“At this day nothing
but the self-evidenced reason of love
will re-establish the
Church.” Canons, Prologue.
GOD THE LORD
“Believe in God:
believe also in Me.”
John,
XIV, 1
“My Lord, and my God!”
John,
XX, 28
ONE AND INFINITE
God is One, and Infinite. The
true quality of the Infinite does not appear; for
the human mind, however highly analytical and exalted,
is itself finite, and the finiteness in it cannot
be laid aside. It is not fitted, therefore, to
see the Infinity of God, and thus God, as He is in
Himself, but can see God from behind in shadow; as
it is said of Moses, when he asked to see God, that
he was placed in a cleft of the rock, and saw His
hinder side. It is enough to acknowledge God from
things finite, that is, created, in which He is infinitely.
True Christian Religion, n. 28
“INTO HIS MARVELLOUS LIGHT”
We read in the Word that Jéhovah God
dwells in light inaccessible. Who, then, could
approach Him, unless He had come to dwell in accessible
light, that is, unless He had descended and assumed
a Humanity and in it had become the Light of the world?
Who cannot see that to approach Jéhovah the Father
in His light is as impossible as to take the wings
of the morning and to fly with them to the sun?
True Christian Religion, n. 176
THE CHRIST-GOD
We ought to have faith in God the
Saviour, Jesus Christ, because that is faith in the
visible God in Whom is the Invisible; and faith in
the visible God, Who is at once Man and God, enters
into man. For while faith is spiritual in essence
it is natural in form, for everything spiritual, in
order to be anything with a man, is received by him
in what is natural.
True Christian Religion, n. 339
Man’s conjunction with the Lord
is not with His supreme Divine Being itself, but with
His Divine Humanity, and by this with the supreme
Divine Being; for man can have no idea whatever of
the supreme Divine Being of the Lord, utterly transcending
his thought as it does; but of His Divine Human Being
he can have an idea. Hence the Gospel according
to John says that no one has at any time seen God except
the only-begotten Son, and that there is no approach
to the Father save by Him. For the same reason
He is called a Mediator.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 4211
GOD-MAN
In the Lord, God and Man are not two
but one Person, yea, altogether one, as soul and body
are. This is plain in many of the Lord’s
own utterances; as that the Father and He are one;
that all things of the Father are His, and all His
the Father’s; that He is in the Father, and
the Father in Him; that all things are given into His
hand; that He has all power; that whosoever believes
in Him has eternal life; that He is God of heaven
and earth.
Doctrine Concerning the Lord, n.
60
There is one God, and the Lord is
He, His Divinity and Humanity being one Person.
Divine Providence, n. 122
They who think of the Lord’s
Humanity, and not at the same time of His Divinity,
by no means allow the expression “Divine Humanity”;
for they think of the Humanity by itself and of the
Divinity by itself, which is like thinking of man
apart from his soul or life, which, however, is no
conception of man, still less of the Lord.
Apocalypse Explained, n. 26
WHY HE CAME
The Lord from eternity, Who is Jéhovah,
came into the world to subdue the hells and to glorify
His Humanity. Without Him no mortal could have
been saved; and they are saved who believe in Him.
True Christian Religion, n. 2
The Lord came into the world to save
the human race which would otherwise have perished
in eternal death. This salvation the Lord effected
by subjugating the hells, which infested every man
coming into the world and going out of the world,
and by glorifying His Humanity; for so He can hold
the hells subdued to eternity. The subjugation
of the hells, and the glorification at the same time
of His Humanity, were effected by temptations let
into the Humanity He had from the mother, and by unbroken
victories. His passion on the cross was the last
temptation and complete victory.
Heavenly Doctrine, n. 293
HOW HE CAME
Because, from His essence, God burned
with the love of uniting Himself to man, it was necessary
that He should cover Himself around with a body adapted
to reception and conjunction. He therefore descended
and assumed a human nature in pursuance of the order
established by Him from the creation of the world.
That is, He was to be conceived by a power produced
from Himself; He was to be carried in the womb; He
was to be born, and then to grow in wisdom and in
love, and so was to approach to union with His Divine
origin. Thus God became Man, and Man God.
True Christian Religion, n. 838
THE LIFE ON EARTH
The Lord had at first a human nature
from the mother, of which He gradually divested Himself
while He was in the world. Accordingly He kept
experiencing two states: a state of humiliation
or privation, as long and as far as He was conscious
in the human nature from the mother; and a state of
glorification or union with the Divine, as long and
as far as He was conscious in the Humanity received
from the Father. In the state of humiliation
He prayed to the Father as to One other than Himself;
but in the state of glorification He spoke with the
Father as with Himself. In this state He said
that the Father was in Him, and He in the Father,
and that the Father and He were one.
The Lord consecutively put off the
human nature assumed from the mother, and put on a
Humanity from the Divine in Himself, which is the
Divine Humanity and the Son of God.
Doctrine Concerning the Lord, nn.
29, 35
THE LOVE OF HIS LIFE
When the Lord was in the world, His
life was altogether the life of a love for the whole
human race, which He burned to save forever. That
life was of the intensest love by which He united Himself
to the Divine and the Divine to Himself. For
being itself, or Jéhovah, is pure mercy from love
for the whole human race; and that life was one of
sheer love, as it can never be with any man.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 2253
“COME UNTO ME”
Do you, my friend, flee evil, and
do good, and believe in the Lord with your whole heart
and with your whole soul, and the Lord will love you,
and give you love for doing, and faith for believing.
Then will you do good from love, and from a faith
which is confidence will you believe. If you
persevere in this, a reciprocal conjunction will take
place, and one that is perpetual, indeed is salvation
itself, and everlasting life.
True, Christian Religion, n. 484
THE TRINITY; THE FULNESS OF HIS BEING
They who are truly men of the Church,
that is, who are in love to the Lord and in charity
toward the neighbor, know and acknowledge a Trine.
Still, they humble themselves before the Lord, and
adore Him alone, inasmuch as they know that there
is no approach to the Divine Itself, called the Father,
but by the Son; and that all that is holy, and of
the Holy Spirit, proceeds from Him. When they
are in this idea, they adore no other than Him, by
Whom and from Whom are all things; consequently they
adore One.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 2329
God is one in essence and in person.
This God is the Lord. The Divinity itself, which
is called Jéhovah “the Father,” is the
Lord from eternity. The Divine Humanity is “the
Son” begotten from His Divine from eternity,
and born in the world. The proceeding Divinity
is “the Holy Spirit.”
Divine Providence, n. 157
MAN
“Lord, what is man that Thou
art mindful of him;
And the son of man that Thou visitest him?”
Psalm,
VIII, 4
GOD’S UNRELAXED EFFORT
The object of creation was an angelic
heaven from the human race; in other words, mankind,
in whom God might be able to dwell as in His residence.
For this reason man was created a form of Divine order.
God is in him, and as far as he lives according to
Divine order, fully so; but if he does not live according
to Divine order, still God is in him, but in his highest
parts, endowing him with the ability to understand
truth and to will what is good. But as far as
man lives contrary to order, so far he shuts up the
lower parts of his mind or spirit, and prevents God
from descending and filling them with His presence.
Then God is in him, but he is not in God.
True Christian Religion, nn. 66,
70
AN INSTRUMENT OF LIFE
Man is an instrument of life, and
God alone is life. God pours His life into His
instrument and every part of him, as the sun pours
its heat into a tree and every part of it. God
also gives man to feel this life in himself as his
own. God wills that he should do so, that man
may live as of himself according to the laws of order,
which are as many as there are precepts in the Word,
and may dispose himself to receive the love of God.
But still God perpetually holds with His finger the
perpendicular above the scales, and regulates, but
never violates by compulsion, man’s free decision.
Man’s free will is from this: that he feels
life in himself as his, and God leaves him so to feel,
that reciprocal conjunction may take place between
Him and man.
True Christian Religion, n. 504
“ABIDE IN ME”
Man is so created that he can be more
and more closely united to the Lord. He is so
united not by knowledge alone, nor by intelligence
alone, nor even by wisdom alone, but by a life in accordance
with these. The more closely he is united to
the Lord, the wiser and happier he becomes, the more
distinctly he seems to himself to be his own, and
the more clearly he perceives that he is the Lord’s.
Divine Providence, nn. 32 et
al.
TWO MINDS: TWO WORLDS
Man is so created as to live simultaneously
in the natural world and in the spiritual world.
Thus he has an internal and an external nature or
mind; by the former living in the spiritual world,
by the latter in the natural world.
Heavenly Doctrine,
INALIENABLE POWERS
There are in man from the Lord two
capacities by which the human being is distinguished
from the beasts. One capacity is the ability to
understand what is true and what is good. It is
called rationality, and is a capacity of his understanding.
The other capacity is the ability to do the true and
the good. It is called freedom, and is a power
of the will. By virtue of his rationality, man
can think what he pleases, as well against God as
with Him, and with his neighbor or against his neighbor.
