I. Goods and Truths and Their Opposites
The Divine good that goes forth from
the Lord is united with His Divine truth, as heat
from the sun is with light in the time of spring.
But angels, who are recipients of the Divine good
and Divine truth going forth from the Lord, are distinguished
as celestial and spiritual. Those who receive
more of the Lord’s Divine good than of His Divine
truth are called celestial angels; because these constitute
the kingdom of the Lord that is called the celestial
kingdom. But the angels who receive more of the
Lord’s Divine truth than of his Divine good are
called spiritual angels, because of these the Lord’s
spiritual kingdom consists. This makes clear
that goods and truths have a twofold origin, namely,
a celestial origin and a spiritual origin. Those
goods and truths that are from a celestial origin
are the goods and truths of love to the Lord; while
those goods and truths that are from a spiritual origin
are the goods and truths of love toward the neighbor.
The difference is like that between higher and lower,
or between inner and outer; thus like that between
things that are in a higher or inner degree, and those
that are in a lower or outer degree; and what this
difference is can be seen from what has been said in
the work on Heaven and Hell about the three degrees
of the heavens, and thus of the angels and their intelligence
and wisdom (H.H., , 34, 38, 39, 208, 209, 211,
435). (A.E., .)
As the heavens are divided into two
kingdoms, namely, into a celestial kingdom and a spiritual
kingdom, so are the hells divided into two domains
opposite to those kingdoms. The domain opposite
to the celestial kingdom is called devilish, and the
domain opposite to the spiritual kingdom is called
infernal. These domains are distinguished in
the Word by the names Devil and Satan. There
are two domains in the hells, because the heavens
and the hells are opposite to each other; and opposite
must fully correspond to opposite that there may be
equilibrium. For the springing forth and permanence
of all things, both in the natural world and in the
spiritual world, depend upon an exact equilibrium
between two activities that are opposite; and when
these act against each other manifestly, they act
by forces, but when not manifestly they act by endeavors
(canatus). By means of equilibriums all things
in both worlds are preserved; without this all things
would perish. In the spiritual world the equilibrium
is between good from heaven and evil from hell; and
thus between truth from heaven and falsity from hell.
For the Lord arranges unceasingly that all kinds and
species of good and truth in the heavens shall have
opposite to them in the hells evils and falsities
of kinds that correspond by opposition; thus goods
and truths from a celestial origin have for their opposites
evils and falsities that are called devilish; and in
like manner goods and truths from a spiritual origin
have for their opposites evils and falsities that
are called infernal. The cause of these equilibriums
is to be found in the fact that the same Divine goods
and Divine truths that the angels in the heavens receive
from the Lord, the spirits in the hells turn into
evils and falsities. All angels, spirits, and
men are kept by the Lord in equilibrium between good
and evil, and thus between truth and falsity, in order
that they may be in freedom; and thus may be led from
evil to good and from falsity to truth easily and as
if by themselves, although in fact they are led by
the Lord. For the same reason they are led in
freedom from good to evil, and from truth to falsity,
and this, too, as if by themselves, although the leading
is from hell. (A.E., .)
II. The First Kind of Profanation
Profanations are of many kinds.
The most grievous kind is when one acknowledges and
lives according to the truths and goods of the Word,
of the church, and of worship, and afterward denies
them and lives contrary to them, or even lives contrary
to them and does not deny them. Such profanation
effects a conjunction and coherence of good with falsity,
and of truth with evil, and from this it comes to pass
that man is at the same time in heaven and in hell;
consequently, when heaven wills to have its own, and
hell wills to have its own, and yet they cohere, they
are both swept away, and thus the proper human life
perishes, and the man becomes like a brute animal,
continually delirious, and carried hither and thither
by fantasy like a dragon in the air, and in his fantasy
shreds and specks appear like giants and crowds, and
a little platter like the universe; and so on.
As such have no longer any human life
they are not called spirits, but something profane,
nor are they called he or she, but it; and when they
are seen in the light of heaven they appear like dried
skeletons. But this kind of profanation is rare,
since the Lord provides against a man’s entering
into a belief in truth and a life of good unless he
can be kept in them continually even to the end of
his life. (A.E., .)
