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Dániel 10

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1 Czírusnak, Persia királyának harmadik esztendejében egy ige jelenteték Dánielnek, a ki Baltazárnak nevezteték; igaz az ige és nagy bajról való; és figyele az igére és megérté a látomást.

2 Azokon a napokon én, Dániel, bánkódtam három egész hétig.

3 Kívánatos étket nem ettem, hús és bor nem ment az én számba, és soha sem kentem meg magamat, míg el nem telék az egész három hét.

4 És az elsõ hónapnak huszonnegyedik napján, ímé én a nagy folyóvíznek, azaz a Hiddekelnek partján valék.

5 És felemelém szemeimet, és látám, és ímé: egy férfiú, gyolcsba öltözve, és dereka ufázi aranynyal övezve.

6 És teste olyan mint a társiskõ, és orczája olyan mint a villám, és szemei olyanok mint az égõ szövétnekek, karjai és lábatája mint az izzó ércznek színe, és az õ beszédének szava olyan, mint a sokaság zúgása.

7 És egyedül én, Dániel láttam e látomást, a férfiak pedig, a kik velem valának, nem látták a látomást; hanem nagy rettenés szálla reájok, és elfutának, hogy elrejtõzzenek.

8 És én egyedül hagyattam, és látám ezt a nagy látomást, és semmi erõ sem marada bennem, és orczám eltorzula, és oda lõn minden erõm.

9 És hallám az õ beszédének szavát; és mikor hallám az õ beszédének szavát, én ájultan orczámra esém, és pedig orczámmal a földre.

10 És ímé, egy kéz illete engem, és felsegített térdeimre és tenyereimre;

11 És monda nékem: Dániel, kedves férfiú! Értsd meg a beszédeket, a melyeket én szólok néked, és állj helyedre, mert most te hozzád küldettem! És mikor e szót szólá velem, felállék reszketve.

12 És monda nékem: Ne félj Dániel: mert az elsõ naptól fogva, hogy szívedet adtad megértésre és sanyargatásra a te Istened elõtt, meghallgattattak a te beszédid, és én a te beszédeid miatt jöttem.

13 De Persiának fejedelme ellenem állott huszonegy napig, és ímé Mihály, egyike az elõkelõ fejedelmeknek, eljöve segítségemre, és én ott maradék a persa királyoknál;

14 Jöttem pedig, hogy tudtodra adjam, a mi a te népedre az utolsó idõkben következik: mert a látomás azokra a napokra [szól.]

15 És mikor ilyen szavakkal szóla velem, orczámmal a földre esém és megnémulék.

16 És ímé, olyan valaki, mint egy ember-fia, megilleté ajkaimat és megnyitám a számat és szólék és mondám annak, a ki elõttem álla: Uram, a látomás miatt reám fordulának az én fájdalmaim, annyira, hogy semmi erõm nincsen.

17 És mi módon szólhat ezzel az én Urammal ennek az én Uramnak szolgája? Hiszen bennem attól fogva nem álla meg az erõ, és lélekzet sem marada bennem.

18 És ismét illete engem az emberhez hasonló, és megerõsíte engem.

19 És monda: Ne félj, te kedves férfiú; békesség néked, légy erõs és bizony erõs! És mikor szóla velem, megerõsödém, és mondék: Szóljon az én Uram, mert megerõsítél engemet.

20 És monda: Tudod-é, miért jöttem hozzád? És most visszatérek, hogy küzdjek a persa fejedelem ellen; és ha én kimegyek, ímé Görögország fejedelme jõ elõ!

21 De megjelentem néked, a mi fel van jegyezve az igazság írásában; és senki sincsen, a ki én velem tartana ezek ellenében, hanem csak Mihály a ti fejedelmetek.

   

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Exposition of Daniel's Vision of a Man

От Andy Dibb

If chapter nine describes the process of repentance we must pass through in order to be fully rid of selfishness, then chapter ten is the next logical step, and carried us into the early stages of repentance. With this in mind it is possible to see the final six chapters of Daniel as a completing sequence of spiritual development from an awareness of the presence of evil and the initial judgment on it, as shown in chapter seven, a state of self examination and a vision of the horrors of evil in chapter eight. Chapter nine follows then with the first rejection of evil from the force of conscience, and chapter ten begins the series of temptation. The very long eleventh chapter completes the series with the total rejection of selfishness, and chapter twelve is a beautiful image of the new state breaking into our minds, as a result.

The process of repentance initiates states of temptation From our human perspective there is often no break in the time-frame or progression of these states, and we simply move from one to the next—and at times seem to be sliding backwards because we have more than one evil we repent of, and are often tempted in different areas of life and on different levels. The process of regeneration, as we have seen in this study of Daniel is not a simple linear progression from one state to the next.

All spiritual life begins in states of selfishness and evil (Or "condemnation," see Divine Providence 83). A person before beginning the process of repentance is led by the love of self and of the world, "and these delights prevent him from knowing that he is in evils, for every delight of love is felt as good". A second state, the state of "reformation" begins when the person "begins to think about heaven on account of the joy there; and thus concerning God from whom the joy of heaven comes to him" (Divine Providence 83).

Unless people reflect on it, they miss the distinct difference between these two states. The first is our Nebuchadnezzar/Belshazzar combination governing our inner and outer being, when everything we feel, think or do is permeated with selfishness. As we saw earlier one of the flaws of that state is its inability to reflect on itself. Thus we have Daniel, or our conscience, to show us alternatives to selfishness, to inspire us with thoughts of heaven and the Lord. However, these thoughts also show us the discrepancies between our state and the ideal state of heaven, with the result that we enter into states of temptation because our vision of truth motivates us to turn aside from selfishness.

This introduces the third state or the active state of being reborn. Regeneration begins “when a person desists from evils as sins, and it progresses as he shuns them, and is perfected as he fights against them; and then, as he from the Lord conquers them, he is regenerated” (Divine Providence 83:6).

From this passage we can clearly see that "regeneration" is a process. There is probably no point at which one can say "now I am regenerated," for there are always evils to desist from, shun and fight, and so there is a perpetual perfecting of our human spirit.

VERSE 1

Chapter ten begins in the now familiar way of introducing a time and a ruler. It begins in the "third year" of Cyrus, king of Persia. These opening words, which mark a passage of time in the historical sense indicate a passage of state in our spiritual journey. Spiritual life is a process, and we move from one state to another in an orderly progression. The "third year," as we have seen several times before means the end of one state and the beginning of the next, and to understand this sequence we have to place each "year" into the context of the chapters which have gone before it.

The prayer of repentance in Daniel chapter nine takes place in the first year of the reign of Darius. As such it depicts the dawning of a new state in which a person who has seen the evils of his or her live, is moved by their conscience to repent. Both chapter five and chapter eight describe the move away from evil. Chapter six and nine, then have Darius in common, with chapter six setting the historical scene with Daniel being elevated to second in command of Babylon—a man much prized and treasured by Darius. Thus we see a progression in which the conscience is lifted up and given power over our minds.

The way in which the power is given, however, is shown in the repentance prayer of chapter nine, for without repentance we cannot engage our evils, face them, or defeat them.

It follows, then that we are ready for the next state, symbolised by Cyrus, king of Persia. The Persians came to be a military and political force under Cyrus. While the Medes controlled Babylon, the Persians gathered force on their eastern border. By 550 BC Cyrus had overrun the Median empire, by which time Daniel had been in Babylon for about fifty-five years. He would have been somewhere between sixty-five and seventy-five years old. When the time came for Cyrus to attack Babylon, the city fell "with astounding ease" (Bright 1972:360) in 539 BC As John Bright writes, “the Babylonians were more than ready for a change, while toleration was characteristic of Cyrus. Neither Babylon nor any of the outlying cities were harmed. Persian soldiers were ordered to respect the religious sensibilities of the population and to refrain from terrorising them. Oppressive conditions were ameliorated” (Bright 1972:361).

The historical man Cyrus embraced the gods of Babylon. He publicly worshipped Marduk, and claimed his right to rule as given by the gods. Yet as we saw in chapter nine, Cyrus also made the proclamation allowing the Jews to return to Israel and begin rebuilding the temple at government cost. Perhaps it is because of this generosity of spirit and action which accords the high representation Cyrus enjoys in the internal sense. Certainly he was a king of a completely different mould from either Nebuchadnezzar or Belshazzar. Bright comments that "Cyrus was one of the truly enlightened rulers of ancient times" (Bright 1972:362).

Could this enlightenment come from the fact that Persia originally lay to the east of Babylon, and the east represents the Lord (Cf. Apocalypse Explained 600). Or it could be Cyrus' allowing the Jews to return to Jerusalem—in itself something loaded with meaning.

Whatever the reason is, however, Cyrus has a most exalted representation, for he represents the Lord in His Human (Arcana Coelestia 8989:6). This can be clearly seen in Isaiah's prophecy, where he refers to Cyrus as "the Lord's anointed," and we are told that this means that in these verses "Cyrus" represents how the Lord from His Divine goodness acting by means of His Divine truth subjugated the hells during the glorification process (The Lord's glorification is the process of how the Lord took on a human from Mary, making it possible for the hells to attack Him. Drawing from the Divine love within, He defeated them one after another and made them subject to Himself. In the same process, by purifying the human from Mary, He made it possible for the Divine to descend to the level at which human beings live. Human regeneration is a finite version of the Lord's glorification, except that while the Lord acted from His own power, humans have no power of their own, but draw it from Him), and keeps the hells forever under his control (Apocalypse Explained 298:11).

Cyrus must have the same representation in the book of Daniel because of the context in which he is introduced. We see him, for the first time, after the prayer of repentance in chapter nine, and, as we have seen repentance introduces a new state, one of temptation and spiritual development.

The state of repentance presupposes two things, firstly that a person is aware of active evils within him or herself, and secondly that one is aware of the wrongness of the evil. The great difficulty in repentance is reconciling ourselves to giving up things our conscience has labelled evil. It is difficult because the other side of our personality, the side which favours the evil, may not see it as evil. Our minds at this stage are divided into two camps, almost as if there were two people within us.

Daniel's vision takes place in the third year of the reign of Cyrus because repentance brings the Lord close to us. As a person prays to the Lord for help to overcome, so the Lord grants that help as well as the sense of hope, comfort and inward joy. Without the Lord's power we have no ability whatever to fight against our sins (Arcana Coelestia 1661, 8172, 10481), because our resistance to evil is really the presence of the Lord acting in us to hold us back from committing the evil (Arcana Coelestia 929). The art of repentance is coming to believe that this is so, and learning to put our confidence and trust in the Lord—not an easy thing to do when a significant part of us resists this process with all its might.

It is partly because of this that the opening verse of chapter ten is so objectively stated, as if some narrator other than Daniel himself is telling the story. Certainly one could read into this that Daniel was not the author of this verse, because he only begins speaking in the next verse and seems so detached in the present verse. However, another way of looking at it is that this detachment is really the result of two forces present in our minds as we repent.

The side of goodness is represented by the statement that a message was revealed "to Daniel." As we have seen earlier, Daniel represents our conscience, or the pattern of our thoughts drawn from the knowledges we learn in the Word. When a person believes these things to be true, he or she separates him or herself from the merely worldly knowledges we accumulate from our environment. The other side of us, the Babylonian or selfish side, does not see Daniel this way. Nebuchadnezzar almost immediately renamed Daniel "Belshazzar" as if in denial of his Jewish roots. In this we see the selfish side of us as willing to know truths, even truths from the Word, but to see them as no different from the many things our environment teaches us, and certainly not as a motivating conscience.

At the time of repentance these two sides dwell within us, ready to pull us in two directions as we begin the process of temptation, or the battle of evil against our states of love and goodness.

VERSES 2-6

After the introductory verse, which seems to narrate Daniel's experience, Daniel himself begins to relate the account of his vision. This verse can also be seen as part of the first thing said in this section, because it sets the scene and tone for the rest of the vision.

Daniel's description begins with the words "in those days." As we have seen before, time in the Word always describes state, and the state Daniel here describes is the state of temptation following from repentance. He describes this as a state of mourning.

When a person experiences temptation after the act of repentance, the person passes, as it were, into a spiritual mourning: We mostly associate the concept of mourning with death, especially the loss of a loved one. Yet all losses indicate a mourning of some sort or another. The act of repentance is no exception. When a person repents, his or her mind is lifted up from a selfish state into a higher light. The person is able to: see his or her actions with relative clarity, or at least clearly enough to understand that they are wrong and be willing to reject them.

