I. The First Commandment
“Thou shalt not make to thee
other gods” includes not loving self and the
world above all things; for that which one loves above
all things is his god. There are two directly
opposite loves, love of self and love to God, also
love of the world and love of heaven. He who
loves himself loves his own (proprium); and as
a man’s own (proprium) is nothing but evil
he also loves evil in its whole complex; and he who
loves evil hates good, and thus hates God. He
who loves himself above all things sinks his affections
and thoughts in the body, and thus in his own (proprium),
and from this he cannot be raised up by the Lord; and
when one is sunk in the body and in his own (proprium)
he is in corporeal ideas and in pleasures that pertain
solely to the body, and thus in thick darkness in
respect to higher things; while he who is raised up
by the Lord is in light. He who is not in the
light of heaven but in thick darkness, since he sees
nothing of God, denies God and acknowledges as god
either nature or some man, or some idol, and even aspires
to be himself worshipped as a god. From this
it follows that he who loves self above all things
worships other gods.
The same is true, but in a less degree,
of one who loves the world; for there cannot be so
great a love of the world as of one’s own (proprium);
therefore the world is loved because of one’s
own and for the sake of one’s own, because it
is serviceable to it. Love of self means especially
the love of ruling over others from a mere delight
in ruling and for the sake of eminence, and not from
a delight in uses and for the sake of public good;
while love of the world means especially a love of
possessing goods in the world from a mere delight in
possession and for the sake of riches, and not from
a delight in uses from these and for the sake of the
consequent good. These loves are both of them
without limit, and rush on, so far as scope is given,
to infinity.
It is not believed in the world that
the love of ruling from a mere delight in ruling,
and the love of possessing goods from a mere delight
in possession, and not from delight in uses, conceal
in themselves all evils, and also a contempt for and
rejection of all things pertaining to heaven and the
church; and for the reason that man is stirred up by
the love of self and love of the world to right doing
in respect to the church, to the country, to society,
and to the neighbor, by making good deeds honorable
and looking for reward. Therefore this love is
called by many the fire of life, and the incitement
to great things.
But it is to be noted that so far
as these two loves give uses the first place and self
the second they are good, while so far as they give
self the first place and uses the second they are
evil, since man then does all things for the sake
of self and consequently from self, and thus in every
least thing he does there is self and what is his own
(proprium), which regarded in itself is nothing
but evil. But to give uses the first place and
self the second is to do good for the sake of the church,
the country, society, and the neighbor; and the goods
that man does to these for the sake of these are not
from man but from the Lord. The difference between
these two is like the difference between heaven and
hell. Man does not know that there is such a
difference, because from birth and thus from nature
he is in these loves, and because the delight of these
loves continually flatters and pleases him.
But let him consider that a love of
ruling from delight in ruling, and not from a delight
in uses, is wholly devilish; and such a man may be
called an atheist; for so far as he is in that love
he does not in his heart believe in the existence
of God, and to the same extent he derides in his heart
all things of the church, and he even hates and pursues
with hatred all who acknowledge God, and especially
those who acknowledge the Lord. The very delight
of the life of such is to do evil and to commit wicked
and infamous deeds of every kind. In a word,
they are very devils.
This a man does not know so long as
he lives in the world: but he will know that
it is so when he comes into the spiritual world, as
he does immediately after death. Hell is full
of such, where instead of having dominion they are
in servitude.
Moreover, when they are looked at
in the light of heaven they appear inverted, with
the head downward and the feet upward, since they gave
rule the first place and uses the second; and that
which is in the first place is the head, and that
which is in the second is the feet; and that which
is the head is loved, but that which is the feet is
despised.
He who supposes that he acknowledges
and believes that there is a God before he abstains
from the evils forbidden in the Decalogue, especially
from the love of ruling from a delight in ruling, and
from the love of possessing the goods of the world
from a delight in possession, and not from delight
in uses, is mistaken. Let a man confirm himself
as fully as he can, from the Word, from preachings,
from books, and from the light of reason, that there
is a God, and thus be persuaded that he believes,
yet he does not believe unless the evils that spring
from love of self and of the world have been removed.
The reason is that evils and their delights block
up the way, and shut out and repel goods and their
delights from heaven, and prevent their establishment.
And until heaven is established there is only a faith
of the lips, which in itself is no faith, and there
is no faith of the heart, which is real faith.
A faith of the lips is faith in externals, a faith
of the heart is faith in internals; and if the internals
are crowded with evils of every kind, when the externals
are taken away (as they are with every man after death),
man rejects from them even the faith that there is
a God.
So far as a man resists his own two
loves, which are the love of ruling from the mere
delight in rule and the love of possessing the goods
of the world from the mere delight in possession,
thus so far as he shuns as sins the evils forbidden
in the Decalogue, so far there flows in through heaven
from the Lord, that there is a God, who is the Creator
and Preserver of the universe, and even that God is
one. This then flows in for the reason that
when evils have been removed heaven is opened, and
when heaven is opened man no longer thinks from self
but from the Lord through heaven; and that there is
a God and that God is one is the universal principle
in heaven which comprises all things. That from
influx alone man knows and as it were sees that God
is one, is evident from the common confession of all
nations, and from a repugnance to think that there
are many gods.
Man’s interior thought, which
is the thought of his spirit, is either from hell
or from heaven; it is from hell before evils have been
removed, but from heaven when they have been removed.
When this thought is from hell man sees no otherwise
than that nature is god, and that the inmost of nature
is what is called the Divine. When such a man
after death becomes a spirit he calls anyone a god
who is especially powerful; and also himself strives
for power that he may be called a god. All the
evil have such madness lurking inwardly in their spirit.
But when a man thinks from heaven, as he does when
evils have been removed, he sees from the light in
heaven that there is a God and that He is one.
Seeing from light out of heaven is what is meant
by influx.
When a man shuns and turns away from
evils because they are sins he not only sees from
the light of heaven that there is a God and the God
is one, but also that God is a Man. For he wishes
to see his God, and he is incapable of seeing Him
otherwise than as a Man. Thus did the ancients
before Abraham and after him see God; thus do the nations
in lands outside the church see God from an interior
perception, especially those who are interiorly wise
although not from knowledges; thus do all little children
and youths and simple well-disposed adults see God;
and thus do the inhabitants of all earths see God;
for they declare that what is invisible, since it
does not come into the thought, does not come into
faith. The reason of this is that the man who
shuns and turns away from evils as sins thinks from
heaven; and the whole heaven, and everyone there,
has no other idea of God than that He is a Man; nor
can he have any other idea, since the whole heaven
is a man in the largest form, and the Divine that
goes forth from the Lord is what makes heaven; consequently
to think otherwise of God than according to that Divine
form, which is the human form, is impossible to angles,
since angelic thoughts pervade heaven.
(That the whole heaven in the complex
answers to a single man may be seen in the work on
Heaven and Hell, and that the angels think
according to the form of heaven.)
This idea of God flows in from heaven
into all in the world, and has its seat in their spirit;
but it seems to be rooted out in those in the church
who are in intelligence from what is their own (proprium),
indeed so rooted out as to be no longer a possible
idea; and this for the reason that they think of God
from space. But when these become spirits they
think otherwise, as has been made evident to me by
much experience. For in the spiritual world an
indeterminate idea of God is no idea of Him; consequently
the idea there is determined to someone who has his
seat either on high or elsewhere, and who gives answers.
From a general influx which is from
the spiritual world men have received ideas of God
as a Man variously according to the state of perception;
and for this reason the triune God is with us called
Persons; and in paintings in churches God the Father
is represented as a man, the Ancient of Days.
It is also from a general influx that men, both living
and dead, who are called saints, are adored as gods
by the common people in Christian Gentilism, and their
sculptured images are esteemed. The same is
true of many nations elsewhere, of the ancient peoples
in Greece, in Rome, and in Asia, who had many gods,
all of whom were regarded by them as men. This
has been said to make known that there is an intuition,
namely, in man’s spirit, to see God as a man.
That is called an intuition which is from general influx.
(A.E., .)
As man from a general influx out of
heaven sees in his spirit that God is a Man, it follows
that those who are of the church where the Word is,
if they shun and turn away from evils as sins, see,
from the light of heaven in which they then are, the
Divine in the Lord’s Human, and the trine in
Him, and Himself to be the God of heaven and earth.
But those who by intelligence from what is their
own (proprium) have destroyed in themselves the
idea of God as a Man are unable to see this; neither
do they see from the trinity that is in their thought
that God is one; they call Him one with the lips only.
But those who have not been purified from evils,
and therefore are not in the light of heaven, do not
in their spirit see the Lord to be the God of heaven
and earth; but in place of the Lord some other being
is acknowledged; by some of these someone whom they
believe to be God the Father; by others someone whom
they call God because he is especially powerful; by
others some devil whom they fear because he can bring
evil upon them; by others Nature, as in the world;
and by others no God at all. It is said in their
spirit, because they are such after death when they
become spirits; therefore what lay concealed in their
spirit in the world then becomes manifest. But
all who are in heaven acknowledge the Lord only, since
the whole heaven is from the Divine that goes forth
from Him, and answers to Him as a Man; and for this
reason no one can enter heaven unless he is in the
Lord, for he enters into the Lord when he enters into
heaven. If others enter they lose their mind
and fall backward. (A.E., .)
The idea of God is the chief of all
ideas; for such as this idea is such is man’s
communication with heaven and his conjunction with
the Lord, and such is his enlightenment, his affection
for truth and good, his perception, intelligence,
and wisdom; for these are not from man but from the
Lord according to conjunction with Him. The idea
of God is the idea of the Lord and His Divine, for
no other is God of heaven and God of earth, as He
Himself teaches in Matthew:
“Authority has been given unto
Me in heaven and on earth” (xxvii.
But the idea of the Lord is more or
less full and more or less clear; it is full in the
inmost heaven, less full in the middle, and still less
full in the outmost heaven; therefore those who are
in the inmost heaven are in wisdom, those who are
in the middle in intelligence, and those who are in
the outmost in knowledge. The idea is clear in
the angels who are at the center of the societies
of heaven; and less clear in those who are round about,
according to the degrees of distance from the center.
All in the heavens have places allotted
them according to the fullness and clearness of their
idea of the Lord, and they are in correspondent wisdom
and in correspondent felicity. All those who
have no idea of the Lord as Divine, like the Socinians
and Arians, are under the heavens, and are unhappy.
Those who have a twofold idea, namely, of an invisible
God and of a visible God in a human form, also have
their place under the heavens, and are not received
until they acknowledge one God, and Him visible.
Some in the place of a visible God see as it were
something aerial, and this because God is called a
spirit. If this idea is not changed in them
into the idea of a Man, thus of the Lord, they are
not accepted. But those who have an idea of God
as the inmost of nature are rejected, because they
cannot help falling into the idea of nature as being
God. All nations that have believed in one God,
and have had an idea of Him as a Man, are received
by the Lord. From all this it can be seen who
those are that worship God Himself and who those are
that worship other gods, thus who live according to
the first commandment of the Decalogue and who do
not. (A.E., .)
II. The Second Commandment
The second commandment is, “Thou shalt not profane
the name of God.”
In the first place, what is meant
by “the name of God” shall be told, and
afterward what is meant by “profaning”
it. “The name of God” means every
quality by which God is worshipped. For God is
in His own quality, and is His own quality.
His essence is Divine love, and His quality is Divine
truth therefrom united with Divine good; thus with
us on earth it is the Word; consequently it is said
in John:
“The Word was with God, and the Word was God”
.
So, too, it is the doctrine of genuine
truth and good from the Word; for worship is according
to that.
Now as His quality is manifold, for
it comprises all things that are from Him, so He has
many names; and each name involves and expresses His
quality in general and in particular. He is called
“Jéhovah,” “Jéhovah of Hosts,”
“Lord,” “Lord Jéhovah,” “God,”
“Messiah (or Christ),” “Jesus,”
“Saviour,” “Redeemer,” “Creator,”
“Former,” “Maker,” “King,”
and “the Holy One of Israel,” “the
Rock” and “the Stone of Israel,”
“Shiloh,” “Almighty,” “David,”
“Prophet,” “Son of God,” and
“Son of Man,” and so on. All these
names are names of the one God, who is the Lord; and
yet where they occur in the Word they signify some
universal Divine attribute or quality distinct from
other Divine attributes or qualities. So, too,
where He is called “Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,”
three are not meant, but one God; that is, there are
not three Divines, but one; and this trine which is
one is the Lord.