He can also will and do what he thinks; and when he
sees evil and fears punishment, by virtue of freedom
he can refrain from doing. By these two capacities
man is man and is distinguished from the beasts.
Man has these twin powers from the Lord, and they are
from Him every moment; nor are they ever taken away,
for if they were, man’s humanity would perish.
The Lord is in these two powers with every man, with
the evil as well as the good. They are His abiding-place
in the race. Thence it is that every human being,
evil as well as good, lives to eternity.
Divine Love and Wisdom, n. 240
THE DRAG OF HEREDITY
Man inclines to the nature he derives
hereditarily, and lapses into it. Thus he strengthens
any evil in it, and also adds others of himself.
These evils are quite opposed to the spiritual life.
They destroy it. Unless, therefore, a man receives
new life from the Lord, which is spiritual life, he
is condemned; for he wills nothing else and thinks
nothing else than concerns him and the world.
Heavenly Doctrine, n. 176
LOVES OF SELF AND THE WORLD
The reason why the love of self and
the love of the world are infernal loves, and yet
man has been able to come into them, and thus to ruin
will and understanding in him, is as follows:
By creation the love of self and the love of the world
are heavenly loves; for they are loves of the natural
man serving his spiritual loves, as a foundation does
a house. From the love of self and the world,
a man wishes well by his body, desires food, clothing
and habitation, takes thought for his household, seeks
occupation to be useful, wishes also for obédience’s
sake to be honored according to the dignity of the
thing he does, and to be delighted and recreated by
the pleasures of the world; yet all this
for the sake of the end, which must be use. By
this a man is in position to serve the Lord and to
serve the neighbor. But when there is no love
of serving the Lord and the neighbor, but only a love
of serving oneself at the world’s hands, then
from being heavenly that love becomes infernal, for
it causes a man to sink mind and character in his
proprium, or what is his own, which in itself
is the whole of evil.
Divine Love and Wisdom, n. 396
THE NEED FOR SELF-ACTION
No one can cleanse himself of evils
by his own power and abilities; but neither can this
be done without the power and abilities of the man,
used as his own. If this strength were not to
all appearance his own, no one would be able to fight
against the flesh and its lusts, which, nevertheless,
is enjoined upon all men. He would not think of
combat. Because man is a rational being, he must
resist evils from the power and the abilities given
him by the Lord, which appear to him as his own; an
appearance that is granted for the sake of regeneration,
imputation, conjunction, and salvation.
True Christian Religion, n. 438
THE WARFARE OF REGENERATION
“Blessed be the Lord my strength,
Who teacheth my hands to war,
And my fingers to fight:
My goodness, and my fortress;
My high tower and my deliverer;
My shield, and He in whom I trust;
Who subdueth my people under me.”
Psalm,
CXLIV, 1, 2
“TO HIM THAT OVERCOMETH”
Because man is reformed by conflicts
with the evils of his flesh and by victories over
them, the Son of Man says to each of the seven Churches,
that He will give gifts “to him that overcometh.”
True Christian Religion, n. 610
Without moral struggle no one is regenerated,
and many spiritual wrestlings succeed one after another.
For, inasmuch as regeneration has for its end that
the life of the old man may die and the new and heavenly
life be implanted, there will unfailingly be combat.
The life of the old man resists and is unwilling to
be extinguished, and the life of the new man cannot
enter, except where the life of the old has been extinguished.
From this it is plain that there is combat, and ardent
combat, because for life.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 8403
REPENTANCE AND THE REMISSION OF SINS
He who would be saved, must confess
his sins, and do repentance. To confess sins
is to know evils, to see them in oneself, to acknowledge
them, to make oneself guilty and condemn oneself on
account of them. Done before God, this is to
confess sins. To do repentance is to desist
from sins after one has thus confessed them and from
a humble heart has besought forgiveness, and then
to live a new life according to the precepts of charity
and faith.
He who merely acknowledges generally
that he is a sinner, making himself guilty of all
evils, without examining himself, that is,
without seeing his sins, makes a confession
but not the confession of repentance. Inasmuch
as he does not know his evils, he lives as before.
One who lives the life of charity
and faith does repentance daily. He reflects
upon the evils in him, acknowledges them, guards against
them, and beseeches the Lord for help. For of
oneself one continually lapses toward evil; but he
is continually raised up by the Lord and led to good.
Repentance of the mouth and not of
the life is not repentance. Nor are sins pardoned
on repentance of the mouth, but on repentance of the
life. Sins are constantly pardoned man by the
Lord, for He is mercy itself; but still they adhere
to man, however he supposes they have been remitted.
Nor are they removed from him save by a life according
to the precepts of true faith. So far as he lives
according to these precepts, sins are removed; and
so far as they are removed, so far they are remitted.
Heavenly Doctrine, nn. 159-165
TEMPTATION AND PRAYER
When a man shuns evils as sins, he
flees them because they are contrary to the Lord and
to His Divine laws; and then he prays to the Lord
for help and for power to resist them a
power which is never denied when it is asked.
By these two means a man is cleansed of evils.
He cannot be cleansed of evils if he only looks to
the Lord and prays; for then, after he has prayed,
he believes that he is quite without sins, or that
they have been forgiven, by which he understands that
they are taken away. But then he still remains
in them; and to remain in them is to increase them.
Nor are evils removed only by shunning them; for then
the man looks to himself, and thereby strengthens
the origin of evil, which was that he turned himself
back from the Lord and turned to himself.
The Doctrine Concerning Charity, n.
146
THE GREAT ARENA
In temptations the hells fight against
man, and the Lord for him. To every falsity which
the hells inject, there is an answer from the Divine.
The falsities inflow into the outward man, the answer
into the inward man, coming to perception scarcely
otherwise than as hope, and the resulting consolation,
in which, however, there is a multitude of things
of which the man is unaware.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 8159
In temptations a man is left, to all
appearance, to himself alone; yet he has not been
left alone, for God is then most present in his inmost
being, and upholds him. When anyone overcomes
in temptation, therefore, he enters into closer union
with God.
True Christian Religion, n. 126
“BY LITTLE AND LITTLE”
When man is being regenerated, he
is not regenerated speedily but slowly. The reason
is that all things which he has thought, purposed
and done since infancy, have added themselves to his
life and have come to constitute it. They have
also formed such a connection among themselves that
no one thing can be removed unless all are at the same
time. Regeneration, or the implantation of the
life of heaven in man, begins in his infancy, and
continues to the last of his life in the world, and
is perfected to eternity.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 9334
A NEW MAN
When a man is regenerated, he becomes
altogether another, and a new, man. While his
appearance and his speech are the same, yet his mind
is not; for his mind is then open toward heaven, and
there dwell in it love for the Lord, and charity toward
the neighbor, together with faith. It is the
mind which makes another and a new man. The change
of state cannot be perceived in man’s body,
but in his spirit. When it [the body] is put
off then his spirit appears, and in altogether another
form, too, when he has been regenerated; for it has
then a form of love and charity with inexpressible
beauty, in the place of the earlier form, which was
one of hatred and cruelty with a deformity also inexpressible.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 3212
CHILDHOOD
“It is not the
will of your Father who is in heaven that one
of these little ones
should perish.”
Matthew,
XVIII, 14
Never could a man live, certainly
not as a human being, unless he had in
himself something vital, that is, some innocence, neighborly
love, and mercy. This a man receives from the
Lord in infancy and childhood. What he receives
then is treasured up in him, and is called in the
Word the remnant or remains, which are
of the Lord alone with him, and they make it possible
for him truly to be a man on reaching adult age.
These states are the elements of his regeneration,
and he is led into them; for the Lord works by means
of them. These remains are also called
“the living soul” in all flesh.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 1050
All states of innocence from infancy
on, of love toward parents, brothers, teachers and
friends; of charity to the neighbor, and also of mercy
to the poor and needy; all states of goodness and truth,
with their goods and truths, impressed on; the memory,
are preserved in man by the Lord, and are stored up
unconsciously to himself in his internal man, and
are carefully kept from evils and falsities. They
are all so preserved by the Lord that not the smallest
of them is lost. Every state from infancy even
to extreme old age not only remains in another
life, but also returns. Returning, these states
are such as they were during a man’s abode in
the world. Not only the goods and truths, stored
up in the memory, remain and return, but likewise
all the states of innocence and charity; and when states
of evil and the false, or of wickedness and phantasy
recur, these latter states are attempered by the former
through the Divine operation of the Lord.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 561
PRAYER
“O Thou who hearest prayer;
Unto Thee shall all flesh come.”
Psalm,
LXV, 2
Prayer, in itself considered, is speech
with God. There is then some inward view of the
objects of the prayer, and answering to that something
like an influx into the perception or thought.