As the states of selfishness reassert themselves- such as we saw the satraps do in the reign of Darius when they tried to trick him into killing Daniel, so we begin a spiritual battle, the battle of temptation. The first casualty of that battle is the clarity with which we had seen our evils. It is more difficult to see the wrong in something when part of our mind wants to embrace it. In those states our mind is divided into two. The understanding may KNOW that it wrong, but the will WANTS to follow the wrong path anyway, and unless we are very careful, the will will cloud our understanding, and we will loose our perception of the wrongness of our feeling, thought or action. If this happens, we give into the temptation.

So Daniel described his state as being one of mourning—mourning for the clarity of thought which the conscience presents before us to help us repent our sins. In. a spiritual state of mourning we may feel as if our understanding of truth has ceased (Arcana Coelestia 3580:3), and our understanding of truth, which had prompted us to repent, has been destroyed (Arcana Coelestia 4763). We come into this state because, as temptations begin to intensify, the turn our minds away from the Lord and His Word, focusing our thoughts and feelings upon ourselves so that we no longer receive His truths (Cf Apocalypse Revealed 492).

This state has to run its course—Daniel said he was in a state of mourning for "three full weeks." There is no short cut through the work of temptation, we should not pray to the Lord to take it away, for the prayers of those who ask for their temptations to be removed are not heard in heaven. To ask the Lord to remove these is counterproductive. We are told that the “prayers of those who are in temptations are but little heard; for the Lord wills the end, which is the salvation of the man, which end He knows, but not the man; and the Lord does not heed prayers that are contrary to the end, which is salvation” (Arcana Coelestia 8179).

So Daniel remained in that state for three full weeks. During that time he recounted that he "ate no pleasant food, no meat or wine came into his mouth." It is interesting how often when we are in a troubled state we loose our appetites. Food holds no appeal to us. This lack of appetite is just as true in times of spiritual combat as it is in natural troubles.

The reason why Daniel lost his appetite was because of the significance of food. When we eat the food becomes a part of our bodies, nourishing us from within and giving us the energy and sustenance to carry on our lives. Eating spiritual food does the same for our spirits. Spiritual eating is the appropriation of states of goodness and truth (Arcana Coelestia 3149, 3568, 3570), which can be compared to food and drink

Notice the sequence of ideas that make up Daniel's fast, He says he ate no "pleasant food, meat or wine." As we have seen many times in this study, lists. like this indicate a developmental series of ideas, which need to be explored. However, before we begin this exploration it is important to point out that the word "food" does not appear in the original. While the term used in the original language can mean "food," it is more specifically "bread" made from grain or corn (Brown Driver Briggs # 3899, Strong's Definition # 3899).

It is important to make this distinction, for while bread may be a staple diet, "food" as a generic term can mean things other than bread made from grain or corn. In the internal sense this kind of precision is important, for example in the Lord's prayer it is said, "Give us this day our daily bread," which would have a different meaning from "our daily food." Similarly in giving the Holy Supper the Lord took bread and broke it, saying this is My body. The fact is He chose bread from amongst the food on the table to represent His body.

The "bread" is so important is because it symbolises everything good and truth with a person (Arcana Coelestia 2165). Goodness and truth are the nourishment of our soul, and together they form the presence of the Lord within us. The Lord is present in us in our love and faith towards Him, especially in the uses we perform towards other people.

In the highest sense "bread" symbolises the love of the angels of the Lord's. celestial heaven, which is the greatest love one human being can express towards another. The essence of this love is humility, for the person in this love "acknowledges and believes that he is something vile and filthy (Arcana Coelestia 1594:4)." This may seem like strong language, but the whole process of the self-examination in chapters seven and eight and the repentance of chapter nine leads to this assumption. The point of this humility, however, is not to denigrate the human spirit for the sake of denigration, but to make it posib1e for us to identify and remove the blockages which allow the Lord to flow into and vivify us. It is hard for us to come to this recognition, but unless we do we can never then experience the liberation of knowing that all true goodness with us comes from the Lord Himself. Freed from selfishness we are able to embrace one another as angels do. Angels do not love their neighbour as much as themselves, but more than oneself (Arcana Coelestia 1594).

Thus when Daniel described his state of mourning he described how no pleasant bread came into his mouth. When we are in a state of temptation we loose the sense that we are evil. All the work of self-examination goes down the drain as our selfish side exerts itself. We saw this very clearly in chapter four when Nebuchadnezzar, having seen his dream of the tree being cut down, and being humbled in the interpretation, still announces himself as the greatest. The result is that he looses his rationality and ends up like a wild beast for seven years.

Much the same thing happens to us. We can acknowledge the origin of evil, and see it in ourselves. We even pray to the Lord for deliverance from the evil. Yet as soon as that old selfishness exerts itself once again we fall right back into it. We loose the clarity of sight, which showed us the nature of evil, with the result that our ability to love our neighbour more than ourselves disappears. No pleasant bread comes into our mouths.

Now notice that Daniel continues his list, no meat or wine came into his mouth. "Meat" represents the external things of love in our lives, the behaviours associated with loving our neighbour (Cf. Arcana Coelestia 574, 627). We call these behaviours "charity" ("Meat" represents charity, see Arcana Coelestia 5204). When a person shuns or removes selfishness from their lives, the removal results in external behaviour, which is the outward expression of their love towards others.

In a similar way, he drank no wine. "'Wine" represents a persons faith (Arcana Coelestia 1071:4). People often think of faith as a commodity, or a possession. One Bible, in notes about faith describes it as "your title deed to eternal life" (The Open Bible. 1975. Nashville: Thomas Nelson Inc. Page 1151). But faith is not a possession as such. One acquires faith through a process of learning spiritual truth from the Word, coming to see the truth of the things learned, and then putting one's trust and confidence in those teachings.

The truths making up faith are described as "water" in the literal sense of the Word. In the story of the Lord turning water into wine one is shown how the truths, by the person acknowledging them to be truth, are turned into spiritual truth, or faith. Faith changes from being an intellectual exercise into a matter of life when a person uses the truths, which make up faith to guide and direct his or her life.

In a state of temptation this process doesn't take place. In his state of mourning Daniel ate no bread, and no meat or wine came into his mouth. In this verse, then, we get a wonderful picture of how, as our evils reassert themselves after a period of repentance, we do not loose our sense of being evil, which makes it possible for us to be lured back into our old evils. At the same time, our love for others and our basic faith are shaken.

We can compare this state with two incidents in the historical section. First Nebuchadnezzar in Chapter four dreams of the mighty tree being cut down. This describes how one's selfishness is brought under control. The process is a form of inward temptation, similar to the images and visions of evil Daniel relates in chapters seven and eight. Yet even with the knowledge of the impending rejection of evil, Nebuchadnezzar still allowed his self-esteem to lead him, with the result that he ended up like a wild beast for seven years.

The second incident is the story of Darius the Mede, who promoted Daniel to a position of high honour, but allowed the satraps to appeal to his vanity with the result that Daniel was cast into the lion's den.

Both of these incidents show how after repentance people fall back into their old ways. Nebuchadnezzar represents our inner man and Darius our external. Together they are us. When we repent the idea of repenting begins in our inner being, and it has to be expressed in our outer, more public self. At the beginning of the process we may indeed be overcome by the enormity of our evils, but after a while they begin to reassert themselves, we loose the urgency or immediacy of the need to overcome them, and relapse into a state of temptation. We eat no bread, no meat or wine enters our mouths.

In addition to not taking food, Daniel also did not anoint himself at all. "Anointing" is the ancient custom of pouring oil over something in order to make it holy for example kings and priest were anointed as an external sign of their office, and internally as a sign that they represented the Lord (Arcana Coelestia 3009, 9144, 10019, 10118 et al).

By being anointed with oil (the oil used was olive oil) means to come into a state of goodness resembling that the Lord Himself, for He was the "anointed," meaning that His Divine love for the entire human race came down into the human form of Jesus Christ, making it possible for what had been an invisible love in the Old Testament to become completely visible in the New. For this reason anointing hold a high place amongst the rituals and practices of the people of Old Testament times, as a prophecy that the Lord would indeed come into the world.

To "anoint oneself' therefore, means to come into states which are receptive of the Lord's presence and one does this by learning faith and bringing into the practice of charity.

This makes it clear how in times of temptation, like Daniel, we do not anoint ourselves. Daniel could not do so because his state represents a time in human life when, as our concept of evil blurs—described by not eating bread, meat or wine—so our ability to do good also disappears. In this state we may know the truths of the Word in an intellectual fashion, but we do not live them (Arcana Coelestia 9272:5). The immediate result is that genuine goodness vanishes, and with it all our love for others and our willingness to act in accordance with our conscience ( Thus we lose our celestial love, which is the love of the Lord above all other things (Arcana Coelestia 9277). In other words, we relapse into our former state of selfishness as if the repentance never took place.

This state of mourning lasted for three weeks, representing a state of fullness. One cannot hurry temptation. Our spiritual battles run their own course, and it is up to us to keep our hearts and minds open to the Lord, thus keep the Daniel side of our lives alive. The Lord's teaching on fasting in the New Testament is of great importance to remember here. As we have seen from Daniel’s experience in a state of mourning, on fasts. Fasting, therefore, represents a state of temptation. Yet our temptation should not be public. As the Lord says in the Sermon on the Mount, we should "anoint our head and wash our face." In other words, even though we might be tempted to relapse into evils associated with selfishness, still we ought to continue to do good to other people, reaching out to them in love and charity. If we continue to do this, the temptation will eventually pass, for as we are told, “Act precedes, man's willing follows; for that which a man does from the understanding, he at let does from the will, and finally puts it on as a habit and it is then insinuated in his rational or internal man. And when it has been insinuated in this, the man no longer does good from truth, but from good; for he then begins to perceive therein somewhat of blessedness, and as it were somewhat of heaven. This remains with him after death, and by means of it he is uplifted into heaven by the Lord” (Arcana Coelestia 4353).

Daniel's' time of mourning passed after three weeks. He recounts how on the twenty-fourth day of the first month he "was by the side of the great river, that is, the Tigris" when his vision began.

A temptation by definition is a battle between goodness and evil in our will and truth and falsity in our understanding. The object of temptation is to confirm a person in a state of goodness and truth, which happens as the person, rejects their inclinations to and activities of evil. Thus the Nebuchadnezzar and Belshazzar states have to be brought down and replaced first with Darius and then with Cyrus states.

In the temptation following a state of repentance the two sides of our personalities are clearly demarcated. On the one side we have the loves of selfishness, and on the other the Daniel, our conscience which connects us to the Lord, enabling us to draw from His power, and, armed in this way to shun and resist evil. In the process the attraction for the evil is weakened, and we are able to confirm the leadership of our conscience.

Temptation does finish. Daniel describes coming out of this battle as the "twenty fourth day of the first month." As in all other composite numbers in the Word, "twenty four" refers to a specific state—although it is more easily seen if one uses the old fashioned expression of "four and twenty."

"Four" as we have seen before, describes a state of conjunction (Arcana Coelestia 9103, 6157). This is the uniting of the two sides of our minds in opposition to the unholy alliance of our selfishness and all the thoughts and actions which underpin it. In a state of temptation we must know why we are resisting an evil, that is, we need to see the evil as an evil. Then we must want to resist it. When this happens our win for goodness and our understanding of truth are brought together and we act in one mind. When we know something is evil, and so we don't want commit that act, then the evil looses its attraction for us. As this happens the evil looses its hold over our minds, and we are set free.

The number "four," then, describes the union of minds. The number twenty describes the state of peace we come into when the hold of the evil is broken. We can reach the number twenty in several ways, but generally it represents a state in which our combat with temptation ceases for a while, and we enter into a state of peace and quiet.

While Daniel was in this state he found himself beside the great river, the Tigris.

While Daniel was in this state of peace he found himself beside the great river, the Tigris. The Tigris, or Hiddekel (See Strong's #2313) was one of the two great rivers forming the Boundaries of Mesopotamia. It is first mentioned in the book of Genesis as being one of the rivers flowing through the Garden of Eden. Daniel finding himself beside this river is important in the internal sense because it describes the heightened states of awareness following temptation.

One of the characteristics of temptation is the sense that our knowledge or perception of evil disappears. It makes sense, then, that as the temptation passes, so one becomes aware once again of the nature of one's evils. Daniel standing on the banks of the River Tigris, or Hiddekel describes this awareness.

