Doctrine of Charity - Swedenborg
Doctrine
of Charity - Chapter 1
AC 6627. Prefatory to the chapters of the Book of Exodus are to be Doctrinal
things; first, Doctrinal things of Charity; afterward, Doctrinal things of
Faith; in order that what has been delivered in the Explications in a scattered
form may be set forth in a connected one; and that in this way the Doctrine
may appear in its order, such as is and ought to be the Doctrine of the church
that it may agree with the good and truth in heaven.
AC 6628. In the preceding Explications it has been shown, as occasion offered,
that the Doctrine of Charity was the doctrine in the Ancient Churches, and
that this doctrine conjoined all the churches, and so made one out of many;
for they acknowledged as men of the church all who lived in the good of charity,
and called them brethren, however greatly they might be at variance in the
truths which at this day are called the truths of faith. In these one instructed
another, and this was among their works of charity; nor were they indignant
if one did not accede to the opinion of another, knowing that everyone receives
truth in proportion as he is in good.
AC 6629. Such being the character of the Ancient Churches, they were more
interior men, and being more interior they were more wise; for those who are
in the good of love and of charity are as to the internal man in heaven, and
in an angelic society there which is in like good. From this they have an
elevation of mind to interior things, and consequently to the things of wisdom;
for wisdom can come from no other source than heaven, that is, through heaven
from the Lord; and in heaven there is wisdom, because there they are in good.
AC 6630. But in course of time this ancient wisdom decreased; for in so far
as the human race removed itself from the good of love to the Lord and of
charity toward the neighbor, so far it also removed itself from wisdom, because
so far it removed itself from heaven. From this it is that man from internal
became external, and this successively.
AC 6631. And when man became external, he also became worldly and corporeal;
and when he is of this character he no longer cares for the things of heaven;
for they have been so far removed as not to be believed to exist; because
the delights of earthly loves, and with these all evils which from these loves
are delightful to him, then take complete possession of the whole man; and
then all that he hears about the life after death, about heaven, and about
hell, is like chaff in the wind, which flies away as fast as it is seen.
AC 6632. From this also it is that the Doctrine of Charity, which was so precious
among the ancients, is at this day one of the lost things; for who at this
day knows what in the genuine sense charity is, and what in the genuine sense
the neighbor is? when yet this doctrine abounds in arcana so many and so great
that it cannot be described as to a thousandth part. The whole Sacred Scripture
is nothing else than the doctrine of love and of charity, as the Lord also
teaches, saying,
"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God from all thy heart, and in all thy
soul, and in all thy mind; this is the first and great commandment: the second
is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself; on these two commandments
hang the law and the prophets" (Matt. 22:37-40).
"The law and the prophets" are the Word in all and each of its parts.
AC 6633. As the doctrine of charity is at this day one of the lost things,
and as the doctrine of faith is consequently much alienated from the truth,
this doctrine may of the Lord's Divine mercy be delivered before the several
chapters of the Book of Exodus, and thus be restored to the church.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 2
AC 6703. As prefatory to the chapters of the Book of Exodus I have undertaken
to deliver the doctrine of charity, it must first be told what the neighbor
is, because it is he toward whom charity is to be exercised. For unless it
is known who the neighbor is, charity may be exercised in the same manner
and without distinction equally toward the evil as toward the good, "whereby
charity becomes no charity; for by virtue of its benefactions the evil do
ill to the neighbor; but the good do well.
AC 6704. The general opinion at the present day is that every man is equally
the neighbor, and that everyone who is in need of help must be benefited.
But it is the part of Christian prudence to search "well the quality
of a man's life, and to exercise charity in accordance therewith. The man
of the internal church does this with discrimination, thus with intelligence;
but as the man of the external church cannot thus discriminate, he does it
indiscriminately.
AC 6705. The ancients reduced the neighbor into classes, and named each class
according to the names of those who in the world appear to be especially in
need; and they taught how charity was to be exercised toward those who were
in one class, and how toward those in another; and in this way they reduced
the doctrine, and the life according to it, into order. Hence the doctrine
of their church contained the laws of life, and hence they saw of what quality
was this or that man of the church whom they called "brother," but
with a distinction in the internal sense in accordance with his exercise of
charity from the genuine doctrine of the church, or from the doctrine as changed
by himself; for as everyone desires to appear blameless, he defends his own
life, and therefore either explains or changes the laws of doctrine in his
own favor.
AC 6706. The distinguishing differences of the neighbor, which the man of
the church ought to wholly know, in order that he may know the quality of
charity, vary in accordance with the good which is with everyone; and as all
good proceeds from the Lord, the Lord is the neighbor in the highest sense,
and in a surpassing degree; and from Him the neighbor originates. From this
it follows that in proportion as anyone has of the Lord in him, in the same
proportion he is the neighbor; and as no two persons receive the Lord (that
is, receive the good which proceeds from Him) in the same way, therefore no
two persons are the neighbor in the same way; for without exception all persons
in the heavens and on earth differ in good. Precisely one and the same good
never exists in two persons; it must vary in order for each person to subsist
by himself. But all these varieties, thus all the distinguishing differences
of the neighbor, which are according to the reception of the Lord, that is,
of the good proceeding from Him, can never be known to any man, nor even to
any angel, except in general, thus as to their genera and some species of
these. Nor does the Lord require more of the man of the church than to live
according to what he knows.
AC 6707. From all this it is now clear that the quality of Christian good
determines in what degree each one is the neighbor; for the Lord is present
in good, because it is His, and He is present according to the quality of
it. And as the origin of the neighbor must be drawn from the Lord, therefore
the distinguishing differences of the neighbor are according to the Lords'
presence in good, thus according to the quality of the good.
AC 6708. That the neighbor is according to the quality of the good, is plain
from the Lord's parable of the man "who fell among thieves, "whom,
"while half dead, the priest passed by, and also the Levite; but the
Samaritan, when he had bound up his "wounds and poured in oil and "wine,
set him on his own beast and brought him to an inn and took care of him; and
he, because he exercised the good of charity, is called the "neighbor"
(Luke 10:29-37). Hence it may be known that they are the neighbor "who
are in good; whereas they who are in evil are indeed the neighbor, but in
quite a different respect; and for this reason they are to be benefited in
a different "way. But on this subject, of the Lord's Divine mercy more
will be said hereafter.
AC 6709. As it is the quality of the good which determines how everyone is
the neighbor, it is the love which does this; for there is not any good which
is not of love; from this comes forth all good, and from this also comes forth
the quality of the good.
AC 6710. That it is the love "which makes a man to be the neighbor, and
that each person is the neighbor according to the quality of his love, is
very manifest from those "who are in the love of self. These acknowledge
as the neighbor those "who love them the most; that is, in so far as
they are theirs; thus are in themselves. These they embrace, these they kiss,
these they benefit, and these they call brethren; nay, because they are evil,
they say that these are the neighbor more than others. All the rest they hold
to be the neighbor according as these love them, thus according to the quality
and the amount of the love. much derive the origin of the neighbor from themselves,
for it is the love that is the determinant.
AC 6711. But they who do not love themselves more than others, as is the case
with all "who are of the Lord's kingdom, "will derive the origin
of the neighbor from Him whom they ought to love above all things, that is,
from the Lord; and will regard everyone as the neighbor according to the quality
of his love to Him. They therefore who love others as themselves, and especially
those who-like the angels-love others more than themselves, all derive the
origin of the neighbor from the Lord; for the Lord Himself is in good, because
it proceeds from Him. Hence also it can be seen that the quality of the love
determines who is the neighbor. That the Lord is in good, He Himself teaches
in Matthew; for He says to those who had been in good, that they "had
given Him to eat," that they "had given Him to drink, had gathered
Him, clothed Him, visited Him, and had come to Him in prison;" and afterward,
that "in so far as they had done it to one of the least of His brethren,
they had done it to Him" (Matthew 25:34-40).
AC 6712. From all this it is now evident whence the origin of neighbor is
to be drawn by the man of the church; and that everyone is the neighbor in
the degree in which he is near the Lord; and because the Lord is in the good
of charity, that the neighbor is according to the quality of the good, thus
according to the quality of the charity.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 3
AC 6818. With respect to the Neighbor, more must be said, because without
knowing who the neighbor is, no one can know in what way charity must be practised.
In the preface to the preceding chapter it was said that every man is the
neighbor, but not one in like manner as another; and that he who is in good
is more the neighbor than others, thus that it is the good in a man which
is to be loved; for when good is loved, the Lord is loved, because it is the
Lord from whom is good, who is in good, and who is good itself.
AC 6819. But not only is man in the singular the neighbor, but also man in
the plural. For a society, smaller or greater, is the neighbor; our country
is the neighbor; the church is the neighbor; the Lord's kingdom is the neighbor;
and so above all is the Lord. All these are the neighbor who is to be benefited
from charity. These also are ascending degrees of the neighbor; for a society
of many is the neighbor in a higher degree than is an individual man; our
country in a higher degree than a society; in a still higher degree the church;
and in a still higher degree the Lord's kingdom; but in the highest degree
the Lord is the neighbor. These ascending degrees are like the steps of a
ladder, at the top of which is the Lord.
AC 6820. A society is more a neighbor than an individual man, because it consists
of many. Charity is to be practised toward it in like manner as toward an
individual man, namely, according to the quality of good in it; thus quite
differently toward a society of the upright, from the way in which it is to
be practised toward a society of those who are not upright.
AC 6821. Our country is more the neighbor than a society, because it is like
a parent; for there the man has been born; it nourishes him, and protects
him from harm. Our country is to be benefited from love, according to its
necessities, which chiefly regard its sustenance, its civil life, and its
spiritual life. He who loves his country, and from good will benefits it,
in the other life loves the Lord's kingdom; for there the Lord's kingdom is
his country. And he who loves the Lord's kingdom, loves the Lord, because
the Lord is the all in all of His kingdom; for what is properly called "the
Lord's kingdom" is the good and truth from the Lord in those who are
in it.
AC 6822. The church is more the neighbor than our country, because he who
has regard for the church, has regard also for the souls and eternal life
of the men who are in the country. And the church is cared for when man is
led to good, and he who does this from charity, loves the neighbor, for he
desires and wills for another, heaven and happiness of life to eternity. Good
can be insinuated into another by anyone in his country, but not truth, except
by those who are teaching ministers; if others do this, heresies arise, and
the church is disturbed and rent asunder. Charity is practised, if through
the truth which is of the church, the neighbor is led to good. If in the church
anything is called truth which leads away from good, this is not worthy of
mention, for it is not truth. Everyone must first obtain for himself truth
from the doctrine of the church, and afterward from the Word of the Lord;
this must be the truth of his faith.
AC 6823. The Lord's kingdom is the neighbor in a higher degree than the church
in which one is born; for the Lord's kingdom consists of all who are in good,
both on earth and in the heavens; thus the Lord's kingdom is good with every
quality of it in the complex; and when this good is loved, everyone who is
in good is loved. Thus the whole, which is all good in the complex, is the
neighbor in the first degree, and is that Grand Man which has been treated
of at the end of many chapters, which Man is a representative image of the
Lord Himself. This Man, that is, the Lord's kingdom, is loved, when from inmost
affection those are benefited who are men through that Man from the Lord,
thus with whom is the Lord's kingdom.
AC 6824. These are the degrees of the neighbor, and according to these degrees
charity ascends; but these are degrees in successive order, in which a prior
or higher degree is always preferred to a posterior or lower one; and as the
Lord is in the highest, and He is to be regarded in every degree as the end
to which each tends, therefore He is above all, and is to be loved above all
things.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 4
AC 6933. It is a common saying that everyone is neighbor to himself, that
is, that one should take care of himself first of all. The doctrine of charity
teaches how the case herein is. Everyone is neighbor to himself, not in the
first, but in the last place. In a prior place are others who are in good;
in a still prior place is a society of many; in a place still prior is our
country; in a place still prior is the church; in a place still prior is the
Lord's kingdom; and above all men and all things is the Lord.
AC 6934. The saying that everyone is neighbor to himself, and that he must
take care of himself first of all, is to be understood in this way. Everyone
must make provision for himself so as to have the necessaries of life, as
food, clothing, a place to dwell in, and other things which are necessarily
required in the civil life where he is; and this not only for himself, but
also for his family; and not only for the present time, but also for the future.
Unless each person procures for himself the necessaries of life, he cannot
be in a state to exercise charity toward the neighbor, for he is in need of
all things.
AC 6935. The end in view declares in what way each person must be neighbor
to himself, and must first of all take care of himself. If the end is that
he may become richer than others merely for the sake of riches, pleasure,
eminence, and the like, the end is evil; and therefore he who from such an
end believes he is neighbor to himself, injures himself to eternity. But if
the end is that he may acquire wealth for the sake of the necessaries of life,
for himself and for his family, so as to be in a state to do what is good
according to the commandments of the doctrine of charity, he takes care of
himself for eternity. The end itself makes the man, for the end is his love,
because everyone has as the end that which he loves.
AC 6936. How the case herein is can be further seen from this similar example.
Everyone ought to take care of his body in respect to its food and clothing.
This must come first, but to the end that there may be a sound mind in a sound
body. And everyone ought to take care of his mind in respect to its food,
namely, in respect to such things as belong to intelligence and wisdom, to
the end that his mind may thus be in a state to serve the Lord; he who does
this, takes good care of himself for eternity. But he who takes care of his
body merely for the sake of the body, and does not think of soundness of mind,
and who does not take care of his mind in respect to such things as are of
intelligence and wisdom, but in respect to such things as are contrary thereto,
takes bad care of himself for eternity. From all this it is evident in what
way everyone ought to be neighbor to himself, namely, not in the first place
but in the last; for the end must not be for himself, but for others; and
where the end is, there is the first.
AC 6937. Moreover the case herein is like that of a man who is building a
house. He must first lay the foundation; but the foundation must be for the
house, and the house for a place to dwell in. And so everyone must first take
care of himself, yet not for himself, but in order that he may be in a state
to be of service to the neighbor, thus to his country, to the church, and
above all to the Lord. He who believes that he is neighbor to himself in the
first place, is like one who regards the foundation as the end, and not the
house and dwelling in it; when yet the dwelling is the very first and last
end, and the house together with its foundation is only a means to the end.
AC 6938. As is the case with possessions, so also is it with honors in the
world: everyone is at liberty to provide himself with these also, yet not
for the sake of himself, but for the sake of the neighbor: he who provides
them for the sake of himself, provides ill for himself; but he who provides
them for the sake of the neighbor, provides well for himself. For he who turns
his ends to himself turns himself toward hell; but he who turns his ends from
himself to the neighbor, turns himself toward heaven.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 5
AC 7080. In what precedes it has been told what the neighbor is: it is now
to be told what the charity or love is which there must be toward the neighbor.