It has been said that the most grievous
kind of profanation is when the truths of the Word
are acknowledged in faith and confirmed in the life,
and man afterward recedes from faith and lives wickedly,
or if he does not recede from faith he nevertheless
lives wickedly. But one who is in faith and
in a life according to it from childhood to youth,
and afterward in adult age recedes from faith and
from a life of faith, does not profane, for the reason
that the faith of childhood is a faith of the memory,
and is the master’s faith in the child; while
the faith of adult age is a faith of the understanding,
and thus a man’s own faith. This faith
a man can profane if he recedes from it and lives contrary
to it, but not the former. For nothing enters
the life of a man and affects it except what comes
into the understanding and from that into the will;
and a man does not think from his own understanding
and act from his own will until he arrives at adult
age. Before that he has thought merely from
knowledge and acted merely from obedience; and this
does not make a part of his life, and therefore cannot
be profaned.
In a word, whatever a man thinks,
speaks, and does, from the understanding with the
will favoring it, this belongs to his life or comes
to be of his life; and if this is holy it is profaned
by his receding. But the profanations of
this kind are more or less grievous according to the
quality of the truth and the consequent faith, and
according to the quality of the good and the consequent
life, and according to the quality of the withdrawal
from these; and therefore there are many specific
differences in this profanation. (A.E., .)
Why the state of profaners after death
is so horrible shall be disclosed. Man has two
minds, a natural and a spiritual. The natural
mind is opened to him by knowledges (scientiae
et cognitiones) of truth and good, and the spiritual
mind is opened by a life according to these; and this
is effected in those who know, acknowledge, and believe
the truths of the Word and live according to them.
In others that mind is not opened. When the
spiritual mind has been opened, the light of heaven,
which is Divine truth, flows through it into the natural
mind, and there arranges truths in a corresponding
order. Therefore when a man passes over into
a contrary state, and either in faith or life denies
the truths of the Word that he has previously acknowledged,
the things that are in the natural mind no longer
correspond with those that are in the spiritual mind;
consequently heaven with its light flows in through
the spiritual mind into non-corresponding things, or
into things opposite to those that correspond in the
natural man; and from this a fantasy arises that is
so direful that they seem to themselves to fly in
the air like dragons, while shreds and specks appear
to them like giants and crowds, and a little ball
like the whole globe, and other like things.
The reason of this is that they have heaven in the
spiritual mind and hell in the natural mind, and when
heaven, which is in the spiritual mind, acts into
hell, which is in the natural mind, such things appear.
And as this destroys all things pertaining to the
understanding, and the will with the understanding,
the man comes to be no longer a man. And this
is why a profaner is no longer called a man, nor he
or she, but it, for he is a brute. (A.E., .)
This kind of profanation exists especially
in those who acknowledge the Lord and His Divine,
and the Word and its holiness; and for the reason
that the Lord alone by means of truths from the Word
opens heaven to the man who lives according to those
truths; and unless heaven is opened such profanation
is not possible. And this shows why the Gentiles,
who are ignorant of the Lord and know nothing about
the Word, cannot bring upon themselves such profanation;
neither can the Jews, for they deny the Lord from
their infancy, and heaven is not opened to them by
means of the Word; neither can the impious who have
been such from childhood; for, as has been said, those
only profane who believe rightly and live rightly,
and afterward believe wrongly and live wrongly.
Besides this kind of profanation there are other
kinds that shall be treated of. (A.E., .)
III. The Second Kind of Profanation
There is another kind of profanation
of holy things that those come into who have supremacy
as their end, and regard the holy things of the Word,
of the church, and of worship, as means. The
Divine order is that heaven and the church, and consequently
the holy things of these, be the end, and supremacy
the means for promoting that end. For when holy
things are the end and supremacy the means, the Lord
is worshipped and adored; but when supremacy is the
end and holy things the means, man instead of the
Lord is worshipped and adored. For the means
look to the end as servants look to their master,
and the end looks to the means as a master looks to
his servants; consequently as a master esteems and
loves his servants according to the compliance they
render to his will, so a man who has supremacy as
his end esteems and loves the holy things of the Word,
of the church, and of worship, according to the compliance
they render to his end, which is supremacy. And
on the other hand, as a lord despises and dismisses
servants and takes others in their place when they
are not subservient to his will, so a man who has supremacy
as his end despises and rejects the holy things of
the church, and takes other things in their place
when they are not subservient to his end, which is
supremacy.
From this it is clear that in those
who have supremacy as their end, holy things are of
no account except so far as they are subservient to
the end, and also that they are not holy, but are profane
when they are subservient to this end; and for the
reason that the end, when it is supremacy, is the
man himself, and as this end is love of self it is
the man’s own (proprium); and man’s
own when viewed in itself is nothing but evil, and
indeed is profane, and the end joins to itself the
means that they may be as one. In this kind
of profanation are all those who are in sacred ministries,
and who are seeking by means of the holy things of
the church to gain honor and glory, and these and not
use, which is the salvation of souls, are what give
them joy of heart. (A.E., .)