The Hiddekel is an east flowing river. As we have seen before, a river describes one's intelligence (Arcana Coelestia 7323), and the "east" represents the Lord. Thus this river describes how as temptation passes, our thoughts turn towards the Lord and He gives us insight into our states. In the exposition of the Genesis story where the River Hiddekel is mentioned we are told that it refers to "reason or the sharp sightedness of reason” (Arcana Coelestia 118).

Thus Daniel has entered a new state, one completely different from his mournful fasting. His questions about the captivity of Israel in Babylon were about to be answered. In a similar way, we are able to begin to see a way to finally break and leave behind our personal Babylon.

As he stood on the banks of the river, Daniel saw a vision completely different in form and outcome than the vision he had had beside the River Ulai in chapter eight. In that vision he saw how selfish states overrun the progress we make against evils as the he-goat trampled the ram. He watched in horror as the goat's horns spread across the land. In terms of our spiritual development the vision in the eighth chapter marks the low point of our spiritual life, and is • directly responsible for the repentance of chapter nine. The vision in this chapter, however, is very different Seen from the perspective of repentance and the temptation it brings, the vision inspires hope for the future.

As Daniel lifted up his eyes and looked he saw a man clothed in linen, and around his waist was a girdle of the gold of Uphaz. To understand the following verses we need to remind ourselves once again that Daniel represents our conscience which gives us the ability to face our selfish states and draw from an inner love of goodness and truth. When we are in temptation our conscience falls victim to our selfishness, just as the ram fell victim to the he-goat. Yet the conscience is the presence of the Lord in us, leading and guiding us through the maze of human pride and arrogance resulting from selfishness.

When we come out of temptation still willing to fight the evil within us, to break its hold, then we are like Daniel coming out of his fast, finding himself on the banks of the river. It was then, as he stood there, that Daniel lifted up his eyes and saw this wonderful vision.

If the Hiddekel represents the "sharp sightedness of reason" breaking into our minds as the temptation clears, the phrase "lifting up our eyes" represents light breaking into our eyes, or our understanding (That the "eyes" represent the understanding, see Arcana Coelestia 2701, 275, 4526 et al). To lift up our eyes describes the lifting of our understanding from immediate concerns to higher things, and from this one's understanding is filled with a "mental view, perception, and thought” (Arcana Coelestia 8160. See also Arcana Coelestia 2789, 2829, 3198, 3202, 4083, 4086, 4339). As our conscience reasserts itself, so we find our heads clearing, so to speak, as we reflect backwards on the truths which lead us to repent in the first place. Thus we lift up our eyes, and focus on guiding truths.

As Daniel lifted his eyes he saw a certain man, clothed in linen and girded with gold of Uphaz. He didn't know it at the time, but this "man" was sent to help him in his crisis. The "man" was an angel in whom the Lord was present (Arcana Coelestia 9872, Apocalypse Revealed 830) with His Divine truth (Arcana Coelestia 9406, Apocalypse Explained 504, 77). Angels, who keep us in a state of spiritual balance, always surround us. In temptation, however, the Lord "gives His angels charge over us, to keep us in all His ways" (Psalm 91:11). Temptation is an attack from hell, and, unless the Lord protected us in this way we would succumb. He is present with us in these times, His love surrounded by His divine truth, or wisdom, inspiring us to remember and hold fast to the conscience.

So Daniel saw this man. He was clothed with linen and girded with gold.. The linen represents the pure and genuine truths from the Word (Arcana Coelestia 9872, Apocalypse Revealed 671, Apocalypse Explained 951). In times of temptation the Lord leads us by our consciences. He calls to mind our beliefs, our ideals, and the memories of truth, which He has been laying up in our minds throughout our lives. These truths form the basis of our resistance to the evil.

If one thinks about it, one will find that in times of temptation our greatest defence is the knowledge that something is wrong, and the memory of this knowledge is often sharply etched on our conscious minds during those times

Yet in the actual state of temptation that knowledge looses its sharpness, depicted by no wine coming into Daniel's mouth. After the temptation passes, and one regains one's senses this knowledge returns. We find, ourselves becoming increasingly convinced of the truth and may see with great clarity that the attitude, or feeling, which had tempted us, was completely wrong.

Thus the man wore a linen garment. The garment was gathered together by a girdle of gold. As we have seen several times before, gold represents goodness. The reason why people turn away from evil is because it interferes with their ability to love and worship the Lord. We cannot serve two masters, we must choose one. The selfish side of us tries to focus our lives inward on self with the result that we become our own gods. The good, altruistic side of us focuses outwards into a life of use and service to others and through this into a love of the Lord Himself.

The gold in the girdle, therefore, represents our greater love for the Lord that ties and binds all our insights of truth together, making them a coherent oneness. When we both know the truth arid want to live according to it, we are armed against further attack from the hells, and:will be able to meet them when they arise.

As Daniel watched he noted other things about this man: his body was like beryl, his face like the appearance of lightning, his eyes like torches of fire., his arms and legs like burnished bronze in colour, and the sound of his words was like the voice of a multitude. All of these attributes are images of the presence of the Lord's truth with us that will help, us in times of temptation.

The insights of truth we have in these times are not only restricted to the deeper "theological" truths that make up our faith, but also insight into the nature of our very lives. Remember that this chapter was written in the reign of King Cyrus, indicating genuine progress on our part. One can expect to see some effects of this progress in our lives, for as we repent and overcome in states of temptation, so gradually we are led away from the evils of selfishness and their consequences. Our lives change.

The image of the man's body depicts the progress we make. First we are told that his body was like beryl. Beryl, or tarshish as it is called in the original language, is a yellow coloured stone (Brown Driver Briggs # 8658), which because it flashed with an inner light was included in the breastplate worn by the high priests of Israel (Exodus 28:20). The doctrines tell us that beryl represents the goodness arising from the act of turning away from evil, thus the good of charity (Arcana Coelestia 6135. The first act of charity is to shun evils as sins against the Lord. True Christian Religion 435).

The love of the Lord and other people, which results when a person puts away selfishness, is described as the lightning flashing from the man's face. This good comes to our conscious minds as a deeper understanding of the relationships we have with people and how selfishness can harm them. Selfishness prevents goodness' from expressing itself because whenever selfishness is present in an action it will always pollute it. No matter how good an action may seem, the lurking selfishness injects a secret agenda to turn that goodness to one's own advantage. Take the selfishness away, however, through the process of repentance and temptation, and the goodness is able to shine with a clear light in every part of one's being.

It is because of this that the man had feet like 'burnished gold, which is an image of the Divine truth of heaven shining down into the very external activities of a person's life (Arcana Coelestia 9406, Apocalypse Explained 69). Even our inherited good nature is filled with genuine goodness (Bronze = natural good Arcana Coelestia 425, Apocalypse Revealed 775), a state completely different, from the mind when it is ruled by selfishness. In Nebuchadnezzar's dream in chapter two, the feet of his image was made of iron mixed with clay, indicating that the weakest point of a selfish life is the external actions of our lives. Yet in this vision the feet of the man were of bronze, or good from the Lord affecting us right down to the very outermost level of our lives.

In this vision Daniel was allowed to see the presence of the Lord, in the form of an angel, protecting us as we develop spiritually. We may not see that angel with our eyes, as Daniel did, but the Lord leads us to a greater understanding of our spiritual life. We need to know we have made progress. The fact that this vision takes place in the reign of king Cyrus indicates that progress, for Cyrus represents the Lord subduing our selfishness and keeping it forever under control. Note the process of action, for the Lord is subduing our selfishness, and the process by which this takes place is the duality of repentance and temptation.

Yet we need to have a sight of goodness, of the benefits of life without selfishness—otherwise there would be no incentive to shun selfishness. We need to know that there is hope, a light at the end of the tunnel. That hope is given to us in the vision of the man Daniel saw when he was beside the river Tigris. We need to know that the clarity with which we see our evils will be challenged in times of temptation. We equally need to know that temptations do not last forever, that our clarity of thought will return. If we can hang on to the images of goodness through our' temptation, coupled with the power of the truth that we can reach these stages,' then the Lord will be able to protect us and nurture is from within.

VERSES 7-9

Daniel makes an interesting observation about this vision: he was not by himself when he saw this vision, and yet the men who were with him did not see it. When Daniel saw visions he was not in his body, but his spiritual eyes were opened making it possible for him to see things in the spiritual world (Divine Providence 134, True Christian Religion 157, Apocalypse Revealed 36). These things are of such a nature as cannot easily be put into human terms, although we can come to have some understanding of them by using the correspondences given in the Heavenly Doctrines. This also explains why the men with Daniel could not see these visions either.

Notice that Daniel is very specific in his language here. He does not say "the people" who were with me, but the men. The Latin Bible Swedenborg read uses the Latin term "vir" meaning males. In the Word the term "male" refers to things from the understanding side of our minds, all our thoughts and intellectual insights. Because Daniel represents our conscience his natural home in our minds is in the understanding.

The Lord reveals Himself to us by means of truths from His Word. These enter our minds through our senses and illuminate our thoughts. If we receive those truths and allow them to influence us, they become our conscience, our Daniel.

We also learn many other truths as well from the natural world around us. While these may guide or influence our thinking, because they are not spiritual, they are not a part of our conscience, but may be affiliated to it to help and assist the conscience in its work. For example, if we know that stealing is wrong because it goes against the Ten Commandments, that knowledge can be part of our conscience and helps keep us honest. We may also know that theft is a criminal offence carrying a prison sentence, and because this knowledge is worldly it is not truly a part of our conscience, yet still it may encourage us for external reason to resist stealing.

The men who were with Daniel represent these kinds of knowledges that cannot be enlightened directly from the Lord because they are natural, but can be illuminated indirectly through the conscience. In other words, while the Lord does not lead us through a fear of the law, our fear of the law, when combined by our conscience can and will take on new meaning to us.

This is why Daniel said, "a great terror fell upon them, so that they fled to hide themselves." The state described here is one of great humility.

We would expect that Daniel's response to so wonderful a vision, a vision of hope, would be one of exaltation. Surely we think we would feel a sense of pride, a thrust of joy at knowing that we are not all bad, but that as we make spiritual progress so we become better and better. Such a response, however, is more suitable from Nebuchadnezzar than from Daniel. Pride in our spiritual achievements does not come from the Lord, but from self.

If we were genuinely making spiritual progress, our observation of any goodness in us would be tempered by the acknowledgement that such goodness comes from the Lord alone. As we mentioned earlier in this. chapter, humility rests in the acknowledgement that of ourselves we are nothing and the Lord everything.

Daniel sensed this humility as his strength deserting him and his "vigor turned to frailty." Genuine humility does this to us. For when we come to recognise the Lord as the sole source of all the good we do and all the truth we think, we come to realise how little we are. Up to the point of this realisation we had been buoyed along by the presence of Nebuchadnezzar in our inner being and Belshazzar in our outer, public self. When we repent, however, these states of selfishness in us begin to fail as the Lord draws near to give us the courage and support we need. He leads us to a better understanding of who we are and what we are capable of. Yet selfishness has no strength in His presence, and, like Daniel, we bow down before Him.

Thus Daniel fell down in "deep sleep upon his face, with his face to the ground."

VERSES 10-14

Daniel became aware of a hand touching him and a voice reassuring him. Humility opens our minds to the presence of the Lord, for in that state we acknowledge that without the Lord we are nothing except selfishness and evil. Our redeeming quality, our conscience, is the Lord's truth active in us. So as Daniel lay in a deep sleep with his face to the ground, a hand touched him.

In the modern English translation this passage is given an element of drama which is different from the original. The New King James Version reads: "Suddenly, a hand touched me..." interposing a quality of time quite different from what it should be. The word that should be used is "lo," indicating a sequence of ideas from one state to the next. Thus while Daniel was on his face, as a consequence, a hand touched him.

This follows well in understanding the regenerative series within the story. When we come through the process of repentance and the mournful state of temptation which comes from it, we are able to have a clearer view of our own states, and of how the Lord through His wisdom is leading us. His angel is always there to strengthen our conscience and commitment to shun evil. The result of this is humility, for when we are truly humble we know that the power to shun evils as sins against the Lord does not come from us, but from the Lord alone.