AC 7081. The very life of man is his love and such as his love is, such is
his life may, such is the whole man. But it is the ruling or reigning love,
that is, the love of that which he has as the end, which makes the man. This
love has subordinate to itself many particular and singular loves, which are
derivations, and appear under a different shape; but still the ruling love
is in each one of them, and directs them, and through them, as through mediate
ends, looks to and aims at its end, which is the first and last of them all;
and this both directly and indirectly.
AC 7082. There are two things in the natural world which make the life there,
namely, heat and light; and there are two things in the spiritual world which
make the life there, namely, love and faith. Heat in the natural world corresponds
to love in the spiritual world, and light in the natural world corresponds
to faith in the spiritual world. Hence it is that when spiritual heat or fire
is mentioned, love is meant; and when spiritual light is mentioned, faith
is meant. Moreover love is actually the vital heat of man, for it is known
that man grows warm from love; and faith is actually the light of man, for
it can be known that man is illumined from faith.
AC 7083. The heat and light in the natural world arise from the sun of the
world; but spiritual heat and light, or love and faith, arise from the sun
of heaven. The sun of heaven is the Lord the heat which comes from Him as
a sun is love, and the light which comes from Him as a sun is faith. That
the Lord is light is evident from these words in John:--
Jesus said, I am the light of the world, he that followeth Me shall not walk
in darkness, but shall have the light of life (John 8:12);
and that the Lord is a sun is evident in Matthew:--
When Jesus was transfigured, His face shone as the sun, and His garments became
white as the light (Matthew 17:2).
AC 7084. From this correspondence it can also be known how the case is with
faith and with love. Faith without love is like light without heat, as is
the light of winter; and faith with love is like light with heat, as is the
light of spring. That in the light of spring each and all things grow and
flower, is known; and also that in the light of winter all things become torpid
and die. It is similar with faith and love.
AC 7085. Now as love is the source of man's life, and as the whole man is
such as is his love, and also as love is spiritual conjunction, it follows
that all in the other life are consociated according to the loves; for everyone's
life, that is, his love, follows him. They who are in love toward the neighbor,
and in love to God, are consociate in heaven; but they who are in the love
of self and the love of the world are consociate in hell; for the love of
self is opposite to love to God, and the love of the world is opposite to
love toward the neighbor.
AC 7086. It is said "love to God," and there is meant love to the
Lord, because in Him is the Trinity, and He is the Lord of heaven, for He
has "all power in heaven and on earth" (Matt. 28:18).
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 6
AC 7178. No one can know what good is, as understood in the spiritual sense,
unless he knows what love toward the neighbor and love to God are; and no
one can know what evil is, unless he knows what the love of self and the love
of the world are Nor can anyone know from inward acknowledgment what the truth
is which is of faith, unless he knows what good is, and unless he is in good;
nor can anyone know what falsity is, unless he knows what evil is. Consequently
no one can examine himself unless he knows what good from its two loves is,
and what truth from good is; and unless he knows what evil from its two loves
is, and what falsity from evil is.
AC 7179. There are two faculties in man, one is called the understanding,
and the other the will; the will has been given man for the sake of the good
which is of love, and the understanding for the sake of the truth which is
of faith; for the good which is of love has relation to the will, and the
truth which is of faith has relation to the understanding; the one faculty
communicates in a wonderful way with the other. They join themselves together
in those who are in good and thence in truth; and they also join themselves
together in those who are in evil and thence in falsity: with both classes
these two faculties make one mind. But it is otherwise with those who are
in truth as to faith, and in evil as to life; and also with those who are
in falsity as to faith, and in apparent good as to life.
AC 7180. Man is not allowed to divide his mind, and to sunder these two faculties
from each other; that is, to understand and speak truth, and to will and do
evil; for then one faculty would look upward or toward heaven, and the other
downward or toward hell, and thus the man would hang between the two. But
let him know that the will carries him away, and the understanding favors.
From all this it is evident how the case is with faith and with love, and
how with the state of man if they are separated.
AC 7181. Nothing is more necessary to man than to know whether heaven be in
him, or hell; for in one or the other he must live to eternity. In order that
he may know this, it is necessary that he should know what good is, and what
evil, for good makes heaven, and evil makes hell; the doctrine of charity
teaches about both.
AC 7182. Love to God is said, and by this is meant love to the Lord, for there
is no other God; the Father is in Him (John 14:9-11), and the Holy of the
Spirit is from Him (John 16:13-15).
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 7
AC 7255. Inasmuch as good makes heaven with man, and evil makes hell, it is
of the utmost importance to know what good is, and what evil is. It has already
been said that good is that which belongs to love to the Lord, and to charity
toward the neighbor; and that evil is that which belongs to the love of self
and the love of the world. Hence it follows that it is from the loves, and
from these alone, that it can be known what good is, and what evil is.
AC 7256. All things in the universe which are according to Divine order have
relation to good and truth; and all things in the universe which are contrary
to Divine order have relation to evil and falsity. The reason is that the
good and truth which proceed from the Divine make order, insomuch that they
are order.
AC 7257. The good which is of love to the Lord is called "celestial good,"
and the good which is of charity toward the neighbor is called "spiritual
good." What the difference is, and how great, between the celestial good
which belongs to love to the Lord, and the spiritual good which belongs to
charity toward the neighbor, will be told in what follows.
AC 7258. The doctrine of celestial good, which is that of love to the Lord,
is the most ample and at the same time the most secret; but the doctrine of
spiritual good, which is that of charity toward the neighbor, is also ample
and secret, but less so than the doctrine of celestial good, which is the
doctrine of love to the Lord. That the doctrine of charity is ample can be
seen from the fact that charity is not the same with one as with another,
and that one is not the neighbor the same as another.
AC 7259. As the doctrine of charity was so ample, the ancients, with whom
the doctrine of charity was the very doctrine of the church, distinguished
charity toward the neighbor into many classes, which they also subdivided,
and gave a name to each class, and taught how charity was to be exercised
toward those who are in one class, and how toward those in another; and in
this way they reduced the doctrine of charity into order, and also the exercises
of charity, that these might fall distinctly under the view of the understanding.
AC 7260. The names which they gave to those toward whom they were to exercise
charity, were many: some they called blind, some lame, some maimed, some poor,
also miserable and afflicted, some orphans, some widows; but in general they
called those hungry to whom they were to give to eat, those thirsty to whom
they were to give to drink, sojourners whom they were to gather in, naked
whom they were to clothe, sick whom they were to visit, and in prison to whom
they were to come (n. 4954-4959).
AC 7261. These names were given from heaven to the ancients who were of the
church, and by those who were so named they understood those who were spiritually
such. Their doctrine of charity taught who these were, and what kind of charity
there was to be toward each.
AC 7262. Hence it is that these same names are in the Word, and signify those
who are such in the spiritual sense. In itself the Word is nothing but the
doctrine of love to the Lord and of charity toward the neighbor, as the Lord
also teaches:--
Thou shalt love the Lord thy God from all thy heart, and in all thy soul,
and in all thy mind. This is the first and great commandment. The second is
like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. In these two commandments
hang the law and the prophets (Matt. 22:37-40);
"the law and the prophets" denote the whole Word.
AC 7263. The reason why these same names are in the Word, is that they who
were in external worship were to exercise charity toward such as were so named;
and they who were in internal worship, toward such spiritually understood;
thus that the simple might understand and do the Word simply, and the wise
wisely; also in order that the simple might be initiated by means of the externals
of charity into its internals.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 8
AC 7366. It was said above that the loves of self and of the world make hell
with man; and now the quality of these loves is to be told, in order that
a man may know whether he is in them, and consequently whether hell or heaven
is in him; for in man himself is either hell or heaven. That the kingdom of
God is within man, the Lord teaches in (Luke 17:21); consequently hell also
is within him.
AC 7367. The love of self reigns with a man, that is, he is in the love of
self, when in what he thinks and does, he does not regard his neighbor, thus
not the public, still less the Lord, but only himself and those who belong
to him; consequently when he does all things for the sake of himself and those
who belong to him; and if for the sake of the public and his neighbor, it
is merely for the sake of the appearance.
AC 7368. It is said "for the sake of himself and those who belong to
him," because he together with these, and these together with him, make
a one; just as when anyone does anything for the sake of his wife, of his
children, grandchildren, sons-in-law, or daughters-in-law, he does it for
the sake of himself, because they are his. In like manner one who does anything
for the sake of relatives and of friends who favor his love and thereby conjoin
themselves with him; for by such conjunction they make one with him, that
is, regard themselves in him, and him in themselves.
AC 7369. In so far as a man is in the love of self, so far he removes himself
from the love of the neighbor; consequently in so far as a man is in the love
of self, so far he removes himself from heaven, for in heaven there is the
love of the neighbor. From this it also follows that in so far as man is in
the love of self, so far he is in hell, for in hell there is the love of self.
AC 7370. That man is in the love of self who despises his neighbor in comparison
with himself, who regards him as his enemy if he does not favor and reverence
him; he is still more in the love of self who therefore hates and persecutes
his neighbor; and he still more who therefore burns with revenge against him
and desires his destruction. Such persons at last love to rage against their
neighbor; and the same, if they are also adulterers, become cruel.
AC 7371. The delight which these men perceive in such things is the delight
of the love of self. This delight in a man is infernal delight. Everything
that is according to love is delightful; and therefore the quality of the
love can be known from the delight.
AC 7372. From what has now been described (n. 7370), as a test, it is known
who are in the love of self. It matters not how they appear in the outward
form, whether pretentious or unassuming; for such they are in the interior
man; and the interior man is at this day hidden by most people, and the exterior
is trained to make a show of love of the public and the neighbor, thus for
contrary things; and this also for the sake of self and for the sake of the
world.
AC 7373. But the love of the world reigns with a man, that is, a man is in
the love of the world, when in what he thinks and does he regards and intends
nothing but his own advantage, not caring whether this involves harm to his
neighbor and to the public.
AC 7374. Those are in the love of the world who desire to possess themselves
of the goods of others by artful devices, and still more those who do this
by cunning and deceit. They who are in this love envy others their goods,
and covet them and in so far as they do not fear the laws, they take them
away, even by robbery.
AC 7375. These two loves increase in so far as the reins are given them, and
in so far as the man is borne along into them; and at last they increase beyond
measure, so that they desire to govern not only all things in their own kingdom,
but also what is beyond, even to the ends of the earth; nay, these loves when
unbridled ascend even to the God of the universe, that is, to such a height
that they who are in them wish to climb to the throne of God, and to be worshiped
instead of God Himself, according to what is written in Isaiah concerning
Lucifer, by whom are meant those who are in these loves, and are called "Babel":--
Thou saidst in thine heart, I will ascend into the heavens, I will exalt my
throne above the stars of God; and I will sit upon the mount of the congregation,
in the sides of the north; I will ascend above the heights of the cloud, and
become like the Most High. Yet thou shalt be cast down to hell (Isa. 14:13-15).
AC 7376. From all this it can now be seen that these two loves are the origins
of all evils, for they are diametrically opposed to love toward the neighbor,
and to love to the Lord; thus diametrically opposed to heaven, where love
to the Lord and love toward the neighbor reign. consequently it is these loves,
namely, the love of self and the love of the world, that make hell with man,
for these two loves reign in hell.
AC 7377. But they are not in these loves who aspire to honors not for the
sake of themselves, but for the sake of their country; and who aspire to wealth
not for the sake of wealth, but for the sake of the necessaries of life, both
for themselves and for their families, also for the sake of the good use on
account of which the wealth delights them. With such persons honors and riches
are means of imparting benefits.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 9
AC 7488. From all that has been said about the loves of self and of the world,
it is evident that all evils spring from them, and because all evils spring
from them, so do all falsities; and on the other hand, from love to the Lord
and love toward the neighbor spring all goods, and because all goods spring
from them, so do all truths.
AC 7489. This being the case, it is evident that in so far as a man is in
the loves of self and of the world, so far he is not in love toward the neighbor,
still less in love to the Lord; for these are opposites.
AC 7490. It is also evident that in so far as a man is in the loves of self
and of the world, so far he does not know what charity is, until at last he
does not know that it exists; also that so far the man does not know what
faith is, until at last he does not know that it is anything; and that so
far the man does not know what conscience is, until at last he does not know
that it exists; nay, that so far the man does not know what the spiritual
is, nor what the life of heaven; and finally that he does not believe there
is a heaven and a hell; consequently he does not believe that there is a life
after death. These are the effects of the loves of self and of the world when
they reign.
AC 7491. The good of heavenly love and the truth of its faith continually
flow in from the Lord, but are not received where the loves of self and of
the world reign; but on the contrary where these loves reign, that is, are
continually in the thought, are the end, are in the will, and make the life,
the good and truth which flow in from the Lord are either rejected, or extinguished,
or perverted.
AC 7492. With those with whom they are rejected, the good which is of love
and the truth which is of faith are held in contempt, and also in aversion.
With those with whom they are extinguished, the good of love and the truth
of faith are denied, and the contrary evils and falsities are affirmed. But
with those with whom they are perverted, the good of love and the truth of
faith are misinterpreted and are applied to favor evil and its falsity.
AC 7493. The loves of self and of the world with man begin to reign when he
comes to years of discretion and self-government; for then the man begins
to think from himself or from his own, and to appropriate these loves to himself,
and this the more as he confirms himself in a life of evil. In so far as a
man appropriates evils to himself, so far the Lord separates the good of innocence
and charity which the man has received in infancy and childhood and at times
afterward, and stores them up in his interiors; for the good of innocence
and the good of charity can in no wise abide with the evils of these loves;
and the Lord is not willing that they should perish.
AC 7494. They therefore who either pervert or extinguish or reject in themselves
the good of love and the truth of faith, have no life in them; for the life
which is from the Divine is to will good and believe truth. But they who do
not will good but evil, nor believe truth but falsity, have what is contrary
to life. This contrary to life is hell, and is called "death," and
they are called "dead." That the life of love and faith is called
"life," also "eternal life," and that they who have it
in themselves are called "living men;" and that the contrary of
life is called "death," also "eternal death," and such
men "dead," is evident from many passages in the Word (Matt. 4:16;
8:21, 22; 18:8, 9; 19:16, 17, 29; John 3:15, 16, 36; 5:24, 25; 6:33, 35, 47,
48, 50, 51, 53, 57, 58, 63; 8:21, 24, 51; 10:10; 11:25, 26; 14:6, 19; 17:2,
3; 20:31).
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 10
AC 7623. There are two things which proceed from the Lord and from this in
their origin are Divine, the one is Good, and the other is Truth. These consequently
are the two things which reign in heaven, nay, which make heaven. In the church
these two things are called charity and faith.