Thus there is a kind of opening of the man’s
interiors toward God, with a difference according
to the man’s state and according to the nature
of the object of the prayer. If one prays out
of love and faith and only about and for things heavenly
and spiritual, then there appears in the prayer something
like revelation, which shows itself in the affection
of the suppliant, in hope, solace, or an inner gladness.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 2535
THE SERVICE OF WORSHIP
“I will come into Thy house
in the multitude of Thy mercy;
In Thy fear will I worship toward Thy holy temple.”
Psalm,
V, 7
One should not omit the practice of
external worship. Things inward are excited by
external worship; and outward things are kept in holiness
by external worship, so that things inward can flow
in. Moreover, a man is imbued in this way with
knowledge, and prepared to receive celestial things,
so as to be endowed with states of holiness, though
he is unaware of it. These states of holiness
the Lord preserves to him for the use of eternal life;
for in the other life all one’s states of life
recur.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 1618
THE SACRAMENTS
Baptism and the Holy Supper are the
holiest acts of worship. Baptism and the Holy
Supper are as it were two gates, through which a man
is introduced into eternal life. After the first
gate there is a plain, which he must traverse; and
the second is the goal where the prize is, to which
he directed his course; for the palm is not given until
after the contest, nor the reward until after the
combat.
True Christian Religion, nn. 667,
721
I. BAPTISM
Baptism was instituted for a sign
that a man is of the Church and for a memorial that
he is to be regenerated. For the washing of baptism
is no other than spiritual washing, which is regeneration.
All regeneration is effected by the Lord through truths
of faith and a life according to them. Baptism,
therefore, testifies that a man is of the Church and
that he can be regenerated; for it is in the Church
that the Lord is acknowledged, Who regenerates man,
and there the Word is, where are truths of faith,
by which is regeneration.
Heavenly Doctrine, nn. 202, 203
The sign of the cross which a child
receives on the forehead and breast at baptism is
a sign of inauguration into the acknowledgment and
worship of the Lord.
True Christian Religion, n. 682
II. THE HOLY SUPPER
The Holy Supper was instituted that
by means of it there might be conjunction of the Church
with heaven, and thus with the Lord. When one
takes the bread, which is the Body, one is conjoined
with the Lord by the good of love to Him, from Him;
and when one takes the wine, which is the Blood, one
is conjoined to the Lord by the good of faith in Him,
from Him.
Heavenly Doctrine, nn. 210, 213
In the Holy Supper the Lord is fully
present, both as to His glorified Humanity, and as
to the Divine. And because He is fully present,
therefore the whole of His redemption is; for where
the Lord the Redeemer is, there redemption is.
Therefore all who observe the Holy Communion worthily,
become His redeemed, and receives the fruits of redemption,
namely, liberation from hell, union with the Lord,
and salvation.
True Christian Religion, nn. 716,
717
THE RESPONSIBLE LIFE IN THE WORLD
“Take My yoke upon you,
and learn of Me.”
Matthew,
XI, 29
There are those who believe that it
is difficult to live the life which leads to heaven,
which is called the spiritual life, because they have
heard that one must renounce the world, must divest
himself of the lusts called the lusts of the body
and the flesh, and must live spiritually. They
take this to mean that they must cast away worldly
things, which are especially riches and honors; that
they must go continually in pious meditation on God,
salvation, and eternal life; and must spend their
life in prayers and in reading the Word and pious
books. But those who renounce the world and live
in the spirit in this manner acquire a melancholy
life, unreceptive of heavenly joy. To receive
the life of heaven a man must by all means live in
the world and engage in its duties and affairs and
by a moral and civil life receive the spiritual life.
That it is not so difficult to live
the life of heaven, as some believe, may be seen from
this: when a matter presents itself to a man
which he knows to be dishonest and unjust, but to which
he inclines, it is only necessary for him to think
that it ought not to be done because it is opposed
to the Divine precepts. If a man accustoms himself
to think so, and from so doing establishes a habit
of so thinking, he is gradually conjoined to heaven.
So far as he is conjoined to heaven the higher regions
of his mind are opened; and so far as these are opened
he sees whatever is dishonest and unjust; and so far
as he sees these evils they can be dispersed for
no evil can be dispersed until it is seen.
Heaven and Hell, nn. 528, 533
THE DECALOGUE
“Come, let us join ourselves
to the Lord in a perpetual
covenant that shall not be forgotten.”
Jeremiah,
L, 5
The conjunction of God with man, and
of man with God, is taught in the two Tables which
were written with the finger of God, called the Tables
of the Covenant. These Tables obtain with all
nations who have a religion. From the first Table
they know that God is to be acknowledged, hallowed
and worshipped. From the second Table they know
that a man is not to steal, either openly or by trickery,
nor to commit adultery, nor to kill, whether by blow
or by hatred, nor to bear false witness in a court
of justice, or before the world, and further that
he ought not to will those evils. From this Table
a man knows the evils which he must shun, and in the
measure that he knows them and shuns them, God conjoins
him to Himself, and in turn from His Table gives man
to acknowledge, hallow and worship Him. So, also,
He gives him not to meditate evils, and, in so far
as he does not will them, to know truths freely.
Apocalypse Explained, n. 1179
As one views the two tables, it is
plain that they are so conjoined that God from His
table looks to man, and that in turn man from his
table looks to God. Thus the regard is reciprocal.
God for His part never ceases to regard man, and to
put in operation such things as are for his salvation;
and if man receives and does the things in his table,
reciprocal conjunction is effected, and the Lord’s
words to the lawyer will have come to pass, “This
do, and thou shalt live.”
True Christian Religion, n. 287
MARRIAGE
“Jesus said: ’Have
ye not read that He who made them at the beginning
made them male and female, and said, For this cause
shall a man leave father and mother and shall cleave
to his wife; and they twain shall be one flesh.
Wherefore they are no more twain but one flesh.
What, therefore, God hath joined together, let
not man put asunder.’”
Matthew,
XIX, 4, 5
A PRICELESS JEWEL
The conjugial inclination of one man
to one wife is the jewel of human life and the depository
of the Christian religion.
Conjugial Love, n. 457
THE PROGRESSIVE CHASTITY OF MARRIAGE
The love in marriage is from its origin
and correspondence heavenly, spiritual, holy, pure
and clean above every other love which the angels
of heaven or men of the Church have from the Lord.
It is such from its origin, which is the marriage
of good and truth; also from its correspondence with
the marriage of the Lord and the Church. If it
be received from its Author, Who is the Lord, sanctity
from Him follows, which continually cleanses and purifies
it. Then, if there be in man’s will a longing
for it and an effort toward it, this love becomes
continually cleaner and purer. All who are in
such love shun extra-conjugial loves (which are conjunctions
with others than their own conjugial partner) as they
would shun the loss of the soul and the lakes of hell;
and in the measure that married partners shun such
conjunctions, even in respect of libidinous desires
of the will and any intentions from them, so far love
truly conjugial is purified with them, and becomes
successively spiritual.
Conjugial Love, nn. 64, 71
THE HEIGHT OF SERVICE
Conjugial love is the love at the
foundation of all good loves, and is inscribed on
all the least life of the human being. Its delights
therefore surpass the delights of all other loves,
and it also gives delight to other loves, in the measure
of its presence and union with them. Into it
all delights from first to last are collected, on
account of the superior excellence of its use, which
is the propagation of the human race, and from it
of an angelic heaven. As this service was the
supreme end of creation, all the beatitudes, satisfaction,
delights, pleasantnesses and pleasures, which the Lord
the Creator could possibly confer upon man, are gathered
into this love.
Conjugial Love, n. 68
ITS WHOLE ESTATE
The states of conjugial love are Innocence,
Peace, Tranquillity, Inmost Friendship, full Confidence,
and mutual desire of mind and heart to do each other
every good. From all of these come blessedness,
satisfaction, agreeableness and pleasure; and as the
eternal fruition of them, heavenly happiness.
These states can be realized only in the marriage
of one man with one wife.
Conjugial Love, nn. 180, 181
THE SACRED SCRIPTURES
“They testify of Me.”
John,
V, 39
GOD’S WORD
In its inmosts the Sacred Scripture
is no other than God, that is, the Divine which proceeds
from God.... In its derivatives it is accommodated
to the perception of angels and men. In these
it is Divine likewise, but in another form, in which
this Divine is called “Celestial,” “Spiritual,”
and “Natural.” These are no other
than coverings of God. Still the Divine, which
is inmost, and is covered with such things as are
accommodated to the perceptions of angels and men,
shines forth like light through crystalline forms,
but variously, according to the state of mind which
a man has formed for himself, either from God or from
self. In the sight of the man who has formed
the state of his mind from God, the Sacred Scripture
is like a mirror in which he sees God, each in his
own way. The truths which he learns from the
Word and which become a part of him by a life according
to them, compose that mirror. The Sacred Scripture
is the fulness of God.
True Christian Religion, n. 6
IN ITS BOSOM SPIRITUAL
The Word in its bosom is spiritual.
