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Secrets of Heaven #1044

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1044. And it will serve as a sign of the pact between me and the earth means an indication of the Lord's presence in charity, and the earth here means human selfhood, as statements above show [§§1036, 1038]. The symbolism of the earth as human selfhood can be seen from the inner meaning, too, and also from the sequence of thoughts. Earlier the text said, "This is the sign of the pact between me and you and every living soul that is with you," which symbolizes whatever has been reborn. Here, however, the phrasing changes: "It will serve as a sign of the pact between me and the earth." The change — and the repetition of the sign of the pact as well — shows that the present verse has another meaning. It shows, in fact, that the earth is that which has not been reborn and cannot be reborn, and this is human self-will.

[2] So far as their intellectual side goes, regenerate people are the Lord's, but so far as their voluntary side goes, they are their own. These two sides in a spiritual person are opposed to each other, but although a person's voluntary part is opposed, its presence is still unavoidable. All the darkness in spiritual people's intellectual part, all the thickening of their cloud, comes from the will side. The darkness constantly streams in from their will side, and the more it does, the more the cloud in their intellectual part thickens. On the other hand, the more the darkness withdraws, the more the cloud thins. That is the reason the earth in this case symbolizes human selfhood. (It was shown earlier that the earth symbolizes our bodily concerns and much else besides [§§16, 17, 28, 29, 82, 566, 620, 662, 800, 895].)

[3] The situation resembles that of two people who were once bound together in a pact of friendship, as will and intellect were among the people of the earliest church. When the friendship breaks down and enmity arises — as it did when humanity completely perverted its power of will — and a new pact is entered into, the hostile party then takes center stage, as if it were the party with which the pact had been struck. The pact is not with this side of our mind, however (since it is diametrically opposed and contrary), but with what streams from it, as noted earlier [§1023] — with intellectual selfhood, that is. The sign or indication of the pact is this: the larger the Lord's presence in our intellectual selfhood, the more remote our self-will.

The case is just like that of heaven and hell. A regenerate person's intellectual half is heaven because of the charity in which the Lord is present. But such a person's will side is hell. The more present the Lord is in heaven, the more hell moves away. When we depend on ourselves, we are in hell. When we depend on the Lord, we are in heaven and are always being lifted up from hell into heaven. The higher we rise, the greater the distance between us and our hell.

The sign or indication that the Lord is present, then, is the withdrawal of our own will. Times of trial and many other means of regeneration work to distance it.

  
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Secrets of Heaven #566

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566. The symbolism of the face of the ground as that whole area where the church existed can be seen from the symbolism of the ground, since the Word carefully distinguishes ground from the earth or the land. Wherever it appears, ground symbolizes the church, or some aspect of the church. This is the origin of the human's name — Adam, which means ground. 1 Often when the earth or the land is mentioned in the Word, it means the absence of the church or of anything having to do with the church. The first chapter is an example. In it, only the earth or land is mentioned, 2 since the church — the regenerate person — did not yet exist. The ground is first mentioned in the second chapter, because by then the church did exist. Something similar occurs here and in the next chapter:

All substance would be destroyed from the face of the ground. (Genesis 7:4, 23)

This means in the territory where the church was. In the same chapter:

... to keep their seed alive on the face of the earth. (Genesis 7:3)

This is about a church yet to be created. The same holds true everywhere in the Word, as in Isaiah:

Jehovah will have mercy on Jacob and will yet choose Israel and will put them on their ground; and the peoples will take them and lead them to their place, and the house of Israel will inherit them upon the ground of Jehovah. (Isaiah 14:1-2)

This is about a church that has been formed; but a place where there was no church is called the earth in verses 9, 12, 16, 20-21, 25, and 26 of the same chapter.

[2] In the same author:

And the ground of Judah will make Egypt quake. On that day there will be five cities in the land of Egypt speaking the tongue of Canaan. (Isaiah 19:17-18)

The ground is where the church is and the land is where the church is not. In the same author:

The earth will wander, wander, like a drunkard. Jehovah will punish the army of the heights on high, and the monarchs of the ground down on the ground. (Isaiah 24:20-21)

The meaning is similar. In Jeremiah:

Because of the chastened ground, since there was no rain on the land, the farmers were put to shame, they covered their head; for even the doe in the field gave birth. (Jeremiah 14:4-5)

The land means the area surrounding the ground, and the ground means the area surrounding the field.