Those who are in this kind of profanation
cannot do otherwise than adulterate the goods of the
Word and falsify its truths, and thus pervert the
holy things of the church; for these are not in accord
with the end, which is the supremacy of man over them,
for they are Divine things that cannot be mere servants;
therefore from necessity, that the means may be in
accord with the end, goods are turned into evils, truths
into falsities, and thus holy things into things profane,
and this in an increasing degree as the supremacy,
which is the end, is increased.
That this is so can be clearly seen
from the Babylon of the present day, to which the
holy things of the Word, of the church and of worship,
are means, and supremacy is the end. So far
as they have magnified supremacy they have minimized
the holiness of the Word, and have actually exalted
above it the holiness of the Pope’s decrees;
they have claimed to themselves power over heaven,
and even over the Lord Himself, and they have instituted
the idolatrous worship of men, both living and dead,
and this until there is nothing left of Divine good
and Divine truth.
That the holy things of the Word,
of the church, and of worship, have been so changed
is of the Lord’s Divine providence; not of His
providence that this should be done, but of His providence
that when men wish to rule and do rule by means of
the holy Divine things, they should choose falsity
in place of truth and evil in place of good, for otherwise
they would defile holy things, and render them abominable
before angels; but when holy things no longer exist
this cannot be done. Take as an example what
has been done with the Holy Supper instituted by the
Lord: they have separated the bread and the wine,
giving the bread to the people and drinking the wine
themselves. For “bread” signifies
good of love to the Lord, and “wine” the
truth of faith in Him; and good separated from truth
is not good, nor is truth separated from good truth,
for truth is truth from good, and good is good in truth.
And so in other things. (A.E., .)
Those who are in the love of self,
and from that in the love of ruling, and who covet,
acquire, and afterward exercise supremacy by means
of the holy things of the Word, of the church, and
of worship, are those who profane. For the delight
of the love of ruling for self’s sake, that
is, for the sake of eminence, and consequent homage
and a kind of worship of self, is an infernal delight.
Moreover, this prevails in hell, for in hell everyone
wills to be the greatest, while in heaven everyone
wills to be the least; and to rule over holy things
from an infernal delight is to profane them.
But this second kind of profanation
of the holy things of the church is not like the former
kind of the profanation of them. Those fall into
the former kind in whom a communication with heaven
has been effected by the opening of their spiritual
mind; while this second kind of profanation those
fall into in whom the spiritual mind has not been
opened, or communication with heaven effected through
it. For so long as the delight of the love of
ruling resides in man, that mind cannot be opened,
and communication with heaven is not possible to him.
Moreover, the lot of these profaners
after death differs from the lot of the former.
The former, as has been said, are in an unceasing
delirium of fantasy; but these hate the Lord, hate
heaven, hate the Word, hate the church, and hate all
its holy things; and they come into such hatred because
their dominion is taken away from them, and thus their
state is changed into its opposite. They appear
like something fiery, and their hell appears like
a conflagration; for infernal fire is nothing else
than a lust for ruling from love of self. These
are among the worst, and are called devils, while
the others are called satáns. (A.E., .)
The love of ruling by the holy things
of the church as means wholly shuts up the interiors
of the human mind from the inmosts toward the outmosts,
according to the kind and strength of that love.
But to make clear that they are shut up, something
shall first be said about the interiors belonging
to the human mind. Man has a spiritual mind,
a rational mind, a natural mind, and a sensual mind.
By means of the spiritual mind man is in heaven and
is a heaven in its least form. By means of the
natural mind he is in the world and is a world in its
least form. Heaven in man communicates with
the world in him by means of the rational mind, and
with the body by means of the sensual mind. The
sensual mind is the first to be opened in man after
his birth; after that the natural mind, and as he
seeks to become intelligent the rational mind, and
as he seeks to become wise the spiritual mind.
And at length, as man becomes wise the spiritual
mind becomes to him as the head, and the natural mind
as the body, and the rational mind serves as a neck
to join this to the head, and then the sensual mind
becomes like the sole of the foot.