Since each name signifies some distinct
attribute or quality, “to profane the name of
God” does not mean to profane His name itself
but His quality. “Name” signifies
quality for the reason that in heaven everyone is
named according to his quality; and the quality of
God or the Lord is everything that is from Him by
which He is worshipped. For this reason, since
no Divine quality of the Lord is acknowledged in hell
the Lord cannot be named there; and in the spiritual
world His names cannot be uttered by anyone except
so far as His Divine is acknowledged; for there all
speak from the heart, thus from love and consequent
acknowledgment. (A.E., .)
Since “the name of God”
means that which is from God and which is God, and
this is called Divine truth, and with us the Word,
this must not be profaned, because it is in itself
Divine and most holy; and it is profaned when its
holiness is denied, which is done when it is despised,
rejected, and treated contemptuously. When this
is done heaven is closed and man is left to hell.
For as the Word is the only medium of conjunction
of heaven with the church, so when the Word is cast
out of the heart that conjunction is dissolved; and
because man is then left to hell he no longer acknowledges
any truth of the church.
There are two things by which heaven
is closed to the men of the church. One is a
denial of the Lord’s Divine, and the other is
a denial of the holiness of the Word; and for this
reason, that the Lord’s Divine is the all of
heaven; and Divine truth, which is the Word in the
spiritual sense, is what makes heaven; which makes
clear that he who denies the one or the other denies
that which is the all of heaven and from which heaven
is and exists, and thus deprives himself of communication
and consequent conjunction with heaven. To profane
the Word is the same as “blaspheming the Holy
Spirit,” which is not forgiven to anyone, consequently
it is said in this commandment that he who profanes
the name of God shall not be left unpunished. (A.E.,
.)
As Divine truth or the Word is meant
by “the name of God,” and the profanation
of it means a denial of its holiness, and thus contempt,
rejection, and blasphemy, it follows that the name
of God is interiorly profaned by a life contrary to
the commandments of the Decalogue. For there
can be a profanation that is inner and not outer, and
there can be a profanation that is inner and at the
same time outer, and there can be also a kind of profanation
that is outer and not at the same time inner.
Inner profanation is wrought by the life, outer by
the speech. Inner profanation, which is wrought
by the life, becomes outer also, or of the speech,
after death. For then everyone thinks and wills,
and so far as it can be permitted, speaks and acts,
according to his life; thus not as he did in the world.
In the world man is wont [accustomed], for the world’s
sake and to gain reputation, to speak and act otherwise
than as he thinks and wills from his life. This
is why it has been said that there can be a profanation
that is inner and not at the same time outer.
That there can be also a kind of profanation that is
outer and not at the same time inner is possible from
the style of the Word, which is not at all the style
of the world, and for this reason it may be to some
extent despised from an ignorance of its interior sanctity.
(A.E., .)
He who abstains from profaning the
name of God, that is, the holiness of the Word, by
contempt, rejection, or any blasphemy, has religion;
and such as his abstinence is such is his religion.
For no one has religion except from revelation, and
with us revelation is the Word. Abstinence from
profaning the holiness of the Word must be from the
heart, and not merely from the mouth. Those
who abstain from the heart live from religion; but
those who abstain merely from the mouth do not live
from religion, for they abstain either for the sake
of self or for the sake of the world, in that the
Word can be made to serve them as a means of acquiring
honor and gain; or they abstain from some fear.
But of these many are hypocrites who have no religion.
(A.E., .)
III. The Third Commandment
The third commandment is, to keep the Sabbath holy.
The third and fourth commandments
of the Decalogue contain things that must be done,
namely, that the Sabbath must be kept holy, and that
parents must be honored. The other commandments
contain things that are not to be done, namely, that
other gods must not be worshipped; that the name of
God must not be profaned; that one must not steal,
must not commit adultery, must not bear false witness,
must not covet the goods of others. These two
commandments are commandments to be done because the
sanctification of the rest of the commandments depends
upon these, for the “Sabbath” signifies
the union in the Lord of the Divine itself and the
Divine Human, also His conjunction with heaven and
the church, and thus the marriage of good and truth
in the man who is being regenerated. This being
the signification of the Sabbath, it was the chief
representative of all things of worship in the Israelitish
Church, as is evident in Jeremiah (xvi-27), and
elsewhere. It was the chief representative of
all things of worship, because the first thing in
all things of worship is the acknowledgment of the
Divine in the Lord’s Human, for without that
acknowledgment man can believe and do only from self,
and to believe from self is to believe falsities, and
to do from self is to do evils, as is also evident
from the Lord’s words in John:
To those asking, “What shall
we do that we might work the works of God?”
Jesus said, “This is the work of God, that ye
believe on Him whom God hath sent” (v,
29).
And in the same,
“He that abideth in Me and I
in him, the same beareth much fruit; for apart from
Me ye can do nothing” (x.
That the Sabbath represented that
union and the holy acknowledgment of it, has been
fully shown in the Arcana Coelestia, namely, that the
“Sabbath” signified in the highest sense
the union of the Divine itself and the Divine Human
in the Lord, in the internal sense the conjunction
of the Lord’s Human with heaven and with the
church, in general the conjunction of good and truth,
thus the heavenly marriage , 10356, 10730).
Therefore the rest on the Sabbath day signified the
state of that union, because the Lord then has rest;
also through that union there is peace and salvation
in the heavens and on the earth. In a relative
sense it signified the conjunction of man with the
Lord, because man then has peace and salvation , 8510, 10360, 10367, 10370, 10374, 10668, 10730).
The six days preceding the Sabbath signified the
labors and combats that precede union and conjunction
, 8888, 9431, 10360, 10667). The man
who is being regenerated is in two states, the first
when he is in truths and by means of truths is being
led to good and into good, the other when he is in
good. When man is in the first state he is in
combats or temptations; but when he is in the second
state he is in the tranquillity of peace. The
former state is signified by the six days of labor
that precede the Sabbath; and the latter state is
signified by the rest on the Sabbath day ,
9431, 10360). The Lord also was in two states:
the first when He was Divine truth and from it fought
against the hells and subjugated them, the other when
He was made Divine good by union with the very Divine
in Himself. The former state was signified in
the highest sense by the six days of labor, and the
latter by the Sabbath . Because such
things were represented by the Sabbath, it was the
chief representative of worship, and the holiest of
all , 10372). “To do work on
the Sabbath day” signified to be led not by the
Lord but by self, thus to be disjoined , 8495,
10360, 10362, 10365). The Sabbath day is not
now representative, but is a day of instruction at the end). (A.E., .)
IV. The Fourth Commandment
The fourth commandment of the Decalogue is that parents
must be honored.
This commandment was given because
honor to parents represented and thus signified love
to the Lord and love toward the church, for “father”
in the heavenly sense, that is, the Heavenly Father,
is the Lord; and “mother” in the heavenly
sense, that is, the heavenly mother, is the church;
“honor” signifies good of love; and “length
of days,” which such will have, signifies the
happiness of eternal life. So is this commandment
understood in heaven, where no father but the Lord
is known, and no mother but the kingdom of the Lord,
which is also the church. For the Lord gives
life from Himself, and through the church He gives
nourishment. That in the heavenly sense no father
in the world can be meant, and indeed, when man is
in a heavenly idea, can be mentioned, the Lord teaches
in Matthew:
“Call no man your father on
earth; for one is your Father who is in the heavens”
(xxii.
That “Father” signifies
the Lord in relation to Divine good may be seen in
the Apocalypse Explained , 200, 254, 297).
That “mother” signifies the Lord’s
kingdom, the church, and Divine truth, may be seen
in the Arcana Coelestia , 2691, 2717, 3703,
5581, 8897); that “length of days” signifies
the happiness of eternal life ; and the “honor”
signifies good of love , and Apocalypse Explained
, 345). All this makes clear that the
third and fourth commandments involve arcana relating
to the Lord, namely, acknowledgment and confession
of His Divine, and worship of Him from good of love.
(A.E., .)
V. The Fifth Commandment
The fifth commandment is, “Thou
shalt not steal.” By “thefts”
both open thefts and those not open are meant, such
as unlawful usury and gains, which are effected by
fraud and craft under various pretenses to make them
appear lawful, or so done clandestinely as not to appear
at all. Such gains are commonly made by higher
and lower managers of the goods of others, by merchants,
also by judges who sell judgments and thus make justice
purchasable. These and many other things are
thefts that must be abstained from and shunned, and
finally renounced as sins against God, because they
are against the Divine laws that are in the Word and
against this law, which is one among the fundamental
laws of all religions in the whole globe. For
these ten commandments are universals, given to the
end that in living from these a man may live from
religion, since by a life from religion man is conjoined
with heaven, while a life according to these from
obedience to civil and moral law conjoins man with
the world and not with heaven, and to be conjoined
with the world and not with heaven is to conjoined
with hell. (A.E., .)
Man is so created as to be an image
of heaven and an image of the world, for he is a microcosm.
He is born of his parents an image of the world,
and he is born again to be an image of heaven.
To be born again is to be regenerated; and man is
regenerated by the Lord by means of truths from the
Word and a life according to them. Man is an
image of the world in respect to his natural mind,
and he is an image of heaven in respect to his spiritual
mind. The natural mind, which is the world, is
beneath; and the spiritual mind, which is heaven, is
above. The natural mind is full of all kinds
of evil, such as thefts, adulteries, murders, false
witnesses, covetousnesses, and even blasphemies and
profanations respecting God. These evils
and many others have their seat in that mind, for
the loves of them are there, and thus the delights
of thinking, willing, and doing them.
These things are inborn in that mind
from parents, for man is born and grows up into the
things that are in that mind, and is restrained only
by the bonds of civil law and by the bonds of moral
life from doing them, and from thus manifesting the
tendencies of his depraved will. Who cannot see
that the Lord cannot flow in out of heaven into man
and teach him and lead him until these evils have
been removed? For they obstruct, repel, pervert,
and suffocate the truths and goods of heaven, which
present themselves from above, press down, and strive
to flow in. For evils are infernal and goods
are heavenly, and everything infernal burns with hatred
against everything heavenly.
This makes clear that before the Lord
can flow in with heaven out of heaven and form man
to the image of heaven, those evils that lie heaped
up in the natural mind must needs be removed.
Moreover, as the removal of evils must come first
before man can be taught and led by the Lord, the
reason is evident why in eight commandments of the
Decalogue the evil works that must not be done are
recounted, but not the good works that must be done.
Good does not exist together with evil, nor does it
exist until evils have been removed; for until then
there is no way possible from heaven into man.
Man is like a dark sea, the waters of which must
be removed on either side before the Lord in a cloud
and in fire can give a passage to the sons of Israel.
The “dark sea” signifies hell, “Pharaoh
with the Egyptians” the natural man, and “the
sons of Israel” the spiritual man. (A.E., .)
Communication with heaven is not possible
until the evils and the falsities therefrom with which
the natural mind is stopped up have been removed;
for these are like black clouds between the sun and
the eye, or like a wall between the light of heaven
and the lumen of a candle in a chamber. For so
long as a man is in the lumen of the natural man only
he is like one shut up in a chamber where he sees
by a candle. But as soon as the natural man
has been purified from evils and falsities therefrom
he is as if he saw through windows in the wall the
things of heaven from the light of heaven. For
as soon as evils have been removed, the higher mind,
which is called the spiritual mind, is opened, and
this, viewed in itself, is a type or image of heaven.
Through this mind the Lord flows in and enables man
to see from the light of heaven, and through this He
also reforms and at length regenerates the natural
man, and implants in it truths in the place of falsities
and goods in the place of evils. This the Lord
does through spiritual love, which is a love for truth
and good. Man is then placed in the midst between
two loves, between the love of evil and the love of
good; and when the love of evil recedes the love of
good takes its place. The love of evil recedes
solely through a life according to the commandments
of the Decalogue, that is, through refraining from
evils there enumerated because they are sins, and
finally shunning them as infernal.
In a word, so long as man does not
refrain from evils because they are sins the spiritual
mind is shut; but as soon as he refrains from evils
because they are sins the spiritual mind is opened,
and with that mind heaven also. And when heaven
is opened man comes into another light in respect
to all things of the church, heaven, and eternal life;
although so long as man lives in this world the difference
between this and the former light is scarcely noticeable,
and for the reason that in the world man thinks naturally
even about spiritual things, and until he passes from
the natural into the spiritual world spiritual things
are enclosed in natural ideas; but in the spiritual
world spiritual things are disclosed, perceived, and
made evident. (A.E., .)
