From Swedenborg's Works

 

Secrets of Heaven #1023

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1023. The symbolism of And I — yes, I — am setting up my pact as the presence of the Lord in charity can be seen from the symbolism of a pact, given in §§ [665,] 666. That section showed that a pact symbolizes rebirth, and more especially the Lord's close connection with a regenerate person through love. It also showed that the heavenly marriage is the most genuine compact, and in consequence that the heavenly marriage inside everyone who has regenerated is such a covenant too.

The nature of this marriage — this covenant — has also been shown before [§§155, 162, 252].

[2] For the people of the earliest church, the heavenly marriage existed within the sensation that they had their own power of will. For the people of the ancient church, however, the heavenly marriage developed within the sensation that their power of understanding was their own. When the human race's willpower had become thoroughly corrupt, you see, the Lord split our intellectual sense of self off from that corrupted voluntary sense of self in a miraculous way. Within our intellectual selfhood he formed a new will, which is conscience, and into conscience he injected charity, and into charity innocence. In this way he joined himself to us or, to put it another way, entered into a compact with us.

[3] To the extent that our self-will can be detached from this sense of intellectual autonomy, the Lord can be present with us, or bind himself to us, or enter into a pact with us.

Times of trial and other similar means of regeneration suppress our self-will to the point where it seems to disappear and almost die out. To the extent that this happens, the Lord can work through the conscience implanted in charity within our intellectual selfhood. This, then, is what is being called a pact in the present verse.

  
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Many thanks to the Swedenborg Foundation and its New Century Edition team.

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Secrets of Heaven #156

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156. Genesis 2:23. And the human said, "This time, bone from my bones and flesh from my flesh. This is why she will be called ‘wife': because she was taken from man." 1

Bone from one's bones and flesh from one's flesh symbolizes the sense of autonomy of our outer being; bone symbolizes that autonomy without much life, and flesh symbolizes that autonomy with life. The man, though, symbolizes our inner being, and because the inner being is intimately coupled with the outer being, as the next verse says, this desire to rule ourselves is here called a wife — the term used in the next verse — instead of a woman as before. 2 This time means that it has now been accomplished, because our state has changed. 3

Footnotes:

1. For this derivation of the word "wife" from "man," see note 6 in §130. [RS]

2. Although in Swedenborg's Latin the word "woman" (Latin mulier) is used in Genesis 2:22 and the word "wife" (Latin uxor) is used in verses 23-25, the same Hebrew word אִישָּׁה ('îššā) underlies them both. In making this change here from "woman" to "wife" Swedenborg follows a long-standing tradition in Latin translations of the Bible. [JSR]

3. Presumably what was accomplished was the acquisition of autonomy. [LHC]

  
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Many thanks to the Swedenborg Foundation and its New Century Edition team.