognizing the necessity of purifying
the truth as it appears, until the earthly dross which clings to its external
form is purged away. This must be done fully — the silver must be purified
seven times before we can attain the reception of the pure words of the Lord.
In this morning's lesson
there is set forth an infinitely instructive representation of how it is with
the silver of the Word which is thus introduced: On a certain day I wandered in the spirit through various
places in the spiritual world for the sake of the end that T might observe
representations of heavenly things which are exhibited in many places there", T.C.R. 277. (221) The memorable relations are of two kinds, one describes scenes of actual life in the spiritual world, and the other describes representations which are made for the purpose of instruction and confirmation like the one read this morning. They are all of necessity correspondential in their character, and thus have an internal sense, whether that sense be directly set forth or whether it be left to be learned from the teaching given elsewhere in the Writings. Thus they are very like the visions described in the Apocalypse and in the Prophets, with the difference that they are here set forth by one who was prepared by the Lord to observe them rationally, and to record them in the form best adapted to illustrate and confirm the doctrine of the New Church.
“In a certain house where there were angels I saw great bags in which
silver was stored up in much abundance, and because they were open it
appeared as if anyone could take the silver there stored up, yea, steal it;
but next to those bags there sat two youths who were guards.... By those
things there was represented the natural sense of the Word in which is the
spiritual sense; those great bags full with silver signified knowledges of truth in much abundance; that they were opened and nevertheless
were guarded by youths signified that anyone can take knowledges of
truth thence, but that care is taken lest anyone should violate the spiritual
sense in which are pure truths”, T.C.R.
277. (222)
Thus knowledges of truth are indeed open to all, though at the same
time the spiritual sense is carefully guarded. Thus to acquire knowledges of
truth even from the Writings and to acquire the spiritual sense are two
distinct things. As has been shown before, the spiritual sense is not given to any but those who are
in enlightenment from the Lord, and this notwithstanding that knowledges of
truth are open to all. The spiritual sense means more than mere knowledge. We
only have the spiritual sense when we see it in application to our own
spiritual life — only as we the truth in such a way as to expose our own
spiritual evils. Let no one therefore deceive himself that he knows the real
spiritual sense unless it is teaching him the spiritual evils which he needs
to shun as sins against God. Unless he be able to learn this from the truth
that he may endeavor to do it, the spiritual sense is guarded from him — the
bags of silver indeed lie open, but guards are placed by the Lord lest the
spiritual sense should be violated. “The place where they were stored up appeared like a manger in a stable;…
the manger as in a stable signified spiritual nutrition for the
understanding; a. manger signifies this because a horse that eats thence
signifies the understanding”, T.C.R. 277. It was for the same reason that the
Word made flesh was laid in a manger as a babe. But this was only
at first, and thus it represents how the Word first
comes to us as merely nutrition for the understanding. This is especially the
case with the Word as revealed by the Lord in His New Advent — it is apt to
be received so as to do little more at first than interest the understanding
and flatter the conceit of self-intelligence. In
the DIARY it adds that the
manger in a stable "was an unsuitable place, signifying that
the human understanding ought not to have part in setting forth the interiors
of the Word", S.D. 3605 ½. (223) If the natural
rational attempt to have part in setting forth the interiors of the Word it
invariably perverts them to make them agree with what seems good to it.
Therefore it is taught that that rational should not be consulted but a
receptive attitude towards the Word cultivated independently of it. It is
only so far as a man compels his under-standing to receive the teaching of
the Word in that manner that the new or spiritual rational can be formed in
him by the truth. The manger in a stable is an unsuitable place for storing
up the silver of the Word. “I then went into a
small room where at first it seemed to me it would have been delightful to
dwell. There were modest virgins there with a modest wife, signifying that
they should not be set forth thus as preachers are wont to do, for moving the
affections, for thus not much would remain”, S.D. 3605 ½. “The modest virgins who were seen in a neighboring room signified
affections of truth and the chaste wife the con-junction of good and truth”,
T.C.R. 277. Hence although this
room appeared so attractive and to be more suitable, really it was still less
suitable than the manger in the stable, for it is of order that the Word
should be received first by the understanding, and it is contrary to order
for teachers of truth to apply themselves to moving the affections, even
though those affections be good in themselves, such as correspond to modest
virgins and a chaste wife; although to do so may seem much more attractive
and better calculated to succeed. For in such a case the affections would be
moved only to the cultivation of natural good, nor can it be otherwise unless
the under standing be first led instead to
see the necessity of shunning evils as sins. “Near that room
stood two infants and it was said that they were not to be played with
childishly but they were to be treated wisely....