So far as man refrains from evils
and shuns and turns away from them as sins, good flows
in from the Lord. The good that flows in is an
affection for knowing and understanding truths, and
an affection for willing and doing goods. But
man cannot refrain from evils by shunning and turning
away from them of himself, for he himself is in evils
from his birth, and thus from nature; and evils cannot
of themselves shun evils, for this would be like a
man’s shunning his own nature, which is impossible;
consequently it must be the Lord, who is Divine good
and Divine truth, who causes man to shun them.
Nevertheless, man ought to shun evils
as if of himself, for what a man does as if of himself
becomes his and is appropriated to him as his own;
while what he does not as if of himself in no wise
becomes his or is appropriated to him. What comes
from the Lord to man must be received by man; and
it cannot be received unless he is conscious of it
that is, as if of himself. This reciprocation
is a necessity to reformation.
This is why the ten commandments were
given, and why it is commanded in them that man shall
not worship other gods, shall not profane the name
of God, shall not steal, shall not commit adultery,
shall not kill, shall not covet the house, wife, or
servants of another, thus that man shall refrain from
doing these things by thinking, when the love of evil
allures and incites, that they must not be done because
they are sins against God, and in themselves are infernal.
So far, therefore, as a man shuns these evils so
far the love of truth and good enters from the Lord;
and this love causes man to shun these evils, and at
length to turn away from them as sins. And as
the love of truth and good puts these evils to flight
it follows that man shuns them not from himself but
from the Lord, since the love of truth and good is
from the Lord. If a man shuns evils merely from
a fear of hell they are withdrawn; but goods do not
take their place; for as soon as the fear departs the
evils return.
To man alone is it granted to think
as if of himself about good and evil, that is, that
good must be loved and done because it is Divine and
remains to eternity, and that evil must be hated and
not done because it is devilish and remains to eternity.
To think thus is not granted to any beast.
A beast can do good and shun evil, yet not of itself,
but either from instinct or habit or fear, and never
from the thought that such a thing is a good or an
evil, thus not of itself. Consequently, one
who would have it believed that man shuns evils or
does goods not as if of himself but from an imperceptible
influx, or from the imputation of the Lord’s
merit, would also have it believed that man lives like
a beast, without thought of, or perception of, or
affection for, truth and good.
That this is so has been made clear
to me from manifold experience in the spiritual world.
Every man after death is there prepared either for
heaven or for hell. From the man who is prepared
for heaven evils are removed, and from the man who
is prepared for hell goods are removed; and all such
removals are effected as if by them. Likewise
those who do evils are driven by punishments to reject
them as if of themselves; but if they do not reject
them as if of themselves the punishments are of no
avail. By this it was made clear that those who
hang down their hands, waiting for influx or for the
imputation of the Lord’s merit, continue in
the state of their evil and hang down their hands forever.
To shun evils as sins is to shun the
infernal societies that are in them, and man cannot
shun these unless he repels them and turns away from
them; and a man cannot turn away from them with repulsion
unless he loves good and from that love does not will
evil. For a man must either will evil or will
good; and so far as he wills good he does not will
evil; and it is granted him to will good when he makes
the commandments of the Decalogue to be of his religion,
and lives according to them.
Since man must refrain from evils
as sins as if of himself, these ten commandments were
inscribed by the Lord on two tables, and these were
called a covenant; and this covenant was entered into
in the same way as it is usual to enter into covenants
between two, that is, one proposes and the other accepts,
and the one who accepts consents. If he does
not consent the covenant is not established.
To consent to this covenant is to think, will, and
do as if of oneself. Man’s thinking to
shun evil and to do good as if of himself is done
not by man, but by the Lord.
This is done by the Lord for the sake
of reciprocation and consequent conjunction; for the
Lord’s Divine love is such that it wills that
what is its own shall be man’s, and as these
things cannot be man’s, because they are Divine,
it makes them to be as if they were man’s.
In this way reciprocal conjunction is effected, that
is, that man is in the Lord and the Lord in man, according
to the words of the Lord Himself in John (xi;
for this would not be possible if there were not in
the conjunction something belonging as it were to
man. What man does as if of himself he does
as if of his will, of his affection, of his freedom,
consequently of his life. Unless these were present
on man’s part as if they were his there could
be no receptivity, because nothing reactive, thus
no covenant and no conjunction; in fact, no ground
whatever for the imputation that man had done evil
or good or had believed truth or falsity, thus that
there is from merit a hell for anyone because of evil
works, or from grace a heaven for anyone because of
good works. (A.E., .)
He who refrains from thefts, understood
in a broad sense, and even shuns them from any other
cause than religion and for the sake of eternal life,
is not cleansed of them; for only by such refraining
is heaven opened. For it is through heaven that
the Lord removes evils in man, as through heaven He
removes the hells. For example, there are higher
and lower managers of property, merchants, judges,
officers of every kind, and workmen, who refrain from
thefts, that is, from unlawful modes of gain and usury,
and who shun these, but only to secure reputation and
thus honor and gain, and because of civil and moral
laws, in a word, from some natural love or natural
fear, thus from merely external constraints, and not
from religion; but the interiors of such are full
of thefts and robberies, and these burst forth when
external constraints are removed from them, as takes
place with everyone after death. Their sincerity
and rectitude is nothing but a mask, a disguise, and
a deceit. (A.E., .)
So far then as the various kinds and
species of theft are removed, and the more they are
removed, the kinds and species of goods to which they
by opposition correspond enter and occupy their place;
and these have reference in general to what is sincere,
right and just. For when a man shuns and turns
away from unlawful gains through fraud and craft he
so far wills what is sincere, right, and just, and
at length begins to love what is sincere because it
is sincere, what is right because it is right, and
what is just because it is just. He begins to
love these things because they are from the Lord,
and the love of the Lord is in them. For to love
the Lord is not to love the person, but to love the
things that go forth from the Lord, for these are the
Lord in man; thus it is to love sincerity itself,
right itself, and justice itself. And as these
are the Lord, so far as a man loves these, and thus
acts from them, so far he acts from the Lord and so
far the Lord removes insincerity and injustice in
respect to the very intentions and volitions
in which they have their roots, and always with less
resistance and struggle, and therefore with less effort
than in the first attempts. Thus it is that
man thinks from conscience and acts from integrity,—not
the man of himself but as if of himself; for he then
acknowledges from faith and also from perception that
it seems as if he thought and did these things from
himself, and yet he does them not from himself but
from the Lord. (A.E., .)
When a man begins to shun and turn
away from evils because they are sins all things that
he does are good, and may be called good works; with
a difference according to the excellence of the use.
For what a man does before he shuns and turns away
from evils as sins are works done by the man himself;
and as the man’s own (proprium), which is
nothing but evil, is in these, and they are done for
the sake of the world, so they are evil works.
But the works that a man does after he shuns and turns
away from evils as sins are works from the Lord, and
because the Lord is in these and heaven with Him they
are good works.
The difference between works done
by man and works done by the Lord in man is not apparent
to man’s vision, but is clearly evident to the
vision of angels. Works done by man are like
sepulchers outwardly whitened, which within are full
of dead men’s bones. They are like platters
and cups outwardly clean, but containing unclean things
of every kind. They are like fruits inwardly
rotten, but with the outer skin still shining; or
like nuts and almonds eaten by worms within, while
the shell remains untouched; or like a foul harlot
with a fair face. Such are the good works done
by man himself, since however good they appear on
the outside, within they are full of impurities of
every kind; for their interiors are infernal, while
their exteriors appear heavenly.
But as soon as man shuns and turns
away from evils as sins his works are good not only
outwardly but inwardly also; and the more interior
they are the more they are good, for the more interior
they are the nearer they are to the Lord. Then
they are like fruits that have a fine-flavored pulp,
in the center of which are depositories with many
seeds, from which new trees, even to whole gardens,
may be produced; but everything and all things in
his natural man are like eggs from which swarms of
flying creatures may be produced, and gradually fill
a great part of heaven. In a word, when man
shuns and turns away from evils as sins the works
that he does are living works, while those that he
did before were dead works; for what is from the Lord
is living but what is from man is dead. (A.E., .)
It has been said that so far as a
man shuns and turns away from evils as sins he does
goods, and that the goods that he does are such good
works as are described in the Word, for the reason
that they are done in the Lord; also that these works
are good so far as man turns away from the evils opposed
to them, because so far they are done by the Lord and
not by man. Nevertheless, works are more or
less good according to the excellence of the use;
for works must be uses. The best are those that
are done for the sake of uses to the church.
Next in point of goodness come those that are done
as uses to one’s country; and so on, the uses
determining the goodness of the works.
The goodness of works increases in
man according to the fullness of truths from affection
for which they are done; since the man who turns away
from evils as sins wishes to know truths because truths
teach uses and the quality of their good. This
is why good loves truth and truth loves good, and
they wish to be conjoined. So far, therefore,
as such a man learns truths from an affection for
them so far he does goods more wisely and more fully,
more wisely because he knows how to distinguish uses
and to do them with judgment and justice, and more
fully because all truths are present in the performance
of uses, and form the spiritual sphere that the affection
for them produces. (A.E., .)
Take judges for an example: All
who make justice venal [purchasable] by loving the
office of judging for the sake of gain from judgments,
and not for the sake of uses to their country, are
thieves, and their judgments are thefts. It is
the same if judgments are given according to friendship
or favor, for friendships and favors are also profits
and gains. When these are the end and judgments
are the means, all things that are done are evil,
and are what are meant in the Word by “evil
works” and “not doing judgment and justice,
perverting the right of the poor, of the needy, of
the fatherless, of the widow, and of the innocent.”
And when such do justice, and yet regard profit as
the end while they do a good work, to them it is not
good; for justice, which is Divine, is to them a means,
and such gain is the end; and that which is made the
end is everything, while that which is made the means
is nothing except so far as it is serviceable to the
end. Consequently, after death such judges continued
to love what is unjust as well as what is just, and
are condemned to hell as thieves. I say this
from what I have seen. These are such as do
not abstain from evils because they are sins, but
only because they fear punishments of the civil law
and the loss of reputation, honor, and office, and
thus of gain.
It is otherwise with judges who abstain
from evils as sins and shun them because they are
contrary to the Divine laws, and thus contrary to God.
Such make justice their end, and they venerate, cherish,
and love it as Divine. In justice they see God,
as it were, because everything just, like everything
good and true, is from God. They always join
justice with equity and equity with justice, knowing
that justice must be of equity in order to be justice,
and that equity must be of justice in order to be
equity, the same as truth is of good and good is of
truth.
As such make justice their end, their
giving judgments is doing good works; yet these works,
which are judgments, are to them more or less good
as there is in their judgments more or less of regard
for friendship, favor, or gain; also as there is more
or less in them of a love of what is just for the
sake of the public good, which is that justice may
prevail among their fellow citizens, and that those
who live according to the laws may have security.
Such judges have eternal life in a degree that accords
with their works; for they are judged as they themselves
have judged. (A.E., .)
Take as an example managers of the
goods of others, higher or lower. If these secretly
by arts or under some pretext by fraud deprive their
kings, their country, or their masters of their goods,
they have no religion and thus no conscience, for
they hold the Divine law respecting theft in contempt
and make it of no account. And although they
frequent churches, devoutly listen to preachings,
observe the sacrament of the Supper, pray morning
and evening, and talk piously from the Word, yet nothing
from heaven flows in and is present in their worship,
piety, or discourse, since their interiors are full
of theft, plundering, robbery, and injustice; and
so long as these are within, the way into them from
heaven is closed; consequently all the works they do
are evil works.
But the managers of property who shun
unlawful gains and fraudulent profits because they
are contrary to the Divine law respecting theft, have
religion, and thus also conscience; and all the works
they do are good, for they act from sincerity for
the sake of sincerity, and from justice for the sake
of justice, and furthermore are content with their
own, and are cheerful in mind and glad in heart whenever
it happens that they have refrained from fraud; and
after death they are welcomed by the angels and received
by them as brothers, and are presented with good things
even to abundance. But the opposite is true of
evil managers; these after death are cast out of societies,
and afterward seek wages and finally are sent into
the caverns of robbers to labor there. (A.E., .)