Descending from Jéhovah the Lord, and passing through
the angelic heavens, the Divine (in itself ineffable
and imperceptible) became level with the perception
of angels and finally the perception of man.
Hence the Word has a spiritual sense, which is within
the natural, just as the soul is in the body, or as
thought is in speech, or volition in action.
True Christian Religion, n. 193
THE LETTER OF THE WORD
The truths of the sense of the letter
of the Word are in part appearances of truth, and
are taken from things in nature, and thus accommodated
and adapted to the grasp of the simple and also of
little children. But being correspondences, they
are receptacles and abodes of genuine truth; and are
like enclosing and containing vessels. The naked
truths themselves, which are enclosed and contained,
are in the Word’s spiritual sense; and the naked
goods in its celestial sense.
The doctrine of genuine truth can
also be drawn in full from the literal sense of the
Word; for the Word in this sense is like a man clothed,
whose face and hands are bare. All that concerns
man’s life, and so his salvation, is bare; the
rest is clothed.
Doctrine Concerning the Sacred Scripture,
nn. 40, 55
ITS LANGUAGE
The whole natural world corresponds
to the spiritual world; not only generally, but in
detail. Whatever comes forth in the natural world
from the spiritual, is therefore called correspondent.
The world of nature comes forth and subsists from
the spiritual world, just as an effect does from its
efficient cause.
Heaven and Hell, n. 89
What is Divine presents itself in
the world in what corresponds. The Word is therefore
written wholly in correspondence. Therefore the
Lord, too, speaking as He did from the Divine, spoke
in correspondence.
True Christian Religion, n. 201
“And behold a ladder set on
the earth, and its head reaching to heaven: and
behold the angels of God ascending and descending on
it. And behold Jéhovah standing above it.”
The ladder set between earth and heaven, or between
the lowest and the highest, signifies communication.
In the original tongue the term ladder is derived from
an expression which signifies a path or way, and a
path or way is predicated of truth. By a ladder,
therefore, one extremity of which is set on the earth,
while the other reaches to heaven, is signified the
communication of truth which is in the lowest place
with truth which is in the highest, indeed with inmost
good and truth, such as are in heaven, and from which
heaven itself is an ascent as it were from what is
lowest, and afterward when the order is inverted, a
descent, and is the order of man’s regeneration.
The arcanum which lies concealed in the internal sense
of these words is, that all goods and truths descend
from the Lord, and ascend to Him, for man is so created
that the Divine things of the Lord may descend through
him even to the ultimates of nature, and from the
ultimates of nature may ascend to Him; so that man
might be a medium uniting the Divine with the world
of nature, and uniting the world of nature with the
Divine, that thus, through man, as through the uniting
medium, the very ultimate of nature might live from
the Divine, which would be the case had man lived
according to Divine order.
Arcana Coelestia, nn. 3699-3702
ITS FUNCTION
Divine truth, in passing from the
Lord through the three heavens to men in the world,
is written and made the Word in each heaven. The
Word, therefore, is the union of the heavens with one
another, and of the heavens with the Church in the
world. Hence there flows in from the Lord through
the heavens a holy Divine with the man who acknowledges
the Divine in the Lord and the holy in the Word, while
he reads it. Such a man can be instructed and
can draw wisdom from the Word as from the Lord Himself
or from heaven itself, in the measure that he loves
it, and thus can be nourished with the same food with
which the angels themselves are fed, and in which there
is life, according to these words of the Lord:
“The words that
I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they
are life.”
“The water that
I shall give him shall be in him a well of
water springing up into
everlasting life.”
“Man shall not
live by bread alone, but by every word which
proceedeth out of the
mouth of God.”
Apocalypse Explained, n. 1074
HOW TO USE IT
They who, in reading the Word, look
to the Lord, by acknowledging that all truth and all
good are from Him, and nothing from themselves, they
are enlightened, and see truth and perceive what is
good from the Word. That enlightenment is from
the light of heaven.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 9405
ITS DISSEMINATION OF LIGHT
There cannot be any conjunction with
heaven unless somewhere upon the earth there is a
Church where the Word is and by it the Lord is known.
It is sufficient that there be a Church where the Word
is, even though it should consist of few relatively.
The Lord is present by it, nevertheless, in the whole
world. The light is greatest where those are
who have the Word. Thence it extends itself as
from a centre out to the last periphery. Thence
comes the enlightenment of nations and peoples outside
the Church, too, by the Word.
Doctrine concerning
the Sacred Scripture, nn. 104, 106
A CANON ON A NEW PRINCIPLE
The books of the Word are all those
which have an internal sense. In the Old Testament
they are the five books of Moses, the book of Joshua,
the book of Judges, the two books of Samuel, the two
books of Kings, the Psalms of David, the Prophets
Isaiah, Jeremiah, Lamentations, Ezekiel, Daniel, Hosea,
Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk,
Zephaniah, Haggai, Zecharaiah, Malachi; and in the
New Testament the four Evangelists, Matthew, Mark,
Luke, John; and the Apocalypse.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 10,325
THE LIFE OF CHARITY AND FAITH
“He hath showed thee, O
man, what is good; and what doth the
Lord require of thee, but to do justly and to
love mercy,
and to walk humbly with thy God.”
Micah,
VI, 8
THE LAW OF CHARITY
Not to do evil to the neighbor is
the first thing of charity, and to do good to him
fills the second place.... That a man cannot do
good which in itself is good before evil has been
removed, the Lord teaches in many places: “Do
men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?
Neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit” Matt.
XVI, 18.
So in Isaiah: “Wash you,
make you clean; put away the evil of your doings from
before Mine eyes; cease to do evil; learn to do well”
(I, 16,17).
True Christian Religion, n. 445
GOOD IN ITS WHOLENESS
Before repentance good is not done
from the Lord, but from the man. It has not,
therefore, the essence of good within it, however it
appears like good outwardly. Good after repentance
is another thing altogether. It is a whole good,
unobstructed from the Lord Himself. It is lovely;
it is innocent; it is agreeable, and heavenly.
The Lord is in it, and heaven. Good itself is
in it. It is alive, fashioned of truths.
Whatever is thus from good, in good, and toward good,
is nothing less than a use to the neighbor, and hence
it is a serving. It puts away self and what is
one’s own, and thus evil, with every breath.
Its form is like the form of a charming and beautifully
colored flower, shining in the rays of the sun.
The Doctrine of Charity, n. 150
THE MAN OF CHARITY
Every man who looks to the Lord and
shuns evils as sins, if he sincerely, justly and faithfully
performs the work which belongs to his office and
employment, becomes an embodiment of charity.
The Doctrine of Charity, VII
In common belief charity is nothing
else than giving to the poor, succoring the needy,
caring for widows and orphans, contributing to the
building of hospitals, infirmaries, asylums, orphanages,
and especially churches, and to their decoration and
income. But most of these things are not the
proper activities of charity, but extraneous to it.
A distinction is to be made between the duties of charity,
and its benefactions. By the duties of charity
those exercises of it are meant, which proceed directly
from charity itself. These have to do primarily
with one’s occupation. By the benefactions
those aids are meant which are given outside of, and
over and above the duties.
True Christian Religion, n. 425
THE ACTIVITY OF CHARITY
Charity is an inward affection, moving
man to do what is good, and this without recompense.
So to act is his life’s delight.
The life of charity is to will well
and to do well by the neighbor; in all work, and in
every employment, acting out of regard to what is
just and equitable, good and true. In a word,
the life of charity consists in the performance of
uses.
Heavenly Doctrine, nn. 106, 124
FAITH THE PARTNER OF CHARITY
Neither charity alone nor faith alone
can produce good works, any more than a husband alone
or a wife alone can have offspring. The truths
of faith not only illuminate charity, but qualify
it, too; and, moreover, they nourish it. A man,
then, who has charity and not truths of faith, is
like one walking in a garden in the night-time, snatching
fruit from the trees without knowing whether it is
of a good or evil use.
True Christian Religion,
THE PATRIOTISM OF CHARITY
One’s country is the neighbor
more than a society, for it consists of many societies,
and consequently the love of it is a more extended
and a higher love. Besides, to love one’s
country is to love the public welfare. A man’s
country is the neighbor because it is like a parent;
for there he was born; it has nourished and still nourishes
him; it has protected him from harm, and still protects
him. From love for it he ought to do good to
his country according to its needs, some of which
are natural, and others spiritual. The country
ought to be loved, not as a man loves himself, but
more than himself. This is a law inscribed on
the human heart. And from the law has issued the
proposition, which has the assent of every true man,
that if ruin threatens the country from an enemy or
other source, it is illustrious to die for it, and
glorious for a soldier to shed his blood for it.
This is a common saying, because so much should one’s
country be loved. Those who love their country,
and from good will do good to it, after death love
the Lord’s kingdom, for this is their country
there; and they who love the Lord’s kingdom,
love the Lord, for He is the All in all of His Kingdom.