The infants signified the innocence of wisdom, for the angels of the supreme
heaven who are the wisest, from innocence appear from afar as infants”,
T.C.R. 277. (224) |
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Those who are in bondage to
their natural rational are apt to make sport of the very simplicity of the
Word especially of an attitude thereto of simple unquestioning receptivity.
Such a state seems to them to be too foolish to be treated seriously. But
wise consideration would cause them to admit that such an attitude is the
only really rational one to be taken towards the Lord's Word by
those who acknowledge Him to be the only God of heaven and earth — the
infinite source of all love and of all wisdom. Swedenborg says in the DIARY that he himself wished to
port with those two infants, but that it was allowed to converse with them
but not to sport in an infantile manner. The innocence of wisdom is a
rational innocence. Then "there came forth
from the room a very obscene girl among the more beautiful ones, who wished
to seize me by force and when I was fleeing away I awoke and saw the carcase
of a horse, signifying that eloquence is not to be studied, which appears as
a beautiful virgin, but because it was a harlot breaking forth from such a
room, it seemed to me that it was of such a quality as the black carcase of a
horse”, S.D. 3605 ½. As it is not of order in teaching the
Word to apply oneself to the moving of the affections, so neither is it
of order to study to please
the understanding by mere eloquence although
the appearance of so doing is compared to that of a beautiful virgin. For what the Word is given to teach men is not
something that is pleasing to them in the first place, but something which
cannot be seen in a state of pleasure, namely the altogether spiritually evil
state in which every man naturally is, and
which must be met by painful self-compulsion until something of
actual repentance is accomplished before any step of regeneration can be
taken, thus before any step can be taken towards the realization of anything of heavenly happiness. To lead a man to
this is not a matter of eloquence but solely of the power of Divine Truth
presented in its simplicity and integrity. If that cannot effect the desired
end nothing can. Whether it is able to do
so or not depends upon the humility and innocence with which it is
received. The eloquence which many depend
upon may seem to have the beauty of a virgin but it is really that of a harlot, when it, rather than
the purity and integrity of truth, is most regarded. (225)
“The harlot with the dead horse
signified the falsification of truth by many at this day, by which all under standing of
truth perishes — the harlot signifies falsification of truth, and the dead
horse no understanding of truth”, T.C.R, 277. Beware therefore of mere appeals which move the natural
affections. Beware also of the eloquence which studios merely to please and
flatter the understanding, for so far as that alone is sought, or indeed so
far as that
is chiefly sought the truth is certainly falsified and its allurement becomes
that of a seeming beautiful harlot that would betray us into being false to
the truth in which the Lord has come to save us and which is the silver by
which He would ransom us from the bondage of self and the world. That silver
appears at first as if stored up in a manger, and can be received only by
those who approach it with humility and innocence, and even then, moulded as
it is in a pot of earth, it must be purified seven times before our reception
thereof enables us to realize the words of the Lord in their purity. The words of the Lord are pure words, silver moulded in a pot of
earth, purified seven times. (226)
In this morning's lesson it is revealed that the
meaning of this verse in summary is: (227) |
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“That the Lord is also merciful to
those who do evil”, T.C.R. 278, the angels explaining that meaning from the
letters or syllables alone in a way which
it is not possible for us to do. It is however revealed that the forms
of the letters in which the Word is written in the third heaven differ but slightly from the Hebrew letters of the
present day, and that those forms, that
is, the very curves and inflexions of
the letters derive their origin from the flux of heaven, and therefore
correspond to and express the very truth which makes heaven. Thus the
sense of the letter in the third heaven
and thence in the Hebrew of the Word is not merely the literal sense of the words but of the
syllables, yea, even of the very letters separately as well
as conjointly. This knowledge enables
us to better understand how fully the Word is ultimated in literal forms not
only in this world but even in the highest heaven. Also that the sense of the
letter on each plane differs in the degree of accommodation, for it is
declared that the sense which the celestial angels explain from the very
forms of the letters, and which is therefore
the sense of the letter with them, is nevertheless concerning
the Lord alone, which is the celestial sense. In considering the meaning of
the text thus revealed, therefore, let us keep in mind that it is a sense of
the letter drawn from the letter of the celestial Word and confirmed thereby — also that the same teaching is
ultimated in and can be confirmed by the letter of each form of the Word that
we possess, but that the teaching is made rationally clear only In the
Writings, which alone for us afford rational confirmation thereof. The
more we consider how infinitely the Lord’s Divine Providence operates in
every detail of life, the more evident it becomes that it must control every
detail of the means by which His Word is accommodated and revealed to us. It was for the sake of the Word that the
Lord provided that the art of printing should be invented. If thus it is of Providence that printing
exists for this end, would it not be altogether inconsistent, if the forms of
the letters used were not in each case just such as would best ultimate the
Word for the purpose it was given? (228)
That the Lord is merciful even to those who do evil. is taught
throughout the Writings. For the Lord is there shown to be incapable of
acting from anything but pure love. That He manifests His love differently to
different people is only because His love is directed by infinite Wisdom to
do what is the very wisest and bests for each one, for each of the evil as
well as for each of the good. For
He maketh His sun to rise on the evil and on the good,
and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust, Matt.