In little children the Lord so arranges
all these minds by means of the inflow of innocence
from heaven that they can be opened. But with
those who begin from childhood to be inflamed with
the lust of ruling through the holy things of the
church as means, the spiritual mind is wholly shut;
so, too, is the rational mind, and finally the natural
mind, even to the sensual mind, or as it is said in
heaven, even to the nose. And thus men become
merely sensual, and are the most stupid of all in things
spiritual and thus in things rational, and the most
crafty of all in worldly and thus in civil matters.
That they are so stupid in spiritual things they
do not themselves know, because in heart they do not
believe these things, and because they believe craft
to be prudence and cunning to be wisdom. And
yet all of this kind differ according to the kind and
strength of their lust for ruling and for exercising
rule, also according to the kind and strength of the
persuasion that they are holy, and according to the
kind of good and truth from the Word that they profane.
(A.E., .)
Profaners of this kind are stupid
and foolish in spiritual things, but are crafty and
keen in worldly things, because they make one with
the devils in hell, and because, as has been said
above, they are merely sensual, and are therefore
in what is their own (proprium), which draws
its delight of life from the unclean effluvia that
exhale from waste matters in the body, and that are
emitted from dunghills; and these cause a swelling
of their breasts when their pride is active and the
titillation of these cause delight. That such
is the source of their delight is made evident by
their delights after death when they are living as
spirits; for then more than the sweetest odors do they
love the rank stenches arising from the gases of the
belly and from outhouses, which to their smell are
more fragrant than thyme. The approach and touch
of these close up the interiors of their mind, and
open the exteriors pertaining to the body, from which
come their quickness in worldly things and their dullness
in spiritual things.
In a word, the love of ruling by means
of the holy things of the church corresponds to filth,
and its delight to a stench indescribable by words,
and at which angels shudder. Such is the exhalation
from their hells when they are opened; but they are
kept closed because of the oppression and occasional
swooning which they produce. (A.E., .)
IV. The Third Kind of Profanation
In the third kind of profanation are
those who with devout gestures and pious utterance
worship Divine things, and yet in heart and spirit
deny them; thus who venerate the holy things of the
Word and of the church and of worship outwardly or
before the world, and yet at home or in secret deride
them. When those of this class are in a holy
external, and are teaching in a church or conversing
with the common people, they do not know otherwise
than that what they are saying is so; but as soon
as they return into themselves their thought is reversed.
Because these are such they can counterfeit angels
of light, although they are angels of darkness.
From this it is clear that this kind
of profanation is a hypocritical kind. They
are not unlike images made of filth and gilded, or
like fruits rotten within but with a beautiful skin,
or like nuts eaten by worms within but with a whole
shell. From all this it is evident that their
internal is diabolical, and therefore that their holy
external is profane.
Such are some of the rulers in the
Babylon of the present day, and many of a certain
society in Babylon, as those of them know who claim
to themselves dominion over the souls of men and over
heaven. For to believe as they do, that power
has been given them to save and to admit into heaven,
is the very opposite of acknowledging in heart that
there is a God, and for the reason that man, in order
to be saved and admitted into heaven, must look to
the Lord and pray to Him. But a man who believes
that such power has been given him looks to himself,
and believes the things that are the Lord’s
to be in himself; and to believe this, and at the
same time to believe that there is a God or that God
is in him, is impossible. For a man to believe
that God is in him when he thinks himself to be above
the holy things of the church, and heaven to be in
his power, is like ascribing that belief to Lucifer,
who burns with the fire of ruling over all things.
If such a man thinks that God is in him he cannot
think this otherwise than from himself; and thinking
from himself that God is in him is thinking not that
God is in him, but that he himself is God, as is said
of Lucifer in Isaiah (xi, 14), by whom is there
meant Babylon, as is evident from the fourth and twenty-second
verses of the same chapter.
Moreover, such a man of himself, when
power is given him, shows forth what he is of himself,
and this by degrees according to his elevation.
From this it is clear that such are atheists, some
avowedly, some clandestinely, and some ignorantly.
And as they regard dominion as an end, and the holy
things of heaven and the church as means, they counterfeit
angels of light in face, gesture, and speech, and thus
profane holy things. (A.E., .)
Those who are in this kind of profanation,
which is hypocritical, differ in this respect, that
there are those who have less ability and those who
have more ability to conceal the interiors of their
mind, that they may not be disclosed, and to shape
the exteriors, which pertain to face and mouth, into
an expression of sanctity. When such after death
become spirits they appear encompassed with a cloud,
in the midst of which is something black, like an
Egyptian mummy. But as they are raised up as
it were into the light of heaven, that bright cloud
changes to a diabolical duskiness, not from any shining
through it, but from a breathing through it, and the
consequent disclosing. In hell, therefore, these
are black devils. The differences in this kind
of profanation are known from the blackness, as being
more or less horrifying. (A.E., .)