True Christian Religion, n. 414
FAITH AND DOUBT
There are those who are in doubt before
they deny, and there are those who are in doubt before
they affirm. Those in doubt before they deny,
are men who incline to a life of evil. When that
life sways them, they deny things spiritual and celestial
to the extent that they think of them. But those
in doubt before they affirm, are men who incline to
a life of good. When they suffer themselves to
be turned to this life by the Lord, they then affirm
things spiritual and celestial to the extent that
they think of them.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 2568
THE FAITH OF THE FAITHFUL
It is one thing to know truths, another
to acknowledge them, and yet another to have faith
in them. Only the faithful can have faith.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 896
The only faith that endures with man
springs from heavenly love. Those without love
have knowledge merely, or persuasion. Just to
believe in truth and in the Word is not faith.
Faith is to love truth, and to will and do it from
inward affection for it.
Heaven and Hell, n. 482
If a man thinks to himself or says
to another, “Who can have that inward acknowledgment
of truth which is faith? I cannot,” I will
tell him how he may: “Shun evils as sins,
and go to the Lord, and you will have as much as you
desire.”
Doctrine Concerning Faith, n. 12
NEIGHBORS
Not only is the individual man the
neighbor, but the collective man, too. A society,
smaller or larger, is the neighbor; the Church is;
the Kingdom of the Lord is; and above all the Lord
Himself. These are the neighbor, to whom good
is to be done from love. These are also the ascending
degrees of the neighbor; for a society consisting of
many is the neighbor in a higher degree than is the
individual; one’s country in a still higher
degree; the Church in a still higher degree than one’s
country; in a degree higher still the Kingdom of the
Lord; and in the highest degree the Lord Himself.
These degrees of ascent are like the steps in a ladder,
at the top of which is the Lord.
Heavenly Doctrine, n. 91
DIVERSIONS
There is an affection in every employment,
which puts the mind upon the stretch and keeps it
intent upon its work or study. If it is not relaxed,
this becomes heavy, and its desire meaningless; as
salt, when it loses its saltness, no longer stimulates,
and as the bow on the stretch, unless it is unbent,
loses the force it gets from its elasticity.
Continuously intent upon its work, the mind wants rest;
and dropping to the physical life, it seeks pleasures
there that answer to its activities. As is the
mind in them, such are the pleasures, pure or impure,
spiritual or natural, heavenly or infernal. If
it is the affection of charity which is in them, all
diversions will recreate it shows, games,
instrumental and vocal music, the beauties of field
and garden, social intercourse generally. There
remains deep in them, being gradually renewed as it
rests, the love of work and service. The longing
to resume this work breaks in upon the diversions
and puts an end to them. For the Lord flows into
the diversions from heaven, and renews the man; and
He gives the man an interior sense of pleasure in
them, too, of which those know nothing who are not
in the affection of charity.
Doctrine of Charity, nn. 127, 128,
130
THE DIVINE PROVIDENCE
“He leadeth me.”
Psalm,
XXIII, 2
THE DIVINE PURPOSE
The Divine Providence has for an end
a heaven which shall consist of men who have become
angels or who are becoming angels, to whom the Lord
can impart from Himself all the blessedness and felicity
of love and wisdom.
Divine Providence, n. 27
THE LAWFUL ORDER OF PROVIDENCE
In all that proceeds from the Lord
the Divine Providence is first. Indeed, we may
say that the Lord is Providence, as we say that
God is Order; for the Divine Providence is Divine
Order with regard above all to the salvation of man.
As order is impossible without laws, it follows that
as God is order so is He the Law of His order.
And as the Lord is His Providence, He is also the
Law of His Providence. The Lord cannot act contrary
to the laws of His Providence, for to act contrary
to them would be to act contrary to Himself.
Divine Providence, n. 331
A WORLD-WIDE LEADING
The Lord provides that there shall
be religion everywhere, and in each religion the two
essentials of salvation, which are, to acknowledge
God, and not to do evil because it is contrary to God.
It is provided furthermore that all who have lived
well and acknowledge God should be instructed by angels
after death. Then, they who, in the world, were
in the two essentials of religion, accept the truths
of the Church, such as they are in the Word, and acknowledge
the Lord as the God of heaven and the Church.
It has also been provided by the Lord that all who
die infants shall be saved, wherever they may have
been born.
Divine Providence, n. 328
THE DIVINE PERSEVERANCE
The Divine Providence differs from
all other leading and guidance in this, that it continually
regards what is eternal, and continually leads to
salvation, and this through various states, now glad,
now sad, states which a man cannot understand
at all, and yet they all conduce to his life to eternity.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 8560
IN THE STREAM OF PROVIDENCE
The Divine Providence is universal,
that is, in the leasts of all things. They who
are in the stream of Providence are borne along continually
to happiness, whatsoever the appearance of the means
may be. They are in the stream of Providence,
who put their trust in the Divine, and ascribe all
things to Him. They are not in the stream of
Providence who trust themselves alone and ascribe all
things to themselves. As far as one is in the
stream of Providence, so far one is in a state of
peace. Such alone know and believe that the Divine
Providence of the Lord is in each and all things, yea,
in the leasts of all things.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 8478
CARE FOR THE MORROW
It is not contrary to order to look
out for one’s self and one’s dependents.
Those have “care for the morrow” who are
not content with their lot, who do not trust in the
Divine but themselves, and who regard only worldly
and earthly things and not heavenly. With such
there prevails universally a solicitude about things
future, a desire to possess everything, and to rule
over all. They grieve if they do not get what
they desire, and suffer torment when they lose what
they have. Then they grow angry with the Divine,
rejecting it together with everything of faith, and
cursing themselves. Altogether different is it
with those who trust in the Divine. Though they
have care for the morrow, yet they have it not; for
they do not think of the morrow with solicitude, still
less with anxiety. Whether they get what they
wish or not, they are composed, not lamenting over
losses, but being content with their lot. If
they become rich, they do not set their hearts upon
riches. If they are exalted to honors, they do
not look upon themselves as worthier than others.
If they become poor, they are not cast down.
If their condition be mean, they are not dejected.
They know that with those who put their trust in the
Divine, all things work toward a happy state to eternity.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 8478
THE SUFFERANCE OF EVIL
The chief aim and effort of the Lord’s
Divine Providence is that a man shall be in what is
good and in what is true at the same time; for thereby
man is man, since he is then an image of the Lord.
But because, in his life in the world, he can be in
what is good and in what is false at the same time,
and also in what is evil and what is true at the same
time, nay, even in evil and at the same time in good,
and thus be a double man, as it were, and because this
division destroys God’s image and so destroys
the man, therefore the Lord’s Divine Providence
in all its workings seeks to prevent this division.
Furthermore, because it is better for man to be in
what is evil and in the same time in what is false
than to be in good and at the same time in evil, therefore
the Lord permits it; not as one willing it, but as
one unable to prevent it consistently with the end,
which is salvation.
Divine Providence, n. 16
DEATH AND THE RESURRECTION
“I laid me down and slept:
I awaked: for the Lord sustained me.”
Psalm,
III, 5
“Now that the dead are raised,
even Moses showed at the bush, when he called
the Lord the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac,
and the God of Jacob: for He is not a God of
the dead, but of the living; for to Him all are
living.”
Luke,
XX, 37, 38
IMMORTAL BY ENDOWMENT
Man has been so created that as to
his inward being he cannot die; for he can believe
in God, and also love God, and thus be united to God
in faith and love; and to be united to God is to live
to eternity.
Heavenly Doctrine, n. 223
FROM WORLD TO WORLD
When the body is no longer able to
perform its functions in the natural world, a man
is said to die. Still the man does not die; he
is only separated from the bodily part which was of
use to him in the world. The man himself lives.
He lives, because he is man by virtue, not of the
body, but of the spirit; for it is the spirit in man
which thinks; and thought together with affection
makes the man. It is plain, then, that when a
man dies, he only passes from one world into the other....
The spirit of man after separation remains awhile in
the body, but not after the motion of the heart has
entirely ceased. This takes place with a variation
according to the diseased condition of which the man
dies. As soon as the motion ceases, the man is
resuscitated. This is done by the Lord alone.
Heaven and Hell, nn. 445, 447
UNHURT BY DEATH
When a man passes from the natural
world into the spiritual, he takes with him everything
that belongs to him as a man except his earthly body.
(This he leaves when he dies, nor does he ever resume
it.) He is in a body as he was in the natural world;
and to all appearance there is no difference.
But his body is spiritual, and is therefore separated
or purified from things terrestrial. And when
what is spiritual touches and sees what is spiritual,
it is just the same as when what is natural touches
and sees what is natural.... A human spirit also
enjoys every sense, external and internal, which he
enjoyed in the world. He sees as before, hears
and speaks as before, smells and tastes as before,
and feels when he is touched. He also longs,
desires, craves, thinks, reflects, is stirred, loves,
wills, as he did previously.... In a word, when
a man passes from the one life into the other, or
from the one world into the other, it is as though
he had passed from one place to another; and he carries
with him all that he possesses in himself as a man.