While we are in this humble state we feel again the presence of the Lord, and again through an angel. Daniel's feeling a hand represents our awareness or consciousness of the power of the Lord with us. In the Word a "hand" represents power (Arcana Coelestia 3021), for our hands convey the full thrust of our will and understanding making it possible for us to do things we want to do. By feeling a hand touching him, Daniel represents the way we feel the presence of the Lord in our humility. As this power touched him, Daniel trembled on the palms of his hands and on his knees.

The Lord's presence brings great changes to our lives. When our conscience leads us to the point of humility at which we can recognise the reality of our own selfishness, our lives begin to change dramatically. One cannot stare evil in the face from the perspective of our conscience, and remain untouched. There is recognition that of ourselves we are "vile and filthy" (Arcana Coelestia 1594:4) and with that a fear of harming the wonderful hope the Lord gives to us. Thus Daniel trembled as our consciences tremble in. this state.

The reason why we come into this state of fearing to hurt the Lord and His goodness with us comes from the hand touching Daniel. Daniel is touched twice more in this chapter, in verse 16 where “one having the likeness of the sons of men touched his lips," and later, in verse 18 when he is touched and strengthened by that touch. In each of these three verses the meaning of touch is the same.

When we touch person three things happen. Firstly we communicate something to that person. We show many of our emotions by means of touch love through caresses, anger through hitting, and so on. Secondly the sense of touch transfers these feelings to another person, so we can soothe and heal or hurt and destroy through the sense of touch. Each touch contains our inner thoughts and feelings. Finally, when we touch someone we evoke a response from him or her, and this depends on the person's reception of our touch.

All this is conveyed to Daniel when the angel touches him. In our spiritual life we are "touched" by an angel when we become aware of the truths from the Lord, which give life to our conscience and which strengthen us both in our resolve and commitment to shunning evils as sins. The clarity of vision expressed by Daniel being beside the Tigris River, and the vision of truth shown in the man standing there, are all part of the presentation of truth to our minds. As we come out of states of temptation we become keenly aware of the force and power of truth, and of communication of truth from the Lord to us.

This truth is transferred to our conscious minds from the Lord. The Doctrines teach that every thought and feeling flows into us from the Lord through heaven, or, from hell (Arcana Coelestia 904, 4249). A person cannot think without this inflowing of thought from angels and spirits around him or her (Arcana Coelestia 5288).

As we open our minds to receive the Lord's truths, so we remove blockages, objections and so on, and the truth communicated to us is transferred into our minds and becomes the essence of our own thought. This cannot happen without our consent, for we must be willing for this transfer to take place. The truth is, however, that in the state of humility we are willing to receive the Lord, for when we are humble and think ourselves evil, and when we think the Lord is everything, then we are willing to be led by Him. Thus the third aspect of a touch takes place in our reception of the Lord's presence. Daniel's response to this reception is one of great fear. He is still bowed down, on hands and knees, trembling as a result of seeing the image of the man beside the River. This trembling is a result of a change of state from being in temptation to suddenly seeing the light of truth, and as a result overcoming the temptation and being led out of it. The Doctrines say, that "all who come suddenly from self-life into any spiritual life are at first afraid, but their love is renewed by the Lord" (Apocalypse Explained 80).

This state of fear can be seen in other places in the Word when angels appear to people. Probably the best example is in the Christmas story, when the angel Gabriel appears to Zechariah, Mary and the Shepherds. On each occasion he begins his communication with the words "Do not be afraid."

Being afraid means “to turn away, it is a state of mind disturbed and changed by an imminent or visible danger to the life; but this is one thing with the good and another with the evil; with the good it is a disturbance of mind and a change of state from imminent and visible danger to the soul, but with the evil it is from imminent and visible danger to the life of the body” (Apocalypse Explained 677:8).

An angel appearing to our conscience warns us of danger to our soul. When a person is humble and he or she is aware of inner evils, especially selfishness, then the awareness of truth awakens that person to the spiritual danger around them. Selfishness can creep up on us. We saw earlier how Nebuchadnezzar, although humbled, still counted himself greatest of all things. Darius was no different, for he too exalted Daniel, and yet was willing for people to essentially call himself God. People need a warning signal, and the signal is a state of fear.

Daniel felt this holy fear sensibly, he "trembled on his knees and on the palms of his hands." The, doctrines describe holy fear as being experienced as a sacred tremor, and some times with our hair standing on end and gooseflesh (Apocalypse Revealed 56: "Holy Fear, which sometimes is joined with a sacred tremor of the interiors of the mind, and sometimes with the hair standing on end," i.e. "gooseflesh"). Maybe we feel that angelic presence more as the "pains of conscience" or the sense of guilt which alerts us to the fact that we have been acting contrary to our conscience.

The angelic presence however, served also to reassure Daniel. His words both loved and gentle, "O Daniel., man greatly beloved, understand the words that I speak to you, and stand upright, for I have now been sent to you." For one who was carried captive to Babylon as a young boy, who had witnessed the passage of kings and emperors, who had see unspeakable pride, arrogance and cruelty, and to whom terrifying visions had been revealed, these words must have been a balm on Daniel's spirit.

Daniel was "greatly beloved." Most simply defined, love is a joining together of two into one (cf. Apocalypse Explained 213: "love effects conjunction and consequent presence…"). In this case, Daniel is conjoined to the Lord, and so is "greatly 'beloved." His state now represents the state of mind we come into when, having sincerely repented and endured temptation on account of it, we enter into a new clarity of vision of the type we would never before 'have dreamed possible. All Daniel's visions, which depict our awareness of the breadth and depth of our selfishness, stand to bolster our resolve to the freed from them. The depth of insight into our selfishness awakes within us a holy fear, and from that fear we are 'lead, by means of our conscience, into the presence of the Lord. Our conscience is the "greatly beloved."

If, in all the chapters leading up to this one, we have wondered about the power of selfishness to utterly destroy people's lives, now we see the counter-balance, the strengthening of goodness to uphold the truth. The angel said to Daniel: "understand the words I speak to you."

Our awareness of selfishness grows in clarity as we come to understand the truths that form our conscience. Each feeling, thought or action derived from selfishness stands in opposition to the truth. Engrossed in selfishness we often miss its real nature, but allow the scales to drop for a moment, and we come to see as never before. The very fact of our holy fear makes it possible for us to understand the angel's words.

Humility prostrates us before the Lord, as Daniel found himself trembling on hands and knees. Yet the Lord's love is such a nature that He continually lifts us .up. "Stand upright," the angel said, "for I have now been sent to you." So Daniel stood upright, trembling.

This represents a change of state in us. The essential quality of holy fear, or the fear of damaging the qualities and states of goodness and truth with us from the Lord, is still present, but from being bowed down with his face to the ground, we are now lifted up. It is interesting to note that when we are on our hands and knees we cannot lift our faces upwards towards heaven, but when we stand upright, we can look upwards, and, as it were, contemplate God.

The change in our minds comes when our conscience gains ascendancy in our minds. Selfishness drags us down, repentance and temptation, while they humble us, make it possible for us to look upward and see new visions of spiritual life we had not before believed possible.

The angel continued to speak to Daniel, saying, "Do not fear Daniel." Here again we see the recurring theme of holy fear representing the change of state we are going through. This makes it possible for us to go through further states of spiritual development, just as Mary in her holy fear was able to mother the Lord, and the shepherds in theirs to come and worship Him.

Our holy fear is the result of our spiritual progress to date. Our conscience begins to grow from the moment we begin learning truth, it protects us from the excesses of Nebuchadnezzar's table, as Daniel was protected by refusing to eat the king's food. It enlightens our minds, making it possible for us to see evil and falsity within ourselves and begin the process of shunning them. Thus the process of developing our conscience takes a lifetime, but it is not in vain for because of that conscience the Lord is able to be with us in truth, and lead us through truth so we can be conjoined to Him.

This path of development did come without opposition. As we have seen throughout the book of Daniel, selfishness and evil work continually to overcome and derail the process. The angel refers to this when he says, "the prince of Persia withstood me twenty one days." To withstand the conscience is to engage it in temptation (Arcana Coelestia 1664:2). Although the Writings do not specifically mention the "Prince of Persia," one must assume that he represents the states of selfishness and greed. Some biblical commentaries (e.g. Clarke's) assume that he is Cyrus. In view of Cyrus' correspondence to the Lord, and the role he plays in liberating the Jews from bondage, this is unlikely, unless one sees him in a negative correspondence in this point.

The precise identity of the "Prince of Persia" is not really important here. What is important is that he withstood the angel for twenty-one days. As in all composite numbers in the Word, twenty-one needs special care. It is the same number referred to at the beginning of this chapter when Daniel notes that he "was in mourning three full weeks," i.e. for twenty-one days.

Multiplying seven by three forms twenty-one and both these numbers have the signification of fullness or completeness. The implication is that the states of temptation or combat following repentance must, as we have seen before, follow its course.

What is new in this verse is how the attraction of evil, and the temptations with it, was broken. Note the angel's words, “And behold, Michael, one of the chief princes, came to help me, for I had been left alone there with the kings. of Persia.”

The angel Gabriel was introduced earlier in the book of Daniel. Now a second angel is mentioned by name. Like Gabriel, Michael is not a single angel, but rather a society of angels performing a specific purpose, in this case helping the being who spoke to Daniel.

Each time Michael is mentioned in the Word it is in connection with a war of protection. In this case he defends the being from the Prince of Persia. Later on in this chapter, it is said "no one upholds me against these, except Michael your prince." In chapter twelve we will be told that Michael "stands watch over the sons of your people." We do not see him again in the pages of the Word until the twelfth chapter of the book of Revelation, where Michael defends the Woman clothed with the sun from the attack of the great dragon.

The imagery surrounding Michael is one of fighting for protection. In the internal sense he represents the “Defence of that part of the doctrine from the Word that teaches that the Lord's Human is Divine, and that a person must life a life of love to the Lord and of charity towards the neighbour that he or she may receive salvation from the Lord” (Apocalypse Explained 735).

This state of defence necessarily entails fighting against evils and falsities (Apocalypse Explained 735), which is why we see Michael in the role of a soldier protecting. Michael has a special significance for Daniel, however, for Daniel represents our conscience which is made up of the truths we have come to believe and which we allow to govern our lives. These truths are sorely tested in times of temptation, and unless the Lord continually strengthened them from within, we would forget them and fall prey to the assault from hell (Heaven and Hell 595, Arcana Coelestia 2410, 5854, 7479).

VERSES 15-21

Once again Daniel was reduced to a state of humility by the angel's words. He turned his face to the ground and became speechless. This inability to speak has a great bearing on the final part of this chapter. The Modern English renders the phrase "speechless," but both the original and the Latin Swedenborg used use the term "dumb" (Strong's #481. Schmidius uses the term "obmutui," meaning "dumb").

As we saw earlier, the presence of the Lord brings a state of fear and humility. The fear is a holy fear of harming or damaging the wonderful states of love that the Lord shows us is possible. The humility comes from the recognition of the Lord's mercy, which is accompanied by a failure of one's self-life in the presence of the Divine. Daniel is brought into this state in his vision, for he sees the man clothed in linen, and, when he falls to the ground he is lifted up and told not to fear. Again, as the being speaks, he turns his face to the ground and becomes dumb.

One of the aspects of humility is that it makes a person "speechless." In the New Testament we are told of Zacharias the priest who, after seeing the angel Gabriel was "speechless." A person is physically "dumb" when he or she cannot speak. The word in the original language implies that the person is "tongue-tied." The concept carries much the same meaning in the internal sense, for when a person is in humility, he or she is spiritually tongue-tied and can utter no words. “By "utterance" is not here meant that of the voice, or speech, for this utterance is natural; but by "utterance" is meant confession of the Lord, and the profession of faith in Him; for this utterance is spiritual. Hence it is evident what is signified in the internal sense by the "dumb," namely, they who cannot confess the Lord, thus cannot profess faith in Him, by reason of ignorance, in which state are the nations outside the church, and also the simple within the church” (Arcana Coelestia 6988).

Like Daniel we are unable to speak because in holy fear and humility it is almost impossible to lift up our voices to the Lord. Our awareness of the evil side of our being, contrasted with the Lord's mercy, is too much for us.

As we have seen in other parts of this study, the Lord never leaves us at a spiritual disadvantage. He created us human being so we can have a relationship with Him, so that we not only receive His presence, but are able to return it as well. Holy Fear and humility are essential to our spiritual development, but the Lord did not create us to be as dumb animals—even Nebuchadnezzar was lifted out of that state.

