Selection from On Divine Love and Wisdom ~ Emanuel Swedenborg
So far as man is in the love of use, so far is he in the Lord, so far he loves the Lord and loves the neighbor, and so far he is a man.
From the love of uses we are taught what is meant by loving the Lord and loving the neighbor, also what is meant by being in the Lord and being a man.
- To love the Lord means to do uses from Him and for His sake.
- To love the neighbor means to do uses to the church, to one's country, to human society and to the fellow-citizen.
- To be in the Lord means to be a use.
- And to be a man means to perform uses to the neighbor from the Lord for the Lord's sake.
To love the Lord means to do uses
from Him and
for His sake, for the reason that all the good uses that man does are from the Lord; good uses are goods, and it is well known that these are from the Lord.
Loving these is doing them, for what a man loves he does. No one can love the Lord in any other way; for uses, which are goods, are from the Lord, and consequently are Divine; yea they are the Lord Himself with man. These are the things that the Lord can love. The Lord cannot be conjoined by love to any man, and consequently cannot enable man to love Him,
except through His own Divine things; for man
from himself cannot love the Lord; the Lord Himself must draw him and conjoin him to Himself;
Therefore loving the Lord as a Person, and not loving uses, is loving the Lord from oneself, which is not loving.
He that performs uses or goods
from the Lord performs them also
for the Lord's sake. These things may be illustrated by the celestial love in which the angels of the third heaven are. These angels are in love to the Lord more than the angels in the other heavens are; and they have no idea that loving the Lord is anything else than doing goods which are uses, and they say that uses are the Lord with them. By uses they understand the uses and good works of ministry, administration, and employment, as well with priests and magistrates as with merchants and workmen; the good works that are not connected with their occupation they do not call uses; they call them alms, benefactions, and gratuities.