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Arcana Coelestia #2334

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2334. And they said, Nay. That this signifies the doubting which is wont to attend temptation, may be seen from their declining and yet going into his house. In all temptation there is somewhat of doubt concerning the Lord’s presence and mercy, and concerning salvation and the like things; for those who are in temptation are in interior anxiety, even to despair; in which they are for the most part kept, to the end that they may be at length confirmed in the fact that all things are of the Lord’s mercy; that they are saved by Him alone; and that with themselves there is nothing but evil; in respect to which they are confirmed by means of conflicts in which they overcome. After the temptation there remain from it many states of truth and good to which their thoughts may afterwards be bent by the Lord, which would otherwise rush into insane things, and draw away the mind into opposition to what is true and good.

[2] Since by “Lot” there is here treated of the first state of the church which is in the good of charity but in external worship, and since before a man comes into this state he is to be reformed, which is also done by a certain kind of temptation (but they who are in external worship undergo only a light temptation), therefore these things which involve something of temptation are said, namely, that the angels at first said they would pass the night in the street, and that Lot urged them, and so they turned aside to him, and came into his house.

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

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Arcana Coelestia #2334

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2334. ‘Et dixerunt, Non’: quod significet dubitationem quae solet esse tentationis, constare potest a negatione, et quod usque iverint in domum ejus; in omni tentatione est dubitativum, de ‘praesentia et misericordia’ Domini, deque salvatione, et similibus; sunt enim in anxietate interiore, usque ad desperationem, in qua ut plurimum tenentur, ob causam ut confirmentur tandem in eo quod omnia sint misericordiae Domini, quod per Ipsum solum salventur, et quod apud se nihil nisi malum sit, de quibus per pugnas in quibus vincunt, confirmantur: manent post tentationem inde plures status veri et boni, ad quos flecti dein possunt a Domino cogitationes, quae alioquin ruerent in vesana, et contra verum et bonum traherent mentem: quia hic per ‘Lotum’ agitur de primo statu Ecclesiae quae in bono charitatis est at in cultu externo, et antequam homo in hunc statum venit, reformandus est, quod fit etiam per quandam speciem tentationis, sed qui in cultu externo, ii modo levem tentationem subeunt, ideo haec dicta sunt, quae involvunt tentationis quoddam, nempe quod angeli primum dicerent 1 quod ‘pernoctarent in platea’, et quod Lot urgeret illos, et sic quod ‘declinaverint ad illum, et venerint in domum ejus’.

Footnotes:

1. The Manuscript inserts Non, et.

  
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This is the Third Latin Edition, published by the Swedenborg Society, in London, between 1949 and 1973.