So it was that while Daniel was dumb, one, "having the likeness of the sons of men" touched his lips. The image of the "Son of Man" was introduced in chapter seven and eight is an image of the truth developing in our minds which will set us free from the bondage of selfishness and greed. In the current vision Daniel sees "one having the likeness of the sons of men," or the plural form. Truth is a great liberator, for as the Lord says: "If you abide in My word, you. are My disciples indeed. And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free" ( John 8:31-32).

The removal of "dumbness," or. the inability to acknowledge and confess the Lord, comes from an acceptance and embracing of the truth. Zacharias is a classic example of this, for when the people wanted to call his son, Zacharias after himself, “he asked for a writing tablet, and wrote, saying, "His name is John." So they all marvelled. Immediately his mouth was opened and his tongue loosed, and he spoke, praising God” (Luke 1:63-64).

The idea contained in this action is the way truth comes into our minds making it possible for the states of humility within us to be brought to fruition. If humility is essentially the recognition of our evil and the Lord's goodness, then it follows that the reception of His goodness into our lives is dependent firstly on our being willing to accept it, and secondly our willingness to use His power and presence to remove the states of evil which block His presence out of our lives.

When we repent and endure temptation as a result, we are brought into states of humility in which we can see both our evils and the states of goodness the Lord promises us. The awareness of evil renders us spiritually dumb—unable to confess and express our joy in the Lord. The "one bearing the resemblance of the sons of men" touching our lips, is a reminder of the truths we have learned and which form the basis of our conscience. These truths are in reality the presence of the Lord in us, for. each truth forms a vessel in our minds capable of receiving the Divine presence, and thus of lifting us up. Thus there is a communication and transfer of the Divine to us in the form of truths, which we receive in our thoughts as an increased insight into our evils and the actions necessary to over come them.

This is why the "one like the sons of men" touched Daniel, for as we saw earlier, touch contains the elements of communication, transfer and reception. Divine truth is communicated and transferred to us in the reminder of the Lord's presence in all the truths we know, in our commitment to living a life led by conscience, makes it possible for us to respond to the Lord. Our response, like Daniel's is still governed by the recognition of present and active evils in our minds—our selfishness and greed are still there, and we can see them clearly because of our conscience.

The essence of humility is that there is, must be, a further recognition that not only are we, in our own right, evil, but also we have no strength, no innate ability to fight against and overcome that evil. The only source of the strength we need is the Lord Himself.

Daniel depicts this beautifully. Once his lips were touched, his mouth was opened and he was able to speak. His words still indicate the humility arising from the recognition of his evils. He speaks of the "vision of his sorrows overwhelming him."

On the surface Daniel seems to speak of the sorrow overwhelming him. These certainly are the sorrows of the human state, as shown in chapters seven and eight. However, there lies beneath the surface a deeper insight into this.

The original word for "sorrow" comes from a root word meaning 'a hinge' (Strong's ref 6635, Brown Driver Briggs defines the word as "the pivot of a door, or a hinge."). Even the Latin word in the Schmidius Bible used by Swedenborg uses a word that is defined as 'a hinge' (See Schmidius at this ref. The word used is "cardo—is". 1 lit. the hinge of a door. 2. The point around which anything turns). At first glance this word makes little sense, until one thinks of how often life swivels around certain issues, or particular things. Those pivotal or hinging points, in our lives often make the difference between which path we choose and which we reject.

Daniel, touched on his lips by an angel, was aware of the differing paths of his life. It is interesting to note how, when we are in states of selfishness, when Nebuchadnezzar or Belshazzar controls our inner and outer beings, we seldom reflect on what we are doing. Our primary motivation in states of selfishness is self—if something seems good, or feels good to us, then surely it must be good. Using this logic we justify countless acts of pure selfishness and greed.

Yet in the presence of truth, when we reflect back on our lives, we come to see how often we reach pivotal points in our lives. It is true that each moment of life is made up of countless choices. Yet some of those choices require us to take stock of our lives, to change direction, or confirm the way we are following. Those times are our pivots.

Daniel, lying supine before the angel was taking stock of his own life, and in so doing he represents the activity of our conscience look back over our own lives. It can be a humbling experience. So often we do make the wrong choices, or do not react in the way we should. As we look backwards, so we realise that until we repent and allow our conscience to guide us, the chief pivot, our sorrow, will be the selfishness and greed of our personal Babylon.

Thus Daniel's words to the angel are very apposite: "because of the vision my sorrows have overwhelmed me, and I have retained no strength." So again we see the strong image of humility—we are humbled and saddened by what we have done with our lives to this point.

Yet again the Lord stirs us from within. The angel again touched Daniel and strengthened him. If there is true humility in us, then that humility can receive the presence of the Lord as He communicates His healing love and wisdom to us. The angel's words to Daniel are as comforting to us as they were to him: "O man greatly, beloved, fear not! Peace be to you; be strong, yes, be strong!"

Our conscience is the "beloved" part of us, because it is the part that admits the Lord's presence to our minds, and so is the gateway to the heavenly peace the Lord gives us. Often in times of temptation and despair this seems unlikely, but the angel's words to Daniel apply just as much to us: "peace to you, be strong."

The angels words to Daniel are reminiscent of the Lord's Words to Joshua as he was about to lead the children of Israel into the Promised Land—in the internal sense the two stories have much in common, as they both deal with the subject of conquering evils along the path of regeneration.

The source of spiritual strength is truth (Cf. Arcana Coelestia 4802, 2832)—great strength is attributed to truth because nothing is able to withstand it (Arcana Coelestia 426). Truths form the conscience, which guides us along the paths of life, yet in order for it to do so, to give us the power and ability to resist evil, it is necessary to bring that truth into practice. If truth is the source of strength, then the practice of truth is obedience to the commandments. True spiritual strength comes from the Lord alone, for He alone, from His own power fought against the hells and overcame them. We draw our strength from Him (Arcana Coelestia 1692). This power is given to us by means of angels surrounding us, who fight first commandment. The second is also against evil on our beha1f (Arcana Coelestia 1752, cf. Arcana Coelestia 50, 227, 228, 697, 968).

Spiritual peace and strength come from the power of the conscience to turn our minds away from selfishness. Even when it seems as if we are brought to our lowest, still, we can be lifted up. This is what the angel came to do. Addressing Daniel he poses a question, "do you know why I have come to you?"

The answer follows in his next words. The angel is returning to fight "with the prince of Persia. As we saw earlier in this chapter, the 'prince of Persia' is Cyrus, the king—this vision being seen in the third year of Cyrus, king of Persia. Note that the angel says he is going to fight 'with' the prince of Persia. One's initial reaction to interpret that 'with' as 'against'. Yet in the original language, 'with' can also mean 'with', that is, alongside, or on the same side as. The angel is not going to fight against Cyrus, but alongside him against the 'prince of Greece'. When one remembers that Cyrus represents the Lord saving the human race.

In the prophecy in chapter eight Daniel is shown that the male-goat with the large horn is "Greece"—which represents the decline of true religion into idolatry (see chapter eight). Yet note the speaker—the angel who lifted Daniel up and urged him to "be strong."

His words introduce the last battle recorded in Daniel, and its victory in Chapter Twelve. However, notice the terms the angel uses as the basis of his introduction: "I will tell you what is noted in the Scripture of Truth." These words in English seem so familiar, for we speak of the Scriptures as a synonym for the Word itself, as indeed it is. In the original language, the term "Scriptures" refers so something written down, a book or a record (Strong's #3791).

The next term "truth" gives us pause though. In the original the term we render as truth takes on a broader meaning of "stability, certainty, truth and trustworthiness" (Strong's #571). This word in turn is derived from a deeper original word meaning “to build up or support; to foster as a parent or nurse; figuratively to render (or be) firm or faithful, to trust or believe, to be permanent or quiet; morally to be true or certain” (Strong's #539).

Looking at these original meanings of the words, one is able to be led beyond the narrow concept of the written word. The angel is speaking of the order of things which will happen when a person, imbued with conscience which had developed from both an understanding of truth and an understanding of one's own selfish states, takes hold in the mind. The whole thrust of the book of Daniel has built up to this point, each temptation, each victory, each vision, one upon another, builds up such spiritual momentum that if the person is willing, the final combats of regeneration can begin.

The angel refers to the "Scripture of Truth," but it is useful to see this as the certainty that if we live according to the Lord's teachings, if we are willing to walk the path demonstrated by Daniel, then our lives will have the same outcome. The truths which guide us will be our light, and the wisdom they give, together with the courage and strength to resist evil will be trust worthy, they will not fail.

Yet how can we be sure? The root word of Truth in this instance draws from concepts of building up, supporting and fostering, and surely this is what the Lord does during the process of regeneration. Each of us begins with a mind empty of truth, yet during the course of our lives we learn truth, values, morals, ethics, all in some form or another. These the Lord supports, fostering them as a parent or nurse fosters a helpless infant. As they develop during the course of life, so the Lord helps us to put our trust and confidence in these truth, until, in time they become a permanent part of our minds.

When truth reaches this stage in us—it is not a process which happens quickly, but through the process of life—then we are ready to face the final battles leading to ultimate victory.

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Apocalypse Explained #730

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730. Verse 6 (Revelation 12:6). And the woman fled into the wilderness, signifies the church among a few, because with those who are not in good, and consequently not in truths. This is evident from the signification of "woman," as being the church (See above, n. 707), also from the signification of "wilderness," as being where there are no truths because there is no good (of which presently); also from the signification of "fleeing" thither, as meaning to tarry among those who are not in truths because they are not in good; and as there are at the end of the church but few who are in truths from good, it signifies among a few. From this it is clear what these words involve, namely, that the New Church that is called the Holy Jerusalem, which is signified by "the woman," can as yet be instituted only with a few, by reason that the former church is become a wilderness; and the church is called a "wilderness" when there is no longer any good; and where there is no good there are no truths. When the church is such, evils and falsities reign, which hinder the reception of its doctrine, that is, the doctrine of love to the Lord and of charity towards the neighbor, with its truths; and when doctrine is not received there is no church, for the church is from doctrine.

[2] Something shall first be said of there being no truths where there is no good. By good is meant the good of the life according to the truths of doctrine from the Word. The reason is because the Lord never flows immediately into truths with man, but mediately through his good; for good is of the will, and the will is the man himself; from the will the understanding is produced and formed; for the understanding is adjoined to the will so that what the will loves the understanding sees, and also brings forth into light; consequently if the will is not in good, but is in evil, then the influx of truth from the Lord into the understanding has no effect, for it is dissipated, because it is not loved, yea, it is perverted, and the truth is falsified. From this it is clear why the Lord does not flow immediately into man's understanding except so far as the will is in good. With every man the Lord can enlighten the understanding, and thus flow in with Divine truths, since there is given to every man the ability to understand truth, and this for the sake of his reformation; nevertheless the Lord does not flow in, because truths do not remain except so far as the will has been reformed. Moreover, it is dangerous to so enlighten the understanding in truths as to produce belief except so far as the will acts as one with it; since man can then pervert, adulterate, and profane truths, which is most hurtful. Furthermore, so far as truths are known and understood and are not at the same time lived, they are nothing but lifeless truths, and lifeless truths are like statues that have no life. From this it can be seen why it is that there are no truths where there is no good, that is, not in essence but only in form.

[3] The man of the church at its end is such, because man then loves supremely such things as belong to the body and the world; and when these are loved supremely then the things pertaining to the Lord and heaven are not loved, for no one can serve two masters at the same time but that he will love the one and hate the other, since they are opposites. For from the love of the body, which is the love of self, and from the love of the world, which is the love of riches, when these are loved above all things, evils of every kind flow forth, and from evils falsities, and these are the opposites of goods and truths, which come forth from love to the Lord and from charity towards the neighbor. These few words will make clear why it is that the woman is said "to have fled into the wilderness," that is, among a few, because of being with those who are not in good, and thus not in truths.

[4] In the Word wilderness and also solitude and waste places are mentioned in many passages, and these signify the state of the church when there is no longer any truth in it because there is no good. This state of the church is called a "wilderness" because in the spiritual world the place where those dwell who are not in truths because they are not in good is like a wilderness, where there is no verdure in the plains, nor harvest in the fields, nor fruit trees in the gardens, but a barren land, parched and dry; moreover "wilderness" signifies in the Word the state of the church with the Gentiles who are in ignorance of truth, and yet are in the good of life according to their religious principle, from which they have a desire for truths. "Wilderness," signifies also in the Word the state of those who are in temptations, because in temptations goods and truths are shut in by the evils and falsities that come forth and are presented to the mind. That "wilderness" has these significations in the Word can be seen from the passages therein where "wilderness" is mentioned.