Take merchants as an example:
All their works are evil works so long as they do
not regard as sins, and thus shun as sins, unlawful
gains and wrongful usury, also fraud and craft; for
such works cannot be done from the Lord, but must
be done from man himself. And the more expert
they are in skillfully and artfully contriving devices
from within for overreaching their companions the
more evil are their works. And the more expert
they are in bringing such devices into effect under
the pretense of sincerity, justice, and piety, the
more evil still are their works. The more delight
a merchant feels in such things the more do his works
have their origin in hell.
But if he acts sincerely and justly
in order to acquire reputation, and wealth through
reputation, even so as to seem to act from a love of
sincerity and justice, and yet does not act sincerely
and justly from affection for the Divine law or from
obedience to it, he is still inwardly insincere and
unjust, and his works are thefts, for through a pretense
of sincerity and justice he seeks to steal.
That this is so becomes evident after
death, when man acts from his inner will and love,
and not from the outer; for then he thinks about and
devises nothing but sharp practices and robberies,
and withdraws himself from those who are sincere,
and betakes himself either to forests or deserts,
where he devotes himself to stratagems. In a
word, all such become robbers.
But it is otherwise with merchants
who shun as sins thefts of every kind, especially
the more interior and hidden, which are effected by
craft and deceit. All the works of such are good,
because they are from the Lord; for the influx from
heaven, that is, through heaven from the Lord, for
accomplishing such works is not intercepted by the
evils just mentioned. To such riches do no harm,
because to them riches are means for uses. Their
tradings are the uses by which they serve their country
and their fellow citizens; and through their riches
they are in a condition to perform those uses to which
affection for good leads them. (A.E., .)
From what has been said above, what
is meant in the Word by good works can now be seen,
namely, that they are all works done by man when evils
have been set aside as sins. For the works done
after this are done by man only as if by him; for
they are done by the Lord; and all works done by the
Lord are good, and are called goods of life, goods
of charity, and good works; as for instance, all judgments
of a judge who has justice as his end, all who venerates
and loves it as Divine, and who detests as infamous
decisions made for the sake of rewards or friendship,
or from favor. Thus he consults the good of his
country by causing justice and judgment to reign therein
as in heaven; and thus he consults the peace of every
innocent citizen and protects him from the violence
of evildoers. All these are good works.
So all services of managers and dealings of merchants
are good works when they shun unlawful gains as sins
against the Divine laws. When a man shuns evils
as sins he daily learns what a good work is, and an
affection for doing good grows in him, and an affection
for knowing truths for the sake of good; for so far
as he knows truths he can perform works more fully
and more wisely, and thus his works become more truly
good. Refrain, therefore, from asking in thyself,
“What are the good works that I must do, or
what good must I do to receive eternal life?”
Only refrain from evils as sins and look to the Lord,
and the Lord will teach and lead you. (A.E., .)
VI. The Sixth Commandment
Thus far five commandments of the
Decalogue have been explained. Now follows the
explanation of the sixth commandment, “Thou shalt
not commit adultery.”
Who at this day can believe that the
delight of adultery is hell in man, and that the delight
of marriage is heaven in him, consequently so far
as he is in the one delight he is not in the other,
since so far as man is in hell he is not in heaven?
Who at this day can believe that the love of adultery
is the fundamental love of all hellish and devilish
loves, and that the chaste love of marriage is the
fundamental love of all heavenly and Divine loves;
consequently so far as a man is in the love of adultery
he is in every evil love, if not in act yet in endeavor;
and on the other hand, so far as he is in the chaste
love of marriage he is in every good love, if not
in act yet in endeavor? Who at this day can
believe that he who is in the love of adultery believes
nothing of the Word, thus nothing of the church, and
even in his heart denies God; and on the other hand,
that he who is in the chaste love of marriage is in
charity and in faith, and in love to God; also that
the chastity of marriage makes one with religion,
and the lasciviousness of adultery makes one with
naturalism?
All this is at this day unknown because
the church is at its end, and is devastated in respect
to truth and in respect to good; and when the church
is such, the man of the church, by influx from hell,
comes into the persuasion that adulteries are not
detestable things and abominations, and thus comes
into the belief that marriages and adulteries do not
differ in their essence, but only as a matter of order,
and yet the difference between them is like the difference
between heaven and hell. That such is the difference
between them will be seen in what follows. This,
then, is why in the Word in its spiritual sense heaven
and the church are meant by nuptials and marriages,
and hell and rejection of all things of the church
are meant in the Word in its spiritual sense by adulteries
and whoredoms. (A.E., .)
Since adultery is hell in man and
marriage is heaven in him, it follows that so far
as a man loves adultery he removes himself from heaven;
consequently adulteries close heaven and open hell,
and this they do so far as they are believed to be
allowable and are perceived to be more delightful
than marriages. The man, therefore, who confirms
himself in adulteries and commits them from the favor
and consent of his will, and turns away from marriage,
closes heaven to himself, until finally he ceases
to believe anything of the church or of the Word, and
becomes a wholly sensual man, and after death an infernal
spirit; for, as has been said above, adultery is hell,
and thus an adulterer is a form of hell. And
since adultery is hell it follows that unless a man
abstains from adulteries and shuns them and turns
away from them as infernal he shuts up heaven to himself,
and does not receive the least influx therefrom.
Afterward he reasons that marriages and adulteries
are alike, but that marriages must be maintained in
kingdoms for the sake of order and the training of
offspring; also that adulteries are not criminal, since
children are equally born from them; and they are not
harmful to women, since they can endure them, and
by them the procreation of the human race is promoted.
He does not know that these and other like reasonings
in favor of adulteries ascend from the Stygian [extremely
dark] waters of hell, and that the lustful and bestial
nature of man which inheres in him from birth attracts
them and sucks them in with delight, as a swine does
excrement. That such reasonings, which at this
day possess the minds of most men in the Christian
world, are diabolical, will be seen. (A.E., .)
That marriage is heaven and that adultery
is hell cannot be better seen than from considering
their origin. The origin of true marriage love
is the Lord’s love for the church; and this
is why the Lord is called in the Word a “Bridegroom”
and a “Husband,” and the church a “bride”
and a “wife.” It is from this marriage
that the church is a church in general and in particular.
The church in particular is a man in whom the church
is. From this it is clear that the Lord’s
conjunction with a man of the church is the very origin
of true marriage love; and how that conjunction can
be the origin shall be told.
The Lord’s conjunction with
a man of the church is a conjunction of good and truth;
good is from the Lord, and truth is a man, and from
this is the conjunction that is called the heavenly
marriage, and from that marriage true marriage love
exists between the married pair that are in such conjunction
with the Lord.
From this it is now evident that true
marriage love is from the Lord alone, and exists in
those who are in the conjunction of good and truth
from the Lord. As this conjunction is reciprocal
it is said by the Lord that
They are in Him, and He in them
(John xi.
This conjunction or this marriage
was thus established from creation. The man was
created to be an understanding of truth, and the woman
to be an affection for good; and thus the man to be
a truth, and the woman to be a good. When understanding
of truth which is in the man makes one with the affection
for good which is in the woman, there is a conjunction
of the two minds into one. This conjunction is
the spiritual marriage from which marriage love descends.
For when two minds are so conjoined as to be one mind
there is love between them; and when this love, which
is the love of spiritual marriage, descends into the
body it becomes the love of natural marriage.
That this is so anyone can clearly perceive if he
will. A married pair who interiorly or in respect
to their minds love each other mutually and reciprocally
also love each other mutually and reciprocally in
respect to their bodies. It is well known that
all love descends into the body from an affection
of the mind, and that apart from such an origin no
love exists.
Since then the origin of marriage
love is the marriage of good and truth, which marriage
in its essence is heaven, it is clear that the origin
of the love of adultery is a marriage of evil and falsity,
which in its essence is hell. Heaven is a marriage
because all who are in the heavens are in a marriage
of good and truth; and hell is adultery because all
who are in the hells are in a marriage of evil and
falsity. From this it follows that marriage and
adultery are as opposite as heaven and hell are. (A.E.,
.)
Man was so created as to be spiritual
and celestial love, and thus an image and likeness
of God. Spiritual love, which is a love for truth,
is an image of God; and celestial love, which is a
love for good, is a likeness of God. All angels
in the third heaven are likenesses of God; and all
angels in the second heaven are images of God.
Man can become the love which is an image or likeness
of God only by a marriage of good and truth; for good
and truth inmostly love one another, and ardently
long to be united that they may be one; and for the
reason that Divine good and Divine truth go forth
from the Lord united, therefore they must be united
in an angel of heaven and in a man of the church.
This union is by no means possible
except by a marriage of two minds into one, since,
as has been said before, man was created to be an
understanding of truth, and thus a truth, and woman
was created to be an affection for good, and thus
a good; therefore in them a conjunction of good and
truth is possible. For marriage love which descends
from that conjunction is the veriest medium by which
man (homo) becomes the love that is an image or likeness
of God. For the married pair who are in conjugal
love from the Lord love one another mutually and reciprocally
from the heart, thus from inmosts; and therefore although
apparently two they are actually one, two in respect
to their bodies, but one in respect to life.
This may be compared to the eyes,
which are two as organs but one in respect to the
sight; also to the ears, which are two as organs but
one in respect to hearing; so, too, the arms and the
feet are two as members but one in respect to use,
the arms one in respect to action, and the feet one
in respect to walking. So with the other pairs
with man. All these have reference to good and
truth, the organ or member on the right to good, and
that on the left to truth. It is the same with
a husband and wife between whom there is a true marriage
love; they are two in respect to their bodies but
one in respect to life; consequently in heaven the
married pair are not called two angels but one.
All this makes clear that through marriage man becomes
a form of love, and thus a form of heaven, which is
an image and likeness of God.
Man is born into a love of evil and
falsity, which love is the love of adultery; and this
love cannot be turned about and changed into spiritual
love, which is an image of God, and still less into
celestial love, which is a likeness of God, except
by a marriage of good and truth from the Lord, and
not fully except by a marriage of two minds and two
bodies. From this it is clear why marriages are
heavenly and adulteries infernal; for marriage is
an image of heaven, and true marriage love is an image
of the Lord, while adultery is an image of hell, and
love of adultery is an image of the devil. Moreover,
marriage love appears in the spiritual world in form
like an angel, and love of adultery in form like a
devil. Reader, treasure this up within you, and
after death, when you are living as a spirit-man,
inquire whether this is true, and you will see. (A.E.,
.)
How profane and thus how much to be
detested adulteries are can be seen from the holiness
of marriages. All things in the human body, from
the head to the sole of the feet, both interior and
exterior, correspond to the heavens, and in consequence
man is a heaven in its least form, and also angels
and spirits are in form perfectly human, for they are
forms of heaven. All the members devoted to
generation in both sexes, especially the womb, correspond
to societies of the third or inmost heaven, and for
the reason that true marriage love is derived from
the Lord’s love for the church, and from the
love of good and truth which is the love of the angels
of the third heaven; therefore marriage love, which
descends therefrom as the love of that heaven, is innocence,
which is the very being (esse) of every good
in the heavens. And for this reason embryos
in the womb are in a state of peace, and when they
have been born as infants are in a state of innocence;
so, too, is the mother in relation to them.
As this is the correspondence of the
genital organs in the two sexes, it is evident that
by creation they are holy, and therefore they are
devoted solely to chaste and pure marriage love, and
are not to be profaned by the unchaste and impure
love of adultery, by which man converts the heaven
in himself into hell; for as the love of marriage
corresponds to the love of the highest heaven, which
is love to the Lord from the Lord, so the love of
adultery corresponds to the love of the lowest hell.
The love of marriage is so holy and
heavenly because it has its beginning in the inmosts
of man from the Lord Himself, and it descends according
to order to the outmosts of the body, and thus fills
the whole man with heavenly love and brings him into
a form of the Divine love, which is the form of heaven,
and is an image of the Lord. But the love of
adultery has its beginning in the outmosts of man from
an impure lascivious fire there, and thus, contrary
to order, penetrates toward the interiors, always
into the things that are man’s own, which are
nothing but evil, and brings these into a form of hell,
which is an image of the devil. Therefore a man
who loves adultery and turns away from marriage is
in form a devil.
As the organs of generation in the
two sexes correspond to the societies of the third
heaven, and the love of a married pair corresponds
to the love of good and truth, so those organs and
that love correspond to the Word. The reason
is that the Word is Divine truth united to Divine good
going forth from the Lord; and this is why the Lord
is called “the Word,” also why in every
particular of the Word there is a marriage of good
and truth, or a heavenly marriage. That there
is such a correspondence is a mystery not yet known
in the world, but it has been made evident and proved
to me by much experience.
