From Swedenborg's Works

 

Secrets of Heaven #1457

Study this Passage

  
/ 10837  
  

1457. The symbolism of And Abram traveled, going and traveling, as further advancement can be seen from the symbolism of going and traveling. Among the ancients, journeys, travels, and immigration had no other meaning, so in the Word as well they have no other symbolism on an inner level.

This is where the Lord's advances into knowledge begin.

Like any other person, the Lord also learned by instruction. Luke demonstrates this:

The child grew and became strong in spirit. He was in the wastelands up to the day of his presentation to Israel. 1 (Luke 1:80)

In the same author:

The child grew and became strong in spirit and was filled with wisdom; and [God's] favor was on him. (Luke 2:40)

In the same author:

Joseph and Jesus' mother, after three days, found him in the Temple, sitting in the middle of the teachers and listening to them and asking them questions; everyone listening to him was astounded at his understanding and his answers. Seeing him, [Joseph and Mary] were amazed, but he said to them, "Why did you search for me? Didn't you know that I have to see to my Father's business?" (Luke 2:46-47, 48, 49)

Verse 42 of the same chapter says that he was then twelve years old. In the same author:

After that, Jesus advanced in wisdom and age and in favor with God and humankind. (Luke 2:52)

Footnotes:

1. The child mentioned in this verse was actually John the Baptist, as the third Latin edition (Swedenborg [1749-1756] 1949-1973) notes; it explains the discrepancy by reference to §1927, which explicitly states that the verse is about the Lord; and to §5620, which describes John the Baptist as representing the Lord. Swedenborg expands at length on this representation in §9372. Elsewhere (§§2708:9, 9818:10, for instance) Swedenborg demonstrates his awareness that the literal sense of the verse concerns John the Baptist. A similar interchangeability of symbolism may lie at the root of two other such substitutions: in the first editions a saying of John the Baptist in Luke 3:8-9 is ascribed to Jesus in Divine Providence 114, and a saying of Jesus in Mark 1:14-15 is ascribed to John in True Christianity 113:7. [LHC, SS]

  
/ 10837  
  

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

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Divine Providence #114

Study this Passage

  
/ 340  
  

114. 4. The Lord cannot rid us of the evils in our outer nature without our help. In all Christian churches the accepted teaching is that before we come to take Holy Communion we should examine ourselves, see and admit our sins, and repent by refraining from them and rejecting them because they come from the devil. Otherwise our sins are not forgiven, and we are damned.

Even though the English accept a theology of faith alone, in the prayer before Holy Communion they explicitly enjoin self-examination, acknowledgment, confession of sins, repentance, and taking up a new life. They threaten people who do not do so by saying that the devil will enter into them as he entered into Judas and fill them with all iniquity, destroying both body and soul. The Germans, Swedes, and Danes, who also accept a theology of faith alone, teach much the same in their prayer before Holy Communion, adding the threat that otherwise we will render ourselves liable to the punishments of hell and eternal damnation because of this mixture of the sacred and the profane. The priest reads these words with a loud voice to the people who come to Holy Communion, and the people hear them with a full recognition of their truth.

[2] However, when these same people hear a sermon about faith alone on the very same day, when they hear that the law does not condemn them because the Lord has fulfilled it for them, that on their own they cannot do anything good without claiming credit for it, and that therefore their deeds contribute nothing whatever to their salvation and only their faith does, then they go home totally oblivious to their earlier confession. In fact, they dismiss it to the extent that they are thinking about this sermon on faith alone.

So which is true, the first or the second? Two mutually contradictory statements cannot both be true. For example, one option is that there is no forgiveness of sins and therefore no salvation, only eternal damnation, unless we examine and identify and recognize and confess and reject our sins--unless we repent. The other option is that things like this contribute nothing to our salvation, because by suffering on the cross the Lord has made full satisfaction for people who have faith; and if we only have faith--a trust that this is true--and are sure that the Lord's merit has been credited to our accounts, then we are sinless and appear before God with faces washed gleaming-clean. We can see, then, that all Christian churches share the basic conviction that we need to examine ourselves, see and admit our sins, and then refrain from them; and that otherwise we face not salvation but damnation.

We can see that this is also divine truth itself in passages in the Word where we are commanded to repent, passages like these:

John said, "Bring forth fruits worthy of repentance. Right now, the axe is lying at the root of the tree. Every tree that does not bring forth good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire." (Luke 3:8-9)

Jesus said, "Unless you repent, you will all be destroyed." (Luke 13:3, 5)

Jesus proclaimed the good news of the kingdom of God: "Repent, and believe the good news." (Mark 1:14-15)

Jesus sent out his disciples who preached repentance as they went forth. (Mark 6:12)

Jesus told the apostles that they were to preach repentance and the forgiveness of sins to all nations. (Luke 24:47)

John preached the baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. (Mark 1:4; Luke 3:3)

Think about this, then, with some clarity of mind and if you are religious you will see that repentance from sins is the pathway to heaven. You will see that faith apart from repentance is not really faith and that people who are without faith because they are without repentance are on the road to hell.

  
/ 340  
  

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