[5] In respect to the first meaning, namely, that "wilderness" means the state of the church when there is no longer any truth in it because there is no good, it is evident from the following passages. In Isaiah:

Is this the man that maketh the earth to tremble, that maketh kingdoms quake, that hath made the world a wilderness and destroyed the cities thereof? (Isaiah 14:16, 17)

This is said of Lucifer, by whom Babylon is meant, and "to make the earth to tremble, to make kingdoms quake, and make the world a wilderness," signifies to destroy all the truths and goods of the church; "the earth" meaning the church; "kingdoms" its truths; "world" its goods; and "wilderness" where these are not. "To destroy its cities" signifies its doctrinals, "city" signifying doctrine. The adulteration of the Word, whereby doctrine and thus the church is destroyed, is here signified by "Babylon. "

[6] In the same:

Upon the land of my people shall come up the thorn of the briar, yea, upon all the houses of joy in the triumphing city; for the palace shall be deserted, the multitude of the city shall be forsaken. The height and the watchtower shall be over the caves forever, a joy of wild asses, a pasture for flocks (Isaiah 32:13, 14).

"Upon the land of my people shall come up the thorn of the briar" signifies the falsity of evil in the church; "the thorn of the briar" meaning the falsity of evil, and "land" the church. "Upon all the houses of joy in the triumphing city" signifies where the goods and truths of the doctrine from the Word have been received with affection. But what is signified by "the palace shall be deserted, the multitude of the city shall be forsaken, the height and the watchtower shall be over the caves, a joy of wild asses, and a pasture for flocks," may be seen above n. 410, where it is explained.

[7] In the same:

At My rebuke I dry up the sea, I make the rivers into a wilderness, their fish shall rot because there is no water, and shall die for thirst (Isaiah 50:2).

"To make the rivers into a wilderness," signifies to deprive the understanding of truths, thus to deprive man of intelligence. (The rest may be seen explained above, n. 342 In Jeremiah:

I saw, and lo, Carmel was a wilderness, and all the cities were desolate before Jehovah; the whole land shall be a waste (Jeremiah 4:26, 27).

"Carmel" signifies the spiritual church, which is in truths from good; that this was a "wilderness" signifies that there were in it no truths from good; "cities which were desolate" signify doctrinals without truths; "the whole land a waste" signifies a church destitute of good and consequently of truths.

[8] In the same:

Many shepherds have destroyed My vineyard, they have trodden down My field, they have made the field of My desire a wilderness of solitude. Devastators are come upon all the hills in the wilderness, for the sword of Jehovah devoureth from one end of the land to the other end of it (Jeremiah 12:10, 12).

The total destruction of the truths and goods of the church by falsities from evil is signified by "they have destroyed the vineyard, trodden down the field, made the field of desire a wilderness of solitude; and devastators are come upon all the hills in the wilderness, for the sword of Jehovah devoureth;" "vineyard and field" signify the church in respect to truth and good; "field of desire" signifies the church in respect to doctrine; and "wilderness of solitude" where these are not; "devastators in the wilderness" signify evils because of the absence of truths; "the sword of Jehovah devoureth" signifies falsity destroying; "from one end of the land to the other end of the land" signifies all things of the church.

[9] In Lamentations:

We get our bread with the peril of our souls, because of the sword of the wilderness (Lamentations 5:9).

"To get bread with the peril of souls" signifies the difficulty and danger in acquiring the truths of life from the Word; "because of the sword of the wilderness" signifies because the falsity of evil prevails in the church and falsifies truths and thus destroys them.

[10] In Ezekiel:

The vine is now planted in the wilderness, in a land of drought and thirst (Ezekiel 19:13).

"Vine" signifies the church, which in the beginning of this chapter is called "a mother who became a lioness;" this is said "to be planted in the wilderness" when there is no longer any truth in it because there is no good; "a land of drought" means where there is no good, but evil instead, and a "land of thirst" means where there is no truth, but falsity instead.

[11] In Hosea:

Strive with your mother that she may put away her whoredoms from her faces, lest I strip her naked and set her as in the day of her birth, and make her as a wilderness, and set her as a land of drought, and slay her with thirst (Hosea 2:2, 3).

This is said of the church that has falsified the truths of the Word; "mother" means the church, and "whoredoms" the falsifications of truth; "to strip her naked and set her as in the day of her birth" signifies to deprive the church of all truth, as it was before it was reformed; "wilderness" and "land of drought" signify a church without good; and "to slay with thirst" signifies a deprivation of truth; "thirst" is predicated of truths, because "water," which is thirsted for, means truth, and "drought" is predicated of the want of good, because it is a result of scorching.

[12] In the same:

He is fierce among the brethren; an east wind shall come, the wind of Jehovah, coming up from the wilderness, and his spring shall become dry, and his fountain shall be dried up (Hosea 13:15).

This is said of Ephraim, by whom the understanding of the Word is meant, and this is called "fierce among the brethren" when it eagerly defends falsities, and combats for them against truths; "an east wind, the wind of Jehovah," signifies the ardor of desire from a love for and pride in the destruction of truths; this is said "to come up from the wilderness" when it is from an understanding in which there are no truths from good, but only falsities from evil; such an understanding is a "wilderness" because it is empty and void; that by such ardor and pride everything of doctrine and of the Word is destroyed is signified by "his spring shall become dry and his fountain shall be dried up," "spring" meaning doctrine, and "fountain" the Word.

[13] In Joel:

O Jehovah, to thee do I cry, because the fire hath consumed the habitations of the wilderness, and the flame hath burned all the trees of the field; for the beasts of the field pant after Thee, for the streams of waters are dried up, and the fire hath consumed the habitations of the wilderness (Joel 1:19, 20).

"The fire hath consumed the habitations of the wilderness and the flame hath burned all the trees of the field" signifies that the love of self and the pride of self-intelligence have consumed all the perception of good and all the understanding of the truth of doctrine from the sense of the letter of the Word, "fire" signifying the love of self, "flame" the pride of self-intelligence, "the habitations of the wilderness" the goods of doctrine from the sense of the letter of the Word, and "the trees of the field" the knowledges of its truth. The sense of the letter of the Word is called a "wilderness" when it is merely understood naturally, thus according to appearances, and not at the same time spiritually, or according to the genuine sense. "The beasts of the field pant after Thee" signifies the lamentations of those who are natural and yet have a desire for truths; that "beasts" signify the affections of the natural man may be seen above n. 650; "for the streams of waters are dried up, and the fire hath consumed the habitations of the wilderness" signifies that consequently there are no longer any truths and goods of life.

[14] In the same:

The day of Jehovah cometh; a fire consumeth before him, and behind him a flame kindleth; the land is as the garden of Eden before him, but behind him a wilderness of wasteness, and nothing escaped him (Joel 2:1, 3).

"The day of Jehovah" means the end of the church, called the consummation of the age, and the Lord's coming at that time. That at the end of the church the love of self and the consequent pride of self-intelligence consume all its goods and truths is signified by "a fire devoureth before him, and behind him a flame kindleth," "fire" signifying the love of self, and "flame" the pride of self-intelligence, as above. "The land is as the garden of Eden before him, but behind him a wilderness of wasteness," signifies that in the beginning, when that church was established with the ancients, there was an understanding of truth from good, but at its end falsity from evil; "the garden of Eden" signifying the understanding of truth from good and the consequent wisdom, and "wilderness of wasteness" signifying no understanding of truth from good, and consequent insanity from falsities that are from evil; "nothing escaped him" signifies that there is nothing whatever of truth from good.

[15] In Isaiah:

The land mourneth, it languisheth, Lebanon blusheth, it hath withered away, Sharon is become like a desert, Bashan is shaken out, and Carmel (Isaiah 33:9).

This, too, describes the devastation of good and the desolation of truth in the church. "Lebanon" signifies the church in respect to a rational understanding of good and truth; "Sharon," "Bashan," and "Carmel," the church in respect to the knowledges of good and truth from the natural sense of the Word; the devastation and abandonment of these is signified by "mourning," "languishing," "withering away," and "becoming like a desert," the "desert" meaning where there is no truth because there is no good.

[16] In Jeremiah:

Because the land is full of adulterers, because the land mourneth on account of cursing, the pastures of the wilderness are dried up (Jeremiah 23:10).

"The land full of adulterers" signifies the church which has its goods and truths from the Word adulterated; the "curse" on account of which the land mourneth, signifies all the evil of life and falsity of doctrine; and "the pastures of the wilderness that are dried up" signify the knowledges of good and truth from the Word; "pastures" meaning such knowledges because they nourish the mind, and "wilderness" signifies the Word when it is adulterated.

[17] In David:

Jehovah maketh rivers into a wilderness, and the springs of water into dryness, a land of fruit into saltiness, for the wickedness of them that dwell therein (Psalms 107:33, 34).

"The rivers that are made into a wilderness" signify intelligence from the understanding of truth and also of the Word in its interior sense, that has been devastated by falsities from evil; "rivers" meaning such things as belong to intelligence, and "wilderness" where these things are absent, and in their place are the falsities from evil. "The springs of water that are turned into dryness" signify that the lowest things of the understanding, which are called the knowledges of truth and good, have no light of truth or spiritual affection for it; "waters" signifying truths; "dryness" deprivation of these from the absence of light and affection, and "springs" the ultimates of truth, like the truths of the sense of the letter of the Word. "The land of fruit that shall be made into saltiness" signifies the good of love and of life deeply vastated by falsities; "saltiness" meaning the devastation of truth by falsities; and as all devastation by falsities comes from the evil of the life it is added, "for the wickedness of them that dwell therein. "

[18] In Jeremiah:

Lift up thine eyes unto the hills, and see where thou hast been defiled, upon the ways hast thou sat as an Arabian in the wilderness, whence thou hast profaned the land with thy whoredoms and thy wickedness (Jeremiah 3:2).

This describes the adulteration and falsification of the Word, which are signified by "being defiled and committing whoredom;" so "Lift up thine eyes unto the hills, and see where thou hast been defiled," signifies to give thought to the knowledges of truth and good in the Word, that they have been adulterated; "to lift up the eyes" signifies to give thought, "hills" signify those knowledges because the groves and trees that are upon them signify knowledges; "hills" signify also the goods of charity which are so destroyed; "upon the ways hast thou sat as an Arabian in the wilderness" signifies to lie in wait, lest any truth should come forth and be received; "ways" meaning the truths of the church; "to sit in them" meaning to lie in wait, and "an Arabian in the wilderness" meaning one who kills and plunders like a robber in the wilderness. "Thou hast profaned the land with thy whoredoms and wickedness" signifies the falsification of the truths of the Word by evils that have come to be of the life.

[19] In the same:

O generation, see ye the Word of Jehovah; have I been a wilderness to Israel? have I been a land of darkness? (Jeremiah 2:31)

That every good of life and truth of doctrine is taught in the Word, and not the evil of life and the falsity of doctrine, is meant by "see ye the Word of Jehovah; have I been a wilderness to Israel? have I been a land of darkness?"

[20] In Joel:

Egypt shall be a waste, and Edom a waste wilderness, because of the violence to the sons of Judah, whose innocent blood they have shed in their land (Joel 3:19).

"Egypt" and "Edom" signify the natural man that has perverted the truths and goods of the Word; that it is to be so destroyed as to see only such things as serve for confirmation is signified by "Egypt shall be a waste, and Edom a waste wilderness;" that this will be because of the adulteration of every good and truth in the Word is signified by "because of the violence to the sons of Judah, whose innocent blood they have shed;" "violence to the sons of Judah" signifying the adulteration of the Word in respect to good, and "shedding innocent blood" the adulteration of the Word in respect to its truths. (That "Judah" signifies the celestial church, and also the Word, see above, n. 211, 433; and that "shedding innocent blood" signifies to do violence to Divine truth, thus to adulterate the truth of the Word, n. 329.) The adulteration of the Word is effected by the knowledges [scientifica] of the natural man when these are applied to confirm falsities and evils, and the natural man becomes a "waste" and a "wilderness" when his knowledges are used to confirm falsity and evil; "Egypt" signifies such knowledges, and "Edom" the pride that falsifies by means of these.

[21] In Malachi:

Esau I hated, and made his mountains a waste and his heritage for the dragons of the wilderness (Malachi 1:3).