From this also it is clear how holy
and heavenly marriages are in themselves, and how
profane and diabolical adulteries are. And for
this reason adulterers make no account of Divine truths
and thus of the Word, and if they were to speak from
the heart they would even blaspheme the holy things
that are in the Word. This they do when they
have become spirits after death, for every spirit
is compelled to speak from the heart, that his interior
thoughts may be revealed. (A.E., .)
As all the delights that man has in
the natural world are turned into correspondent delights
in the spiritual world, so are the delights of the
love of marriage and the delights of the love of adultery.
The love of marriage is represented in the spiritual
world as a virgin, whose beauty is such as to inspire
the beholder with the charms of life; while the love
of adultery is represented in the spiritual world by
an old woman, whose deformity is such as to inspire
in the beholder a coldness and death to every charm
of life. Therefore in the heavens the angels
are beautiful according to the quality of marriage
love in them, and in the hells the spirits are deformed
according to the quality of the love of adultery in
them. In a word, the angels of heaven have life
in their faces, in the movements of the body, and
in their speech, in the measure of their marriage
love, while the spirits of hell have death in their
faces in the measure of their love of adultery.
In the spiritual world the delights
of marriage love are represented to the sense by odors
from fruits and flowers of various kinds, while the
delights of the love of adultery are there represented
to the sense by the stenches from excrements and putridities
of various kinds. Moreover, the delights of the
love of adultery are actually turned into such things,
since all things pertaining to adultery are spiritual
filth. Therefore from the brothels in the hells
stenches pour forth that excite vomiting. (A.E.,
.)
How holy in themselves, that is, from
creation, marriages are can be seen from the fact
that they are the nurseries of the human race; and
as the angelic heaven is from the human race they
are also the nurseries of heaven; consequently by
marriages not only the earths but also the heavens
are filled with inhabitants; and as the end of the
entire creation is the human race, and thus heaven,
where the Divine itself may dwell as in its own and
as it were in itself, and as the procreation of mankind
according to Divine order is accomplished through marriages,
it is clear how holy marriages are in themselves,
that is, from creation, and thus how holy they should
be esteemed. It is true that the earth might
be filled with inhabitants by fornications and adulteries
as well as by marriages, but not heaven; and for the
reason that hell is from adulteries but heaven from
marriages.
Hell is from adulteries because adultery
is from the marriage of evil and falsity, from which
hell in the whole complex is called adultery; while
heaven is from marriages because marriage is from the
marriage of good and truth, from which heaven in its
whole complex is called a marriage. That is called
adultery where its love, which is called a love of
adultery, reigns, whether it be within wedlock or apart
from it, and that is called marriage where its love,
which is called marriage love, reigns.
When procréations of the human
race are effected by marriages in which the holy love
of good and truth from the Lord reigns, then it is
on earth as it is in the heavens, and the Lord’s
kingdom on earth corresponds to the Lord’s kingdom
in the heavens. For the heavens consist of societies
arranged according to all the varieties of celestial
and spiritual affections, from which arrangement the
form of heaven springs, and this pre-eminently surpasses
all other forms in the universe. There would
be a like form on the earth if the procréations
there were effected by marriages in which a true marriage
love reigned; for then, however many families might
descend in succession from one head of a family, there
would spring forth as many images of the societies
of heaven in a like variety.
Families would then be like fruit-bearing
trees of various kinds, forming as many different
gardens, each containing its own kind of fruit, and
these gardens taken together would present the form
of a heavenly paradise. This is said in the
way of comparison, because “trees” signify
men of the church, “gardens” intelligence,
“fruits” goods of life, and “paradise”
heaven. I have been told from heaven that with
the most ancient people, from whom the first church
on this globe was established, which was called by
ancient writers the golden age, there was such a correspondence
between families on the earth and societies in the
heavens, because love to the Lord, mutual love, innocence,
peace, wisdom, and chastity in marriages then prevailed;
and it was also told me from heaven that they were
then inwardly horrified at adulteries, as at the abominable
things in hell. (A.E., .)
That heaven is from marriages and
hell from adulteries has been shown above. What
this means shall now be told. The hereditary
evils into which man is born are not from Adam’s
having eaten of the tree of knowledge, but from the
adulteration of good and the falsification of truth
by parents, thus from the marriage of evil and falsity,
from which a love of adultery springs. The ruling
love of parents by means of a germ from it passes
over into the offspring and is transcribed upon it
and becomes its nature. If the love of the parents
is a love of adultery it is also a love of evil for
falsity and of falsity for evil. From this source
man has all evil, and from evil he has hell. All
this makes clear that it is from adulteries that man
has hell, until he is reformed by the Lord by means
of truths and a life according to them. And no
one can be reformed unless he shuns adulteries as
infernal and loves marriages as heavenly. In
this and in no other way is hereditary evil broken
and rendered milder in the offspring.
It is to be noted, however, that while
from adulterous parents man is born a hell, he is
not born for hell but for heaven. For the Lord
provides that no one shall be condemned to hell on
account of hereditary evils, but only on account of
the evils that the man has actually made his own by
his life, as can be seen from the lot of infants after
death, all of whom are adopted by the Lord, educated
under His auspices in heaven, and saved. This
makes clear that every man, although from the evils
with which he is born he is a hell, is born not for
hell but for heaven.
It is the same with every man born
from adultery if he does not himself become an adulterer.
Becoming an adulterer means living in the marriage
of evil and falsity by thinking evils and falsities
from a delight in them and by doing them from a love
for them. Every man who does this becomes an
adulterer. Moreover, it is from Divine justice
that no one suffers punishments on account of the
evils of his parents, but only on account of his own;
therefore the Lord provides that hereditary evils
shall not return after death, but only one’s
own evils, and it is only for those that return that
a man is then punished. (A.E., .)
It has been said that the difference
between a love of marriage and a love of adultery
is like that between heaven and hell. There is
a like difference between the delights of these loves;
for delights derive their all from the loves from
which they spring. The delights of the love
of adultery derive what they are from the delights
of doing evil uses, thus of evil-doing; and the delights
of the love of marriage from the delights of doing
good uses, thus of well-doing. Therefore such
as the delight of the evil is in doing evil such is
the delight of their love of adultery; because a love
of adultery descends therefrom. That it descends
from that scarcely anyone can believe; and yet such
is its origin. From this it is evident that
the delight of adultery ascends from the lowest hell.
But the delight of the love of marriage, since it
is from the love of the conjunction of good and truth
and from the love of doing good, is a heavenly delight;
and it comes down from the inmost or third heaven,
where love to the Lord from the Lord reigns.
From this it can be seen that the
difference between these two delights is like that
between heaven and hell. And yet, for a wonder,
it is believed that the delight of marriage and the
delight of adultery are similar; nevertheless the
difference between them is such as has now been described.
But the difference can be discerned and felt only by
one who is in the delight of marriage love.
One who is in that delight plainly feels that in the
delight of marriage there is nothing impure or unchaste,
thus nothing lascivious; and that in the delight of
adultery there is nothing but what is impure, unchaste,
and lascivious. He feels that unchastity comes
up from beneath, and that chastity comes down from
above. But one who is in the delight of adultery
is incapable of feeling this, because he feels what
is infernal as his heavenly.
From all this it follows that the
love of marriage, even in its outmost act, is purity
itself and chastity itself; and that the love of adultery
in its acts is impurity itself and unchastity itself.
Since the delights of these two loves are alike in
outward appearance, although inwardly they are wholly
unlike, because opposites, the Lord provides that
the delights of adultery shall not ascend into heaven
and that the delight of marriage shall not descend
into hell; and yet that there shall be some correspondence
of heaven with prolification in adulteries, though
none with the delight itself in them. (A.E., .)
It has been said that marriage love,
which is natural, descends from the love of good and
truth, which is spiritual; this spiritual therefore
is in the natural love of marriage as a cause is in
its effect. So from the marriage of good and
truth there comes forth a love of bearing fruit, that
is, good through truth and truth from the good; and
from that love a love of producing offspring descends,
and in that love there is every delight and pleasure.
On the contrary, love of adultery,
which is natural, springs from a love of evil and
falsity, which is spiritual; consequently this spiritual
is in the natural love of adultery as a cause is in
its effect. So from the marriage of evil and
falsity by love there comes forth a love of bearing
fruit, namely, evil through falsity and falsity from
evil; and from that love a love of producing offspring
in adulteries descends, and in that love there is
every delight and pleasure.
There is every delight and pleasure
in the love of producing offspring, because all that
is delightful, pleasurable, blessed, and happy, in
the whole heaven and in the whole world, has been
from creation brought together into the effort and
thus into the act of bringing forth uses; and these
joys increase in an ascending degree to eternity, according
to the goodness and excellence of the uses.
This make evident why the pleasure of producing offspring,
which surpasses every other pleasure, is so great.
It surpasses every other because its use, which is
the procreation of the human race, and thus of heaven,
surpasses all other uses.
From this, too, comes the pleasure
and delight of adultery; but as prolification by adulteries
corresponds to the bringing forth of evil through
falsity and of falsity from evil, that pleasure or
delight decreases and becomes vile by degrees until
it is changed at last into aversion and disgust.
Because, as has been said above, the delight of the
love of marriage is a heavenly delight, so the delight
of adultery is an infernal delight, so the delight
of adultery is from a certain impure fire, which as
long as it lasts, counterfeits the delight of the
love of good, but in itself it is the delight of the
love of evil, which is in its essence the delight
of hatred against good and truth. And because
this is its origin there is not love between an adulterer
and an adulteress except such as the love of hatred
is, which is such that they can be in conjunction
in externals but not in internals. For in the
externals there is something fiery, but in the internals
there is coldness; therefore after a short time the
fire is extinguished and coldness succeeds, either
with impotence or a turning away as from something
filthy.
It has been granted me to see that
love in its essence, and it was such that within it
was deadly hatred, while without it appeared like a
fire from burning dung and putrid and stinking matters.
And as that fire with its delight burnt out, so by
degrees the life of mutual discourse and intercourse
expired, and hatred came forth, manifested first as
contempt, afterward as aversion, then as rejection,
and finally as abuse and contention. And what
was wonderful, although they hated each other they
could from time to time come together and for the time
feel the delight of hatred as the delight of love;
but this came from a hankering of the flesh.
What the delight of hatred and thus
of doing evil is with those who are in hell can neither
be described nor believed. To do evil is the joy
of their heart, and this they call their heaven.
Their delight in doing evil derives its all from
hatred and vengeance against good and truth; when,
therefore, they are moved by a deadly and devilish
hatred they rage against heaven, especially against
those who are from heaven and who worship the Lord;
for they violently burn to slaughter them, and because
they cannot destroy their bodies they desire to destroy
their souls. It is, therefore, the delight of
hatred which, becoming a fire in the extremes and
being injected into the lusting flesh, becomes for
the moment the delight of adultery,—the
soul in which the hatred lies concealed then withdrawing
itself. It is for this reason that hell is called
adultery, and also that adulterers are desperately
unmerciful, savage, and cruel. This, then, is
the infernal marriage. (A.E., .)
It has been said that the love of
adultery is a fire enkindled from impurities that
soon burns out and is turned into cold, and into an
aversion corresponding to hatred. But the reverse
is true of the love of marriage. This is a fire
enkindled from a love of good and truth and from a
delight in well-doing, thus from love to the Lord and
from love toward the neighbor. This fire, which
from its origin is heavenly, is full of innumerable
delights, as many, in fact, as are the delights and
blessednesses of heaven. It has been told me
that the charms and pleasantnesses of that love, which
are manifested from time to time, are so many and
such that they cannot be numbered or described.
Moreover, they are multiplied with continued increase
to eternity. These delights have their origin
in the fact that the married pair wish to be united
into one in respect to their minds, and into such a
union heaven breathes from the marriage of good and
truth from the Lord in heaven. (A.E., .)