AC 7624. When Good and Truth proceed from the Lord they are completely united,
and so united as to be not two, but one. Consequently they are one in heaven;
and because they are one in heaven, heaven is an image of the Lord. It would
be the same with the church if charity and faith therein were a one.
AC 7625. An idea of the good which is of charity and of the truth which is
of faith may be formed from the sun and its light: when the light which proceeds
from the sun is conjoined with heat, as is the case in spring and summer,
then all things of the earth sprout forth and live; but when there is no heat
in the light, as in winter time, then all things of the earth become torpid
and die. Moreover in the Word the Lord is compared to the "sun;"
and truth conjoined with good, which proceeds from Him, is compared to "light;"
and also in the Word the truth of faith is called "light," and the
good of love is called "fire." Moreover love is the fire of life,
and faith is the light of life.
AC 7626. From all this an idea can also he formed about the man of the church,
as to what he is when with him faith is conjoined with charity, namely, that
he is like a garden and a paradise; and what he is when with him faith is
not conjoined with charity, namely, that he is like a desert and a land covered
with snow.
AC 7627. From the mere light of his natural man everyone can see that Truth
and Good are in agreement, and also that they can be conjoined together; and
that truth and evil are in disagreement, and that they cannot be conjoined
together; and in like manner faith and charity. Experience itself testifies
the same: that he who is in evil as to life is either in falsity as to faith,
or is in no faith, or is quite opposed to faith. And (what is a secret) he
who is in evil as to life is in the falsity of his evil, although he believes
that he is in truth. That he so believes is because he is in persuasive faith,
of which in what follows.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 11
AC 7752. All things in the universe bear relation to Good and Truth. That
which does not bear relation to good and truth is not in Divine order; and
that which does not bear relation to both together, produces nothing. Good
is that which produces, and truth is that by which it produces.
AC 7753. These facts may illustrate how the case is with spiritual good and
truth, which are called charity and faith; namely, that all things which belong
to the church bear relation to these, and those which do not bear relation
to them have nothing of the church in them; and also that which does not contain
both within it produces no fruit, that is, no good of charity or of faith.
AC 7754. For in order that anything may be produced, there must be two forces,
one which is called active, the other which is called passive; the one without
the other brings forth nothing. Such forces, or lives, are charity and faith
in the man of the church.
AC 7755. The first of the church is good, the second is truth; or the first
of the church is charity, and the second is faith. For the truth of the doctrine
of faith is for the sake of the good of life. That which is the end for the
sake of which something else exists, this is the first.
AC 7756. With the conjunction of the good which is of charity, and the truth
which is of faith, in man, the case is this. The good which is of charity
enters through the soul into man, but the truth which is of faith enters through
the hearing; the former flows in immediately from the Lord, but the latter
mediately through the Word. Hence the way by which the good of charity enters
is called the internal way; and the way by which the truth of faith enters
is called the external way. That which enters by the internal way is not perceived,
because it is not plainly subject to sensation; whereas that which enters
by the external way is perceived, because it is plainly subject to sensation.
For this reason everything of the church is attributed to faith. It is otherwise
with those who have been regenerated; with such the good that is of charity
is plainly perceived.
AC 7757. The conjunction of the good of charity with the truth of faith is
effected in the interiors of man. The good itself which flows in from the
Lord adopts truth there, and appropriates it to itself, and thereby causes
the good with the man to be good, and the truth to be truth; or the charity
to be charity, and the faith to be faith. Without this conjunction charity
is not charity, but only natural goodness; neither is faith faith, but only
the memory-knowledge of such things as are of faith, and in some cases a persuasion
that a thing is so for the sake of earning gain or honor.
AC 7758. When truth has been conjoined with good it is no longer called truth,
but good; and so when faith has been conjoined with charity it is no longer
called faith, but charity; the reason is that the man then wills and does
the truth, and that which he wills and does is called good.
AC 7759. With the conjunction of the good of charity with the truth of faith,
the case, further, is this. This good obtains its quality from truth, and
truth its essence from good. From this it follows that the quality of good
is according to the truths with which it is conjoined; and therefore good
becomes genuine if the truths with which it is conjoined are genuine. Genuine
truths of faith are possible within the church, but not out of it, for within
the church is the Word.
AC 7760. Moreover the good of charity receives its quality also from the abundance
of the truths of faith; likewise from the connection of one truth with another:
thus is formed spiritual good with man.
AC 7761. A clear distinction must be made between spiritual good and natural
good. As before said, spiritual good has its quality from the truths of faith,
their abundance, and their connection; but natural good is born with the man,
and also arises by accident, as by misfortunes, diseases, and the like. Natural
good saves no one, but spiritual good saves all. The reason is that the good
which is formed through the truths of faith is a plane into which heaven can
flow, that is, the Lord through heaven, and lead man, and withhold him from
evil, and afterward uplift him into heaven; but not so natural good; and therefore
they who are in natural good can be as easily carried away by falsity as by
truth, provided the falsity appears in the form of truth; and they can be
as easily led by evil as by good, provided the evil is presented as good.
They are like feathers in the wind.
AC 7762. The confidence of trust which is said to be of faith and is called
faith, is not spiritual confidence or trust, but natural. Spiritual confidence
or trust has its essence and life from the good of love; but not from the
truth of faith separate. The confidence of faith separate is dead; and therefore
there cannot be true confidence with those who have led an evil life. Moreover
that confidence which depends on salvation through the Lord's merit, irrespective
of what the life has been, is likewise not from truth.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 12
AC 7814. Man has been so created that he can look upward, or above himself;
and can also look downward, or below himself. To look above himself is to
look to his neighbor, to his country, to the church, to heaven, especially
to the Lord; but to look below himself is to look to the earth, to the world,
and especially to himself.
AC 7815. That to look to his neighbor, to his country, and to the church,
is to look above himself, is because this is to look to the Lord; for the
Lord is in charity, and it is of charity to look to the neighbor, to one's
country, and to the church, that is, to will well to them. But they look below
themselves who turn themselves away from these, and will well only to themselves.
AC 7816. To look above one's self is to be uplifted by the Lord; for no one
can look above himself, unless he is uplifted by Him who is above. But to
look below himself is of man, because then he does not suffer himself to be
uplifted.
AC 7817. They who are in the good of charity and of faith look above themselves,
because they are uplifted by the Lord; but they who are not in the good of
charity and of faith look below themselves, because they are not uplifted
by the Lord. Man looks below himself when he turns the influx of truth and
good from the Lord to himself. He who turns to himself the good and truth
flowing in from the Lord, sees himself and the world before him, and does
not see the Lord with His good and truth, because they are behind him, and
therefore come into such obscurity to him that he cares nothing for them,
and at last he denies them.
AC 7818. By looking above self and below self, is meant to have as the end,
or to love above all things. Thus by looking above self is meant to have as
the end, or to love above all things, what is of the Lord and heaven; and
by looking below self is meant to have as the end, or to love above all things,
what is of self and the world. The interiors of man also actually turn themselves
to where the love turns itself.
AC 7819. The man who is in the good of charity and faith loves also himself
and the world, but no otherwise than as the means to an end are loved. The
love of self with him looks to the love of the Lord, for he loves himself
as a means to the end that he may serve the Lord; and the love of the world
with him looks to the love of the neighbor, for he loves the world as a means
for the sake of the end that he may be of service to the neighbor. When therefore
the means is loved for the sake of the end, it is not the means that is loved,
but the end.
AC 7820. From this it can be seen that they who are in worldly glory, that
is, in eminence and opulence above others, can look above themselves to the
Lord equally as can those who are not in eminence and opulence; for they look
above themselves when they regard eminence and opulence as means, and not
as the end.
AC 7821. To look above self is proper to man, but to look below self is proper
to beasts. From this it follows that in so far as a man looks below himself
or downward, so far he is a beast, and also so far is an image of hell; and
that in so far as he looks above himself or upward, so far he is a man, and
also so far is an image of the Lord.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 13
AC 8033. What Charity is, and what Faith is, with man, must now be told. Charity
is an internal affection which consists in a heartfelt desire to do the neighbor
good, and in this being the delight of life; and this without any reward.
AC 8034. On the other hand, Faith is an internal affection which consists
in a heartfelt desire to know what is true and what is good, and this not
for the sake of doctrine as the end in view, but for the sake of life. This
affection conjoins itself with the affection of charity through the desire
to do according to the truth, thus to do the truth itself.
AC 8035. They who are in the genuine affection of charity and faith believe
that from themselves they do not desire anything good, and that from themselves
they do not understand anything true; but that the will of good and the understanding
of truth are from the Lord.
AC 8036. This then is charity, and this is faith. They who are in these have
within them the kingdom of the Lord and heaven, and within them is the church;
and these are they who have been regenerated by the Lord, and from Him have
received a new will and a new understanding.
AC 8037. They who have the love of self or the love of the world as the end
in view, cannot possibly be in charity and faith. They who are in these loves
do not even know what charity is, and what faith is, and do not at all comprehend
that to will good to the neighbor without any reward is heaven in man, and
that in this affection there is happiness as great as is that of the angels,
which is unutterable; for they believe that if they are deprived of the joy
arising from the glory of honors and of wealth all joy ceases to be possible;
when yet heavenly joy, which infinitely transcends every other joy, then first
begins.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 14
AC 8120. It is believed that charity toward the neighbor consists in giving
to the poor, in helping the needy, and in doing good to everyone without exception.
Nevertheless genuine charity consists in acting prudently, and to the end
that good may come thereby. He who helps any poor or needy rogue, does evil
to his neighbor through him, for by the help which he affords he confirms
him in evil, and supplies him with the means of doing evil to others. It is
otherwise with him who gives assistance to the good.
AC 8121. But charity toward the neighbor extends much more widely than to
the poor and needy. Charity toward the neighbor consists in doing right in
every work, and one's duty in every office. If a judge does what is just for
the sake of justice, be exercises charity toward the neighbor; if he punishes
the guilty and acquits the guiltless, he exercises charity toward the neighbor,
for he thus consults the welfare of his fellow-citizen, of his country, and
also of the Lord's kingdom. By doing what is just for the sake of justice
he consults the welfare of the Lord's kingdom; by acquitting the guiltless,
he consults that of his fellow-citizen; and by punishing the guilty, that
of his country. The priest who teaches truth, and leads to good, for the sake
of truth and good, exercises charity; but he who does such things for the
sake of himself and the world does not exercise charity, because he does not
love his neighbor, but himself.
AC 8122. The case is the same in all other instances, whether men be in any
employment or not; as with children toward their parents, and with parents
toward their children; with servants toward their masters, and with masters
toward their servants; with subjects toward their king, and with the king
toward his subjects. In these cases he who does his duty from a sense of duty,
and what is just from a sense of justice, exercises charity.
AC 8123. That such things belong to charity toward the neighbor, is because
every man is the neighbor, but in various ways (n. 6818); a society smaller
or larger is more the neighbor (n. 6819, 6820); our country is yet more the
neighbor (n. 6819, 6821); the church still more (n. 6819, 6822); the Lord's
kingdom still more (n. 6819, 6823); and the Lord above all (n. 6819, 6824).
In the universal sense the good which proceeds from the Lord is the neighbor
(n. 6706, 6711), consequently so also are justice and right. And therefore
he who does any good whatsoever for the sake of good, and anything just for
the sake of justice, loves the neighbor and exercises charity, for he acts
from the love of what is good, and the love of what is just, and thus from
the love of those in whom these are. But he who does what is unjust for the
sake of any self-advantage whatever, hates his neighbor.
AC 8124. He who is in charity toward the neighbor from internal affection
is a charity toward the neighbor in everything which he thinks and speaks,
and which he wills and does. It can be said that as to his interiors a man
or an angel is a charity when good is to him the neighbor. So widely does
charity toward the neighbor extend.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 15
AC 8252. With the man of the church there must be the life of piety, and there
must be the life of charity: they must be joined together. The life of piety
without the life of charity is profitable for nothing; but the former together
with the latter is profitable for all things.
AC 8253. The life of piety is to think piously and to speak piously, to devote
one's self much to prayers, to behave humbly at such times, to frequent places
of worship, and while there to listen devoutly to the preachings, to engage
in the sacrament of the Supper frequently every year, and in like manner in
all other things of worship, according to the ordinances of the church. But
the life of charity is to wish well and to do well to the neighbor, to act
from what is just and fair, and from what is good and true, in every work,
in like manner in everything we do; in a word, the life of charity consists
in performing uses.
AC 8254. The veriest worship of the Lord consists in the life of charity,
but not in the life of piety without this. The life of piety without the life
of charity is to wish to have regard for one's self alone, not for the neighbor;
but the life of piety with the life of charity is to wish to have regard for
one's self for the sake of the neighbor. The former life is from love toward
self, but the latter is from love toward the neighbor.
AC 8255. That to do what is good is to worship the Lord, is evident from the
Lord's words in Matthew: "Everyone who heareth My words, and doeth them,
I will compare to a prudent man; but everyone that heareth My words, and doeth
them not, shall be compared to a foolish man" (Matt. 7:24, 26).
AC 8256. Moreover a man is such as is the life of his charity; but not such
as is the life of his piety without this. Consequently, the life of charity
remains with the man to eternity; but not the life of piety, except in so
far as the latter is in agreement with the former. That the life of charity
remains with the man to eternity, is also evident from the Lord's words in
these passages:--
The Son of man will come in the glory of His Father with His angels; and then
He will render to everyone according to his deeds (Matt. 16:27).
They shall go forth; they who have done goods, into the resurrection of life;
but they who have done evils, into the resurrection of judgment (John 5:29);
and also from what is said in (Matt. 25:31-46).
AC 8257. By the life through which the Lord is chiefly worshiped, is meant
a life according to His injunctions in the Word, for by these man is acquainted
with what faith is and what charity is: this life is the Christian life, and
is called spiritual life. But a life according to the laws of what is just
and honorable, without that life, is a civil and a moral life: this life makes
a man to be a citizen of the world; but the other to be a citizen of heaven.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 16
AC 8387. He who wishes to be saved must confess his sins and do repentance.
AC 8388. To confess sins is to become thoroughly acquainted with evils, to
see them in one's self, to acknowledge them, to regard one's self as guilty,
and to condemn one's self on account of them. When this is done before God,
it is to confess sins.
AC 8389. To do repentance is after one has thus confessed his sins and from
a humble heart has made supplication for their forgiveness, to desist from
them and to lead a new life according to the commands of faith.
AC 8390. He who merely acknowledges that he is a sinner like all others, and
who regards himself as guilty of all evils, and does not examine himself-that
is, see his sins-does indeed make confession, but not the confession of repentance,
for he lives afterward as he had done before.