5, 45.
“The Lord never judges anyone
except from good for He wills to raise into heaven
all whosoever they are, yea, it He can even to Himself, for the Lord is Mercy
Itself and Good Itself. Mercy Itself and Good Itself can never damn anyone,
but it is man, because he rejects good, who damns himself. As man had shunned
good in the life of the body, thus he shuns it in the other life, therefore
thus he shuns heaven and the Lord”, A.C. 2335. "He never averts His face
from anyone, hut it is nun, when he is in evil, who averts his face. As the
Lord said through Isaiah: `Your iniquities are what separate between
you and between your God; your sins cause His faces to be hidden from you',
59 : 2", A.C. 223. (229) For the Lord's face to be hidden from us, is to have
heavenly states removed from us and this can only be done by our own evils.
The Lord never removes happiness from us — He does not even suffer anyone to
excite in us the states which interfere with our external happiness except
for our salvation, if only we allow such revelation of our own evils to cause
us to shun them as sins. "Jehovah God or the Lord
never curses anyone, never is angry with anyone, never leads anyone into
temptation, never punishes, still less curses, but the diabolical crew do
such things. From the fountain of Mercy, Peace, and Goodness such things can
never come", A.C. 245. "The Lord never began a
combat with any hell, but the hells attacked Him, as also happens with every
man who is in temptation, or in combat with evil spirits; with him the angels
never attack, but evil or infernal spirits always and continually do so; the
angels only avert and defend. This comes from the Lord who never wills to
bring evil to anyone even if he should be the worst and most hostile enemy of
all, or to detrude him into hell, but it is he who brings evil 10 himself
and precipitates himself into hell. This also follows from the nature of evil
and of good", A.C. 1683. As this is the Lord's
attitude towards all, and as He rules and controls all things, it follows of
necessity that no one can do us other than good — all real hurt can only come
from our own selves. Even when others are permitted to excite the evils in us
which hurt us — this is only done so far as the Lord can overrule it for our
eternal good. It is for us then to so strive to trust in Divine Providence, to so strive to trust that
the Lord is doing the best good for everyone that possibly can be done
without interfering with their freedom, that we may learn more and more to
see in all the actions of others toward us only the instrumentality which the
Divine Providence is using for our welfare, if only we humble ourselves
before Him, that He may conquer our
evils for us. If it were not that the Lord is merciful even to the evil, none
of us could hope for mercy — for all are evil. (230) “The
mercy of Jehovah or of the Lord involves all and single things which are done
by the Lord toward I he human race which is such that He has mercy on it and
on each according to his state, thus He has mercy on him whom He permits to
be punished and He has mercy on him to whom He gives to enjoy good. It is of
mercy to be punished because He bends all the
evil punishment into good;
and it is of mercy to give to enjoy good because no one merits anything of
good; for all the human race is evil and from himself everyone rushes toward
hell, wherefore it is mercy that he should be taken out thence, nor is
anything but mercy, because He has need of no one. Hence it is called mercy because
it takes man out from miseries and
hell, thus relatively towards the human race which is such and it is the
effect of love toward all because they are such”, A.C. 587. But though the
Lord is merciful to all, and all need His mercy for all are evil, yet the degree in which His mercy upon
the attitude of man
towards Him and therefore His mercy is
especially toward the regeneration and toward those who can be regenerated,
which is involved in the latter part of the text: Happy is the man to whom the Lord
imputeth not iniquity, if only there be not
in his spirit deceit.
