April 16, 2020

When Knowledges Become Truths

Selection from Arcana Coelestia ~ Emanuel Swedenborg
Knowledges are nothing else than the truths of the natural man, but which have not yet been made his own...

Knowledges do not become truths in man until they are acknowledged by the understanding, which takes place when they are confirmed by him; and these truths do not become his own until he lives according to them; for nothing is made man's own except that which becomes of his life, for thus he himself is in the truths, because his life is in them.
(from Arcana Coelestia 5276)

April 14, 2020

The Hinge of the Determinations

Selection from Arcana Coelestia ~ Emanuel Swedenborg
There are with man two determinations of the things of the understanding and of the will — one determination is outward toward the world, and the other is inward toward heaven.

• With natural and sensuous men, the determination of the things of the understanding and of the will, thus of the thoughts and affections, is toward the world;

• With spiritual and celestial men the determination of these things is toward heaven, and also alternately toward the world.

The hinge of the determinations turns inward when the man is being regenerated, and so far as it can then be turned inward, so far the man can be raised by the Lord toward heaven to Himself, and consequently be in the same proportion imbued with wisdom, faith, and love. For the man then lives in the internal man, consequently in his spirit, and the external man is subordinate thereto. But if a man does not suffer himself to be regenerated, then all his interiors remain determined toward the world, and then his life is in the external man, and the internal man is subordinate thereto. This is the case when the external man supplies reasonings which favor evil lusts. These men are called natural, and they who abide in things most external are called sensuous; from which it can be seen what is meant by "the sensuous."
(from Arcana Coelestia 9730)

April 11, 2020

The Holy Spirit is Neither Given or Lost

Selection from Invitation to the New Church ~ Emanuel Swedenborg
Posthumous Work
The soul is the inmost man, and thence according to the ancients it is in the whole and in every part of the body, because the beginning of life resides in the soul; that part of the body in which the soul does not inmostly reside, does not live. Wherefore there is a reciprocal union; and hence the body acts from the soul, but not the soul through the body.
Whatever proceeds from God partakes of the human form,
because God is Himself the Man
this is especially the case with the soul, which is the first of man.

Nothing is more common in the whole heaven and in the whole world, than for one thing to be within another; thus there is an inmost, a middle, and an outmost; and these three intercommunicate, and the power of the middle and outmost are derived from the inmost.

That there are three things, one within the other, appears from each and all things in the human body.

• Around the brain there are three tunics, which are called the dura mater, the pia mater, and the arachnoid; and over these is the skull.
• Around the whole body there are tunics, one within the other, which taken all together are called the skin.
• Around each artery and vein there are three tunics; likewise around each muscle and fiber; in like manner around all the rest which are there.

In the vegetable kingdom the case is the same.

How these parts intercommunicate, and how the inmost enters the middle, and the middle the ultimate, is shown by anatomy, etc.

Thence it follows that the same is the case with light; that spiritual light which in its essence is truth, is interiorly in natural light; likewise that spiritual heat which in its essence is love, is in natural heat. By natural heat is meant natural love, because that love becomes warm; and this is clothed with the heat of the blood.

All things which people speak concerning the Holy Spirit fall to the ground, as soon as it is believed that man is not life, but only an organ of life; and thus that God is constantly in man, and that He strives, acts, and urges that those things which belong to religion, and consequently those which belong to the church, to heaven and salvation, shall be received. Therefore it is wrong to say that the Holy Spirit is given, or that it is lost. For the Holy Spirit is nothing else than the Divine which proceeds out of the Lord from the Father, and this Divine causes a man's life, and also his understanding and his love; and the presence of this Divine is perpetual. Without the presence of the Lord or the Holy Spirit, man would be nothing but a kind of beast; yea he would not have any more life, than salt, a stone, or a stock. The reason of this is, that man is not born with instinct, like a beast; wherefore a pullet one day old knows the order of its life better than an infant.
(from Invitation to the New Church 48-50)