AC 8391. He who leads a life of faith does repentance daily; for he reflects
upon the evils that are in him, acknowledges them, guards himself against
them, and supplicates the Lord for aid. For from himself man is continually
falling, but is continually being raised up by the Lord. He falls from himself
when he thinks what is evil with desire; and he is raised up by the Lord when
he resists evil, and consequently does not do it. Such is the state with all
who are in good; but they who are in evil are continually falling, and also
are continually being uplifted by the Lord; but this to prevent them from
falling into the most grievous hell of all, whither from themselves they incline
with all their might: thus in truth uplifting them into a milder hell.
AC 8392. The repentance that is done in a state of freedom avails; but that
which is done in a state of compulsion avails not. A state of compulsion is
a state of sickness, a state of dejection of mind from misfortune, a state
of imminent death; in a word, every state of fear which takes away the use
of sound reason. When an evil man who in a state of compulsion promises repentance
and also does what is good, comes into a state of freedom, he returns into
his former life of evil. The case is otherwise with a good man, such states
being to him states of temptation in which he conquers.
AC 8393. Repentance of the mouth and not of the life is not repentance. Sins
are not forgiven through repentance of the mouth, but through repentance of
the life. Sins are continually being forgiven man by the Lord, for He is mercy
itself; but sins adhere to the man, however much he may suppose that they
have been forgiven, nor are they removed from him except through a life according
to the commands of faith. So far as he lives according to these commands,
so far his sins are removed; and so far as they are removed, so far they have
been forgiven. For by the Lord man is withheld from evil, and is held in good;
and he is so far able to be withheld from evil in the other life, as in the
life of the body he has resisted evil; and he is so far able to be held in
good then, as in the life of the body he has done what is good from affection.
This shows what the forgiveness of sins is, and whence it is. He who believes
that sins are forgiven in any other way, is much mistaken.
AC 8394. After a man has examined himself, and has acknowledged his sins,
and has done repentance, he must remain constant in good up to the end of
life. If however he afterward falls back into his former life of evil, and
embraces it, be commits profanation, for he then conjoins evil with good,
and consequently his latter state becomes worse than his former one, according
to the Lord's words:--
When the unclean spirit goeth out of a man he walketh through dry places,
seeking rest, but findeth none; then he saith, I will return into my house
whence I came out; and when he is come, and findeth it empty, and swept, and
garnished for him, then goeth he, and joineth to himself seven other spirits
worse than himself, and having entered in they dwell there; and the last things
of the man become worse than the first (Matt. 12:43-45).
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 17
AC 8548. He who does not receive spiritual life, that is, who is not begotten
anew by the Lord, cannot come into heaven. This the Lord teaches in John:
"Verily, verily, I say to thee, Except a man be begotten anew, he cannot
see the kingdom of God" (John 3:3).
AC 8549. Man is not born of his parents into spiritual life, but into natural
life. Spiritual life is to love God above all things, and to love the neighbor
as one's self, and this according to the commandments of faith which the Lord
has taught in the Word. But natural life is to love self and the world above
the neighbor, yea above God Himself.
AC 8550. Every man is born of his parents into the evils of the love of self
and of the world. Every evil which by habit has contracted a kind of nature,
is derived into the offspring, thus successively from parents, from grandparents,
and from great-grandparents, in a long series backward. From this the derivation
of evil has at last become so great, that all of man's own life is nothing
else than evil. This continuous derived nature is not broken and changed,
except by the Lord through a life of faith and charity.
AC 8551. Man continually inclines and lapses to what he derives hereditarily.
By so doing he confirms this evil in himself, and also adds to it more evils
from himself.
AC 8552. These evils are utterly contrary to spiritual life. They destroy
it. Therefore unless in respect to his spiritual life a man is conceived anew,
born anew, and reared anew, that is, created anew by the Lord, he is damned,
for he wills nothing else, and consequently thinks nothing else, than what
is of hell.
AC 8553. When a man is of this character, the order of life in him is inverted.
That which ought to rule serves, and that which ought to serve rules. For
his salvation to be possible this order in the man must be wholly inverted.
This is effected by the Lord through regeneration.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 18
AC 8635. No one can be regenerated unless he knows such things as are of the
new life, that is, of spiritual life; for man is introduced into this life
by means of regeneration. The things which are of the new life, or of spiritual
life, are truths which must be believed, and goods which must be done; the
former are of faith, the latter of charity.
AC 8636. No one can know these things from himself, for man apprehends only
those things which have been obvious to his senses; from these he has procured
for himself a light which is called natural light, by virtue of which he sees
nothing else than what belongs to the world and to himself, and not what belongs
to heaven and to God; these he must learn from revelation.
AC 8637. For example, that the Lord, who was God from eternity, came into
the world to save the human race; that He has all power in heaven and in earth;
that everything of faith and everything of charity, thus everything of truth
and good is from Him; that there is a heaven, and that there is a hell; that
man will live to eternity, in heaven if he has done well, in hell if he has
done evil.
AC 8638. These things and more are of faith, which must be known by the man
who is to be regenerated; for he who knows them can think them, then will
them, and lastly do them, and thus have new life.
AC 8639. On the other hand, he who does not know that the Lord is the Saviour
of the human race, cannot have faith in Him, worship Him, love Him, and thus
do good for His sake. He who does not know that all good is from Him, cannot
think that his own righteousness and his own salvation are from Him, still
less can he will it to be so, thus he cannot live from Him. He who does not
know that there is a hell, and that there is a heaven, nor that there is eternal
life, cannot even think about the life of heaven, nor apply himself to receiving
it; and so in all other things.
AC 8640. From all this it can be seen what the quality of the life of a regenerate
person is, that it is a life of faith; and also that it cannot be given to
a man until he is in such a state as to be able to acknowledge the truths
of faith, and in so far as he acknowledges them, to will them.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 19
AC 8742. Everyone has an internal man and an external man; the internal man
is what is called the spiritual man, and the external man is what is called
the natural man. Both must be regenerated for the man to be regenerated.
AC 8743. With the man who has not been regenerated the external or natural
man commands, and the internal or spiritual man serves; but with the man who
has been regenerated the internal or spiritual man commands, and the external
or natural serves. This inversion cannot possibly exist except through regeneration
by the Lord.
AC 8744. So long as the external man has not been regenerated, be makes all
good consist in pleasure, in gain, in pride, and burns with hatred and revenge
against those who set themselves in opposition; and then the internal man
not only consents, but also supplies reasons which confirm and promote: thus
the internal man serves and the external commands.
AC 8745. But when the external man has been regenerated, the internal man
makes all good consist in thinking well of the neighbor and willing well to
him, and the external man makes all good consist in speaking well of him and
acting well toward him; and at last each has as its end to love the neighbor
and to love the Lord, and not as before to love self and to love the world.
In this case the external or natural man serves, and the internal or spiritual
man commands.
AC 8746. The internal man is first regenerated by the Lord, and afterward
the external man, and the latter by means of the former. The internal man
is regenerated by thinking those things which are of faith, and willing them;
but the external man by a life according to them. The life of faith is charity.
AC 8747. The man who has been regenerated is in heaven as to his internal
man, and is an angel there with angels, among whom also he comes after death.
He can then live the life of heaven, love the Lord, love the neighbor, understand
truth, relish good, and perceive blessedness therefrom. These things are the
happiness of eternal life.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 20
AC 8853. Every man has something of his own which he loves above all things.
This is called that which rules, or if you will, that which reigns universally
with him. This is constantly present in his thought, and also in his will,
and makes his veriest life.
AC 8854. As for example, he who loves wealth above all things, whether money
or possessions, is continually revolving in his mind how he may procure it;
he inmostly rejoices when he acquires it; he inmostly grieves when he loses
it; his heart is in it. He who loves himself above all things is mindful of
himself in everything, thinks of himself, speaks of himself, acts for the
sake of himself; for his life is a life of self.
AC 8855. A man has as the end that which he loves above all things; in each
and all things he has regard to this; it is in his will like the hidden current
of a river which draws and hears him away, even when he is doing something
else, for it is what animates him. It is this which one man searches out in
another, and also sees, and according to it either leads him, or acts with
him.
AC 8856. When a man is being regenerated, charity is implanted by means of
faith, even until it becomes that which rules; and when charity has become
this, he has a new life, for it is then continually present in his thought,
and continually in his will, nay, in every single thing of them, even when
he is meditating about other things, and when he is engaged in business.
AC 8857. The case is the same with love to the Lord. When this love is that
which rules, it is present in every single thing of the man's life; as for
instance with him who loves his king, or his parent, his love toward them
shines forth in their presence from every feature of his face, it is heard
in every expression of his speech, and is seen in his every gesture. This
is meant by having God continually before the eyes, and by loving Him above
all things, with all the soul and with all the heart.
AC 8858. A man is wholly such as is the ruling principle of his life; by this
he is distinguished from others; according to this is formed his heaven if
he is good, and his hell if he is evil; for it is his veriest will, and thus
the very being of his life, which cannot be changed after death. From all
this it is evident what is the nature of the life of one who is regenerate,
and what is the nature of the life of one who is not regenerate.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 21
AC 8958. They who are being regenerated undergo Temptations.
AC 8959. Temptations are spiritual combats in man. For they are combats between
the evil that is in him from hell, and the good that is in him from the Lord.
AC 8960. Temptation is induced by evil spirits who dwell with man in his evils
and falsities; these spirits excite his evils, and accuse him. But angels
from the Lord, who dwell in his goods and truths, call forth the truths of
faith which are with him, and defend him.
AC 8961. That which is dealt with in Temptations relates to the dominion of
the evil that is with the man from hell, and of the good that is with him
from the Lord. The evil that wishes to have dominion is in the natural or
external man, but the good is in the spiritual or internal man; hence it is
that in Temptations that which is dealt with also relates to the dominion
of the one over the other; if evil conquers, the natural man has dominion
over the spiritual; if good conquers, the spiritual man has dominion over
the natural.
AC 8962. These combats are carried on by means of truths of faith which are
from the Word. The man must fight against evils and falsities from these;
if he fights from anything else, he does not conquer, because the Lord is
not in anything else.
AC 8963. As the combat is carried on by means of truths of faith which are
from the Word, the man is not admitted into combat until he is in the knowledges
of truth and of good, and has obtained therefrom some spiritual life; and
therefore these combats do not arise with man until he has come to years of
maturity.
AC 8964. He who has not with him truths of faith from the Word by which he
may fight, thus who has not any spiritual life in himself from these, is not
admitted into any combat, because he yields; and if a man yields, his state
after Temptation becomes worse than his state before Temptation, for evil
has then acquired to itself power over good, and falsity over truth.
AC 8965. As at this day faith is rare, for the church is at its end, therefore
at this day few undergo any spiritual Temptations. Hence it is that it is
scarcely known what they are, and to what they conduce.
AC 8966. Temptations conduce to the confirmation of the truths of faith, also
to the implantation of them, and the insinuation of them into the will, that
they may become goods of charity. For, as before said, man fights from the
truths of faith against evils and falsities; and because his mind is then
in truths, when he conquers he confirms himself in them and implants them;
and also accounts as an enemy, and rejects from himself, the evils and falsities
which have assailed him. Moreover through Temptations the concupiscences which
are of the loves of self and of the world are subdued, and the man becomes
humble. Thus he is rendered fit to receive the life of heaven from the Lord,
which life is the new life, such as belongs to the regenerated man.
AC 8967. As through temptations the truths of faith are confirmed, and the
goods of charity implanted, and also the concupiscences of evil are subdued,
it follows that through Temptations the spiritual or internal man acquires
dominion over the natural or external man, thus the good which is of charity
and faith over the evil which is of the love of self and of the world. When
this is effected, the man has enlightenment, and perception of what is true
and what is good, and also of what is evil and false; and consequently he
has intelligence and wisdom, which afterward increase day by day.
AC 8968. When a man is being introduced through the truths of faith to the
good of charity, he undergoes Temptations; but when he is in the good of charity,
Temptations cease, for he is then in heaven.
AC 8969. In Temptations man ought to fight against evils and falsities as
from himself, but still believe that he does so from the Lord. If during the
Temptation itself he does not believe this, because he is then in obscurity,
still he should believe it after the Temptation. If after Temptation the man
does not believe that the Lord alone has fought for him and conquered for
him, he has undergone only external Temptation, which Temptation does not
penetrate deeply, nor cause anything of faith and of charity to take root.
Doctrine of Charity - Chapter 22
AC 9112. What Conscience is shall now be stated. Conscience is formed in a
man from his religious persuasion, according to the reception of this within
himself.
AC 9113. With the man of the church, Conscience is formed by means of truths
of faith from the Word, or from doctrine drawn from the Word, according to
the reception of these in the heart. For when a man knows the truths of faith
and apprehends them in his own way, and afterward wills them and does them,
a Conscience is then being formed in him. Reception in the heart is reception
in the will, for the will of man is that which is called his "heart."
AC 9114. From this it is that those who have Conscience speak from the heart
what they speak, and do from the heart what they do. Such also have an undivided
mind, for they act in accordance with what they believe to be true and good,
and in accordance with what they understand. Consequently a more perfect Conscience
is possible with those who are more enlightened than others in the truths
of faith, and who are in a clearer perception than others, than is possible
with those who are less enlightened, and who are in an obscure perception.
AC 9115. Those have Conscience who have received from the Lord a new will.
This will is itself the Conscience; and therefore to act contrary to Conscience
is to act contrary to this will And as the good of charity makes the new will,
the good of charity also makes the Conscience.
AC 9116. Seeing that, as before said (n. 9113). Conscience is formed by means
of the truths of faith, as also is the new will, and charity, it follows that
to act contrary to the truths of faith is to act contrary to Conscience.
AC 9117. As the faith and charity which are from the Lord make a man's spiritual
life, it follows that to act contrary to Conscience is to act contrary to
this life.
AC 9118. As therefore to act contrary to Conscience is to act contrary to
the new will, contrary to charity, and contrary to the truths of faith, consequently
contrary to the life which man has from the Lord, it is evident from this
that a man is in the tranquillity of peace, and in internal blessedness, when
he acts according to Conscience; and that he is in intranquillity, and also
in pain, when he acts contrary to Conscience. This pain is what is called
"the stings of Conscience."
AC 9119. Man has a Conscience of what is good, and a Conscience of what is
just. The Conscience of what is good is the Conscience of the internal man;
and the Conscience of what is just is the Conscience of the external man.
The Conscience of what is good consists in acting according to the precepts
of faith from internal affection; while the Conscience of what is just consists
in acting according to civil and moral laws from external affection. They
who have a Conscience of what is good, have also a Conscience of what is just;
but they who have only a Conscience of what is just, have the capacity of
receiving a Conscience of what is good, and moreover do receive it when they
are instructed.