“Iniquity regards evil, and
deceit the false thence; … by deceit is not meant deceit in the natural sense
in which there is fraudulent device, and lying from malice against another,
but deceit in the spiritual sense, in which deceit there is thought from the
intention of the will or from the purpose and decision of speaking and
persuading falses and thus of destroying the soul… Deceit in the spiritual
sense is against the truth and good of the Word and the Church. . . . That
deceit is such a grievous crime is because decision and purpose are of the
will and whatever is of the will is of the man himself and is called the evil
of his heart. For the will is of the man himself, but indeed thought before
consent which is of the will is not in a man but outside of him, since those
things which inflow into the thought are like objects which inflow into the
sight from the world of which some please and some do not please; and those
which please enter the delight of the life but those which do not please are
rejected. Thus it is with everything which inflows into the internal sight of
man which is of his understanding and thence of his thought — if it please it
enters the will and adds itself to his life, but indeed if it does not please
it is rejected. It is to be known
that all the evil have the disposition and cupidity, consequently the will,
of destroying the truths of heaven and the church by falses. the reason is
because they are conjoined to hell and the infernals, from the delight of
their love, burn with the cupidity of destroying all things of heaven and the
church, and this by cunning deceits which they artificially weave and
wonderfully prepare, which if I should describe from experience I would fill
sheets. Hence it is evident that by deceit in general is signified every evil
of intention of destroying truths by falses", A.E. 866. (231) |
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Thus it is necessary to regeneration
and therefore necessary to becoming especially receptive of the Lord's mercy that this kind of
deceit be shunned, of which the text declares: if only there be not in his spirit deceit. How common this
kind of deceit is only becomes evident after considerable reflection in the
light of revelation, for man is apt to exercise this kind of deceit without
recognizing it in himself. For how are truths destroyed? What way can they he
destroyed, otherwise than by perverting them from their application to our
own evils? There is ever a natural tendency so to turn our understanding of
truths as to make them not apply to those evils which we cherish as the
delight of our life — the only evils which endanger our salvation. Natural
reason is active in thus destroying truths by removing them from that which
alone can save man from his evils, and yet in so doing he especially deceives
himself and persuades himself that the lifeless truths which he thus receives
are loved for the sake of truth. This is a deceit which everyone should
carefully examine himself for, in order that by getting rid of it he may so
open himself to the reception of the Lord's mercy that he may be saved
thereby. “There are two things which not only
close up the way of communication (with the rational) but also deprive malt
of the faculty of ever being able to become rational, they are deceit and
profanation — deceit is like a subtle poison which infects the interiors.
From these two the rational altogether perishes. There are with every man
goods and truths stored up by the Lord from infancy — deceit infects these,
and profanation commingles them”, A.C. 5128. (232) They
who are interiorly infected by spiritual deceit. that is, hypocrisy, are
meant by those who speak against the Holy Spirit, for whom there is no
remission . . . for thus the false lies within in the truths which they speak
and evil in the goods which they do, which is hidden poison, hence they are
called the progeny of vipers....
That there is no forgiveness for them is because hypocrisy or deceit about
holy Divine things infects the interiors of man and destroys everything of
spiritual life with him, at length even to that degree that there is no
soundness anywhere.... They are
also such who are meant by the one who was not clothed with a nuptial
garment”, A.C. 9013 Thus throughout the Word there is warning
against spiritual deceit—that deceit which renders truth ineffective, when
nevertheless it is the only means by which man can be saved. This deceit is
the opposite of innocence. Deceit destroys truths to make them
non-destructive of the evils that are loved. Innocence is a readiness to see
and shun the evils in oneself which truths are revealed to us to expose. Happy is the man to whom the Lord imputeth, not
iniquity, if only there be not in his spirit deceit. The deeds which a man outwardly does do
not follow him
into the other life, but only the will that, was in them. If there was
self-will in them, and the man had by spiritual deceit prevented truth from
exposing his evil state, he shuts himself against the Lord’s mercy. But
whatever his outward deeds, if there has been really within them any genuine
endeavor to do the Lord’s will rather than his own, and the man has thus
preserved in himself a state of readiness to see the application of truth to
his own spiritual evils, then he can and does receive of the Lord's
infinite mercy and is saved in spite of the evil deeds he may have done — for
the Lord is also merciful to those who do evil. Happy is the man to whom
the Lord imputeth not iniquity, if only there be not in his spirit deceit. All salvation is entirely and solely of the Lord's mercy and in
spite of our own natural love. How absolutely this is true and how
emphatically it is taught in the Word, can
to some extent be seen; but the angels see it taught and confirmed
even in the very forms of the letters in which the Word is ultimated. (233)
Satans are those who are in falses, or