[3] In the same author:

He brought the seed of the house of Israel out from the north land and from all the lands to which I drove them, and they will live on their ground. (Jeremiah 23:8)

The land and lands are where there are no churches; the ground is where the church or true worship is. In the same author:

I will make the survivors of Jerusalem — those left in this land and those living in the land of Egypt — I will make them a disturbance, an evil to all the kingdoms of the earth. And I will send against them sword, famine, and contagion to the point of devouring them off the ground that I gave to them and their ancestors. (Jeremiah 24:8-9, 10)

The ground stands for theology and for the worship it gives rise to. The same holds true for Jeremiah 25:5. 3

[4] In Ezekiel:

I will gather you from the lands to which you have been scattered, and you will acknowledge that I am Jehovah, when I have returned you onto Israel's ground, onto the land in which I lifted my hand to give it to your ancestors. (Ezekiel 20:41-42)

The ground stands for inner worship; it is called land when there is no inner worship. In Malachi:

I will harangue against the devouring pest for you, and it will not spoil the fruit of the ground for you; and the grapevine in the field will not be bereft for you. And all nations will call you fortunate, because you will be a land of pleasure. (Malachi 3:11-12)

The land stands for the whole surrounding area and so, quite obviously, for a person, who is called "a land." The ground surrounded by that land stands for the church, or theology.

[5] In Moses:

Sing, you nations, his people. He will expiate the guilt incurred by his ground, his people. (Deuteronomy 32:43)

Clearly this stands for the church among non-Jewish nations, which is called the "ground." 4 In Isaiah:

Before the child knew to spurn evil and choose good, the ground that you despise in the presence of its two monarchs would be deserted. (Isaiah 7:16)

This speaks of the Lord's Coming, saying that the ground prepared for the church — the true doctrine concerning faith — would be deserted. It is clear that the words ground and field are used in connection with planting, as in Isaiah:

He will give rain for the seed with which you would sow the ground. Oxen and young donkeys are working the ground. (Isaiah 30:23-24)

And in Joel:

The field was devastated and the ground mourned, because the grain was devastated. (Joel 1:10)

From this it can now be seen that the human — called adam in Hebrew, from the word for ground — symbolizes the church.

Footnotes:

1. On the apparent derivation of the name Adam from the Hebrew word for "ground," see note 2 in §313. For more on the name, see note 1 in §475. [RS]

2. On the translation of the single Latin word terra with the two English words "earth" and "land," see note 1 in §31. Contrary to the observation Swedenborg makes here, the Latin word rendered by the word "ground" (humus) does in fact appear once in the first chapter, near the end of verse 25, as does the Hebrew word underlying it (אֲדָמָה ['ăḏāmā]). (On this Hebrew word, see also note 2 in §313.) Swedenborg elsewhere reiterates the importance of the distinction between "earth" or "land" and "ground" (see §§90, 268, 620, 662, 872, 895), but assigns a wide and varied range of meanings to each term, depending on context. At times the meanings even overlap. For example, "earth" is here said to mean "the absence of the church or of anything having to do with the church" and "ground" is said to mean "the church." In §662 "earth" is said to mean "a person in the church" and "ground" is said to mean "the church itself." In §872 "earth" is said to refer to people before "the seed of faith's truth and goodness can be sown in them" and "ground" is said to mean "people in the church." Nevertheless in each context the distinction between the two terms is emphasized as important. [LHC, SS]

3Jeremiah 25:5 reads, "Turn, please, each of you from your evil and from the wickedness of your deeds, and live on the ground that Jehovah gave you and your ancestors from age to age." [LHC]

4. For more about the "church among non-Jewish nations," see note 1 in §231. [LHC]

  
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Secrets of Heaven #16

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16. Genesis 1:1. In the beginning, God created heaven and earth.