That true marriage love contains in
itself ineffable delights that can neither be numbered
nor described can be seen from the fact that this is
the fundamental love of all celestial and spiritual
loves, since through that love man becomes love; for
from it each of the married pair loves the other as
good loves truth and truth loves good, thus representatively
as the Lord loves heaven and the church. Such
a love can come forth only through a marriage in which
the man is truth and the wife is good. When
a man through marriage has become such a love he is
also in love to the Lord and in love toward the neighbor,
and thus in a love for all good and in a love for
all truth. For from man as a love loves of every
kind must proceed; therefore marriage love is the
fundamental love of all the loves of heaven. And
as it is the fundamental love of all the loves of
heaven it is also the foundation of all the delights
and joys of heaven, since every delight and joy is
of love. From this it follows that heavenly
joys, in their order and in their degrees, have their
origins and their causes in marriage love.
From the felicities of marriages a
conclusion may be drawn respecting the infelicities
of adulteries, namely, that the love of adultery is
the fundamental love of all infernal loves, which
are in themselves not loves, but hatreds, consequently
from the love of adultery hatreds of every kind gush
forth, both against God and against the neighbor, and
in general against every good and truth of heaven
and the church; therefore to it all infelicities belong,
for, as has been said before, from adulteries man
becomes a form of hell, and from the love of adulteries
he becomes an image of the devil. That from the
marriages in which there is true marriage love all
delights and felicities increase even till they become
the delights and felicities of the inmost heaven, and
that all that is undelightful and unhappy in the marriages
in which love of adultery reigns increases in direfulness
even to the lowest hell, can be seen in the work on
Heaven and Hell.
True marriage love is from the Lord
alone. It is from the Lord alone because it
descends from the Lord’s love for heaven and
the church, and thus from the love of good and truth;
for good is from the Lord, and truth is in heaven
and the church; and from this it follows that true
marriage love in its first essence is love to the Lord.
And from this it is that no one can be in true marriage
love and in its pleasantnesses, delights, blessings,
and joys, unless he acknowledges the Lord alone, that
is, that the trinity is in Him. One who approaches
the Father as a person by Himself, or the Holy Spirit
as a person by Himself, and not these as in the Lord,
can have no marriage love.
The genuine conjugal principle is
given especially in the third heaven, because the
angels there are in love to the Lord and acknowledge
Him alone as God, and do His commandments. To
them doing the commandments is loving the Lord.
To them the Lord’s commandments are the truths
in which they receive Him. There is conjunction
of the Lord with them, and of them with the Lord;
for they are in the Lord because they are in good,
and the Lord is in them because they are in truths.
This is the heavenly marriage, from which true marriage
love descends.
As true marriage love in its first
essence is love to the Lord from the Lord it is also
innocence. Innocence is loving the Lord as one’s
Father by doing His commandments and wishing to be
led by Him and not by oneself, thus like a little
child. As that love is innocence, it is the
very being (esse) of all good; and therefore man
has so much of heaven in himself, or he is so much
in heaven, as he is in marriage love, because he is
so far in innocence. It is because true marriage
love is innocence that the playfulness between a married
pair is like the play of little children; and this
is so in the measure in which they love each other,
as is evident in the case of all in the first days
after the nuptials, when their love emulates true
marriage love. The innocence of marriage love
is meant in the Word by the “nakedness”
at which Adam and his wife blushed not; and for the
reason that there is nothing of lasciviousness, and
thus nothing of shame, between a married pair, any
more than between little children when they are naked
together.
Since marriage love in its first essence
is love to the Lord from the Lord, and thus is innocence,
marriage love is also peace, such as angels in the
heavens have. For as innocence is the very being
(esse) of all good, so peace is the very being
(esse) of all delight from good, consequently
is the very being (esse) of all joy between the
married pair. As, then, all joy is of love,
and marriage love is the fundamental love of all the
loves of heaven, so peace itself has its seat chiefly
in marriage love. Peace is bliss of heart and
soul arising from the conjunction of the Lord with
heaven and the church, as well as from conjunction
of good and truth, when all conflict and combat of
evil and falsity with good and truth has ceased.
And as marriage love descends from such conjunction
so all the delight of that love descends and derives
its essence from heavenly peace. Moreover, this
peace shines forth in the heavens as heavenly bliss
from the faces of a married pair who are in that love,
and who mutually regard each other from that love.
But such heavenly bliss, which inmostly affects the
delights of loves, and is called peace, can be granted
only to those who can be joined together inmostly,
that is, as to their very hearts.
Man has such and so much of intelligence
and wisdom as he has of marriage love. The reason
is that marriage love descends from the love of good
and truth as an effect does from its cause, or as the
natural from its spiritual; and from the marriage
of good and truth the angels of the three heavens
have all their intelligence and wisdom; for intelligence
and wisdom are nothing else than the reception of light
and heat from the Lord as a sun, that is, the reception
of Divine truth joined to Divine good, and of Divine
good joined to Divine truth; thus it is a marriage
of good and truth from the Lord.
That it is such has been made clearly
evident by angels in the heavens. When these
are separated from their consorts they are indeed in
intelligence, but not in wisdom; but when they are
with their consorts they are also in wisdom; and what
seemed wonderful, as they turn the face to their consort
they are to the same extent in a state of wisdom;
for the conjunction of truth and good is effected in
the spiritual world by looking; and the wife there
is good and the husband truth; therefore as truth
turns itself to good so truth becomes living.
By intelligence and wisdom ingenuity in reasoning
about truths and goods is not meant, but a capacity
to see and understand truths and goods, and this capacity
man has from the Lord.
True marriage love is a source of
power and protection against the hells, as it is against
the evils and falsities that ascend from the hells,
and for the reason that through marriage love man has
conjunction with the Lord, and the Lord alone has
power over all the hells; also because through marriage
love man has heaven and the church; consequently as
the Lord unceasingly protects heaven and the church
from the evils and falsities that rise up from the
hells, so He protects all who are in true marriage
love, because such and no others have heaven and the
church. For heaven and the church are a marriage
of good and truth, from which is marriage love, as
has been said above. And this is why through
marriage love man has peace, which is inmost joy of
heart from a complete safety from the hells and a
protection from infestations of the evil and falsity
therefrom.
Those who are in true marriage love,
when after death they become angels, return to their
early manhood and to youth, the males, however spent
with age, becoming young men, and the wives, however
spent with age, becoming maidens. Each of the
married pair returns to the flower and joy of the
age when marriage love begins to exalt the life with
new delights, and to inspire playfulness for the sake
of prolification. The man who while he lived
in the world had shunned adulteries as sins, and who
has been inaugurated by the Lord into marriage love,
comes into this state first outwardly and afterward
more and more interiorly to eternity.
As such continue to grow young more
interiorly it follows that true marriage love continually
increases and enters into its charms and satisfactions,
which have been provided for it from the creation of
the world, and which are the charms and satisfactions
of the inmost heaven, arising from the love of the
Lord for heaven and the church, and thus from the
love of good for truth and truth for good, which loves
are the source of every joy in the heavens.
Man thus grows young in heaven because he then enters
into the marriage of good and truth; and in good there
is the conatus [instinct] to love truth continually,
and in truth there is the conatus [instinct] to love
good continually; and then the wife is good in form
and the husband is truth in form. From that conatus
[instinct] man puts off all the austerity, sadness,
and dryness of old age, and puts on the liveliness,
gladness, and freshness of youth, from which the conatus
[instinct] becomes living and a joy.
I have been told from heaven that
such then have the life of love, which cannot otherwise
be described than as the life of joy itself.
That the man who lives in true marriage love in the
world comes after death into the heavenly marriage,
which is the marriage of good and truth springing
from the marriage of the Lord with the church, is clearly
evident from this, that from the marriages in the
heavens, although the married pair have consociations
there like those on the earth, children are not born,
but instead of children goods and truths, and thus
wisdom, as has been said above. And this is
why births, nativities, and generations mean in the
Word, in its spiritual sense, spiritual births, nativities,
and generations, and sons and daughters mean the truths
and goods of the church, and other like things are
meant by daughters-in-law, mothers-in-law, and fathers-in-law.
This also makes clear that marriages on the earth
correspond to marriages in the heavens; and that after
death man comes into the correspondence, that is, comes
from natural bodily marriage into spiritual heavenly
marriage, which is heaven itself and the joy of heaven.
From marriage love angels have all
their beauty; thus each angel has beauty in the measure
of that love. For all angels are forms of their
affections, for the reason that it is not permitted
in heaven to counterfeit with the face things that
do not belong to one’s affection; consequently
their faces are types of their minds. When, therefore,
they have marriage love, and love of wisdom, these
loves in them give form to their faces, and show themselves
like vital fires in their eyes; to which innocence
and peace add themselves, which complete their beauty.
Such are the forms of the inmost angelic heaven; and
they are truly human forms.
From what has been thus far presented
what the good is that results from chastity in marriage
can be inferred, consequently what the good works
of chastity are that a man does who shuns adulteries
as sins against God. The good works of chastity
concern either the married pair themselves, or their
offspring and posterity, or the heavenly societies.
The good works of chastity that concern
the married pair themselves are spiritual and celestial
loves, intelligence and wisdom, innocence and peace,
power and protection against the hells and against
the evils and the falsities therefrom, and manifold
joys and felicities to eternity. Those who live
in chaste marriages, as before described, have all
these.
The good works of chastity that concern
the offspring and posterity are that so many and so
great evils do not become innate in families.
For the ruling love of parents is transmitted to
the offspring and sometimes to remote posterity, and
becomes their hereditary nature. This is broken
and softened in parents who shun adulteries as infernal
and love marriages as heavenly. The good works
of chastity that concern the heavenly societies are
that chaste marriages are the charms of heaven, that
they are its nurseries, and that they are its supports.
They supply charms to heaven by communications; they
are nurseries to heaven by producing offspring; and
they are supports to heaven by their power against
the hells; for at the presence of conjugal love devilish
spirits become furious, insane, and mentally impotent,
and cast themselves into the deep.
From the goods enumerated and described
that result from chaste marriages it may be concluded
what the evils are that result from adulteries; for
such evils are the opposites of such goods; that is,
in place of the spiritual and celestial loves that
those have who live in chaste marriages, there are
the infernal and devilish loves that those have who
are in adulteries. So in place of the intelligence
and wisdom that those have who live chastely in marriages
there are the insanities and follies that those have
who are in adulteries; in place of the innocence and
peace that those have who live in chaste marriages
there are the deceit and no peace that those have
who are in adulteries; in place of the power and protection
against the hells that those have who live chastely
in marriages there are the very Asmodean demons and
the hells that those have who live in adulteries;
in place of the beauty that those have who live chastely
in marriages there is the deformity that those have
who live in adulteries, which is monstrous according
to what they are. Their final lot is that from
the extreme impotence to which they are at length
reduced they become emptied of all the fire and light
of life, and dwell alone in deserts as images of the
slothfulness and weariness of their own life.
True marriage love is impossible except
between two, like the Lord’s love toward heaven,
which is one from Him and in Him, or toward the church,
which like heaven is one from Him and in Him.
All who are in the heavens and who are in the church
must be one through mutual love from love to the Lord.
An angel in heaven or a man in the church who does
not thus make one with the rest is not of heaven or
of the church. Moreover, in the whole heaven
and in the whole world there are two things to which
all things have reference; these two are called good
and truth, from which, when joined into one, all things
in heaven and in the world have had existence and
subsistence. When these are one, good is in
truth and truth is in good, and truth is of good and
good is of truth; thus one recognizes the other as
its mutual and reciprocal, or as an agent recognizes
its reagent, each in its turn.
This universal marriage is the source
of marriage love between husband and wife. The
husband has been so created as to be the understanding
of truth, and the wife so created as to be the will
of good, and thus the husband to be a truth and the
wife a good, as well as that both may be truth and
good in form, which form is man, and an image of God.
Since, then, for truth to come to
be of good and good to be of truth mutually and reciprocally
has its origin in creation, so it is impossible for
one truth to be united to two diverse goods, or the
reverse; neither is it possible for one understanding
to be united to two diverse wills or the reverse;
neither for one person who is spiritual to be united
to two diverse churches; neither in like manner for
one man (vir) to be inmostly united to two women.
Inmost union is like that of soul and heart; the
soul of the wife is the husband, and the heart of
the husband is the wife. The husband communicates
and conjoins his soul to the wife by actual love;
it is in his seed; and the wife receives it in her
heart, and from this the two become one, and then
each and all things in the body of the one look to
their mutual in the body of the other. This
is genuine marriage, which is possible only between
two. For it is by creation that all things of
the husband, both of his mind and of his body, have
their mutual in the mind and in the body of the wife;
and thus the most particular things look mutually to
each other and will to be united. From this looking
and conatus [instinct] marriage love springs.