what practically amounts to the same, those who are in the pride of their own
intelligence. Self-intelligence is formed in every man naturally from the
appearances about him and from reflection thereon. According to the quality
of the reflections that intelligence may be more or less gross. It may indeed be so cultivated as to be
very effective in dealing with the affairs of this world. But nevertheless it
should always be kept in mind by the man of the Church that however well
cultivated it may be, natural intelligence always remains too gross to enter
into spiritual affairs, and whenever the attempt is made to use it in dealing
with spiritual things it leads only to obscurity in spiritual things, if not
to open denial of true spiritual principles. Being formed from appearances,
appearances are mostly in its favour, and can always be made to seem
so. Hence natural intelligence is plausible to those who give weight to
appearances, and indeed so much so that it is regarded by such as being
formed of self-evident truths which it is absurd to deny. Hence it is useless
to reason in favour of spiritual principles with those who trust in natural
intelligence, which can be received only by those a ho are willing to put
away self-intelligence and who refuse to listen to its ratiocinations against
spiritual truths, even as the Lord refused to listen to Peter when he denied
the necessity of undergoing the sufferings which the Lord prophesied. It was
in reply to that denial that the Lord said:
Get thee behind Me, Satan; ,thou art a scandal to Me;
because thou savourest not of those things which are of God, but of those
things which are of men. (234) |
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In the world about us no distinction
is recognized between spiritual and natural things than as between what is
more or less refined. As things exist in the Old Church the distinction
really does not involve any more, for what are called spiritual things there
are no more than refinements of the natural. In the New Church however the
distinction is known at least theoretically as being altogether a discrete
one; but yet in practice the discrete quality of the distinction is apt to be
overlooked, and spiritual things are then discussed from natural intelligence
and pride and are only received when they have been so fax modified as to gain the approval of the natural
rational. Hence it is important not only so to see but as far as possible to
realize the completeness of the distinction, and the impossibility of bringing
spiritual things into the range of the jurisdiction of natural intelligence
without essentially perverting thorn. They are on a discretely higher plane
to which the understanding must be elevated if it would see them, and the
understanding can be so elevated only when it is willing to emulate the Lord's
example, in putting away natural considerations and plausibilities, saying
thereto: Get thee behind me,
Satan; thou art a scandal to me; because thou savourest not of those things
which are of God, but of those things which are of men. The distinction is very vividly set
forth in the Memorable Relation read this morning, where the unique case of
Swedenborg is made the means of presenting instruction on this matter for
both angels and men, for even angels had not previously understood it. (235)
“Angels had not before known the difference between the spiritual and
the natural on account of the cause that there had not before been given any
means of comparison by any man who was at the same time in both worlds, and
those differences without comparison and relation are not knowable”, T.C.R.
280. The distinction is ultimated in the fact
that natural eyes cannot see the objects of the spiritual world nor yet can
spiritual eyes see the objects of the natural world. To Swedenborg however it
was given to be able to present himself in each world and to reflect upon and
understand the relation between the two, which relation he has been caused to
set forth rationally for us. It is important to realize this, although the
knowledge of the fact that the objects of the one world cannot be seen in the
other may seem not to have much practical application, until it is remembered
that the two worlds are represented within the minds of each individual who
is being regenerated, and the discrimination needs to be made there in order
to be able to think spiritually without its being perverted by merely natural
thought. The first point to be observed is that the distinction between the
spiritual and the natural is not like
that between what is more or less pure, the spiritual is not a purer natural.
“The distinction is not such; the natural can never by subtilization
approximate to the spiritual so that it can become it, for the distinction is
of such quality as between prior and posterior, between which a finite ratio
is not given; for the prior is in the posterior as a cause is in its effect,
and the posterior is from the prior as an effect is from its cause. Hence it
is that the one does not appear to the other”, T.C.R. 280. That this is so objectively is simply the
basis and ultimate which results from its being so in the mind. There is no
finite ratio between spiritual and finite thought, so that if the distinction
between them be not observed the spiritual quality is inevitably lost and
merged into the natural. This is continually being done and is the cause of
much of the difficulty experienced in understanding spiritual teaching. It is hard to realize the necessity of putting natural thought behind before the understanding can be
effectively elevated to spiritual thought. The more the natural thought has
been cultivated on ordinary lines, the more difficult it is to realize this
necessity, for then the pride of intelligence interposes and easily confirms
itself by appearances and experience. Yet it must be done before there can be