"Esau" signifies the love of the natural man; "his mountains" signify the evils from that love, and "his heritage" signifies the falsities from those evils, and "the dragons of the desert" signify mere falsifications from which these come.

[22] Because with the Jewish nation all things of the Word had been adulterated, and there was no longer any truth because there was no good, John the Baptist was "in the wilderness," and this represented the state of that church, respecting which it is written in the Gospels:

John the Baptist was in the wilderness till the days of his appearing unto Israel (Luke 1:80).

That he preached in the wilderness of Judea (Matthew 3:1-3; Mark 1:2-4; Luke 3:2, 4, 5);

and in Isaiah:

The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of Jehovah, make level in the solitude a highway for our God (Isaiah 40:3).

So also the Lord says of "Jerusalem," which means the church in respect to doctrine:

Your house is left deserted (Luke 13:35).

"A house deserted" signifies the church that is without truths because it is without good. But what is signified by the following in Matthew:

If they say unto you, Lo, Christ is in the wilderness, go not forth; if in the secret chambers, believe not (Matthew 24:26);

may be seen explained in Arcana Coelestia 3900); for "Christ" means the Lord in relation to Divine truth, consequently in relation to the Word and to doctrine from the Word, and "false Christs," of whom this is said, signify the falsities of doctrine from the truths of the Word falsified. From the passages that have been cited from the Word it can be seen that "wilderness" means the church in which there are no truths because there is no good, consequently in which there is falsity because there is evil; for where there is no truth and good, there is falsity and evil; the two cannot exist together, and this is meant by the Lord's words, that "no one can serve two masters."

[23] 2. Again, "wilderness" signifies the state of the church with the Gentiles that have been in ignorance of truth, and yet have been in the good of life according to their religious principle, from which they have desired truths, as can be seen from the passages in the Word that treat of the church that is to be established among the Gentiles. In Isaiah:

The spirit shall be poured out upon you 1 from on high; then the wilderness shall be a fruitful field, and the fruitful field shall be esteemed a forest; judgment shall dwell in the wilderness, and justice shall abide in the fruitful field (Isaiah 32:15, 16).

This is said of those who are in natural good, and are being reformed; influx out of heaven into such is signified by "the spirit shall be poured out upon you 2 from on high;" that truth from a spiritual origin will then be implanted in them is signified by "the wilderness shall be a fruitful field;" "wilderness" meaning the natural man destitute of truths, and "fruitful field" (or land of harvest) the natural man made fruitful by truths. That in consequence the natural man will have a knowledge [scientia] of the cognitions of truth and good is signified by "the fruitful field shall be esteemed a forest;" "forest" is predicated of the natural man as "garden" is of the spiritual, therefore a "forest" signifies knowledge and a "garden" intelligence; that in consequence there will be in the natural man that which is right and just is signified by "judgment shall dwell in the wilderness, and justice shall abide in the fruitful field;" "judgment" and "justice" signify in the spiritual sense truth and good, but in the natural sense that which is right and just.

[24] In the same:

I will open rivers on the heights, and fountains will I place in the midst of the valleys; I will make the wilderness into a pool of waters, and the dry land into springs of waters; I will give in the wilderness the cedar of shittah, the myrtle, and the oil tree; I will set in the solitude the fir tree, the pine, and the box tree (Isaiah 41:18, 19).

This, too, is said of the reformation and enlightenment of the Gentiles; and "to open rivers upon the heights and to place fountains in the midst of the valleys" signifies to give intelligence from spiritual truths and from natural truths; "rivers upon the heights" signifying intelligence from spiritual truths, and "fountains in the midst of valleys" intelligence from natural truths; "to make the wilderness into a pool of waters, and the dry land into springs of waters" signifies to fill the spiritual and the natural man with truths where before there were no truths; the spiritual man in which there were no truths is meant by "wilderness," since hitherto there had been no truth in it; and the natural man in which there was no truth is meant by "dry land," since hitherto there had been no spiritual influx into it; that the spiritual man will have truths in abundance is meant by "a pool of waters," and that the natural man will have truths in abundance is meant by the "springs of waters." "To set in the wilderness the cedar of shittah, the myrtle, and the oil tree" signifies to give rational truths and a perception of them, and "to set in the solitude the fir tree, the pine, and the box tree," signifies in like manner natural truths, which are knowledges and cognitions with the understanding of them; the "cedar" meaning higher rational truth; the "myrtle" lower rational truth; "oil tree" perception of good and thus of truth; "fir tree" the higher natural truth; the "pine" lower natural truth; and "box tree" the understanding of good and truth in the natural man.

[25] In David:

He maketh the wilderness into a pool of waters, and the dry land into a springing forth of waters; and there He maketh the hungry to dwell, that they may build a city of habitation (Psalms 107:35, 36).

This, likewise, is said of the enlightenment of the Gentiles. "To make the wilderness into a pool of waters" has a similar signification as just above; "and there He maketh the hungry to dwell" signifies for the sake of those who desire truths; these are meant by "the hungry and famished" in the Word; "that they may build a city of habitation" signifies that out of truths they may make for themselves a doctrine of life, "city" meaning doctrine, and "to inhabit" meaning to live.

[26] In Isaiah:

Behold, I am doing a new thing, now it shall spring forth; I will even place a way in the wilderness, rivers in the solitude; the wild beast of the field shall honor Me, the dragons and the daughters of the owl, because I will give waters in the wilderness, rivers in the solitude, to give drink to My people, My chosen (Isaiah 43:19, 20).

This, too, is said of the New Church to be established by the Lord among the Gentiles. The "wilderness" signifies the state of the church with those who are ignorant of truth, and yet have a desire to know it. But what the particulars signify in the spiritual sense may be seen explained above n. 518.

[27] In the same:

Jehovah will comfort Zion, He will comfort all her waste places, and He will make her wilderness as Eden, and her solitude like the garden of Jehovah; joy and gladness will be found therein, confession and the voice of singing (Isaiah 51:3).

This, also, is said of the New Church among the Gentiles that will acknowledge the Lord; that church is meant by "Zion," and its establishment and the reformation of the Gentiles by "comforting;" "the wilderness that shall be made as Eden and the solitude like the garden of Jehovah" signifies wisdom and intelligence from love to the Lord that those have who before had no understanding of truth and no perception of good. (But this may be seen explained above, n. 721)

[28] In David:

The habitations of the wilderness drop, and the hills gird themselves with exultation; the meadows are clothed with flocks, and the valleys are covered over with corn (Psalms 65:12, 13).

This, also, is said of the church among the Gentiles. "The habitations of the wilderness drop" signifies that their minds that before have been in ignorance of truth acknowledge and receive truths; "to drop" is predicated of the influx, acknowledgment and reception of truth; "habitations" are predicated of the interiors of man which belong to his mind, and "wilderness" is predicated of a state of the ignorance of truth. "The hills gird themselves with exultation" signifies that the goods in them receive truths with joy of heart; "the meadows are clothed with flocks, and the valleys are covered over with corn," signifies that both the spiritual mind and the natural mind receive truths suitable to themselves; "meadows" signifying such things as belong to the spiritual mind and thus to the rational mind, and "valleys" such as belong to the natural mind; "flock" spiritual truth, and "corn" natural truth.

[29] In Isaiah:

Let them sing praise, the end of the earth, those that go down to the sea, and its fullness, the islands and the inhabitants thereof. Let the wilderness and the cities thereof lift up the voice, the villages that Arabia doth inhabit; let the inhabitants of the rock sing, let them cry out from the head of the mountains (Isaiah 42:10, 11).

This is said of a church with those who were remote from the truths of the church because they were natural and sensual; their state of ignorance is meant by the "wilderness," and their joy from the preaching and the knowledge of truth is signified by "singing praise and lifting up the voice." (The rest may be seen explained above, n. 406)

[30] Since the state of ignorance of truth, in which the Gentiles have been, is signified by a "wilderness," and the desire for truth by "hunger," and instruction by the Lord by "feeding," it came to pass that the Lord withdrew into the wilderness, and there taught the multitude that sought Him, and afterwards fed them. (That this took place in the wilderness can be seen in Matthew 14:13-22; 15:32-38; Mark 6:31-34; 8:1-9; Luke 9:12-17.) For all things that the Lord did and all things connected with Him were representative because they were correspondences, so also were these things. From these and the passages cited above it is evident that a "wilderness" signifies an uncultivated and uninhabited state with man, thus a state not yet made vital from what is spiritual, consequently, as applied to the church, a state not vivified by means of truths; thus it signifies such a religious principle as the Gentiles had, which was almost empty and void, because they did not have the Word where truths are, and thence did not know the Lord who teaches truths; and as they did not have truths, their good also could be no otherwise than such as the truth was with them, for good is like its truth, because one is of the other. From this it can be seen what "wilderness" signifies where the Gentiles are treated of, namely, where there is no truth and yet a desire for it that their good may be vivified.

[31] 3. Again, "wilderness" signifies the state of those who are in temptations, because in them truths and goods are shut in by the falsities and evils that come forth and are presented to the mind. This can be seen from the wandering of the sons of Israel in the wilderness forty years; for this represented every state of temptations into which those come who are being regenerated, and of whom the church is to consist. Every man is born natural, and lives naturally until he becomes rational; and when he has become rational he can be led by the Lord and become spiritual; and this is effected by the implanting of the knowledges of truth from the Word, and at the same time by the opening of the spiritual mind which receives the things of heaven, and by calling forth these knowledges and elevating them out of the natural man and conjoining them with the spiritual affection of truth. This opening and conjunction is possible only through temptations, because in temptations man fights interiorly against the falsities and evils that are in the natural man. In a word, man is introduced into the church and becomes a church through temptations. This was represented by the wandering and leading about of the sons of Israel in the wilderness. The state of the natural man before he is regenerated was represented by their sojourning in the land of Egypt, for "the land of Egypt" signified the natural man and its knowledges and cognitions, together with the cupidities and appetites that reside in it (as can be seen from what has been said and shown above respecting Egypt, n. 654. But the spiritual state, which is the state of the church with man, was represented by the introduction of the sons of Israel into the land of Canaan, for "the land of Canaan" signified the church with its truths and goods, together with its affections, and delights, which reside in such a man; while the reformation and regeneration of man before from being natural he becomes spiritual and thus a church, was represented by their wanderings and journeyings in the wilderness forty years.

[32] That this is so, and that "the wilderness" signified a state of temptations, can be seen in Moses:

Thou shalt remember all the way which Jehovah thy God hath led thee these forty years in the wilderness, that He might afflict thee and try thee, and know what was in thine heart whether thou wouldst keep His commandments or no; and He afflicted thee and made thee to hunger, and made thee to eat manna, which thou knewest not neither did thy fathers know; that He might teach thee that man doth not live by bread only, but by all that goeth forth from the mouth of Jehovah doth man live; thy raiment waxed not old upon thee, and thy foot swelled not, these forty years (Deuteronomy 8:2-4).

In the same:

In the wilderness which thou sawest, Jehovah thy God bare thee as a man doth bear his son. He went before you in the way, to seek for you a place in which ye might encamp, in fire by night to show you the way, and in the cloud by day (Deuteronomy 1:31, 33).

In the same:

Jehovah, who led thee through the great and fearful wilderness of the serpent, of the fiery serpent and of the scorpion, and of thirst, where there were no waters; who brought thee forth waters out of the rock of flint, and fed thee with manna in the wilderness, that He might afflict thee and try thee, to do thee good in thy latter end (Deuteronomy 8:15, 16).

In the same:

Jehovah found Jacob in a land of wilderness, in an emptiness, a howling, a solitude; He led him about, He instructed him, He guarded him as the pupil of the eye (Deuteronomy 32:10).

The particulars here mentioned, and all the particulars related in the book of Exodus respecting the journeyings of the sons of Israel in the wilderness, from their going forth from Egypt to their entrance into the land of Canaan, depict the temptations that the faithful encounter before they become spiritual, that is before the goods of love and charity with their truths are implanted, which constitute the church with man.

[33] He who knows what spiritual temptations are knows that when a man is in them he is so infested by evils and falsities as scarcely to know otherwise than that he is in hell; he knows, too, that the Lord with man fights against temptations from the interior; as also that He sustains man in the meantime with spiritual food and drink, which are the goods and truths of heaven; that the natural man loathes these; that nevertheless the natural man with his lusts is thus subdued and as it were dies; and that he is thus brought into subjection to the spiritual man; and that man is thus reformed and regenerated and introduced into the church. All this is involved in what is related respecting the sons of Israel in the wilderness. But to make clear that this is meant it is allowed to explain some of the particulars in the passages quoted.