AC 9120. What Conscience is may also be illustrated by examples. If unknown
to the other, a man has the property of that other in his possession, and
thus can keep it for himself without any fear of the law, or of the loss of
honor and reputation, and nevertheless restores it to the other because it
is not his own, he has Conscience, for he does what is good for the sake of
what is good, and what is just for the sake of what is just. Again, if a man
who has it in his power to attain a high position, sees that another, who
also is a candidate, would be more useful to his country, and yields the position
to this other man for the sake of his country's good, he has Conscience. So
in all other cases.
AC 9121. From these examples may be inferred the character of those who have
no Conscience. They are known from the opposite. Those among them who for
the sake of their own advantage would make what is unjust to appear as just,
and what is evil to appear as good; and the reverse; have no Conscience. Those
of them who know that what they do is unjust and evil, and yet do it, do not
know what Conscience is, and if instructed, do not wish to know. Such are
they who do all things for the sake of themselves and the world.
AC 9122. Those who have not received Conscience in the world cannot receive
Conscience in the other life. Thus they cannot be saved, because they have
no plane into which heaven (that is, the Word through heaven) can flow, and
whereby it may operate, and so draw them to itself; for Conscience is the
plane and receptacle of the influx of heaven. Wherefore in the other life
such persons are associated with those who love themselves and the world above
all things; and these are in hell.
Web editor's note: The following deals with how faith is related to charity
and is built on Christain doctrines. It is the central belief of my particular
religion that our Creator and God filled the seed of a human mother and took
on the human body to combat, conquer and reorder the hells. Through these
victories, order was and is being restored in the spiritual world and, as
a result of these actions, God is acknowledged in the Lord Jesus Christ. However,
this is the same God of all other religions (past and present) - there is
no difference in the God we worship: only in name. And there is no special
favoritism for Christians. All humans are judged by their deeds and not by
the faith of their lips. That God Himself would come to earth was prophesied
ages ago in many legends, myths and religious documents. The Lord fulfilled
these predictions. But, as was said above, this is my faith. Yours may be
different and this is OK: as long as you are a brother or sister under the
doctrines charity.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 1
AC 9239. Men speak of believing in God, and of believing those things which
are from God. Believing in God is the Faith that saves; but believing the
things which are from God, is a Faith which without the former does not save.
For believing in God is knowing and doing; whereas believing the things which
are from God is knowing and not as yet doing. Those who are truly Christians
both know and do, thus they believe in God; but those who are not truly Christians
know, and do not. These are called by the Lord "foolish," but the
former are called "prudent" (Matt. 7:24, 26).
AC 9240. The learned within the church call the Faith which saves, "trust"
and "confidence," namely, that God the Father sent His Son in order
to reconcile mankind to Himself, and thus to save those who have this Faith.
AC 9241. But in regard to the trust and confidence which is called Faith itself,
the case is this. Those who are in the love of self and of the world, that
is, those who are in evils and the consequent falsities, cannot have this
Faith, for their heart is not toward God, but toward themselves and the world.
Whereas those who are in charity toward the neighbor and in love to the Lord
can have such Faith, for their heart is toward the Lord. This the Lord also
teaches in John:--
As many as received Him, to them gave He the power to be the sons of God,
even to those who believe in His name; who were born, not of bloods, nor of
the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God (John 1:12, 13);
those who are "born of bloods, of the will of the flesh, and of the will
of man," are those who are in what is evil and false from the loves of
self and of the world. And those who are "born of God" are those
who are in the good of charity and of faith from the Lord (n. 5826).
AC 9242. The confidence which in an eminent sense is called Faith, appears
like spiritual confidence even with the evil, when their life is in danger,
and when they are sick. But as they then think about the state of their life
after death, either from the fear of hell, or from the love of self of heaven,
they have not the confidence of Faith; for what is from fear is not from the
heart, and what is from the love of self is from an evil heart; and therefore
when such persons come back out of mortal danger, or when they recover from
disease, they return into their former life, which was a life of no confidence,
that is, a life of no Faith. From this it is evident that the Faith which
is called "confidence," is possible only with those who are in charity
toward the neighbor, and in love to the Lord.
AC 9243. Nor is the Faith which is meant by believing the things which are
from God, that is, the truths which are from the Word, possible with those
who are in evils from the love of self or the love of the world; for the love
of self and of the world either rejects the truths of faith, or extinguishes,
or perverts them (n. 7491, 7492). From this it is again evident that neither
can such persons have the confidence of Faith; for he who does not believe
the truths which are from God, cannot believe in God; because to believe in
God is to believe from the truths which are from God.
AC 9244. All who are in heavenly love, have confidence that they will be saved
by the Lord; for they believe that the Lord came into the world in order to
give eternal life to those who believe and live according to the commandments
which He taught; and that He regenerates these, and so makes them fit for
heaven; and that He does this Himself alone, from pure mercy, without the
aid of man. This is meant by "believing in the Lord."
AC 9245. That those alone are in Faith who live according to the precepts
of Faith, the Lord teaches in John:--
The light is come into the world, but men loved the darkness rather than the
light, because their works were evil. Everyone that doeth evils hateth the
light, and cometh not to the light, lest his works should be reproved. But
he that doeth the truth cometh to the light, that his works may be made manifest,
because they have been wrought in God (John 3:19-21);
to "come to the light" denotes to come to faith in the Lord, thus
to faith from the Lord. In like manner in Luke:--
Why call ye Me, Lord, Lord, and do not the thing which I say? Everyone that
cometh unto Me, and heareth My saying, and doeth them, is like a man that
built a house, and laid a foundation upon the rock. But he that heareth, and
doeth not, is like a man that built a house upon the earth without a foundation
(Luke 6:46-49);
those who "do the Lord's sayings" or "words" are those
who love the neighbor and love the Lord; for he who loves, does (John 14:20,
21, 23, 24; 15:9-17).
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 2
AC 9363. To believe those things which the Word teaches, or which the doctrine
of the church teaches, and not to live according to them, appears as if it
were faith, and some also suppose that they are saved by this faith; but no
one is saved by this alone, for it is Persuasive Faith, the quality of which
shall now be told.
AC 9364. There is Persuasive Faith when the Word and the doctrine of the church
are believed and loved, not for the sake of serving the neighbor, that is,
one's fellow citizen, our country, the church, heaven, and the Lord Himself;
consequently not for the sake of life, for serving these is life; but for
the sake of gain, honors, and the reputation of learning, as ends. Wherefore
they who are in this faith do not have in view the Lord and heaven, but themselves
and the world.
AC 9365. They who aspire after great things in the world, and covet many things,
are in a stronger persuasion that what the doctrine of the church teaches
is true, than are those who do not aspire after great things and covet many
things. The reason is that to the former the doctrine of the church is merely
a means to their ends; and the means are loved and also believed in proportion
as the ends are desired.
AC 9366. In itself however the fact is that in so far as such men are in the
fire of the loves of self and of the world, and speak, preach, and act from
this fire, so far they are in that persuasion, and they then know no otherwise
than that what they say is so. But when they are not in the fire of these
loves, they believe nothing, and many of them deny everything; from which
it is evident that a Persuasive Faith is a faith of the lips, and not of the
heart; thus that in itself it is no faith.
AC 9367. They who are in Persuasive Faith do not know from any internal enlightenment
whether what they teach is true or false; nay, they do not care, provided
they are believed by the common people; for they are in no affection of truth
for the sake of truth Moreover above all others they defend faith alone; and
the good of faith, which is charity, they make of importance only in so far
as they can profit by its means.
AC 9368. They who are in Persuasive Faith abandon faith, if they are deprived
of honors and gains, provided their reputation is not endangered; for Persuasive
Faith is not within the man, but stands outside, in the memory only, out of
which it is drawn while it is being taught. And therefore after death this
faith vanishes, together with its truths; for then only that much of faith
remains which is within the man; that is, which has been rooted in good; thus
has been made of the life.
AC 9369. They who are in Persuasive Faith are meant by those of whom we read
in these passages:--
Many will say to Me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied by Thy
name, and by Thy name have cast out demons, and in Thy name done many mighty
deeds? But then will I confess unto them, I know you not, ye workers of iniquity
(Matt. 7:22, 23).
Then shall ye begin to say, We have eaten and drunk in Thy presence, and Thou
hast taught in our streets. But He shall say, I tell you, I know you not whence
ye are; depart from me, all ye workers of iniquity (Luke 13:26, 27).
They are also meant in Matthew by the five foolish virgins, who had no oil
in their lamps:--
Afterward came the other virgins, saying, Lord, Lord, open to us. But He answering
said, Verily, I say unto you, I know you not (Matt. 25:11, 12);
"oil in the lamps" denotes good in the faith (n. 886, 4638).
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 3
AC 9443. The Forgiveness of Sins shall now be spoken of.
AC 9444. The sins done by a man are rooted in his very life, and make it;
and therefore no one is liberated from them unless he receives new life from
the Lord, which is effected by means of regeneration.
AC 9445. That from himself a man cannot do what is good or think what is true;
but only from the Lord, is evident in John:--
A man can do nothing except it be given him from heaven (John 3:27).
He that abideth in Me, and I in him, the same beareth much fruit; for without
Me ye can do nothing (John 15:5).
From this it is evident that no one can withdraw anyone from sins, thus forgive
them, save the Lord alone.
AC 9446. The Lord continually flows into man with the good of love and the
truths of faith; but these are variously received; being received in one way
by one person, and in a different way by another; by those who have been regenerated
they are received well; but by those who do not suffer themselves to be regenerated
they are received ill.
AC 9447. Those who have been regenerated are continually kept by the Lord
in the good of faith and of love, and are then withheld from evils and falsities.
And those who do not suffer themselves to be regenerated by the Lord are also
withheld from evil and kept in good, for good and truth continually flow in
from the Lord with every man; but the infernal loves in which they are, namely,
the loves of self and of the world, stand in the way, and turn the influx
of good into evil, and that of truth into falsity.
AC 9448. From all this it is evident what the Forgiveness of Sins is. To be
able to be kept by the Lord in the good of love, and the truths of faith,
and to be withheld from evils and falsities, is the Forgiveness of Sins. And
to shun evil and falsity, and to feel aversion for them, is then Repentance.
But these are possible only with those who, through regeneration, have received
new life from the Lord; because these things belong to the new life.
AC 9449. The signs that sins have been forgiven are the following. Delight
is felt in worshiping God for the sake of God; in being of service to the
neighbor for the sake of the neighbor; thus in doing good for the sake of
good, and in believing truth for the sake of truth There is an unwillingness
to merit by anything that belongs to charity and faith. Evils, such as enmities,
hatreds, revenges, unmercifulness, adulteries, in a word, all things that
are against God and against the neighbor, are shunned and are held in aversion.
AC 9450. But the signs that sins have not been forgiven are the following.
God is not worshiped for the sake of God; and the neighbor is not served for
the sake of the neighbor; thus good is not done and truth is not spoken for
the sake of good and truth, but for the sake of self and the world. There
is a desire to merit by our deeds; others are despised in comparison with
ourselves; delight is felt in evils, such as enmities, hatred, revenge, cruelty,
adulteries; and the holy things of the church are held in contempt, and are
at heart denied.
AC 9451. When sins have been forgiven, they are believed to be wiped off,
and washed away as dirt is with water. Nevertheless they remain in the man;
and their being said to be "wiped off" is from the appearance when
the man is withheld from them.
AC 9452. The Lord regenerates a man from Divine Mercy. This is done from his
infancy down to the last of his life in the world, and afterward to eternity.
Thus it is from Divine Mercy that the Lord withdraws a man from evils and
falsities, and leads him to the truths of faith and goods of love, and afterward
keeps him in these. And after this, in Divine Mercy He raises him to Himself
in heaven, and makes him happy. All this is what is meant by the Forgiveness
of Sins from Mercy. They who believe that sins are forgiven in any other way,
are quite mistaken; for it would be the absence of mercy to see a multitude
of men in the hells, and not save them, if it could be done in any other way.
And yet the Lord is mercy itself, and wills not the death of anyone, but that
he may live.
AC 9453. Consequently those who do not suffer themselves to be regenerated,
thus who do not suffer themselves to be withheld from evils and falsities,
remove and cast away from themselves these mercies of the Lord. Therefore
it is the man who is in fault if he cannot be saved.
AC 9454. This is what is meant in John:--
As many as received Him, to them gave He power to be sons of God, to them
that believe in His name; who were born, not of bloods, nor of the will of
the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God (John 1:12, 13);
"of bloods" denotes those who are opposed to the goods of faith
and of charity; "of the will of the flesh" denotes those who are
in evils from the loves of self and of the world; "of the will of man"
denotes those who are in falsities thence derived; to be "born of God"
denotes to be regenerated. That no one can come into heaven unless he is regenerated,
is taught in the same:--
Verily, verily I say unto thee, Except a man be born anew, be cannot see the
kingdom of God. Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born of water
and of the spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God (John 3:3, 5);
"to be born of water" denotes through the truth of faith; and "to
be born of the spirit" denotes through the good of love. From all this
it can now be seen who they are whose sins have been forgiven; and who they
are whose sins have not been forgiven.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 4
AC 9585. All that is called Freedom which is of the will, thus which is of
the love; whence it is that Freedom manifests itself by means of the delight
of willing and thinking, and of the consequent doing and speaking. For all
delight is of love, and all love is of the will, and the will is the being
of man's life.
AC 9586. To do evil from the delight of love appears like Freedom; but is
slavery, because from hell. To do good from the delight of love appears to
be Freedom, and also is Freedom, because it is from the Lord. It is therefore
slavery to be led by hell, and it is Freedom to be led by the Lord. This the
Lord teaches in John:--
Everyone that doeth sin is the servant of sin. The servant abideth not in
the house forever; the Son abideth forever. If the Son shall make you free,
ye shall be free indeed (John 8:34-36).
AC 9587. The Lord keeps man in the Freedom of thinking; and in so far as outward
bonds, which are the fear of the law and for life, and the fear of the loss
of reputation, of honor, and of gain, do not hinder, He keeps him in the Freedom
of doing; but, through Freedom, He bends him away from evil; and, through
Freedom, He bends him to good; leading him so gently and silently that the
man knows no otherwise than that everything proceeds from himself. Thus the
Lord, in Freedom, inseminates and inroots good in the very life of the man,
which good remains to eternity. This the Lord teaches in Mark:--
So is the Kingdom of God, as a man who casteth seed into the earth; the seed
germinateth and groweth, while he knoweth not. The earth beareth fruit of
its own accord (Mark 4:26-28);
"the kingdom of God" denotes heaven with man, thus the good of love
and the truth of faith.