It cannot, then, be said, that after death a man has
lost anything that really belonged to him. He
carries his natural memory with him, too; for he retains
all things whatsoever which he has heard, seen, read,
learned and thought in the world, from earliest infancy
even to the last of life.
Heaven and Hell, n. 461
THE WORLD OF SPIRITS
Every man at death comes first into
the world of spirits, which is midway between heaven
and hell; and there he passes through his own states,
and is prepared either for heaven or for hell according
to his life.... It is to be observed that the
world of spirits is one thing, and the spiritual world
another. The spiritual world embraces the world
of spirits and heaven and hell.
Divine Love and Wisdom, n. 140
THE WAY OF ONE’S OWN LOVE
After death every one goes the way
of his love he who is in a good love, to
heaven, and he who is in a wicked love, to hell.
Nor does he rest until he is in that society where
his ruling love is. What is wonderful, every
one knows the way.
Every one’s state after death
is spiritual, which is such that he cannot be anywhere
but in the delight of his own love, which he has acquired
for himself by his life in the natural world.
From this it appears plainly that no one can be let
into the delight of heaven who is in the delight of
hell.... This may be still more certainly concluded
from the fact that no one is forbidden after death
to ascend to heaven. The way is shown him, opportunity
is given him, and he is let in. But when one
who is in the delight of evil comes into heaven, and
breathes in its delight, he begins to be oppressed,
and racked at heart, and to feel in a swoon, in which
he writhes like a snake put near a fire; and with
his face turned away from heaven and toward hell,
he flees headlong, nor does he rest until he is in
the society of his own love.
Divine Providence, nn. 319, 338
It is an abiding truth that every
man rises again after death into another life, and
presents himself for judgment. This judgment,
however, is circumstanced as follows: As soon
as his bodily parts grow cold, which takes place after
a few days, he is raised by the Lord at the hands
of celestial angels who first are with him. If
he is such that he cannot be with them, he is received
by spiritual angels, and in turn afterwards by good
spirits. For all who come into the other life,
whoever they may be, are grateful and welcome new-comers.
But as every one’s desires follow him, he who
has led a bad life cannot remain long with angels
or good spirits, but in turn separates himself from
them, until at length he comes to spirits of a life
conforming with the life he had in the world.
Then it seems to him as if he were back in the life
of the body; his present life being, in fact, a continuation
of his past life. With this life his judgment
commences. They who have led a bad life in process
of time descend into hell; they who have led a good
life, are by degrees raised by the Lord into heaven.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 2119
THE FIRST THREE STATES AFTER DEATH
“He that is unjust, let him be
unjust still; and he that is filthy, let him
be filthy still; and he that is righteous, let
him be righteous still; and he that is holy, let him
be holy still.”
Rev.,
XXII, 11
CONTINUATION OF THE OUTWARD LIFE
There are three states through which
a man passes after death, before he enters either
heaven or hell. The first state is that of his
outward nature and life; the second, that of his inward
nature and life; and the third, one of preparation.
A man passes through these states in the world of
spirits.
The first state of a man after death
is like his state in the world, because he is then
similarly in things outward. His appearance is
similar, and so are his speech, his mental habit, and
his moral and civil life. As a result he does
not know but that he is still in the world, unless
he pays attention to things that meet his eye, and
to what the angels told him at his resuscitation,
that now he is a spirit. Thus one life is carried
on into the other, and death is only the transition.
Heaven and Hell, nn. 491, 493
REVELATION OF THE INNER LIFE
After the first state is past, which
is the state of the outward nature and life, a spirit
is admitted into the state of his inward will and
thought, in which, on being left to himself to think
freely and unchecked, he had been in the world.
He slips unawares into this state, just as he did
in the world. When he is in this state, he is
in himself, and in his very life; for to think freely
from the affection properly one’s own, is the
very life of man, and is the man.
When a spirit is in the state of his
inward nature and life, it appears plainly what manner
of man he was in the world; for then he acts from
his very self. A man who was inwardly in good
in the world, then acts rationally and wisely more
wisely, in fact, than he did in the world; for he
has been loosed from connection with the body, and
so with worldly things, which caused obscurity and,
as it were, interposed a cloud. But a man who
was in evil in the world, then acts foolishly and
insanely more insanely, in fact, than he
did in the world, for now he is in freedom and not
coerced. For when he lived in the world, he was
sane in his outward life, for so he assumed the appearance
of a rational man. When, therefore, his outward
life is laid off, his insanities reveal themselves.
Heaven and Hell, nn. 502, 505
INSTRUCTED FOR HEAVEN
The third state of a man after death
is a state of instruction. This is a state in
the experience of those who enter heaven and become
angels.
Instruction in heaven differs from
instruction on earth, in that knowledge is not committed
to memory, but to life; for the memory of spirits
is in their life, inasmuch as they receive and become
imbued with everything that agrees with their life,
and they do not receive, still less do they become
imbued with, anything that disagrees with it; for
spirits are affections, and are in a human form like
their affections. Being such, they have inspired
in them continually an affection for truth for the
sake of the uses of life; for the Lord provides that
every one may love the uses which suit his genius,
a love that is exalted, too, by the hope of becoming
an angel.... With every one, therefore, the affection
of truth is united to the affection of use, so fully
that they act as one. Thereby truth is planted
in service, so much so that the truths which angelic
spirits learn, are truths of use. Thus are they
instructed and prepared for heaven.
Heaven and Hell, nn. 512, 517
HEAVEN
“Blessed are they that do
His commandments, that they may
have right to the tree of life; and may enter
in through the
gates into the city.”
Rev.,
XXII, 14
“Thou wilt show me the path
of life; In Thy presence is
fulness of joy; At Thy right hand there are pleasures
forevermore.”
Psalm,
XVI, 11
“THE KINGDOM OF GOD IS WITHIN YOU”
Heaven is in a man; and they who have
heaven within themselves, come into heaven. Heaven
in a man is to acknowledge the Divine, and to be led
by the Divine.
Every angel receives the heaven which
is around him according to the heaven which is within
him. Unless heaven is within a man, none of the
heaven around him flows in and is received.
Love to the Lord is the love regnant
in the heavens; for there the Lord is loved above
all things. Thus the Lord is All in all there.
He flows into all the angels, and into each of them.
He disposes them; He induces a likeness of Himself
on them, and causes Heaven to be where He is.
Hence an angel is heaven in the least form; a society
is heaven in a greater form; and all the societies
together are heaven in the greatest form.
Heaven and Hell, nn. 319, 54, 58
AN ACTUAL WORLD
In general, what appears in heaven,
appears the same as it does in our material world
of three kingdoms. Things appear before the eyes
of angels just as objects of the three kingdoms do
before the eyes of men in the world. Still there
is this difference: the things which appear in
heaven, have a spiritual origin, and those which appear
in our world a material origin. Objects of a
spiritual origin affect the senses of angels because
these senses are spiritual, as those of a material
origin affect the senses of men, inasmuch as their
senses are material. Heavenly objects are said
to have a spiritual origin, because they exist from
the Divine which proceeds from the Lord as a Sun;
and the Divine that proceeds from the Lord as a Sun
is spiritual. For there the Sun is not fire,
but Divine Love, appearing before the eyes of the
angels as the sun of the world does before the eyes
of men; and whatever proceeds from the Divine Love
is Divine and is spiritual. Of this origin are
all things which exist in the heavens, and they appear
in forms like those in our world. It is due to
the order of creation that they appear in such forms.
According to that order, things which are of love
and wisdom with the angels, on descending into the
lower sphere in which angels are in respect of their
bodies and of their sensation, present themselves in
such forms and under such types. These are correspondences.
Apocalypse Explained, n. 926
A WORLD OF ACTION
All heaven’s delights are united
to uses and inhere in them, because uses are the goods
of love and charity, in which the angels are.
The angels find all their happiness in use, from use,
and according to use. There is the highest freedom
in this because it proceeds from interior affection,
and is conjoined with ineffable delight. Uses
exist in the heavens in all variety and diversity.
Never is the use of one angel quite the same as that
of another; nor the delight. What is more, the
delights of any one person’s use are countless.
These countless and various delights are nevertheless
united in an order so that they mutually regard one
another, as do the uses of every member, organ and
inner part of the body. They are even more like
the uses of each vessel and fibre in every member,
organ and vital part; each and all of which are so
related that they regard each of its own good in the
other, and thus in all, and all in each. As a
result of this general and several regard they act
as one.
Heaven and Hell, nn. 402, 403,
404, 405
OUR CHILDREN IN HEAVEN
Every little child, wheresoever born,
whether within the Church or out of it, whether of
pious parents or of impious, is received by the Lord
at death; is educated in heaven; is taught and imbued
with affections of good and by these with knowledges
of truth; and then, as he is perfected in intelligence
and wisdom, is introduced into heaven and becomes
an angel.