[34] 1. That man in temptations is so infested by evils and falsities as scarcely to know otherwise than that he is in hell is meant by "Jehovah led thee through the great and fearful wilderness of the serpent, of the fiery serpent, of the scorpion, and of thirst, where there were no waters;" "the great and fearful wilderness" signifies grievous temptations; "the serpent, the fiery serpent, and the scorpion," signify evils and falsities with their persuasions coming forth from the sensual and natural man; "serpents" meaning evils therefrom, "fiery serpents" falsities therefrom, and "scorpions" persuasions; "thirst where there were no waters" signifies a lack and shutting off of truth. The above is meant also by "Jehovah afflicted thee and tried thee, that He might know what was in thine heart."

[35] 2. That the Lord with man fights against evils and falsities that are from hell is signified by "Jehovah found Jacob in a wilderness, in emptiness, a howling, a solitude, He guarded him as the pupil of His eye;" also by "He bare him as a man doth bear his son;" also by "He went before them in fire by night and in the cloud by day."

3. That the Lord sustains man in the meantime with spiritual food and drink, which are the goods and truths of heaven, is signified by "He fed them with manna, He brought them forth waters out of the rock of flint, and He led them and instructed them;" "manna" meaning the good of celestial love, and "waters out of the rock of flint" the truths of that good from the Lord.

4. That in temptations the natural man loathes those things is meant by the sons of Israel so often complaining of the manna, and lusting after the food of Egypt; therefore it is here said, "Jehovah afflicted thee and caused thee to hunger, and fed thee with manna."

[36] 5. That nevertheless the natural man with his lusts is subdued and as it were dies and becomes subject to the spiritual man, was represented by the death in the wilderness of all those that went forth out of Egypt and desired to return thither, and refused to enter into the land of Canaan, and that their children were brought into that land. That this represented and signified such things can be known and seen only from the spiritual sense.

6. That after temptations man becomes spiritual, and is brought into the church, and through the church into heaven, was represented by their being brought into the land of Canaan, for "the land of Canaan" signified the church, and also heaven; and this is signified by "Jehovah afflicted thee and tried thee, to do thee good in thy latter end."

Their spiritual life is described by Jehovah's teaching them that "man doth not live by bread only, but by everything going forth from the mouth of Jehovah." That "their raiment waxed not old and their foot swelled not" signifies that the natural man was not injured by these afflictions, for "raiment" signifies the truths of the natural man, and the "foot" the natural man itself. Moreover "forty," whether years or days, signifies the entire duration of temptations (See above, n. 633).

[37] Like things are involved in these words in David:

They wandered in the wilderness in loneliness of life, 1 they found no city of habitation, hungry and thirsty; when their soul was disheartened in the way, they cried to Jehovah. He led them in a way of straightness, 2 that they might go to a city of habitation (Psalms 107:4-7).

This was said in general of those who have been redeemed, and in particular of the sons of Israel in the wilderness, and these words describe the temptations of those who are being regenerated by the Lord. "The city of habitation which they found not" signifies the doctrine of life which constitutes the church in man; and as the church is formed in man by a life according to doctrine, when temptations have been passed through, it is said that "Jehovah led them in a way of straightness that they might go to a city of habitation;" the lack of truth even to despair, and yet desire for it, is signified by "they were hungry and thirsty, so that their soul was disheartened in the way."

[38] In Jeremiah:

I remembered thy youth, the love of thine espousals, when thou wentest after Me in the wilderness. They said not, Where is Jehovah, who made us to come up out of the land of Egypt, who led us in the wilderness, in the land of solitude and of the pit, in a land of drought and of dense shade, in a land through which no man [vir] passed, and where no man [homo] dwelt? And I led you into a land of grain, to eat the fruit thereof and the good thereof (Jeremiah 2:2, 6, 7).

The "youth" and "love of espousals" that Jehovah remembered signify the state of man's reformation and regeneration, when from being natural he becomes spiritual; because man is thereby conjoined to the Lord, and as it were espoused to Him, this is what is meant by the "love of espousals;" and because this is effected through temptations it is said, "When thou wentest after Me in the wilderness;" the state of temptations is described by "He led me in the wilderness, in a land of solitude and of the pit, in a land of drought and dense shade;" "wilderness" signifying that state; "land of solitude and of the pit" signifying that state in respect to the evils and falsities that come forth, and the "land of drought and dense shade" signifying the perception of good and the understanding of truth obscured. The state of man after temptations is described by "I led you into a land of grain, to eat the fruit thereof and the good thereof," which signifies to be brought into the church in which are the truths of doctrine, by means of which the good of love and of charity are appropriated; "land" signifying the church; "the land of grain" the church in respect to the truths of doctrine; "to eat" to appropriate; "fruit" the good of love, and "good" the good of charity and of life.

[39] In Ezekiel:

I will lead you out from the peoples, and will gather you from the lands, and I will lead you into a wilderness of peoples, and I will plead with you there face to face, even as I pleaded with your fathers in the wilderness of the land of Egypt; then will I cause you to pass under the rod, and I will bring you into the bond of the covenant (Ezekiel 20:34-37).

Here again "wilderness" stands for a state of temptations, which state is called "a wilderness of peoples" and "the wilderness of the land of Egypt," because the state of the natural man before regeneration is meant, which is a wilderness and a solitude because there are then no goods and truths in it, but only evils and falsities; but when falsities and evils have been exterminated therefrom, and truths and goods have been implanted in their place, from being a wilderness it becomes "Lebanon" and a "garden." "To plead with them in the wilderness face to face" signifies to show them to the life of what quality they are and in a way that they acknowledge it; for in temptations man's evils and falsities come forth and appear; "face to face" means to the life and so as to be acknowledged. That after man has endured hard things, conjunction with the Lord, which is reformation, takes place, is signified by "then will I cause you to pass under the rod, and I will bring you into the bonds of the covenant;" "to cause to pass under the rod" meaning to endure hard things, and "the bond of the covenant" meaning conjunction with the Lord.

[40] In Hosea:

I will visit upon her the days of the Baalim, in which she went after her lovers. Therefore behold, I will bring you 3 into the wilderness, and afterwards I will speak upon her heart, and I will give her her vineyards thence, and the valley of Achor for an entrance of hope, and she shall make answer there according to the days of her youth, and according to the days of her coming up out of the land of Egypt; and in that day thou shalt call Me, my Husband, and shalt no more call Me, my Baal (Hosea 2:13-16).

The "Baalim" and "lovers," after whom she went, signify the things that belong to the natural man and are loved, namely, cupidities and falsities therefrom; that these must be removed by means of temptations is signified by "I will bring you 3 into the wilderness;" that afterwards there will be consolation is signified by "afterwards I will speak upon her heart;" that they will then have spiritual and natural truths is signified by "I will give her vineyards thence and the valley of Achor." That afterwards they will have influx of good out of heaven and consequent joy, as those had who were of the ancient churches and who from natural had become spiritual, is signified by "she shall make answer or sing there according to the days of her youth, and according to the days of her coming up out of the land of Egypt," "days of youth" signifying the times of the ancient church, and "according to the days of her coming up out of Egypt," signifying when from natural they became spiritual. Conjunction with the Lord at that time through the affections of truth, when the cupidities from the natural man have been rejected, is signified by "in that day thou shalt call Me, my Husband, and thou shalt no more call Me, my Baal."

[41] As a "wilderness" signifies a state of temptations, and "forty," whether years or days, their whole duration from beginning to end, therefore the temptations of the Lord, which were the most direful of all, and which He sustained from childhood to the passion of the cross, are signified by the temptations of the forty days in the desert, which are thus described in the Gospels:

Jesus was led by the spirit into the wilderness, to be tempted of the devil; and when He had fasted forty days and forty nights He afterwards hungered; and the tempter drew near unto Him (Matthew 4:1-3; Luke 4:1-3).

The spirit urging Jesus caused Him to go out into the wilderness; and He was in the wilderness forty days, tempted, and He was with the beasts (Mark 1:12, 13).

This does not mean that the Lord was tempted by the devil only forty days, and at the end of these, but that He was tempted throughout His whole life even to the last, when He endured direful anguish of heart in Gethsemane and afterwards the dreadful passion of the cross; for by means of the temptations admitted into the human that He had from the mother, the Lord subjugated all the hells, and at the same time glorified His Human. (But of these temptations of the Lord see what is written in the Arcana Coelestia, and collected therefrom in The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem, n.201.) All these temptations of the Lord are signified by the temptations in the wilderness forty days and forty nights, since the "wilderness" signifies a state of temptations, and "forty days and forty nights" the whole duration of these. No more was written respecting these in the Gospels because no more was revealed respecting them; nevertheless in the prophets, and especially in the psalms of David, they are described at length. "The beasts" with which the Lord is said to have been, signify the infernal societies; and "fasting" signifies here such affliction as there is in the combats of temptation.

[42] 4. Again, "wilderness" also signifies hell, because that is called a wilderness where there is no harvest or habitation, likewise where there are wild beasts, serpents, and dragons, which signify where there is no truth of doctrine or good of life, consequently where there are lusts from evil loves, and falsities therefrom of every kind; and as these are in hell and the former in a wilderness, so from correspondences the "wilderness" also signifies hell. Moreover, the natural man with everyone, so long as it is separated from the spiritual, as it is before regeneration, is a hell, because all the hereditary evil into which man is born resides in his natural man, and is not cast out from it, that is, removed, except by the influx of Divine truth through heaven from the Lord; and this influx into the natural man can come only through the spiritual, for the natural man is in the world and the spiritual in heaven; therefore the spiritual man must be opened before the hell that is in the natural man can be removed by the Lord out of heaven.

[43] How this is removed was represented by the he-goat called Azazel that was cast out into the desert; for the "he-goat" from correspondence signifies the natural man in respect to his affections and knowledges, and in the contrary sense in respect to his cupidities and falsities. Of this he-goat we read thus in Moses:

That Aaron should take two he-goats and cast lots upon them, one for the he-goat to be sacrificed, the other for Azazel; and after he had expiated the Tent of meeting and the altar with the blood of the sacrificed bullock and of the sacrificed he-goat, he should lay his hands upon the head of the he-goat Azazel, and should confess upon it the iniquities and sins of the sons of Israel; which he shall put upon the head of the he-goat, and afterwards should send him by the hand of a man appointed into the wilderness. So the he-goat shall bear upon him all the iniquities of the sons of Israel into the land cut off and into the wilderness; and the skin, the flesh, and the dung of the bullock and of the sacrificed he-goat should be burned in the wilderness; thus should they be expiated and cleansed from all their sins (Leviticus 16:5-34).

These things were commanded to represent expiation, that is, purification from evils and falsities. Two he-goats were taken to represent this, because a "he-goat" from correspondence signifies the natural man; the he-goat that was to be sacrificed represented the natural man in reference to the part purified, and the he-goat that was to be sent into the wilderness the natural man not purified. And as the natural man swarms with cupidities and uncleanness of every kind, as has been said above, therefore that he-goat was sent out of the camp into a land cut off and into the wilderness that he might bear away the iniquities and sins of all in that church; "the land cut off and the wilderness" signifying hell. Aaron laying his hands upon its head and confessing the sins represented communication and transference, for this is done when man is purified or expiated from sins, for the sins are then sent down to hell, and the affections of good and truth are implanted in their place; these were represented in part by the fat sacrificed from the bullock and from the other he-goat, also by their blood, and especially by the burnt offering from the ram (respecting which see verses 5-24 in the same chapter) Leviticus 16:5-24, for the "ram" from correspondence signifies the natural man in respect to the good of charity. But it is to be known that the Israelitish people were not in the least purified from their sins by this, but the purification of the natural man when he was being regenerated was thus merely represented. All things of man's regeneration were represented by such external things, especially by sacrifices; and this was done for the sake of the conjunction of heaven with that church through the externals of worship, the internals that the externals represented being seen in the heavens. Who cannot see that the sins of the whole congregation could not be transferred to a he-goat and borne by him to hell? From this it is evident what is signified by "wilderness" in its various senses.

Бележки под линия:

1. The Hebrew has "in loneliness of way," as found also in Arcana Coelestia 2708.

3. The Hebrew has "a straight way," as found also in 223.

3. The Hebrew has "her," as found in Arcana Coelestia 2708.

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Foundation for their permission to use this translation.