AC 9588. That which is inseminated in Freedom remains, because it is inrooted
in the very will of man, which is the being of his life. But that which is
inseminated under compulsion does not remain, because what is of compulsion
is not from the will of the man, but is from the will of him who compels.
For this reason worship from Freedom is pleasing to the Lord, but not worship
from compulsion; for worship from Freedom is worship from love, because all
Freedom is of love.
AC 9589. There is heavenly Freedom, and there is infernal Freedom. Heavenly
Freedom is to be led by the Lord, and this Freedom is the love of what is
good and true. But infernal Freedom is to be led by the devil, and this Freedom
is the love of what is evil and false; properly speaking, it is concupiscence.
AC 9590. They who are in infernal Freedom believe it to be slavery and compulsion
not to be allowed to do what is evil and to think what is false at pleasure.
But they who are in heavenly Freedom feel horror in doing what is evil and
in thinking what is false, and if they are compelled thereto, they are in
torment.
AC 9591. From all this it can be seen what Free Will is, namely, that is to
do what is good from choice, or from the will; and that they are in this Freedom
who are led by the Lord.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 5
AC 9701. Something shall now be said about the Internal and the External Man.
AC 9702. They who have only a general idea about the Internal and the External
Man, believe that it is the Internal Man which thinks and wills, and the External
Man which speaks and acts; because to think and to will are internal, and
from these to speak and act is external.
AC 9703. But be it known that it is not only the Internal Man that thinks
and wills, but also the External; yet in one way when they are conjoined,
and in another when they are separated.
AC 9704. When a man thinks intelligently and wills wisely, he thinks and wills
from the Internal Man; but when he does not think intelligently and will wisely,
he does not think and will from the Internal Man. Consequently, when a man
thinks well about the Lord and about what belongs to the Lord, and when he
thinks well about the neighbor and what belongs to the neighbor, and when
he also wills well to these, he then thinks and wills from the Internal Man.
But when a man thinks evilly in regard to these, and bears them ill will,
he then does not think and will from the Internal Man. To think well is from
the faith of truth, and to will well is from the love of good; but to think
evilly is from the faith of what is false, and to will evilly is from the
love of what is evil.
AC 9705. In a word, in so far as a man is in love to the Lord and in love
toward the neighbor, so far he is in the Internal Man, and thinks and wills
and also speaks and acts from it; but in so far as a man is in the love of
self and in the love of the world, so far he is in the External Man, and in
so far as he dares, he also speaks and acts from it.
AC 9706. The reason is that man has been created according to the image of
heaven and the image of the world; the Internal Man according to the image
of heaven, and the External Man according to the image of the world. Wherefore
to think and will from the Internal Man is to think and will from heaven,
that is, through heaven from the Lord; but to think and will from the External
Man is to think and will from the world, that is, through the world from self.
AC 9707. It has been so provided and ordained by the Lord that in so far as
a man thinks and wills from heaven, that is, through heaven from the Lord,
so far his Internal Man is opened: the opening is unto heaven, even unto the
Lord Himself. Therefore, on the other hand, in so far as a man thinks and
wills from the world, that is, through the world from self, so far the Internal
Man is closed, and the External Man is opened: the opening is unto the world
and unto self.
AC 9708. In order that the External Man may be reduced into order, it must
be made subordinate to the Internal Man, and it is made subordinate when it
obeys. So far as this is effected, so far the External Man also is wise. This
is meant by the old man with its evil affections needing to die in order that
the man may become a new creature.
AC 9709. Those with whom the Internal Man has been closed, do not know that
there is an Internal Man, neither do they believe that there is a heaven and
an eternal life. And wonderful to say they nevertheless suppose that they
think more wisely than others; for they love themselves and what belongs to
them, and these they worship. It is otherwise in the case of those with whom
the Internal Man has been opened toward heaven unto the Lord, for these are
in the light of heaven, thus in illumination from the Lord; whereas the former
are not in the light of heaven, but in the light of the world, and thus in
illumination from self. Those who are illumined from self, and not from the
Lord, see falsity as truth and evil as good.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 6
AC 9796. When it is known what the internal man is, and what the external
man, the source of the Understanding of Truth, and of the Will of Good, can
then he known.
AC 9797. In proportion as the internal man has been opened toward heaven,
thus to the Lord, in the same proportion a man is in the light of heaven,
thus in the same proportion he is in the understanding of truth. The light
of heaven is the Divine truth that proceeds from the Lord; to be enlightened
by this light is to understand truth.
AC 9798. In proportion as the internal man has been opened to the Lord, and
the external man subordinated to it, in the same proportion a man is in the
fire of heaven; thus in the same proportion he is in the will of good. The
fire of heaven is the Divine love that proceeds from the Lord; to be kindled
by this fire is to will good.
AC 9799. Therefore the understanding of truth is to see truths from the Word
by virtue of enlightenment from the Lord; and the will of good is to will
these truths from affection.
AC 9800. They who are in love and faith in the Lord, and in charity toward
the neighbor, are in the understanding of truth and in the will of good, for
with them there is a reception of the good and truth which are from the Lord.
AC 9801. On the other hand, in proportion as the interval man has been closed
toward heaven and to the Lord, in the same proportion a man is in cold and
thick darkness in respect to the things of heaven. And then in proportion
as the external man has been opened toward the world, in the same proportion
the man thinks what is false, and wills what is evil, and thus is insane;
for the light of the world extinguishes in him the light of heaven; and the
fire of the life of the world extinguishes the fire of the life of heaven.
AC 9802. They who are in the love of self, and in the persuasion of self-derived
intelligence and wisdom, are in such cold and thick darkness.
AC 9803. From this it is evident that to be intelligent and wise does not
consist in understanding and being wise about many things of the world; but
in understanding and willing the things of heaven. For there are those who
understand and are wise about many things of the world, and yet do not believe
or will the things of heaven; thus are insane. These are they of whom the
Lord says:--
I speak by parables; because seeing they see not, and hearing they hear not,
neither do they understand (Matt. 13:13).
The world cannot receive the Spirit of truth, because it seeth Him not, neither
knoweth Him (John 14:17).
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 7
AC 9974. Those who believe that they merit heaven by the goods which they
do, do goods from themselves, and not from the Lord.
AC 9975. None of the goods which men do from themselves are good, because
they are done for the sake of self, being done for the sake of reward; thus
from these works they have regard in the first place to themselves; but the
goods which men do from the Lord are all good, because they are done for the
sake of the Lord and for the sake of the neighbor; thus in these goods they
have regard in the first place to the Lord and the neighbor.
AC 9976. Therefore those who place merit in works love themselves, and those
who love themselves despise the neighbor, and even are angry with God Himself
if they do not receive the hoped for reward, for they do the works for the
sake of the reward.
AC 9977. From this it is evident that their works are not from heavenly love,
thus not from true faith; for the faith which regards good from self, and
not from God, is not true faith. Such cannot receive heaven into themselves,
for heaven with man is from heavenly love and true faith.
AC 9978. Those who place merit in works cannot fight against the evils which
are from the hells, for no one can do this from himself; but the Lord fights
and conquers for those who do not place merit in works.
AC 9979. The Lord alone had merit, because He alone, from Himself, has conquered
and subdued the hells. Hence the Lord alone is merit and righteousness.
AC 9980. Moreover from himself man is nothing but evil; thus to do good from
self is to do it from evil.
AC 9981. That good must not be done for the sake of a reward, the Lord Himself
teaches in Luke:--
If ye love those who love you, what thanks have ye? If ye do well to those
who do well to you, what thanks have ye? for sinners do the same. Rather love
your enemies, and do well, and lend, hoping for nothing; then shall your reward
be great, and ye shall be sons of the Most High (Luke 6:32-35).
That a man cannot from himself do good that is good; but only from the Lord,
the Lord also teaches in John:--
A man can receive nothing unless it be given him from heaven (John 3:27).
Jesus said, I am the vine, ye are the branches; he that abideth in Me, and
I in him, the same beareth much fruit; for without Me ye can do nothing (John
15:5).
AC 9982. To believe that they will be rewarded if they do what is good, is
not hurtful to those who are in innocence, as is the case with little children
and with the simple; but to confirm themselves therein when they are grown
up is hurtful: for a man is initiated into good by looking for a reward, and
he is deterred from evil by looking for a punishment. But in so far as he
comes into the good of love and of faith, he is removed from having regard
to merit in the goods which he does.
AC 9983. To do good that is good must be from the love of good, thus for the
sake of good. They who are in this love abhor merit, for they love to do,
and perceive satisfaction from it; and on the other hand, they are saddened
if it is believed that it is done for the sake of something of self. The case
herein is almost as it is with those who do what is good to friends for the
sake of friendship, to a brother for the sake of brotherhood, to wife and
children for their own sake, to their country for their country's sake; thus
from friendship and from love. They who think well also say and insist that
they do not do well for the sake of themselves; but for the sake of those
to whom they do it.
AC 9984. The delight itself which is in the love of doing what is good without
any end of recompense, is the reward which remains to eternity; for every
affection of love remains inscribed on the life. Into this there is insinuated
by the Lord heaven and eternal happiness.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 8
AC 10167. Few know from what origin comes forth conjugial love. They who think
from the world believe that it comes forth from nature; but they who think
from heaven believe that it comes forth from the Divine in heaven.
AC 10168. Love truly conjugial is the union of two minds, which is a spiritual
union; and all spiritual union descends from heaven. From this it is that
love truly conjugial is from heaven, and that its first being is from the
marriage of good and truth there. The marriage of good and truth in heaven
is from the Lord; wherefore in the Word the Lord is called the "Bridegroom"
and "Husband," while heaven and the church are called the "bride"
and "wife;" and therefore heaven is compared to a marriage.
AC 10169. From all this it is evident that love truly conjugial is the union
of two persons in respect to their interiors which belong to the thought and
the will, thus to truth and good; for truth belongs to the thought, and good
to the will. For one who is in love truly conjugial loves what the other thinks
and what the other wills; thus he also loves to think as the other does, and
he loves to will as the other does; consequently to be united to the other,
and to become as one man. This is what is meant by the Lord's words in Matthew:--
"And they twain shall be one flesh, therefore they are no more twain,
but one flesh" (Matt 19:4-6; Gen. 2:24).
AC 10170. The delight of love truly conjugial is an internal delight, because
it belongs to the minds, and is also an external delight from this, which
belongs to the bodies. But the delight of love not truly conjugial is only
an external delight without an internal one, and such a delight belongs to
the bodies and not to the minds. But this delight is earthly, being almost
like that of animals, and therefore in time perishes; whereas the first-mentioned
delight is heavenly, as that of men should be, and therefore is permanent.
AC 10171. No one can know what love truly conjugial is, and what is the nature
of its delight, except one who is in the good of love and in the truths of
faith from the Lord; because, as has been said, love truly conjugial is from
heaven, and is from the marriage of good and truth there.
AC 10172. From the marriage of good and truth in heaven and in the church
we can learn what must be the nature of marriages on earth, namely, that they
must be between two, one husband and one wife, and that love truly conjugial
is never possible if there are a number of wives to one husband.
AC 10173. That which is done from love truly conjugial is done from freedom
on both sides, because all freedom is from love, and both have freedom when
one loves that which the other thinks and that which the other wills. From
this it is that the wish to command in marriages destroys genuine love, for
it takes away its freedom, thus also its delight. The delight of commanding,
which follows in its place, brings forth disagreements, and sets the minds
at enmity, and causes evils to take root according to the nature of the domination
on the one side, and the nature of the servitude on the other.
AC 10174. From all this it can be seen that marriages are holy, and that to
injure them is to injure that which is holy; consequently that adulteries
are profane; for as the delight of conjugial love descends from heaven, so
the delight of adultery ascends from hell.
AC 10175. Therefore those who take delight in adulteries can no longer receive
any good and truth from heaven. From this it is that those who have taken
delight in adulteries, afterward make light of and also at heart deny the
things of the church and of heaven. The reason of this is that the love of
adultery is from the marriage of evil and falsity, which is the infernal marriage.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 9
AC 10318. Without a revelation from the Divine, man cannot know anything about
eternal life, nor indeed anything about God, and still less about love to
Him and faith in Him. For man is born into mere ignorance, and afterward has
all things to learn from what is of the world, from which he must form his
understanding. He is also born hereditarily into all evil that belongs to
the love of self and the love of the world. The delights from these loves
reign continually, and prompt to such things as are diametrically contrary
to the Divine. From this then it is that from himself man knows nothing about
eternal life; and therefore there must needs be a revelation from which he
may know this.
AC 10319. That the evils of the love of self and of the world induce such
ignorance about the things of eternal life, is very evident from those within
the church who although they know from revelation that there is a God, that
there are a heaven and a hell, that there is eternal life, and that this life
must be acquired by means of the good of love and of faith, nevertheless fall,
both learned and unlearned, into denial. From this it is again evident what
great ignorance would prevail if there were no revelation.
AC 10320. Seeing therefore that man lives after death, and this to eternity;
and that a life awaits him in accordance with his love and faith, it follows
that from love toward the human race, the Divine has revealed such things
as will lead to that life, and will conduce to man's salvation. That which
the Divine has revealed is with us the Word.
AC 10321. As the Word is a revelation from the Divine, it is Divine in general
and in particular, for that which is from the Divine cannot be otherwise.
AC 10322. That which is from the Divine descends through the heavens down
to man, and therefore in the heavens it has been accommodated to the wisdom
of the angels who are there, and on earth it has been accommodated to the
apprehension of the men who are there. Therefore in the Word there is an internal
sense for the angels, which is spiritual; and an external sense for men, which
is natural. From this it is that there is a conjunction of heaven with man
by means of the Word.
AC 10323. The genuine sense of the Word is apprehended by none but those who
are enlightened; and those only are enlightened who are in love to the Lord
and in faith in Him, for the interiors of such are raised by the Lord even
into the light of heaven.
AC 10324. The Word in the letter cannot be apprehended except by means of
doctrine made from the Word by one who is enlightened. For the sense of the
letter of the Word has been accommodated to the apprehension of even simple
men; and therefore they need doctrine out of the Word for a lamp.
AC 10325. The books of the Word are all those which have an internal sense;
and those which have not an internal sense are not the Word. The books of
the Word in the Old Testament are the five books of Moses, the book of Joshua,
the book of Judges, the two books of Samuel, the two books of the Kings, the
Psalms of David, the Prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, Lamentations, Ezekiel, Daniel,
Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai,
Zechariah, and Malachi; and in the New Testament the four Gospels, Matthew,
Mark, Luke, and John; and the Revelation.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 10
AC 10386. Baptism was instituted as a sign that the man belongs to the church,
and as a memorial that he is to be regenerated; for the washing of Baptism
is nothing else than spiritual washing, which is regeneration.