When children die, they are still
children in the other life. They have the same
infantile mind, the same innocence in ignorance, and
the same tenderness in all things. They have
only the rudimentary capacity of becoming angels;
for children are not yet angels, but are to become
angels. The state of children in the other life
far surpasses that of children in the world; for they
are not clothed with an earthly body, but with a body
like that of the angels. The earthly body is in
itself heavy, and does not receive its first sensations
and impulses from the interior or spiritual world,
but from the exterior or natural world. In this
world, therefore, infants must learn to walk, to control
the body’s motions, and to talk. Even their
senses, like sight and hearing, must be developed
by use. It is quite otherwise with children in
the other life. Being spirits, they act at once
in expression of their inner being, walking without
practice, and also talking, but at first from general
affections not yet distinguished into ideas of thought.
They are quickly initiated into these, too, however;
and this for the reason that outer and inner are homogeneous
with them.
The Lord flows into the ideas of children
chiefly from their inmost soul, for nothing has closed
their ideas, as with adults. No false principles
have closed them to the understanding of truth, nor
any evil life to the reception of good, nor to becoming
wise.
Heaven and Hell, nn. 416, 330,
331, 836
TOWARD THE MORNING OF LIFE
The Lord is present with every human
being, urgent and instant to be received; and when
a man receives Him, as he does when he acknowledges
Him as his God, Creator, Redeemer and Saviour, then
is His first Coming, which is called the dawn.
From this time the man begins to be enlightened, as
to understanding in things spiritual, and to advance
into a more and more interior wisdom. As he receives
this wisdom from the Lord, so he advances through
morning into day, and this day lasts with him into
old age, even to death; and after death he passes into
heaven to the Lord Himself, and there, though he died
an old man, he is restored to the morning of his life,
and to eternity he develops the beginnings of the
wisdom that was implanted in the natural world.
True Christian Religion, n. 766
The people of heaven are continually
advancing towards the spring-time of life; and the
more thousands of years they live, the more delightful
and happy is the spring to which they attain.
Women who have died old and worn out with age, and
have lived in faith in the Lord and in charity to
the neighbor, come, with the succession of years,
more and more into the flower of youth and early womanhood,
and into a beauty exceeding every idea of beauty ever
formed through the sight. In a word, to grow
old in heaven is to grow young.
Heaven and Hell, n. 414
HELL
“If I make my bed in
hell; behold, Thou art there.”
Psalm,
CXXXIX, 8
EVIL IS HELL
Evil with man is hell with him; for
it is the same thing whether we say evil or hell.
And as a man is the cause of his own evil, therefore
he, and not the Lord, also leads himself into hell.
So far is the Lord from leading man into hell, that
He delivers him from it as far as a man does not will
and love to be in his own evil.
All a man’s will and love remains
with him after death. He who wills and loves
evil in the world, wills and loves the same evil in
the other life; and then he no longer suffers himself
to be withdrawn from it. This is the reason that
a man who is in evil is bound fast to hell and is
actually there, too, in spirit, and after death he
desires nothing more than to be where his evil is.
After death, therefore, a man casts himself into hell,
and not the Lord.
Heaven and Hell, n. 547
EVIL AND PUNISHMENT
All evil bears its punishment with
it. Evil spirits are punished because the fear
of punishment is the one means of subduing evils in
this state. Exhortation no longer avails, nor
instruction, nor fear of the law nor fear for one’s
reputation; for now the spirit acts from a nature
which cannot be coerced or broken except by punishment.
Heaven and Hell, n. 509
It is a law in the other life that
no one shall become worse than he had been in the
world.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 6559
GOD WILLS THE DAMNATION OF NONE
If men could be saved by immediate
mercy, all would be saved, even those in hell; and
indeed there would be no hell, because the Lord is
mercy itself and good itself. Therefore it is
contrary to His Divine Nature to say that He can save
all immediately, and does not save them. We know
from the Word that the Lord wills the salvation of
all and the damnation of none.
Heaven and Hell, n. 524
MASTER PASSIONS OF HELL
Love of self and love of the world
rule in the hells and also constitute them. Love
to the Lord and love toward the neighbor rule in the
heavens and also constitute them. These loves
are diametrically opposite. Love of self consists
in wishing well to oneself alone, and not to others
except for the sake of oneself, not even to the Church,
to one’s country, or to any human society; also
in doing good to them, but for the sake of one’s
reputation, honor and glory. Unless he sees these
in the services he renders them, he says in his heart,
“Of what use is it? Why should I do it?
Of what advantage will it be to me?”, and he
leaves it undone. His delight is only that of
self-love. And because the delight which springs
from his love makes the life of a man, therefore his
life is the life of self; and the life of self is
life from man’s proprium; and the proprium
of man, viewed in itself, is nothing but evil.
Love of self is of such a quality, too, that, as far
as the reins are given it, it rushes on until at length
it desires to rule not only over the whole earth, but
over the whole heaven, too, and over the Divine Himself.
Heaven and Hell, nn. 554, 556,
559
“OUR NAME IS LEGION”
Men have believed hitherto that there
is some one devil who is over the hells, and that
he was created an angel of light; but that after he
turned rebel, he was cast down with his crew into hell.
Men have had this belief because the Devil is named
in the Word, and Satan, and also Lucifer, and in these
passages the Word has been understood according to
the sense of the letter, when yet hell is meant in
them by the Devil and Satan.... That there is
no single Devil to whom the hells are subject, is
also evident from this fact, that all who are in the
hells, like all who are in the heavens, are from the
human race; and that from the beginning of the creation
to this time they amount to myriads of myriads, every
one of whom is a devil of a sort according with his
opposition to the Divine in the world.
Heaven and Hell, n. 544
COMMUNICATION WITH THE SPIRITUAL WORLD
“Blessed is the man that walketh
not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth
in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat
of the scornful. But his delight is in the law
of the Lord; and in His law doth he meditate
day and night.”
Psalm,
I, 1, 2
ONE’S SPIRITUAL COMPANY
The mind of a man is his spirit which
lives after death; and a man’s spirit is constantly
in company with spirits like himself in the spiritual
world. Man does not know that in respect to his
mind he is in the midst of spirits because the spirits
with whom he is in company in that world, think and
speak spiritually. The spirit of man, however,
while in the material body, thinks and speaks naturally;
and spiritual thought and speech cannot be understood,
nor perceived, by the natural human being; nor the
reverse. Hence, too, it is that spirits cannot
be seen. Yet when a man’s spirit is in society
with spirits in their world, then he is in spiritual
thought and speech with them, too, because his inner
mind is spiritual, but the outer natural; wherefore
by his inner nature he communicates with them, and
by his outer being with men. By this communication
a man perceives and thinks analytically. If there
were no such communication, man would no more think
than a beast, nor any differently from a beast.
Indeed, were all commerce with spirits cut off, a
man would instantly die.
True Christian Religion, n. 475
“MINISTERS OF HIS, THAT DO HIS PLEASURE”
Man is quite ignorant that he is governed
by the Lord through angels and spirits, and that there
are at least two spirits with a man and two angels.
Through the spirits a communication of the man with
the world of spirits is effected; and through the
angels, with heaven. As long as a man is not
regenerated, he is governed quite otherwise than when
he is regenerated. While unregenerated, there
are evil spirits with him, who dominate him so fully
that the angels, though present, can scarcely do more
than guide him, so that he shall not hurl himself
into the lowest evil, and bend him to some good to
some good by means of his own desires, indeed, and
to some truth through even fallacies of sense.
Then, through the spirits who are with him, he has
communication with the world of spirits, but not so
much with heaven, for the evil spirits rule with him,
and the angels only avert their rule. When, however,
a man is regenerated, then the angels rule and inspire
in him all good and truth, and a horror and dread of
evil and falsity. The angels lead the man indeed,
but serve only as ministers, for it is the Lord alone,
Who, by angels and spirits, governs man.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 50
It is an office of the angels to inspire
charity and faith in a man, to observe the direction
his enjoyments take, and to restrain and bend them
to good, as far as they can in man’s free choice.
They are forbidden to act violently, and so to break
a man’s cupidities and principles; but are bidden
to act gently. It is also an office of theirs
to govern evil spirits who are from hell. When
evil spirits infuse evils and what is false, the angels
instill what is true and good, by which they at least
temper an evil. Infernal spirits are continually
assaulting, and angels constantly giving protection.
Especially do the angels call forth goods and truths
which are with a man, and oppose them to the evils
and falsities which the evil spirits excite.
Hence a man is in the midst, nor does he apperceive
the evil or the good; and being in the midst, is free
to turn himself to the one or to the other. By
such means angels from the Lord lead and protect a
man, and this every moment, and every moment of a moment.
