From Swedenborg's Works

 

Secrets of Heaven #950

Study this Passage

  
/ 10837  
  

950. There was a troop of spirits surging out on one side of Gehenna, 1 rising high up in front. From their aura 2 I could tell that they held the Lord 3 in contempt and despised all worship of God. (At the first approach of spirits, one can sense their character just from their aura.) Their speech rose and fell. One of them made scandalous charges against the Lord and was immediately tossed down to one side of Gehenna.

From in front they moved back over my head, intent on finding kindred souls they could band together with in order to dominate others. They were slowed down along the way, though, and told that they should give up their plan because it would turn out badly for them. So they came to a halt. I then had a look at them. Their faces were black, 4 and around their heads each wore a white headband, meaning that they saw the worship of God — and the Lord's Word 5 too — as something black, useful only for binding the fetters of conscience on the great mass of people. 6

Their residence is near Gehenna, and nonpoisonous flying snakes live there, which is why it is called a snakes' nest. 7 But since they are not charlatans, their hell is not very oppressive.

People like this ascribe everything to themselves and their own shrewdness and boast that they fear nothing, but they were shown that a mere hiss can drive them to terrified flight. Hearing one once, they assumed in their fright that all hell was rising up to carry them off, and from being heroes they suddenly became like women. 8

Footnotes:

1. On Gehenna, see both §374:1 and note 3 in §374. See also §§825-831 and 940-942. [LHC, RS]

2. "Aura" is a translation of the Latin sphaera, literally a "sphere" of influence surrounding an individual. For more on auras, see §§1504-1520 and note 2 in §1512. [RS]

3. By "the Lord" Swedenborg generally means Jesus; see §14 and note 2 in §1. [Editors]

4. The reference to color is not racial here; see both §814:2 and note 1 in §814. [RS, JSR]

5. By "the Lord's Word" here Swedenborg means the Bible. For a more nuanced description of the meaning of "the Word" in Swedenborg's theology, see note 1 in §981. [Editors]

6. The white band around the head does not seem to point to any historically attested group of skeptics; rather, it seems to symbolize the belief in conscience as a "binding" of the mind. The notion that religion is a substitute for public conscience was a philosophical commonplace throughout the Enlightenment period. For example, in the early Enlightenment the English philosopher Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) describes the use of religion "to keep the people in obedience and peace" (Hobbes [1651] 2012; 2:176 [chapter 12]). For a related note, see Swedenborg [1771] 2006, page 731 note 383 [NCBSP: This is a reference to a work in the bibliography from the Swedenborg Foundation]. [SS]

7. This is a reference to a phrase that occurs in Isaiah 34:13; 35:7; Jeremiah 9:11; 10:22; 49:33; 51:37. The Hebrew word that Swedenborg understands as "snakes" (Latin dracones, as in Schmidt 1696) is translated by most scholars as "jackals." The Hebrew is תַּנִּים (tannîm). [LHC]

8. It can be inferred here that these spirits are all male, but that inference is in any case irrelevant to the point of the final metaphor, which is that they stopped acting bold when they were threatened. In the Judeo-Christian tradition, the practice of insulting a man's courage by comparing him to a woman goes back at least as far as Old Testament times: see Isaiah 19:16; Jeremiah 50:37; 51:30; to any or all of which Swedenborg may actually be alluding. Although Swedenborg at times mirrors common cultural prejudices against women, as in this passage, in other passages he goes against the current of his age and attributes superior qualities to them. For a general comment on characterizations of women in his works, see the reader's guide in volume 1, pages 55-56. [KK, JLO, LSW]

  
/ 10837  
  

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

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Secrets of Heaven #981

Study this Passage

  
/ 10837  
  

981. God blessed symbolizes the Lord's presence and favor, as can be seen from the symbolism of blessing.

In the Word, 1 on its surface, blessing people means enriching them with every earthly, personal benefit. This is how the Word is interpreted by all who restrict themselves to its surface meaning — Jews of the past and present, for instance, and Christians as well, today especially. 2 So they have identified and continue to identify divine blessings with wealth, an abundance of every resource, and glory for themselves.