AC 10387. All regeneration is effected by the Lord by means of the truths
of faith and a life according to them. Therefore Baptism testifies that the
man belongs to the church, and that he can be regenerated; for in the church
the Lord is acknowledged, who regenerates; and in it is the Word which contains
the truths of faith whereby regeneration is effected.
AC 10388. This the Lord teaches in John:--
Except a man be born of water and of the spirit, he cannot enter into the
kingdom of God (John 3:5);
in the spiritual sense "water" denotes the truth of faith from the
Word; "the spirit" denotes a life according to this truth; and "to
be born" of these denotes to be regenerated.
AC 10389. As everyone who is regenerated also undergoes temptations, which
are spiritual combats against evils and falsities, therefore by the waters
of Baptism these temptations also are signified.
AC 10390. As Baptism is for a sign and a memorial of these things, therefore
a man may be baptized when an infant, and if not then, when an adult.
AC 10391. Be it known therefore by those who are baptized, that Baptism itself
does not confer faith, or salvation; but that it testifies that men receive
faith, and that they are saved, if they are regenerated.
AC 10392. From this it can be seen what is meant by the Lord's words in Mark:
He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not
shall be condemned (Mark 16:16);
"he that believeth" is he who acknowledges the Lord and receives
Divine truths from Him through the Word; "he that is baptized" is
he who is regenerated by the Lord by means of these truth.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 11
AC 10519. The Holy Supper was instituted by the Lord in order that by means
of it there may be a conjunction of the church with heaven, thus with the
Lord. It is therefore the most holy thing of the church.
AC 10520. But in what manner conjunction is effected by means of it, is not
apprehended by those who do not know anything of the internal or spiritual
sense of the Word; for they do not think beyond its external sense, which
is the sense of the letter. From the internal or spiritual sense of the Word
it is known what is signified by the "body" and the "blood,"
and what by the "bread" and the "wine," and also what
by "eating."
AC 10521. In this sense the Lord's "body" or "flesh" denotes
the good of love, in like manner the "bread;" and the Lord's "blood"
denotes the good of faith, in like manner the "wine;" and "eating"
denotes appropriation and conjunction. The angels who are with a man when
he comes to the sacrament of the Supper perceive these things no otherwise;
for they apprehend all things spiritually. From this it is that there then
flows in from the angels to the man, thus through heaven from the Lord, a
holy feeling of love and of faith. From this comes the conjunction.
AC 10522. From all this it is evident that when a man takes the bread, which
is the body, he is conjoined with the Lord through the good of love to Him
from Him; and when he takes the wine, which is the blood, he is conjoined
with the Lord through the good of faith to Him from Him. But be it known that
conjunction with the Lord through the sacrament of the Supper is effected
solely with those who are in the good of love and of faith to the Lord from
the Lord. The Holy Supper is the seal of this conjunction.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 12
AC 10591. Man has been so created that he cannot die in respect to his Internal,
because he is able to believe in God and also to love God, and thus to be
conjoined with God in faith and love; and to be conjoined with God is to live
forever.
AC 10592. This Internal is in every man who is born. His External is that
by means of which he brings into effect the things that belong to faith and
love, thus that belong to the Internal. The Internal is what is called the
"soul," and the External is what is called the "body."
AC 10593. The external which man carries about in the world has been accommodated
to uses in the world. This external is what is laid aside when the man dies;
but the external which has been accommodated to uses in the other life does
not die. This latter external together with the internal is called a "spirit;"
a good spirit and an angel if the man had been good in the world; and an evil
spirit if he had been evil.
AC 10594. In the other life the spirit of man appears in the human form absolutely
as in the world. He also enjoys the capability of seeing, of hearing, of speaking,
and of feeling, as in the world; and is endowed with every capability of thinking,
of willing, and of acting, as in the world. In a word, he is a man in respect
to each and all things, except that he is not encompassed with that gross
body with which he was encompassed in the world. This he leaves behind when
he dies, nor does be ever resume it.
AC 10595. It is this continuation of life which is meant by Resurrection.
The reason why men believe that they will not rise again until the Last Judgment,
when also every visible thing of the world will perish, is that they have
not understood the Word, and that sensuous men place the very life itself
in the body, and believe that unless this were to live again it would be all
over with man.
AC 10596. The life of man after death is the life of his love, and the life
of his faith; consequently such as has been his love, and such as has been
his faith, during his life in the world, such his life remains forever. The
life of hell is for those who have loved themselves and the world above all
things; and the life of heaven for those who have loved God above all things
and the neighbor as themselves. These are they who have faith; but the former
are they who have not faith. The life of heaven is what is called eternal
life; and the life of hell is what is called spiritual death.
AC 10597. The Word teaches that man lives after death, as where it is said
that "God is not the God of the dead but of the living" (Matt 22:32);
that after death Lazarus was taken up into heaven, but the rich man was cast
into hell (Luke 16:22, 23); that Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob are there (Matt.
8:11; 22:32; Luke 16:23-25, 29); that Jesus said to the thief, "This
day shalt thou be with Me in paradise" (Luke 23:43); and in other places.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 13
AC 10714. There are two things which make the life of man-love and faith.
Love makes the life of his will, and faith the life of his understanding;
consequently such as the love is, and such as the faith is, such is the life.
AC 10715. The love of good and the derivative faith of truth make the life
of heaven, and the love of evil and the derivative faith of falsity make the
life of hell.
AC 10716. The Divine of the Lord makes the heavens, and heaven is with everyone
according to his reception of love and of faith from the Lord.
AC 10717. Heaven is present with all, both angels and men, who receive love
and faith from the Lord; and therefore those come into heaven after death
who have heaven in them during their life in the world.
AC 10718. Those who have heaven in them desire the good of all, and feel delight
in benefiting others, not for the sake of themselves and the world, but for
the sake of the good, and for the sake of the truth, which is so to be done.
But those who have hell in them desire evil to all, and feel delight in doing
evil to others. If these feel delight in benefiting others, it is not for
the sake of what is good and true, but for the sake of themselves and the
world.
AC 10719. Heaven with man is in his internal, thus in his thinking and willing;
and from this is in the external, that is, in his speaking and doing. But
heaven is not in the external without the internal, for all hypocrites can
speak well and do well, but not think well and will well. By thinking well,
and willing well, is meant thinking and willing what is from the love of good,
and from the faith of truth.
AC 10720. When a man comes into the other life, which takes place immediately
after death, it is evident whether heaven is in him, or hell; but not while
he lives in the world. For in the world only the external appears, and not
the internal; when as in the other life the internal stands open, because
the man then lives in respect to his spirit.
AC 10721. From all this it can be seen what makes heaven, namely, love to
the Lord and love toward the neighbor, and likewise faith, but this latter
only in so far as it has life from these loves. Hence it is again evident
that the Lord's Divine makes heaven, for both this love and the derivative
faith are from the Lord, and whatever is from the Lord is Divine.
AC 10722. Eternal happiness, which is also called heavenly joy, exists with
those who are in love and faith toward the Lord from the Lord. This love,
and this faith, have this joy in them; and after death the man who has heaven
in him comes into this joy. In the meantime it lies hidden in his internal.
AC 10723. In the heavens there is a communion of all goods. There the peace,
intelligence, wisdom, and happiness of all are communicated to everyone, and
that of everyone is communicated to all, yet to each according to the reception
of love and of faith from the Lord. From this it is evident how great in heaven
are the peace, intelligence, wisdom, and happiness.
AC 10724. Those in whom reign the love of self and the love of the world,
do not know what heaven is, and what is the happiness of heaven, and it appears
incredible to them that there is any happiness in other loves than these;
when yet the happiness of heaven enters only in so far as these loves are
removed, as ends. The happiness which succeeds on their removal is so great
that it surpasses all man's apprehension.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 14
AC 10740. That which anyone does from love remains inscribed on his heart,
for love is the fire of life, thus is the life of everyone. Consequently such
as is the love, such is the life; and such as is the life, thus such as is
the love, such is the whole man as to soul and as to body.
AC 10741. As love to the Lord and love toward the neighbor make the life of
heaven with man, so when they reign do the love of self and the love of the
world make the life of hell with him, for these loves are opposite to the
former; and therefore those with whom the loves of self and of the world reign,
man receive nothing from heaven; but all that they receive is from hell. For
whatever a man thinks, and whatever he wills; or whatever a man believes,
and whatever be loves, is either from heaven or from hell.
AC 10742. From this it is that those in whom the love of self and the love
of the world make the life, desire what is good for themselves alone, and
not for others except for the sake of themselves. And as their life is from
hell, they despise others in comparison with themselves, they are angry with
others if they do not favor them, they hold them in hatred, they burn with
revenge against them, and even desire to vent their rage upon them. At last
these things become the delights of their life, thus their loves.
AC 10743. These are they who have hell in them, and who after death come into
hell, because their life is in agreement with the life of those who are in
hell; for all there are of this character; and everyone comes to his own people.
AC 10744. As these persons receive nothing from heaven, in their hearts they
deny God and the life after death, and consequently hold in contempt all things
of the church. It avails not that they do good to their fellow-citizen, to
society, to their country, and to the church; or that they speak well about
these; because they do all this for the sake of themselves and the world,
in order to save appearances, and to secure reputation, honors, and gains.
These are the external bonds by which such persons are brought to do what
is good, and are withheld from doing what is evil. As for internal bonds,
which are those of conscience, and which dictate that what is evil must not
be done because it is sin, and is contrary to the Divine laws, they have none.
AC 10745. And therefore when these persons come into the other life, which
takes place immediately after death, and external things are taken away from
them, they rush headlong into every wickedness in accordance with their interiors,
such as contempt of others in comparison with themselves, enmity, hatred,
revenge, rage, cruelty, and also into hypocrisy, fraud, deceit, and many other
kinds of wickedness. These are then the delights of their life; and therefore
they are separated from the good, and cast into hell.
AC 10746. In the world many such persons are not aware that these thing are
the delight of their life, because these things hide themselves in the loves
of self and of the world; and at that time such persons call all things goods
that favor these loves; and all things that confirm them they call truths.
Neither do they know and acknowledge any other goods and truths, because they
receive nothing from heaven, which they have closed against themselves.
AC 10747. As love is the fire of life, and everyone's life is in accordance
with his love, it may from this be known what heavenly fire is, and what infernal
fire. Heavenly fire is love to the Lord and love toward the neighbor, and
infernal fire is the love of self and the love of the world, and the consequent
concupiscence of all evils, which spring from these loves as from their fountains.
AC 10748. The nature of the life with those who are in hell can be inferred
from what it would be among such persons in the world if external bonds were
taken away, and there were no internal bonds to restrain them.
AC 10749. The life of man cannot be changed after death. It then remains such
as it had been. Nor can the life of hell be transferred into the life of heaven,
because they are opposites. From this it is evident that those who come into
hell remain there forever; and that those who come into heaven remain are
forever.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 15
AC 10760. That which makes heaven with man also makes the Church, for the
Church is the Lord's heaven on earth. Consequently from what has been previously
said about heaven, it is evident what the Church is.
AC 10761. That is called the Church where the Lord is acknowledged, and where
the Word is; for the essentials of the Church are love to the Lord from the
Lord, and faith in the Lord from the Lord; and the Word teaches how a man
must live in order that he may receive love and faith from the Lord.
AC 10762. The Lord's Church is internal and external; internal with those
who do the Lord's commandments from love, for these are they who love the
Lord; and external with those who do the Lord's commandments from faith, for
these are they who believe in the Lord.
AC 10763. In order that the Church may exist, there must be doctrine from
the Word, because without doctrine the Word is not understood; yet doctrine
alone in a man does not make the Church in him; but a life according thereto.
From this it follows that faith alone does not make the Church; but the life
of faith which is charity.
AC 10764. The genuine doctrine of the Church is the doctrine of charity and
at the same time of faith, and not the doctrine of faith without that of charity;
for the doctrine of charity and at the same time of faith is the doctrine
of life; but not the doctrine of faith without the doctrine of charity.
AC 10765. Those who are outside the Church, and yet acknowledge one God, and
live according to their religion in a kind of charity toward the neighbor,
are in communion with those who are of the Church, because no one is condemned
who believes in God, and lives well. From this it is evident that the Lord's
Church is everywhere in the whole world, although specifically it is where
the Lord is acknowledged, and where the Word is.
AC 10766. Everyone in whom the Church is, is saved. But everyone in whom the
Church is not, is condemned.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 16
AC 10773. The government of the Lord in the heavens and on earth is called
Providence. And as all the good which is of love, and all the truth which
is of faith, are from Him, and absolutely nothing from man, it is evident
from this that the Divine Providence of the Lord is in each and all things
that conduce to the salvation of the human race. This the Lord thus teaches
in John:--
I am the way, the truth, and the life (John 14:6).
As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the name, so
neither can ye, except ye abide in Me: without Me ye can do nothing (John
15:4, 5).
AC 10774. Moreover the Divine Providence of the Lord is over the veriest singulars
of man's life; for there is one only fountain of life, which is the Lord,
from whom we live and act and have our being.
AC 10775. Those who think about the Divine Providence from worldly things,
conclude from these that it is only universal, and that the singulars appertain
to man. But these persons are not acquainted with the arcana of heaven, for
they form their conclusions solely from the loves of self and of the world
and their pleasures; and therefore when they see the evil exalted to honors,
and gaining wealth rather than the good; and also that the evil succeed in
accordance with their skill, they say in their hearts that it would not be
so if the Divine Providence were in each and all things. But these persons
do not consider that the Divine Providence does not look to that which is
fleeting and transitory, and which comes to an end together with the life
of man in the world; but that it looks to that which remains to eternity,
thus which has no end. That which has no end is; but that which has an end,
relatively as not.
AC 10776. Everyone who duly reflects is able to know that eminence and wealth
in the world are not real Divine blessings, although from the pleasure in
them men so call them; for they pass away, and likewise seduce many, and turn
them away from heaven; but that life in heaven and happiness there are the
real blessings which are from the Divine. This the Lord also teaches in Luke:--
Make for yourselves treasure in the heavens that faileth not, where thief
draweth not near, nor moth destroyeth. For where your treasure is, there will
your heart be also (Luke 12:33, 34).
AC 10777. The reason why the evil succeed in accordance with their skill,
is that it is according to order that everyone should do what he does from
reason and also from freedom; and therefore unless it were left to a man to
act in freedom according to his reason, and thus also unless the consequent
arts succeeded, the man could not possibly be disposed to receive eternal
life, because this is insinuated when the man is in freedom, and his reason
is enlightened. For no one can be compelled to good, because nothing compulsory
cleaves to the man, for it is not his. That becomes the man's own which is
done from freedom, for that which is from the will is done from freedom, and
the will is the man himself; and therefore unless a man is kept in the freedom
to do evil also, good from the Lord cannot be provided for him.