any clear spiritual thought
from the doctrines. Moreover there is not only a discrete difference between
spiritual thought and natural thought, which necessitates their being kept
respectively in their own distinct planes, but also there is a relation by
correspondence which must be observed. This relation is that of cause and
effect. Therefore spiritual and natural thought must not only be kept
distinct, but also the natural must be kept in subordination to the
spiritual. The spiritual must lead. But the natural continually attempts to
do so, and when it does, it becomes satanic in its quality and should be
ordered to get behind. It is like Peter presuming to rebuke the Lord when He
foretold His sufferings saying: Be it
far from Thee, Lord, this shall not he 'unto Thee. The natural
would advocate what is smooth and easy to the will, and protect against hard
standing by principle, regardless of consequences. But however plausibly it
pleads, the Lord teaches us to rebuke it as He did Peter's
suggestion — Get thee behind Me, Satan;
thou art a scandal to Me; for thou savourest not of those things which are of
God, but of those things which are of men. (236) The same may be confirmed by the distinction and relation
which exists between spiritual language and natural language, as also between
spiritual writing and natural writing. Spiritual language and writing express
so many particulars of principle which can only be generalized in natural
language and writing, which generalizations not only cannot teach or lead to
an understanding of those innumerable particulars, but if the attempt be made
to carry them to that plane, they would teach what is quite untrue in the
realm of causes, however correct it may be in treating merely of the realm of
effects. Spiritual thought may be generalized in natural thought and these
generalizations may be expressed in natural language. Thus it is that the
Word as ultimated in natural languages only expresses
the generals of truth relatively to the innumerably more particulars that can be expressed when it is ultimated in
spiritual language. But still these more general expressions serve as a basis
and prepare the way for the ultimate reception of those particulars, which
cannot be received until man is fully raised into the plane of spiritual
thought. “Spiritual
thought exceeds natural thought so much that it is ineffable; . . . no idea
of natural thought adequate to any idea of purely spiritual thought (can be
found), thus no natural words expressing it; . . . spiritual ideas are
supernatural, inexpressible, ineffable, and incomprehensible to the natural
man; and because they are so super-eminent spiritual ideas or thought
respectively to natural are ideas of ideas and thoughts of thoughts, and
therefore by them are expressed qualities of qualities and affections of affections;
consequently spiritual thoughts are the beginnings and origins of natural
thoughts”, T.C.R. 280. (237) |
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Man from the natural habit of his natural mind which is formed from external appearances and thinks from them, supposes that complexity is in externals and that he can conclude concerning internals by a process of analysis; but such conclusions are necessarily false for there are infinitely more things in the internal than in the external, each of which are more complex than anything which the external presents. “What is divided does not become more
and more simple but more and more multiplex, because it approaches nearer to
the Infinite in which all things are infinitely”, T.C.R. 280. This can be seen from the relation of
external acts to the complexity of motives which often enters into them on
the part of those doing them. Hence the simplest expression of Divine Truth
contains and involves an infinity of particulars, which no mere analysis of
the external expression can bring out and which natural thought could never
grasp however they were presented. “For (moreover) to think spiritually
is to think without time and space and to think naturally is to think with
time and space; for there adheres to every idea of natural thought something
of time and space, but not to any idea of spiritual thought. The reason is
because the spiritual world is not in time and space like the natural world,
but is in the appearances of those two. In this also thoughts and
perceptions differ. Wherefore those in
the spiritual world can think concerning the Essence and Omnipotence of God
from eternity, that is, concerning God before the creation of the world,
because they think concerning the Essence of God without time and concerning
His Omnipotence without space, and thus
comprehend such things as transcend the natural ideas of man. ... Once
I thought concerning the Essence and Omnipotence of God from eternity, that
is, concerning God before the creation of the world and because I could not
yet remove spaces and times from my ideas I was made anxious, since the idea
of nature instead of God entered. But it was said: remove the ideas of space
and time and you will see. And it was given me to remove them and I saw, and
from that time I could think God from eternity, not at all nature from
eternity, because God is in all time without
time and in all space without space, but nature in all time is in time
and in all space is in space, and nature with its time and space could not
but begin, but not God who is without time and space; wherefore nature is
from God, not from eternity, but in time with its time and space", T.C.R. 280. (238)
It is evident therefore that natural thought is utterly unable to
penetrate to spiritual things, as also to evolve the spiritual sense of the
Word from the natural. Spiritual truth can only come by Revelation. But even
the revelation of the spiritual sense has to be given to us in a natural form
expressed in a natural language derived from the things of time and space.