All things in the body, which are
called members, viscera, and organs, are nothing but
natural corporeal forms corresponding to the spiritual
form of the mind; from this each and all things of
the body so correspond to each and all things of the
mind that whatever the mind wills and thinks the body
at its command instantly brings forth into act.
When, therefore, two minds act as one their two bodies
are potentially so united that they are no more two
but one flesh. To will to become one flesh is
marriage love; and such as the willing is, such is
that love.
It is allowed to confirm this by a
wonderful thing in the heavens. There are married
pairs there in such marriage love that the two can
be one flesh, and are one whenever they wish, and
they then appear as one man. I have seen and
talked with such; and they said that they have one
life, and are like the life of good in truth and the
life of truth in good, and are like the pairs in man,
that is, like the two hemispheres of the brain enclosed
in one membrane, the two ventricles of the heart within
a common covering, likewise the two lobes of the lungs;
these, although they are two, yet are one in regard
to life and the activities of life, which are uses.
They said that their life so conjoined is full of
heaven, and is the very life of heaven with its infinite
beatitudes, for the reason that heaven that heaven
also is such from the marriage of the Lord with it,
for all the angels of heaven are in the Lord and the
Lord in them.
Furthermore, they said that it is
impossible for them to think from any intention about
an additional wife or woman, because this would be
turning heaven into hell, consequently if an angel
merely thinks of such a thing he falls from heaven.
They added that natural spirits do not believe such
conjunctions as theirs to be possible, for the reason
that with those who are merely natural there is no
marriage from a spiritual origin, which is of good
and truth, but only a marriage from a natural origin;
therefore there is no union of minds, but only a union
of bodies from a lascivious disposition in the flesh;
and this lust is from a universal law impressed upon
and thus implanted in everything animate and inanimate
from creation. The law is that everything in
which there is force wills to produce its like and
to multiply its kind to infinity and to eternity.
As the posterity of Jacob, who were called the sons
of Israel, were merely natural men, and thus their
marriages were not spiritual but carnal, so they were
permitted on account of the hardness of their hearts
to take more wives than one.
But it is to be noted that adulteries
are more and less infernal and abominable. The
adulteries that spring from more grievous evils and
their falsities are more grievous, and those from the
milder evils and their falsities are milder; for adulteries
correspond to adultérations of good and consequent
falsifications of truth; adultérations of
good are in themselves evils, and falsifications
of truth are in themselves falsities. According
to correspondences with these the hells are arranged
into genera and species.
In brief, from every conjunction of
evil and falsity in the spiritual world a sphere of
adultery flows forth, but only from those who are in
falsities in regard to doctrine and in evils in regard
to life; not from those who are in falsities in regard
to doctrine but are in goods in regard to life, for
in such there is no conjunction of evil and falsity,
but only in the former. That sphere flows forth
particularly from priests who have taught falsely
and lived wickedly; for these have adulterated and
falsified the Word. Although such were not adulterers
in the world, adultery is excited by them; but it
is an adultery called sacerdotal [priestly] adultery,
which is distinguishable from other adulteries.
All this makes clear that the origin of adulteries
is the love and consequent conjunction of evil and
falsity.
Adulteries are less abhorrent to Christians
than to the heathen, and even to some barbarous nations,
for the reason that at present in the Christian world
there is no marriage of good and truth, but a marriage
or evil and falsity. For the religion and doctrine
of faith separated from good works is a religion and
doctrine of truth separated from good; and truth separated
from good is not truth, but inwardly regarded is falsity;
and good separated from truth is not good, but inwardly
regarded is evil. Consequently in the Christian
religion there is doctrine of falsity and evil, from
which origin a desire and inclination for adultery
from hell flow in; and this is why adulteries are believed
in the Christian world to be allowable, and are practiced
without shame. For, as has been said above, the
conjunction of evil and falsity is spiritual adultery,
from which according to correspondence natural adultery
springs. For this reason “adulteries”
and “whoredoms” signify in the Word adultérations
of good and falsifications of truth; and for
this reason Babylon is called in the Apocalypse a “harlot,”
and Jerusalem is so called in the Word of the Old
Testament; and the Jewish nation was called by the
Lord “an adulterous nation,” and “from
their father the devil.”
He that abstains from adulteries from
any other motive than because they are sins and are
against God is still an adulterer; as for instance
when anyone abstains from them from fear of the civil
law and its penalties, from fear of the loss of reputation
and thus of honor, from fear of resulting diseases,
from fear of upbraidings at home from his wife and
consequent intranquility of life, from fear of chastisement
by the servants of the injured husband, from poverty,
or from avarice; from infirmity arising from abuse
or from age or impotence or disease; in fact, when
one abstains because of any natural or moral law, and
does not at the same time abstain because of the Divine
law, he is interiorly unchaste and an adulterer, since
he none the less believes that adulteries are not
sins, and therefore declares them lawful in his spirit,
and thus commits them in spirit, although not in the
body; consequently after death when he becomes a spirit
he speaks openly in favor of them, and commits them
without shame.
It has been granted me in the spiritual
world to see maidens who regarded whoredoms as wicked
because they are contrary to the Divine law, and also
maidens who did not regard them as wicked and yet
abstained from them because the resulting bad name
would turn away suitors. These latter I saw
encompassed with a dusky cloud in their descent to
those below, while the former I saw encompassed with
a shining light in their ascent to those above.
VII. The Seventh Commandment
In what now follows something shall
be said about the seventh commandment, which is, “Thou
shalt not kill.” In all the commandments
of the Decalogue, as in all things of the Word, two
internal senses are involved (besides the highest
which is a third), one that is next to the letter
and is called the spiritual moral sense, another that
is more remote and is called the spiritual celestial
sense.
The nearest sense of this commandment,
“Thou shalt not kill,” which is the spiritual
moral sense, is that one must not hate his brother
or neighbor, and thus not defame or slander him; for
thus he would injure or kill his reputation and honor,
which is the source of his life among his brethren,
which is called his civil life, and afterward he would
live in society as one dead, for he would be numbered
among the vile and wicked, with whom no one would
associate. When this is done from enmity, from
hatred, or from revenge, it is murder.
Morever, by many in the world this
life is counted and esteemed in equal measure with
the life of the body. And before the angels in
the heavens he that destroys this life is held to
be as guilty as if he had destroyed the bodily life
of his brother. For enmity, hatred, and revenge
breathe murder and will it; but they are restrained
and curbed by fear of the law, of resistance and of
loss of reputation. And yet these three are
endeavors toward murder; and every endeavor is an act,
for it goes forth into act when fear is removed.
This is what the Lord teaches in Matthew:
“Ye have heard that it was said
to them of old, Thou shalt not kill; and whosoever
shall kill shall be liable to the judgment. But
I say unto you, that whosoever is angry with his brother
without cause shall be liable to the judgment; whosoever
shall say to his brother, Raca, shall be liable
to the council; but whosoever shall say, Thou fool,
shall be liable to the hell of fire.”
But the more remote sense of this
commandment, Thou shalt not kill, which is called
the celestial spiritual sense, is that one shall not
take away from man the faith and love of God, and thus
his spiritual life. This is murder itself, because
from this life man is a man, the life of the body
serving this life as the instrumental cause serves
its principal cause. Moreover, from this spiritual
murder moral murder is derived; consequently he who
is in the one is also in the other; for he who wills
to take away a man’s spiritual life is in hatred
against him if he cannot take it away, for he hates
the faith and love in him, and thus the man himself.
These three, namely, spiritual murder, which pertains
to faith and love, moral murder, which pertains to
reputation and honor, and natural murder, which pertains
to the body, follow in a series one from the other,
like cause and effect.
As all who are in hell are in hatred
against the Lord, and thus in hatred against heaven,
for they are against goods and truths, so hell is
the essential murderer or the source of essential murder.
It is the source of essential murder because man
is man from the Lord through the reception of good
and truth; consequently destruction of good and truth
is destruction of the human itself, thus the killing
of man.
That those who are in hell are such
has not yet been known in the world, because in those
who belong to hell and therefore after death come into
hell no hatred against good and truth, or against heaven,
or still less against the Lord, is evident.
For everyone while he lives in the world is in externals;
and these externals are taught and trained from infancy
to counterfeit such things as are honest and decorous,
right and equitable, and good and true. Nevertheless,
hatred lies concealed in their spirit, and this in
equal degree with the evil of their life. And
as hatred is in the spirit it breaks forth when the
externals are laid aside, as is the case after death.
This infernal hatred against all who
are in good is deadly hatred because it is hatred
against the Lord. This can be seen particularly
in their delight in doing evil, which is such as to
exceed in degree every other delight, for it is a
fire that burns with a lust for destroying souls.
Moreover, it has been ascertained that this delight
is not from hatred against those whom they attempt
to destroy, but from hatred against the Lord Himself.
And since man is a man from the Lord, and the human
which is from the Lord is good and truth, and since
those who are in hell are, from hatred against the
Lord, eager to kill the human, which is good and truth,
it follows that hell is the source of murder itself.
From what has been said above it can
be seen that all who are in evils in respect to life,
and in the falsities therefrom, are murderers; for
they are enemies and haters of good and truth, since
evil hates good and falsity hates truth. The
evil man does not know he is in such hatred until
he becomes a spirit; then hatred is the very delight
of his life. Consequently from hell, where all
the evil are, there constantly breathes forth a delight
in doing evil from hatred; while from heaven, where
all the good are, there constantly breathes forth a
delight in doing good from love. Therefore two
opposite spheres meet each other in the middle region
between heaven and hell, and engage in reciprocal
combat. While man lives in the world he is in
this middle region. If he is then in evil and
in falsities therefrom he passes over to the side
of hell, and thus comes into a delight in doing evil
from hatred. But if he is in good and in truths
therefrom, he passes over to the side of heaven, and
thus comes into a delight in doing good from love.
The delight in doing evil from hatred,
which breathes forth from hell, is a delight in killing.
But as they cannot kill the body they wish to kill
the spirit; and to kill the spirit is to take away
spiritual life, which is the life of heaven.
This makes clear that the commandment, “Thou
shalt not kill,” involves also thou shalt not
hate thy neighbor, also thou shalt not hate the good
of the church and its truth; for if one hates good
and truth he hates the neighbor; and to hate is to
wish to kill. This is why the devil, by whom
hell in the whole complex is meant, is called by the
Lord,
“A murderer from the beginning”
Since hatred, which is a desire to
kill, is the opposite of love to the Lord and also
of love toward the neighbor, and since these loves
are what make heaven in man, it is evident that hatred,
being thus opposite, is what makes hell in him.
Nor is infernal fire anything else than hatred; and
in consequence the hells appear to be in a fire with
a dusky glow according to the quality and quantity
of the hatred, and in a fire with a dusky flame according
to the quantity and quality of the revenge from hatred.
Since hatred and love are direct opposites,
and since hatred in consequence constitutes hell in
man, just as love constitutes heaven in him, so the
Lord teaches,
“If thou shalt offer thy gift
upon the altar, and shalt there remember that thy
brother hath aught against thee, leave there thy gift
before the altar, and go; first be reconciled to they
brother, and then coming offer thy gift. Be well
disposed toward thine adversary whiles thou art in
the way with him; lest haply the adversary deliver
thee to the judge, and the judge deliver thee to the
officer, and thou be cast into prison. Verily,
I say unto thee, Thou shalt not come out thence till
thou hast paid the uttermost farthing”
To be delivered to the judge, and
by the judge to the officer, and by him to be cast
into prison, depicts the state of the man who is in
hatred after death from his having been in hatred against
his brother in the world, “prison” meaning
hell, and “paying the uttermost farthing”
signifying the punishment that is called the fire everlasting.
Since hatred is infernal fire it is
clear that it must be put away before love, which
is heavenly fire, can flow in, and by light from itself
give life to man; and this infernal fire can in no
wise be put away unless man knows whence hatred is
and what it is, and afterward turns away from it and
shuns it. There is in every man by inheritance
a hatred against the neighbor; for every man is born
into a love of self and of the world, and in consequence
conceives hatred, and from it is inflamed against
all who do not make one with him and favor his love,
especially against those who oppose his lusts.
For no one can love himself above all things and
love the Lord at the same time; neither can anyone
love the world above all things and love the neighbor
at the same time; since no one can serve two masters
at the same time without despising and hating the
one while he honors and loves the other. Hatred
is especially in those who are in a love of ruling
over all; with others it is unfriendliness.