For, should the angels intermit their care a single
instant, man would be plunged into evil from which
he could never afterward be led forth. These
offices the angels do from a love which they have from
the Lord; for they know nothing pleasanter and happier
than to remove evils from a man, and to lead him to
heaven. That this is their joy, see Luke,
XV, 7. Scarcely any man believes that the Lord
has such a care for man, and this continually, from
the first thread of his life to the last, and on to
eternity.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 5992
WHOLESOME AND UNWHOLESOME COMMUNICATION
Many believe that a man can be taught
by the Lord through spirits who speak with him.
They who believe so, and will this communication, do
not know, however, that it is attended with danger
to their souls. While a man is living in the
world, he is in the midst of spirits as to his spirit;
nevertheless spirits do not know they are with man,
nor a man that he is with spirits. But as soon
as spirits begin to speak with a man, they come out
of their spiritual state into the man’s natural
state; and then they know that they are with man, and
they unite themselves to the thoughts of his affection,
and they speak with him from those thoughts.
Thence it is that the spirit speaking is in the same
principles as the man, whether these be true or false.
These he stirs up, and through his affection, united
to the man’s, strongly confirms them. All
this shows the danger in which a man is who speaks
with spirits, or who manifestly perceives their operation.
Of the nature of his affection, good or bad, a man
is ignorant, also with what others he is associated.
If his is a pride of self-intelligence, the spirit
favors every thought from that source. Likewise
there is the favoring of principles which are inflamed
from the fire which those have who are not in truths
from any genuine affection for them. Whenever
from a like affection a spirit favors a man’s
thoughts or principles, then the former leads the
latter, as the blind lead the blind, until both fall
into the ditch.
It is otherwise with those whom the
Lord leads. He leads those who love and will
truths from Him. Such are enlightened when they
read the Word, for there the Lord is, and He speaks
with every one according to the latter’s apprehension.
When these hear speech from spirits, as they do sometimes,
they are not taught, but are led, and this so prudently
that the man is still left to himself. For every
man is led through the affections by the Lord, and
he thinks from these freely as if of himself.
Were it otherwise, a man could not be reformed, nor
could he be enlightened.
Apocalypse Explained, nn. 1182,
1183
AN UNBROKEN ASSOCIATION
Married partners, who have lived in
truly conjugial love, are not separated in the death
of one of them. For the spirit of the deceased
partner lives continually with the spirit of the other,
not yet deceased, and this even to the death of the
other, when they meet again and reunite, and love
each other more tenderly than before; for now they
are in the spiritual world.
Conjugial Love, n. 321
THE CHURCH
“Behold, the tabernacle
of God is with men, and He will
dwell with them, and they shall be His people,
and God
Himself shall be with them, and be their God.”
Rev.,
XXI, 3
THE CHURCH IN GOD’S SIGHT
The Church is in man, and not outside
of him; and the Church at large consists of the men
who have the Church in them. The Church
consists of those who from the heart acknowledge the
Divine of the Lord, who learn truths from Him by the
Word, and do them. Every one who lives
in the good of charity and of faith is a Church and
a Kingdom of the Lord. The Church in general
is constituted of those who are severally Churches,
however remote they are from one another. The
Church of the Lord is scattered throughout the whole
world.
Heaven and Hell, n.
57 Apocalypse Explained, n. 388
Arcana Coelestia, ; ib.,
A SUCCESSION OF CHURCHES
There have been four Churches on this
earth since the day of creation; a first, to be called
the Adamic, a second, to be called the Noachic; a
third, the Israelitish; and a fourth, the Christian.
After these four Churches, a new one will arise, which
is to be truly Christian, foretold in Daniel
and in the Apocalypse, and by the Lord Himself
in the Evangelists, and looked for by the Apostles.
Coronis, Summary, I, VIII
EARLY CHRISTIANITY AND ITS DECLINE
When a Church is raised up by the
Lord, it is in the beginning blameless; and one then
loves the other as his brother, as we know of the
primitive Church after the Lord’s advent.
At that time, all the sons of the Church lived together
like brothers, and also called one another brother,
and mutually loved each other. But in the course
of time charity diminished, and vanished; and as it
vanished, evils succeeded; and together with evils
falsities insinuated themselves. Hence came schisms
and hérésies, which would never come to be, were
charity regnant and alive.
Arcana Coelestia, n. 1834
THE LORD’S SECOND COMING: WHEN? HOW?
Now is the Lord’s Second Coming,
and a New Church is to be instituted. The Second
Coming of the Lord is not a coming in Person, but in
the Word, which is from Him, and is Himself.
We read in many places that the Lord will come in
the clouds of heaven. The “clouds of heaven”
mean the Word in its natural sense, and “glory”
the Word in its spiritual sense, and “power”
the Lord’s power by means of the Word. So
the Lord is now to appear in the Word. He is not
to appear in Person because, since His ascension into
heaven, He is in the Glorified Humanity, in which
He cannot appear to any man, unless He opens the eyes
of his spirit first, and this cannot be done with any
one who is in evils and thence in falsities.
It is vain, therefore, to believe that the Lord will
appear in a cloud of heaven in Person; but He will
appear in the Word, which is from Him, and so is Himself.
True Christian Religion, nn. 115,
776, 777
What occurred at the end of the Jewish
Church has occurred similarly now; for at the end
of that Church, which was when the Lord came into
the world, the Word was interiorly opened. Interior
Divine truths were revealed by the Lord, which were
to serve the New Church to be established by Him,
and did serve it, too. To-day, again, for similar
reasons, the Word has been interiorly opened, and divine
truths still more interior have been revealed, which
are to serve a New Church, which will be called the
New Jerusalem.
Apocalypse Explained, n. 948
A NEW CHURCH
It was foretold in the Apocalypse
(XXI, XXII) that at the end of the former Church a
New Church was to be instituted, in which this would
be the chief teaching: that God is One in Person
as well as in Essence, in Whom is the Trinity, and
that that God is the Lord. This Church is what
is there meant by the New Jerusalem, into which only
he can enter who acknowledges the Lord alone as God
of Heaven and earth.
Divine Providence, n. 263
The descent of the New Jerusalem cannot
take place in a moment, but becomes a fact as the
falsities of the former Church are removed. For
what is new cannot enter where falsities have previously
been engendered, unless these are eradicated; which
will take place with the clergy, and so with the laity.
True Christian Religion, n. 784
THE ULTIMATE GOAL
Were it received as a principle, that
love to the Lord and charity to the neighbor are what
the whole Law hangs on and are what all the Prophets
speak of, and thus are the essentials of all doctrine
and worship, then the mind would be enlightened in
innumerable things in the Word, which otherwise lie
hidden in the obscurity of a false principle.
In fact, hérésies would be scattered then, and
out of many one Church would come to be, however the
doctrines flowing therefrom or leading thereto, and
the rituals, might differ. Were the case so,
all men would be governed as a single human being by
the Lord; for all would be as members and organs of
one body, which, dissimilar in form and function though
they are, still have relation to one heart only, whereon
they each and all depend. Then, in whatever doctrine
or outward worship one might be, he would say of another,
“This man is my brother. I see that he
worships the Lord, and that he is a good man.”
Arcana Coelestia, n. 2385
MEMORABLE SAYINGS
MEMORABLE SAYINGS
All religion has relation to life;
and the life of religion is to do good.
Love in act is work and deed.
Heaven is a kingdom of uses.
No one who believes in God and lives well is condemned.
Shunning evils as sins is the mark of faith.
To resist one evil is to resist many;
for every evil is united with countless evils.
If you wish to be led by the Divine
Providence, employ prudence as a servant and attendant
who faithfully dispenses his Lord’s goods.
Where men know doctrine and think
according to it, there the Church may be; but
where men act according to doctrine, there alone the
Church is.
It is not the desire of an intelligent
man to be able to confirm whatever he pleases; but
to be able to see truth as truth, and falsity as falsity,
and to confirm his insight, is the way of an intelligent
man.
To reason only whether a thing is
so or not, is like reasoning about the fit of a cap
or a shoe without ever putting it on.
It is the essence of God’s love
to love others outside Himself, to desire to be one
with them, and from Himself to render them blessed.
The absence of God from man is no
more possible than the absence of the sun from the
earth through its heat and light.
Truths perish with those who do not desire good.
Peace has in it confidence in the
Lord that He governs all things, and provides
all things, and leads to a good end.
The Lord powerfully influences the humble.
Innocence is willingness to be led by the Lord.
One’s distance from heaven is
in proportion to the measure of one’s self-love.
Peace in the heavens is like spring
in the world, gladdening all things.
No two things mutually love each other
more than do truth and good.
Love consists in desiring to give
our own to another and in feeling as our own his delight.
A wicked man may shun evils as hurtful;
none but a Christian can shun them as sins.
If a man studies the neighbor and
the Lord more than himself, he is in a state of regeneration.
The Lord acts mediately through heaven,
not because he needs the aid of the angels, but that
they may have functions and offices, life and happiness.
Good is like a little flame which
gives light, and causes man to see, perceive and believe.
Evil itself is disunion.
To serve the Lord is to be free.