How then are we to learn therefrom the genuine spiritual sense which is
discretely above and within any natural expression? The lesson makes it clear
that it cannot be done by any effort of the natural intelligence -- it cannot
he arrived at by hard thinking. The spiritual sense is given to no one but
those who are in enlightenment from the Lord. Its reception therefore depends
upon how far we place ourselves in an attitude of innocence while we study
written Revelation; and this again depends
upon the completeness with which we shun being influenced by the natural
thought of our own intelligence while we study the Word. If then you would elevate
your understanding to the reception of the spiritual light of the word,
resist the promptings and suggestions of your
natural intelligence and put away your conclusions from appearances and
experience, and be ready, at their every attempt to influence you, and
however acceptable to your own will their pleadings may be, to apply to them
the Lord's answer: Get thee behind Me, Satan; for thou
savourest not of those things which are of God, but of those things which are
of men. (239)
This "signifies
that all are judged according to their internal life in externals",
A.R. 871. It is significant that the
chapter of the TRUE CHRISTIAN RELIGION concerning the
Word concludes with a Memorable Relation describing the judgment of those who
have confirmed themselves from the Word in justification by faith alone, thus
emphasizing the teaching that the Word is given that its truths may be done
and that every one is judged by the works which he does. This judgment as far
as it involves treating each one according to his works, is not just an
experience which has to be met and got through, but it is a treatment which
is continued to eternity in hell as well as in heaven. Everyone has to
perform use and the food, clothing, and lodging which he receives is
according to the quality and dignity of the work which he does. This is a
universal law of the spiritual world and applies to hell as well as to
heaven. It is taught that everyone
is born for heaven. It is the same if it be said that everyone is born
for the performance of some use. If by the Lord's help he conquers
the evils in himself which prevent him from loving the work of his use, he is
thereby fitted for the life of heaven; but if not, he has to go to where he
will be compelled to do the work he is fitted for. Thus though in this world,
for the sake of freedom in determining his life, a man may sometimes be
permitted to live in idleness; it is not so in that life where every man
finds his eternal home. There idleness is not tolerated. Heaven is the state
of those who love to work for the sake of use. Hell is the state of those who
have to work for their living, of those who would not do it without that
compulsion. Although it is quite evident that the work done in the world is
largely of the latter kind — indeed the unregenerate man can do no other —
still in an individual case it may not appear clearly what the quality of the
work done is — whether it is done from the love of use — from the love of
gain — or from the necessity of life. Hence the judgment which each one
undergoes after death, is just to make this point manifest — because of the
quality of their internal life in externals, they are judged each according
to his works. (240) |
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“I.
When they have died and live again as to the spirit, which generally takes
place on the third day after the heart has ceased to beat, they appear to
themselves in a similar body to that in which they had before in the world,
even to that degree that they do not know otherwise than that they still live
in the prior world, though not in a material body but in a substantial body,
which appears before the senses like the material one although it is not”,
T.C.R. 281. They have indeed already decided the
determination of their life either to heaven or hell, before their death by
the choice they have made as to the internal quality they have put into their
work. But this internal quality is often hidden even from themselves, by
being covered over by an external quality quite different. People often
profess to work for the good of the country and of the neighbour until they
even persuade themselves that it is so. So much is this so that many, if they
were suddenly brought into their internal states, would not recognize
themselves, still less would they be recognized by others as the same
persons. Therefore they are led into them by degrees only starting from a
state just similar to that which they outwardly manifested in the world. “II. After some days they see that
they are in a world where various societies arc instituted, which world is
called the World of Spirits and is mediate between heaven and hell. All the societies there which are innumerable are
wonderfully ordered according to good and evil natural affections. The
societies ordered according to good natural affections communicate with
heaven, and the societies ordered according to evil natural affections
communicate with hell", T.C.R. 281. (241) Natural affections are those that men
have in common with animals, like affection for the own offspring and
affection for those who treat them well. Good natural affections are like those
which man has in common with gentle and tame animals. Evil natural affections
are like those which he has in common with cunning and savage animals.
Worldly people often cultivate good natural affections, for the sake of
making the world more pleasant about themselves, and this sometimes with a
strong appearance of unselfishness. Even in the world they tend to associate
themselves with each other according to these natural affections, and some
have the idea that if they could only do this fully they would realize a
heavenly state. Hence when they first come into the world of spirits they are
thus consociated, and they then find that it does not suffice, for if they
are not in harmony as to internal affections,
and this can only be the case with the regenerated, there will be
internal conflict however it is hidden by natural agreeableness. “III. The novitiate spirit, or
spiritual man, is led and transferred into various societies, both good and
evil, and is explored whether he is affected by goods and truths and how, or
whether he is affected by evils and falses and how”, T.C.R. 281. This is in order that the quality of
the internal affection may be brought out, for it is always in agreement with
a person’s attitude towards truths and falses. If the internal
affection is good it is affected by truths, for good loves truth and
continually desires to be led thereby. But if the internal affection be evil
it is affected by falses and favors them because falses favor self-leading
and the rule of the merely natural affections. “IV. If he is affected by goods and
truths he is led away from evil societies until he comes into a society
corresponding to his natural affection and there enjoys the good
corresponding to that affection, and this until he puts off his natural
affection and puts on the spiritual, :and then he is elevated into heaven.