V. The Fourth and Fifth Kinds of Profanation
A fourth kind of profanation is to
live a life of piety, by frequenting churches, listening
devoutly to preachings, observing the sacrament of
the Supper, and the other appointed forms of worship,
reading the Word at home, and sometimes books of devotion,
and habitually praying morning and evening, and yet
making the precepts of life that are in the Word,
particularly in the Decalogue, of no account, by acting
dishonestly and unjustly in business and in judgments
for the sake of gain or influenced by friendship;
committing whoredom and adultery when lust inflames
and urges; burning with hate and revenge against those
who do not favor their gain or honor; lying, and speaking
evil of the good, and good of the evil, and so on.
When a man is in these evils, and has not been purified
from them by turning away from them and hating them,
and still worships God devoutly, as has been said
above, then he profanes; for he mingles his internals
which are impure with externals that are pious, and
these he defiles.
For there can be nothing external
that does not proceed and have existence from internals.
The actions and speech of man are his externals,
and thoughts and volitions are his internals.
Man can speak only from thought, and can act only
from volition. When the life of the thoughts
and of the will is infected with craft, cunning, and
violence, it must needs be that these, as interior
evils of the life, will flow into the speech and actions
pertaining to worship and piety, and defile them as
filth defiles waters.
This worship is what is meant by “Gog
and Magog” (Apoc. x, and is thus described
in Isaiah:
“What is the multitude of sacrifices
unto Me, meat offerings, incense, sabbaths, new moons,
appointed feasts, and prayers, when your hands are
full of bloods? Wash you, make you clean, put
away the wickedness of your doings . . . ; cease to
do evil” (i. 11-19).
This kind of profanation is not hypocritical
like the former, because the man who is in it believes
that he will be saved by external worship separate
from internal, and does not know that the worship by
which he can be saved is external worship from internal.
(A.E., .)
Those who give themselves up wholly
to a life of piety, who walk continually in pious
meditations, who pray frequently upon their knees,
and talk about salvation, faith, and love at all times
and in all places, and yet do not shun frauds, adulteries,
hatreds, blasphemies, and the like, as sins against
God, nor fight against them, such are the kind that
are more fully profaners; for by the impurities of
their minds they defile the piety of their lips, especially
when they renounce the world and lead solitary lives.
Of this kind there are some who are still more profaners;
these are like those just described, but by reasonings
and by the Word falsely interpreted they defend their
vices as adulteries and lusts that belong to their
nature, and thus to their enjoyment. Such first
regard themselves as free from danger, afterward as
blameless, and at length as holy; and thus under the
veil of sanctity they cast themselves into uncleannesses
with which both themselves and their garments are
polluted. (A.E., .)
To this class of profaners those especially
belong who read the Word and know about the Lord;
because from the Lord through the Word are all things
holy that can be profaned; things not from that source
cannot be profaned. That is said to be profane
that is the opposite of what is holy, and that offers
violence to what is holy and destroys it. From
this it follows that those who do not read the Word
and do not approach the Lord, as is the case with
the Papists, still less those who know nothing about
the Lord and the Word, like the Gentiles, do not belong
to this class of profaners.
Those who belong to this class of
profaners appear after death at first with a face
of human color, around which float many wandering stars;
and those of them that had been leaders sometimes
appear shining about the lips. But as they are
brought into the light of heaven, the stars and the
shining of the lips vanish, and the color of the face
is changed to black, and likewise their garments.
But the blackness of these profaners tends to blue,
as the blackness of the other kind of profaners tends
to red, for the reason that the latter profane the
goods of the Word and of the church, while the others
profane the truths of the Word and of the church.
For red derives from the sun its signification of
good, while blue derives from the sky its signification
of truth. (A.E., .)
The fifth kind of profanation is not
like the others that have been treated of, for it
consists in jesting from the Word and about the Word.
For those who make jokes from the Word do not regard
it as holy, and those who joke about it hold it in
no esteem. And yet the Word is the very Divine
truth of the Lord with men, and the Lord is present
in the Word, and heaven also; for every particular
of the Word communicates with heaven, and through
heaven with the Lord; therefore to jest from the Word
or about the Word is to bespatter the holy things of
heaven with the dust of the earth. (A.E., .)