It shall be told what hatred is.
Hatred has in itself a fire which is an endeavor
to kill man. That fire is manifested in anger.
There is a seeming hatred and consequent anger in
the good against evil; but this is not hatred, but
an aversion to evil; neither is it anger, but a zeal
for good in which heavenly fire inwardly lies concealed.
For the good turn away from what is evil, and are
seemingly angry at the neighbor, in order that they
may remove the evil; and thus they have regard to the
neighbor’s good.
When a man abstains from hatred and
turns away from it and shuns it as devilish, love,
charity, mercy, clemency flow in through heaven from
the Lord, and then for the first time the works that
he does are works of love and charity; while the works
he had done before, however good might be their appearance
in the external form, were all works of love of self
and of the world, in which hatred lurked whenever they
were not rewarded. So long as hatred is not
put away so long man is merely natural; and the merely
natural man remains in all his inherited evil, nor
can he become spiritual until hatred, with its root,
which is love of ruling over all, is put away; for
the fire of heaven, which is spiritual love, cannot
flow in so long as the fire of hell, which is hatred,
stands in the way and shuts it out.
VIII. The Eighth Commandment
The eighth commandment of the Decalogue,
“Thou shalt not bear false witness,” shall
now be explained. “To bear false witness”
signifies in the sense nearest to the letter to lie
about the neighbor by accusing him falsely. But
in the internal sense it signifies to call what is
just unjust, and what is unjust just, and to confirm
this by means of falsities; while in the inmost sense
it signifies to falsity the truth and good of the
Word, and on the other hand to prove a falsity of
doctrine to be true by confirming it by means of fallacies,
appearances, fabrications, knowledges falsely applied,
sophistries, and the like. The confirmations
themselves and the consequent persuasions are false
witnesses, for they are false attestations.
From this it can be seen that what
is here meant is not only false witness before a judge,
but even a judge himself who in perverting right makes
what is just unjust, and what is unjust just, for he
as well as the witness himself acts the part of a
false witness. The same is true of every man
who makes what is straight to appear crooked, and what
is crooked to appear straight; likewise any ecclesiastical
leader who falsifies the truth of the Word and perverts
its good. In a word, every falsification of
truth, spiritual, moral, and civil, which is done from
an evil heart, is false witness.
When a man abstains from false testimonies
understood in a moral and spiritual sense, and shuns
and turns away from them as sins, a love of truth
and a love of justice flow in from the Lord through
heaven. And when, in consequence, the man loves
truth and loves justice he loves the Lord, for the
Lord is truth itself and justice itself. And
when a man loves truth and justice it may be said
that truth and justice love him, because the Lord
loves him; and as a consequence his utterances become
utterances of truth, and his works become works of
justice.
IX: The Ninth and Tenth Commandments
The ninth commandment, “Thou
shalt not covet thy neighbor’s house,”
is now to be treated of. There are two loves
from which all lusts spring and flow forth perpetually
like streams from their fountains. These loves
are called love of the world and love of self.
Lust is a love continually desiring, for what a man
loves, that he continually longs for. But lusts
belong to the love of evil, while desires and affections
belong to the love of good. Now because love
of the world and love of self are the fountains of
all lusts, and all evil lusts are forbidden in these
last two commandments, it follows that the ninth commandment
forbids the lusts that flow from love of the world,
and the tenth commandment the lusts that flow from
love of self. “Not to covet a neighbor’s
house” means not to covet his goods, which in
general are possessions of wealth, and not to appropriate
them to oneself by evil arts. This lust belongs
to love of the world.
The tenth commandment is “Thou
shalt not covet (or try to get possession of) thy
neighbor’s wife, his man-servant, or his maid-servant,
his ox, or his ass.” These are lusts after
what is man’s own, because the wife, man-servant,
maid-servant, ox, and ass, are within his home, and
the things within a man’s home mean in the spiritual
internal sense the things that are his own, that is,
the wife means affection for spiritual truth and good,
“man-servant and maid-servant,” affection
for rational truth and good serving the spiritual,
and “ox and ass” affection for natural
good and truth. These signify in the Word such
affections; but because coveting and trying to get
possession of these affections means to wish and eagerly
desire to subject a man to one’s own authority
or bidding, it follows that lusting after these affections
means the lusts of the love of self, that is, of the
love of ruling, for thus does one make the things
belonging to a companion to be his own.
From this it can now be seen that
the lust of the ninth commandment is a lust of the
love of the world, and that the lusts of the tenth
commandment are lusts of the love of self. For,
as has been said before, all lusts are of love, for
it is love that covets; and as there are two evil
loves to which all lusts have reference, namely, love
of the world and love of self, it follows that the
lust of the ninth commandments has reference to love
of the world, and the lust of this commandment to
love of self, especially to the love of ruling.
X. The Commandments in General
The commandments of the Decalogue
are called the ten words or ten commandments, because
“ten” signifies all; consequently the ten
words mean all things of the Word, and thus all things
of the church in brief. All things of the Word
and all things of the church in brief are meant, because
there are in each commandment three interior senses,
each sense for its own heaven, for there are three
heavens. The first sense is the spiritual moral
sense; this is for the first or outmost heaven; the
second sense is the celestial spiritual sense, which
is for the second or middle heaven; and the third
sense is the Divine celestial, which is for the third
or inmost heaven. There are thus three internal
senses in every least particular of the Word.
For from the Lord, who is in things highest, the
Word has been sent down in succession through the three
heavens even to the earth, and thus has been accommodated
to each heaven; and therefore the Word is in each
heaven and I may say in each angel in its own sense,
and is read by them daily; and there are preachings
from it, as on the earth.
For the Word is Divine truth itself,
thus Divine wisdom, going forth from the Lord as a
sun, and appearing in the heavens as light. Divine
truth is the Divine that is called the Holy Spirit,
for it not only goes forth from the Lord but it also
enlightens man and teaches him, as is said of the
Holy Spirit. As the Word in its descent from
the Lord has been adapted to the three heavens, and
the three heavens are joined together as inmosts are
with outmosts through intermediates, so, too, are
the three senses of the Word; which shows that the
Word is given that by it there may be a conjunction
of the heavens with each other, and a conjunction
of the heavens with the human race, for whom the sense
of the letter is given, which is merely natural and
thus the basis of the other three senses. That
the ten commandments of the Decalogue are all things
of the Word in brief can be seen only from the three
senses of those commandments, which are as above stated.
What these three senses in the commandments
of the Decalogue are can be seen from the following
summary explanation. The first commandment,
“Thou shalt not worship other gods beside Me,”
involves in the spiritual moral sense that nothing
else nor anyone else is to be worshipped as Divine;
nothing else, that is, Nature, by attributing to it
something Divine of itself; nor anyone else, that
is, any vicar of the Lord or any saint. In the
celestial spiritual sense it involves that one God
only is to be acknowledged, and not several according
to their qualities, as the ancients did, and as some
heathens do at this day, or according to their works,
as Christians do at this day, who make out one God
because of creation, another because of redemption,
and another because of enlightenment.
This commandment in the Divine celestial
sense involves that the Lord alone is to be acknowledged
and whorshipped, and a trinity in Him, namely, the
Divine itself from eternity, which is meant by the
Father, the Divine Human born in time, which is meant
by the Son of God, and the Divine that goes forth
from both, which is meant by the Holy Spirit.
These are the three senses of the first commandment
in their order. From this commandment viewed
in its threefold sense it is clear that it contains
and includes in brief all things that concern the essence
of the Divine.
The second commandment, “Thou
shalt not profane the name of God,” contains
and includes in its three senses all things that concern
the quality of the Divine, since “the name of
God” signifies His quality, which in its first
sense is the Word, doctrine from the Word, and worship
of the lips and of the life from doctrine; in its second
sense it means the Lord’s kingdom on the earth
and the Lord’s kingdom in the heavens; and in
its third sense it means the Lord’s Divine Human,
for this is the quality of the Divine itself.
In the other commandments there are
likewise three internal senses for the three heavens;
but these, the Lord willing, will be considered elsewhere.
As the Divine truth united to Divine
good goes forth from the Lord as a sun, and by this
heaven and the world were made,
it follows that it is from this that all things in
heaven and in the world have reference to good and
to truth and to their conjunction in bringing forth
something. These ten commandments contain all
things of Divine good and all things of Divine truth,
and there is also in them a conjunction of these.
But this conjunction is hidden; for it is like the
conjunction of love to the Lord and love toward the
neighbor, Divine good belonging to love to the Lord,
and Divine truth to love toward the neighbor; for
when a man lives according to Divine truth, that is,
loves his neighbor, the Lord flows in with Divine
good and conjoins Himself. For this reason there
were two tables on which these ten commandments were
written, and they were called a covenant, which signifies
conjunction; and afterward they were placed in the
ark, not one beside the other, but one above the other,
for a testimony of the conjunction between the Lord
and man. Upon one table the commandments of love
to the Lord were written, and upon the other table
the commandments of love toward the neighbor.
The commandments of love to the Lord are the first
three, and the commandments of love toward the neighbor
are the last six; and the fourth commandment, which
is “Honor thy father and thy mother,”
is the mediating commandment, for in it “father”
means the Father in the heavens, and “mother”
means the church, which is the neighbor.
Something shall now be said about
how conjunction is effected by means of the commandments
of the Decalogue. Man does not conjoin himself
to the Lord, but the Lord alone conjoins man to Himself,
and this He does by man’s knowing, understanding,
willing, and doing these commandments; and when man
does them there is conjunction, but if he does not
do them he ceases to will them, and when he ceases
to will them he ceases also to understand and know
them. For what does willing amount to if man
when he is able does not do? Is it not a figment
of reason? From this it follows that conjunction
is effected when a man does the commandments of the
Decalogue.
But it has been said that man does
not conjoin himself to the Lord, but that the Lord
alone conjoins man to Himself, and that conjunction
is effected by doing; and from this it follows that
it is the Lord in man that does these commandments.
But anyone can see that a covenant cannot be entered
into and conjunction be effected by it unless there
is some return on man’s part, not only in consent
but also in acceptance. To this end the Lord
has imparted to man a freedom to will and act as if
of himself, and such a freedom that man does not know
otherwise, when he is thinking about truth and doing
good, than that the freedom is in himself and thus
from himself. There is this return on man’s
part in order that conjunction may be effected.
But as this freedom is from the Lord, and continually
from Him, man must by all means acknowledge that thinking
about and understanding truth and willing and doing
good are not from himself, but are from the Lord.
Consequently when man through the
last six commandments conjoins himself to the Lord
as if of himself, the Lord then conjoins Himself to
man through the first three commandments, which are
that man must acknowledge God, must believe in the
Lord, and must keep His name holy. These man
does not believe, however much he may think that he
does, unless the evils forbidden in the other table,
that is, in the last six commandments, he abstains
from as sins. These are the things pertaining
to the covenant on the part of the Lord and on the
part of man, through which there is reciprocal conjunction,
which is that man may be in the Lord and the Lord
in man.
It is said by some that he who sins
against one commandment of the Decalogue sins also
against the rest, thus that he who is guilty of one
is guilty of all. It shall be told how far this
is in harmony with the truth. When a man transgresses
one commandment, assuring himself that it is not a
sin, thus offending without fear of God, because he
has thus rejected the fear of God he does not fear
to transgress the rest of the commandments, although
he may not do this in act.
For example, when one does not regard
as sins frauds and illicit gains, which in themselves
are thefts, neither does he regard as a sin adultery
with the wife of another, hating a man even to murder,
lying about him, coveting his house and other things
belonging to him; for when he rejects from his heart
in any one commandment the fear of God he denies that
anything is a sin; consequently he is in communion
with those who in like manner transgress the other
commandments. He is like an infernal spirit who
is in a hell of thieves; and although he is not an
adulterer, nor a murderer, nor a false witness, yet
he is in communion with such, and can be persuaded
by them to believe that such things are not evils,
and can be led to do them. For he who becomes
an infernal spirit through the transgression of one
commandment, no longer believes it to be a sin to
do anything against God or anything against the neighbor.
But the opposite is true of those
who abstain from the evil forbidden in one commandment,
and who shun and afterward turn away from it as a sin
against God. Because such fear of God, they come
into communion with angels of heaven, and are led
by the Lord to abstain from the evils forbidden in
the other commandments and to shun them, and finally
to turn away from them as sins; and if perchance they
have sinned against them, yet they repent and thus
by degrees are withdrawn from them.