The word beginning is being used for the very earliest times. The prophets frequently call them "the days of old." 1

"The beginning" includes the first period of regeneration too, as that is when people are being born anew and receiving life. Because of this, regeneration itself is called our new creation [2 Corinthians 5:17; Galatians 6:15]. Almost everywhere in the prophetic books, the words creating, forming, and making stand for regenerating, though with differences. 2 In Isaiah, for example:

All have been called by my name, and I have created them for my glory; I have formed them; yes, I have made them. (Isaiah 43:7)

This is why the Lord is called Redeemer, One-Who-Forms-from-the-Womb, Maker, and Creator, as in the same prophet:

I am Jehovah, 3 your Holy One, the Creator of Israel, your Monarch. (Isaiah 43:15)

In David: 4

The people created will praise Jah. 5 (Psalms 102:18)

In the same author:

You send out your spirit — they will continue to be created — and you renew the face of the ground. 6 (Psalms 104:30)

Heaven, or the sky, symbolizes the inner self, and the earth, before regeneration occurs, symbolizes the outer self, as may be seen below [§§17, 24:3, 27].

Footnotes:

1. For references to "the days of old," see Deuteronomy 32:7; Psalms 44:1; 77:5; 143:5; Isaiah 23:7; 37:26; 51:9; 63:9, 11; Jeremiah 46:26; Lamentations 1:7; 2:17; 5:21; Amos 9:11; Micah 5:2; 7:14, 20; Malachi 3:4. [LHC]

2. The Hebrew original of Genesis uses three distinct words for creation: בָּרָא (bārā), "create;" יָצָר (yāṣār), "form;" and עָשָׂה (‘āśā), "make." [RS]

3. Following a Christian practice of his times, Swedenborg used "Jehovah" as a rendering of the tetragrammaton, יהוה, "YHVH" (or "YHWH"), the four-letter name of God in the Hebrew Scriptures. In earliest times, Hebrew was written only with consonants; a system for indicating vowels was not perfected until the eighth century of the Common Era, and even in most modern Hebrew texts, vowels are not marked. The current scholarly reconstruction of the original pronunciation of the name is "Yahweh": see Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament, under "YHWH." A strict understanding of the Second Commandment, "You are not to take the name of YHVH your God in vain" (Exodus 20:7), led pious Jews to avoid pronouncing the name aloud; instead the name אֲדֹנָי ('ăḏōnāi, literally meaning "my lord") was read. To indicate this, vowels similar to those in Adonai were added to YHVH, creating the form Jehovah. At occurrences of the combination אֲדֹנָי‭ ‬יהוה ('ăḏōnāi yhvh), "the Lord YHVH," the vowels for אֱלֹהִים ('ĕlōhîm), or "God," are added to the four consonants instead, again in adapted form, to make יֱהוִֹה (yĕhôvih). Swedenborg carefully represents this as "Jehovih." For a traditional Jewish view of this vocalization, see Gikatilla 1994, 148-149. "Yahweh" itself, יַהְוֶה (yahweh), may be grammatically an imperfect causative form of the verb הָיָה (hāyā), "to be," meaning "he causes to be" or "he creates" (Cross 1973, 65). This identification is controversial, however. Swedenborg himself connects the name "Jehovah" with being: see True Christianity 19:1, where he says the name means "I am" (see Exodus 3:14-15; 6:3). Some modern English Bibles use the name "Jehovah," while others render the term as "Lord," so capitalized; "Lord," in capital and lowercase; "Yahweh;" "Adonai;" or even "God." [GFD, RS]

4. As was the custom in his day, Swedenborg refers to Psalms as a book of David. [LHC]

5. "Jah" is a shortening of the name Jehovah. Jewish esoteric thought ascribed the different names of God to different aspects of the divine. "Jah" or "Yah" (Hebrew יָהּ [yāh]) was associated with divine wisdom and mercy (Gikatilla 1994, 4-5, 325). [RS, LHC]

6. The Latin word here translated "they will continue to be created" is creabuntur, a simple future form. Its subject is the world of living things, which are dependent on God for their existence. The original Hebrew has an imperfect verb form here, indicating an action that is continuous or not yet completed. Many English versions of the Bible render this word "they are created." [RS]

  
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