But this takes place with those who in the world have lived a life of charity
and I lies also a life of faith which is that they have believed in the Lord
and have shunned evils as sins”, T.C.R. 281. (242) It is only with these that good natural affection is genuine and
in agreement with its internal, thus with these i hat their work is
internally good. For works to be internally good they must be done from
innocence, that is, they must be done from a principle of obedience to truth
instead of being merely from some natural affection. The latter alone always
has the love of self-leading within it. Thus an affirmative attitude towards
genuine truth always accompanies good internal affection and is an indication
of its presence. “V. But those who
have confirmed themselves in falses by rational things, especially by the
Word and so have not lived any other life than a merely natural one, thus an
evil life; for evils accompany falses, and evils, adhere to falses; these,
because they are not affected by goods and truths, but by evils and falses,
arc led away from good societies and are led into evil ones and also into
various ones, even until they come into some society corresponding to the concupiscences
of their love”, T.C.R. 281. Notice here that an
evil life and a merely natural life are the same thing — thus evil works and
merely natural works are the same. In the world this is not recognized
--merely natural works are the only good works known or cultivated.
Such natural works may be useful to others, but in their effect on those who
do them they are evil, for 1 hey in some
way directly or indirectly regard self more than use to others. Let
each try to keep this in mind lest they fall into the popular delusion that
because they do not do What the world calls evil works, they do not do what
are meant by evil works in the Word, for their regeneration depends upon
their learning to shun these evils as sins. All who have only done such evil
works in the world, come into evil societies in the other life. “VI. But because in
the world they simulated good affections in externals, although in their
internals there were nothing but evil affections or concupiscences, they are by
turns held in externals; and they who in the world had been set over
companies, are set over societies here and there in the world of spirits, in
general or in part according to the amplitude of the offices which they had
performed before. But because they do not love truth, nor do they love what
is just, neither can they be illustrated so that they may know what is true
and just, therefore after some days they are dismissed. I have seen such
transferred from one society into another and everywhere administration is
given to them, but after a short time they are as often dismissed",
T.C.R. 281. (243) |
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Thus they are given uses to perform
similar to those which they did in the world, and this repeatedly until they
prove that they are not able to do them satisfactorily, for their internal
quality cannot be concealed there as they are often able to do in the world. “VII.
After frequent dismissals, some from weariness do not wish, some from fear of
the loss of fame do not dare to seek functions anymore, wherefore they recede
and sit sad, and then they are led away into a solitude where there are huts
which they enter, and there there is given to them some work to do, and as
they do it they receive food,
and if they do not do it they hunger and do not receive any, wherefore necessity compels them. Foods there are
similar to foods in our world, but they are from a spiritual origin. and are
given from heaven by the Lord to all according to the uses which they do — to
the idle because they are not useful they are not given”, T.C.R. 281. This is the ultimate state of judgment to which those who
do not internally love to do useful work for the sake of the use, are
brought. When external honors and rewards can no longer be obtained by their
work, they begin to loathe work, and can only be brought to do it by the
compulsion of hunger when it so presses upon them that they are not able to
think of anything else than how to obtain food to appease their hunger, and
even then when opportunity is given to them to work for some food they do not
do it faithfully but fraudulently as also unwillingly, wherefore they leave
their work and only love to be in company to talk, to walk, and to sleep. So
finally they are placed in workhouses situated in caverns, from which they
are not allowed to go out, but are made to work for their food, work being
allotted to them each day such as they are fitted to do, and food is given to
them only when they have finished it; while if they do evil to another they
are severely punished. (244) “Hell consists of such caverns which are nothing but eternal workhouses”, T.C.R. 281. Thus even in hell
idleness is not tolerated — all are compelled to work and as work that is
done by compulsion is of the lowest quality, the rewards given for it
correspond. The Word is given to teach men what they should do in order to
perform uses in a heavenly manner and thus to teach how they may become
fitted for heaven. The heavenly manner of doing useful work is not to do just
what seems useful but what the Lord teaches to be really useful. Everyone
is judged according to his work. Work that is done merely by the compulsion
of necessity, is work done the way it is done in hell. Idleness is not
compatible even with the order of hell, much less with that of heaven. While
work that is done for the sake of honour and gain is a kind that is tolerated
only temporarily while in this world. In the other life everyone who has not
learned to work for the sake of the use done, only does work under the
compulsion of hunger. It is then for the man of the Church to shun not only
idleness, for that in the other world he will be made to do whether he
chooses or not, but also to shun working merely for the necessities of life,
or merely for honour and gain. Everyone who works for the sake of use and
combats every temptation to work for any other end has a right to trust the
Lord to give him all that is good for him, which the Lord never fails to do.
Remember that the same work which is externally good and useful, may be of
opposite qualities internally according to the ends that are in it; and it is
according to these ends which are in man's work that every one is
finally judged. Every man is born for useful work, because he is horn for
heaven; but if he will not choose to love work for the sake of its use, the
Lord provides what in that case is the best that can be done for him --- that
he should be compelled to work by hunger, which is the mercifully provided
state of all those in hell. They have been judged each according to his
works. (245) |
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