In a deeper sense, though, blessing people means enriching them with every kind of spiritual and heavenly goodness. As the Lord is the only one who grants this kind of blessing, or is even capable of granting it, the act of blessing symbolizes the Lord's presence and favor. The Lord's presence and favor carry such a blessing with them.

[2] The word presence is used because only in charity is the Lord present, and the subject here is a regenerate spiritual person, who acts out of charity. The Lord is present in each of us, but the further we distance ourselves from neighborly love, the more the Lord's presence is absent, so to speak — which is to say, the more remote the Lord is.

The word favor is used rather than mercy because of something I believe is unknown today: people of heavenly character speak not of favor, [or grace,] but of mercy, while those of spiritual character speak not of mercy but of grace. 3 The reason for the difference is this: Heavenly people acknowledge that the human race is sheer filth, that in itself it is made of excrement and is hellish. On this account they beg the Lord for mercy, since mercy is the fitting word for people who feel this way.

[3] Spiritual people, on the other hand, might know intellectually that the human race is such, but they do not accept it internally, because they hold fast to their sense of self-sufficiency and love it. As a consequence, they have a hard time saying the word mercy but an easy time saying grace. This results from the type of humility in each of the two.

The more we love ourselves and consider ourselves capable of doing good on our own in order to earn salvation, the less able we are to plead for the Lord's mercy. The reason some are able to ask the Lord's grace, [or favor,] is that it has become a customary way of speaking. When the request is merely formal, grace contains little of the Lord, but is full of oneself. You can examine this in yourself, when you call on the Lord's grace.

Footnotes:

1. By "the Word" Swedenborg generally means the Bible — a terminology that was prominent in the world of his Lutheran upbringing. However, the particular Bible books he includes in this designation vary over time. In his earlier theological works, in three roughly parallel passages (Secrets of Heaven 10325; New Jerusalem 266; White Horse 16), he defines "the Word" as only those books of the Bible that have an inner meaning, by which he apparently means a generally hidden layer of meaning that concerns the Lord and his kingdom, running continuously behind the literal text; see Secrets of Heaven 3540:4, 9942:5. In fact, in the three parallel passages just mentioned he provides a list of the books that have an inner meaning: "The books of the Word in the Old Testament are the five books of Moses, Joshua, Judges, the two books of Samuel, the two books of Kings, David's Psalms, and the prophets — Isaiah, Jeremiah, Lamentations, Ezekiel, Daniel, Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi. Those in the New Testament are the four Gospels — Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John — and Revelation." The clear implication is that the Bible books not on this list are not part of the Word — namely, Ruth, 1, 2 Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther, Job, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Song of Songs (Song of Solomon) in the Old Testament; all the books now included in the Apocrypha; and Acts and the Epistles in the New Testament. Nevertheless, although he never retracts these strong statements or explains that he has changed his mind, in his last theological works and manuscripts he extends the term "the Word" to apply to Acts and the Epistles as well; see True Christianity 158, 176, 585:4, 601, 675:2, 730:1; Draft for "Coda to True Christianity" (Swedenborg 1996b) §§2:3, 23:2; Draft Invitation to the New Church (Swedenborg 1996c) §47. In one of these passages, for example, he cites a phrase that is "frequently mentioned in the Word of the New Testament, both in the Gospels and in the Acts of the Apostles and their Epistles" (True Christianity 158). In two other passages, he apparently refers to Acts and the Epistles as "the Apostolic Word" (Draft for "Coda to True Christianity" [Swedenborg 1996b] §§1, 59:5; compare True Christianity 730:1). By contrast, he never overtly quotes or cites Acts or the Epistles in Secrets of Heaven. [JSR]

2. The idea that Scripture possesses an inner meaning was widely held in early times, but was growing less popular by Swedenborg's day. On older interpretations of the Bible's inner meaning, see note 3 in §1 and note 1 in §606. See also notes 85, 309 below. In this specific instance, however, Swedenborg may be criticizing a materialistic understanding of the term blessing rather than referring to particular schools of hermeneutics. [RS, SS]

3. For an earlier discussion of the distinction between mercy (misericordia) and grace or favor (gratia), see §598. [LHC]

  
/ 10837  
  

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