Commentary

 

As-of–self

By Julian Duckworth, Cairns Henderson

by Caleb Kerr

The phrase of "as of self" in Swedenborgian theology refers to the idea that though we as human beings are recipients of life from the Divine, our life must seem to us to be our very own so that we can have freedom and use reason in order to live as of ourselves. The freedom and reason we have isn't fully implanted in us, but it is continually joined to us. In power, origin, and inspiration it is Divine, but it is human in use. We exercise this ability when we act in all areas of life entirely as of ourselves, yet at the same time we should acknowledge that our life, as well as any truth we apply or good that results, is from the Lord.

The Lord gives us this "as of self" ability, so that we may have freedom, and thus have the chance to freely return His love. It keeps us from being robots, or slaves. We can receive and use the Lord's power, feeling that it is ours - making it real. At the same time, we can - in fact we need to - acknowedge that it isn't actually coming from us. This acknowledgment is critical; without it, a person will forget the idea of God, and depend only on self, which leads to pride, arrogance, and, eventually, hell.

The "as of self" doctrine is important. It shows how people can be spiritually free, and responsible for their regeneration, even though they can’t do any good from themselves.

(References: A Brief Explanation of the Teachings of the New Church 69; Apocalypse Revealed 224; Arcana Coelestia 1712 [2], [3]; Conjugial Love 134, 135; Divine Love and Wisdom 115; Divine Providence 42, 79; The Doctrine of Life for the New Jerusalem 101)

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Life #101

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101. We Need to Abstain from Sinful Evils and Fight against Them As Though We Were Doing So on Our Own

IT is part of the divine design that we act in freedom and according to reason, because acting in freedom according to reason is acting on our own.

However, these two powers, freedom and reason, are not our own. They are the Lord's within us; and since we are human they are not taken from us, because we cannot be reformed without them. That is, we cannot practice repentance, we cannot fight against evils and as a result bear fruit that is consistent with repentance [Matthew 3:8; Luke 3:8].

So since we are given freedom and reason by the Lord and we act from them, it follows that we are not acting on our own but as though we were on our own. 1

Footnotes:

1. [Swedenborg's Footnote] On our being given freedom by the Lord, see 19, 20 above and 589-596, 597-603 in Heaven and Hell. On what freedom is, see The New Jerusalem and Its Heavenly Teachings (published in London in 1758) .

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