AC 10778. To leave man from his freedom to do evil also, is called permission.
AC 10779. To be led to happiness in the world by means of his skill, appears
to the man as if it were done from his own sagacity. Nevertheless the Divine
Providence continually accompanies by permitting and by constantly withdrawing
from evil. But to be led to happiness in heaven is known and perceived not
to be of man's own sagacity, because it is from the Lord, and is effected
from His Divine Providence by disposing and continually leading to good.
AC 10780. That this is the case a man cannot apprehend from the light of nature,
for from this light he does not know the laws of Divine order.
AC 10781. Be it known that there is providence and there is foresight. Good
is that which is provided by the Lord, but evil is that which is foreseen
by the Lord. The one must be with the other, for that which comes from man
is nothing but evil; but that which comes from the Lord is nothing but good.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 17
AC 10789. There are two kinds of things with men that must be in order, namely,
the things that belong to heaven, and the things that belong to the world.
The things that belong to heaven are called Ecclesiastical; and the things
that belong to the world are called Civil.
AC 10790. Order cannot be maintained in the world without overseers, who must
take note of all things that are done according to order, and that are done
contrary to order; and who must reward those who live according to order,
and punish those who live contrary to order.
AC 10791. If this be not done, the human race will perish. For there is born
in everyone, by inheritance, the desire to rule over others, and to possess
the goods of others. From this come enmities, envyings, hatreds, revenges,
deceits, fierce ragings, and many other evils; and therefore unless men are
kept in bonds by laws, and by rewards suited to their loves, which are honors
and gains for those who do good things; and by punishments contrary to their
loves, which are the loss of honors, of possessions, and of life for those
who do evil things, the human race must perish.
AC 10792. There must therefore be overseers learned in the law, wise, and
god-fearing, to keep the assemblages of men in order. Among the overseers
also there must be order, lest anyone should from caprice, or from ignorance,
permit evils that are contrary to order, and should thus destroy it. This
is guarded against when there are higher and lower overseers, among whom there
is subordination.
AC 10793. Overseers over the things with man that belong to heaven, or over
ecclesiastical things, are called priests, and their office is called the
priesthood. But overseers over such things with man as belong to the world,
or over civil matters, are called magistrates, and their chief, where such
supreme powers exist, is called a king.
AC 10794. As regards priests, they must teach men the way to heaven, and must
also lead them. They must teach them according to the doctrine of their church,
and they must lead them to live according to it. Priests who teach truths
and by means of them lead to the good of life, and thus to the Lord, are good
shepherds of the sheep; but those who teach, and do not lead to the good of
life, and thus to the Lord, are evil shepherds. The latter are called by the
Lord "thieves and robbers," in (John 10:7-16).
AC 10795. Priests must not claim for themselves any power over the souls of
men, because they do not know in what state are a man's interiors; and still
less must they claim for themselves the power of opening and closing heaven,
because this power belongs to the Lord alone.
AC 10796. Priests must have dignity and honor on account of the holy things
which they engage in; but those of them who are wise give the honor to the
Lord, from whom come all holy things; and not to themselves. But those of
them who are not wise attribute the honor to themselves. These take it away
from the Lord. Those who attribute honor to themselves on account of the holy
things which they engage in, set honor and profit above the salvation of souls,
which they ought to have regard for. But those who give the honor to the Lord
and not to themselves, set the salvation of souls above honor and profit.
AC 10797. No honor of any employment is in the person; but it is adjoined
to him according to the dignity of the thing which be administers, and that
which is adjoined is separate from the person, and also is separated from
him together with the employment. The honor that is in the person is the honor
of the wisdom and fear of the Lord (that he displays).
AC 10798. Priests must teach the people, and lead them to the good of life
by means of truths. But they must not compel anyone, because no one can he
compelled to believe contrary to what he thinks in his heart to be true. He
who believes differently from the priest, and makes no disturbance, must be
left in peace; but he who makes a disturbance must be separated; for this
also belongs to the order for the sake of which is the priesthood.
AC 10799. As priests are overseers for the administration of the things that
belong to the Divine law and to worship, so are kings and magistrates for
the administration of the things that belong to the civil law, and to judgment.
AC 10800. As the king alone cannot administer all things, therefore there
are overseers under him, to each of whom has been given the official duty
of administering what the king cannot attend to. Taken together these overseers
constitute the royalty, but the king himself is the chief.
AC 10801. The royalty itself is not in the person, but is adjoined to the
person. The king who believes that the royalty is in his own person, and the
overseer who believes that the dignity of the overseership is in his own person,
is not wise.
AC 10802. The royalty consists in administering according to the laws of the
kingdom, and in judging from justice according to these laws. The king who
regards the laws as above him, consequently himself as below the laws, is
wise; but he who regards himself as above the laws, consequently the laws
as beneath him, is not wise.
AC 10803. The king who regards the laws as above himself, and thus himself
as beneath the laws, makes the royalty to consist in the law, and the law
rules over him; for he knows that the law is justice, and all justice that
is justice is Divine. But he who regards the laws as beneath him, and thus
himself as above them, makes the royalty to consist in himself, and either
believes himself to be the law, or the law which is justice to be from himself;
consequently he arrogates to himself that which is Divine, and under which
he must be.
AC 10804. The law which is justice must be brought forward by persons in the
realm learned in the law, who are wise and god-fearing; in accordance with
which the king and his subjects must then live. The king who lives in accordance
with the law which is justice, and therein sets an example to his subjects,
is truly a king.
AC 10805. A king who has absolute power, and who believes that his subjects
are such slaves that he has a right to their lives and properties, and who
exercises this power, is not a king, but a tyrant.
AC 10806. The king must be obeyed in accordance with the laws of the realm,
nor must he be injured in any way by word or deed, for upon this depends the
public safety.
Doctrine of Charity and Faith - Chapter 18
AC 10815. There is one God, who is the Creator of the universe and the Preserver
of the universe, thus who is the God of heaven and the God of earth.
AC 10816. There are two things which make the life of heaven with man: the
truth of faith, and the good of love. Man has this life from God, and nothing
whatever of it from man; and therefore the chief thing of the church is to
acknowledge God, to believe in God, and to love Him.
AC 10817. Those who have been born within the church ought to acknowledge
the Lord, His Divine and His Human, and to believe in Him and love Him, because
all salvation is of the Lord. This the Lord teaches in John:--
He that believeth in the Son hath eternal life; but be that believeth not
the Son shall not see life, but the anger of God abideth with him (John 3:36).
This is the will of Him that sent Me, that everyone who seeth the Son, and
believeth in Him, may have eternal life; and I will raise him up In the last
day (John 6:40).
Jesus said, I am the resurrection and the life; be that believeth in Me, though
he die, shall live; but everyone that liveth and believeth in Me shall never
die (John 11:25, 26).
AC 10818. Wherefore those who within the church do not acknowledge the Lord
and His Divine, cannot be conjoined with God, and thus cannot have any lot
with the angels in heaven, for no one can be conjoined with God except by
the Lord and in the Lord. That no one can be conjoined with God except by
the Lord, the Lord teaches in these passages:--
No man hath ever seen God; the only-begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the
Father, He hath set Him forth (John 1:18).
Ye have never heard the voice of the Father, nor seen His shape (John 5:37).
No one knoweth the Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son willeth
to reveal Him (Matt. 11:27).
I am the way, the truth, and the life; no one cometh unto the Father but by
Me (John 14:6).
That no one can be conjoined with God except in the Lord, the Lord also teaches
in John:--
As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, unless it abide in the vine; so
neither can ye, unless ye abide in Me; for without Me ye can do nothing (John
15:4, 5).
That no one can be conjoined with God except in the Lord, because the Father
is in Him, and They are one, as also He teaches John:--
He that seeth Me seeth Him that sent Me; and ye have known My Father, and
from henceforth ye have known Him; He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father:
Philip, believest thou not that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me?
Believe Me that I am in the Father, and the Father in Me (John 12:45; 14:7-11).
The Father and I are one; that ye may know, and believe, that I am in the
Father and the Father in Me (John 10:30, 38).
AC 10819. As the Father is in the Lord, and the Father and the Lord are one,
and as He must be believed in, and whoso believeth in Him hath eternal life,
it is evident that the Lord is God. That the Lord is God is taught everywhere
in the Word, as in these passages:--
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and God was the
Word. All things were made by Him; and without Him was not anything made that
was made. And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, and we beheld His
glory, the glory as of the only-begotten of the Father (John 1:1, 3, 14).
Unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given, and the government shall
be upon His shoulder, and His name shall be called God, Hero, the Father of
Eternity, the Prince of Peace (Isa. 9:6).
A virgin shall conceive, and bring forth, and His name shall be called God
with us (Isa. 7:14; Matt. 1:23).
Behold the days come when I will raise unto David a righteous Branch, who
shall reign as king, and shall prosper; and this is His name whereby they
shall call Him, JEHOVAH OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS (Jer. 23:5, 6; 33:15, 16).
AC 10820. All those who are of the church, and are in light from heaven, see
the Divine in the Lord, and this in His Human. But those who are not in light
from heaven see nothing but the Human in the Lord, when yet the Human and
the Divine in Him are so united that they are one, as the Lord taught in another
passage in John:--
Father, all things that are Mine are Thine, and all things that are Thine
are Mine (John 17:10).
AC 10821. Those who in regard to the Divinity have an idea of three Persons,
cannot have an idea of one God. If they say one with the mouth, they nevertheless
think of three. But those who in regard to the Divinity have an idea of three
in one Person, can have an idea of one God, and can say "one God,"
and also think "one God."
AC 10822. Men have the idea of three in one Person when they think that the
Father is in the Lord, and that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Lord; and
then the Trine in the Lord is the Divine Itself which is called the Father,
the Divine Human which is called the Son, and the proceeding Divine which
is called the Holy Spirit.
AC 10823. Every man has from his father his being of life, which is called
his soul. The derivative manifestation (exsistere) of life is that which is
called the body. Consequently the body is the likeness of its soul, because
by means of it the soul pursues its life at its pleasure. From this it is
that men are born into the likeness of their fathers, and that families are
distinguished from each other. And from this it is evident what was the nature
of the Lord's body or Human, namely, that it was like the Divine Itself, which
was the Being of His life, or the Soul from the Father; and He therefore said:--
He that seeth Me seeth the Father (John 14:9).
AC 10824. That the Divine and the Human of the Lord are one Person, is also
in accordance with the faith received in the whole Christian world, which
is to this effect: "Although Christ is God and Man, nevertheless He is
not two, but one Christ. Yea, He is altogether one and a single Person; for
as the body and soul are one man, so also God and Man are one Christ."
This is from the Athanasian Creed.
AC 10825. That the Lord was conceived of Jehovah the Father and thus was God
from conception, is known in the church, and also that He rose again with
His whole body, for He left nothing in the sepulchre. Of this He also afterward
confirmed His disciples, saying,
"Behold My hands and My feet, that it is I Myself; feel Me, and see;
for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye see Me have" (Luke 24:39).
And although He was a man in respect to the flesh and bones, He nevertheless
entered in through closed doors; and after He had manifested Himself He again
became invisible (John 20:19, 26; Luke 24:31). It is different with every
man, for a man rises again only as to the spirit, and not as to the body;
and therefore when He said that He is not a spirit, He said that He is not
like any other man. From this it is now evident that in the Lord the Human
also is Divine.
AC 10826. Those who make the Human of the Lord like the human of any other
man, do not think about His conception from the Divine Itself, nor about His
resurrection with the whole body, nor about Him as seen when He was transfigured,
in that His face shone as the sun. Neither do they know and apprehend that
the body of everyone is a likeness or effigy of his soul, nor that the Lord
is omnipresent even in respect to the Human, for from this is the belief in
His omnipresence in the Holy Supper. Omnipresence is Divine (Matt. 28:20).
AC 10827. As all the Divine is in the Lord, He therefore has all power in
the heavens and on earth' as also He Himself says in these passages:--
The Father hath given to the Son power over all flesh (John 17:2).
All things have been delivered unto Me by the Father (Matt. 11:27).
All power hath been given unto Me in heaven and on earth (Matt. 28:18).
AC 10828. The Lord came into the world in order to save the human race, which
otherwise would have perished in eternal death; and He saved it by this: that
He subjugated the hells which were infesting every man that came into the
world and that went out of the world; and at the same time by this: that He
glorified His Human, for in this way He can hold the hells in subjection to
eternity. The subjugation of the hells and the simultaneous glorification
of His Human, were effected by means of temptations admitted into His Human,
and by continual victories then. His passion on the cross was the last temptation
and the full victory. That the Lord subjugated the hells, He Himself teaches
in the following passages:--
Jesus said, Now is My soul troubled, Father, rescue Me from this hour; but
for this cause came I into the world. Father, glorify Thy name. There came
forth a voice from heaven, saying, I have both glorified it, and I will glorify
it again. Then Jesus said, Now is the judgment of this world; now shall the
prince of this world be cast out (John 12:27, 28, 31).
Be of good cheer; I have overcome the world (John 16:33).
Who is this that cometh from Edom, marching in the multitude of his strength,
great to save? Mine own arm performed salvation for Me; therefore He became
their Saviour (Isa. 63:1, 5, 8; 59:16-21).
That He glorified His Human, and that the passion of the cross was the last
temptation and the full victory through which He was glorified, He also teaches
in these passages:--
After Judas was gone out, Jesus said, Now hath the Son of man been glorified,
and God shall glorify Him in Himself, and shall straightway glorify Him (John
13:31, 32).
Father, the hour is come; glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son also may glorify Thee.
Now, O Father, glorify Thou Me with the glory which I had with Thee before
the world was (John 17:1, 5).
Now is My soul troubled, Father, glorify Thy name; and there came forth a
voice from heaven saying, I have both glorified it, and I will glorify it
again (John 12:27, 28).
Ought not the Christ to suffer this, and to enter into His glory? (Luke 24:26).
"To glorify" denotes to make Divine. From this it is now evident
that unless the Lord had come into the world, and had become a Man, and had
in this manner freed from hell all those who believe in Him and love Him,
no mortal could have been saved. This is meant by its being said that without
the Lord there is no salvation.
AC 10829. To love the Lord is to live according to His commandments. That
this is to love the Lord, He Himself teaches in John:--
If ye love Me, keep My commandments He that hath My commandments, and keepeth
them, he it is that loveth Me. If a man love Me, he will keep My word; but
he that loveth Me not, keepeth not My woe (John 14:15, 21, 23, 24).
And that those are saved who receive the Lord, and believe in Him; but not
those who are in evils and the derivative falsities, because these latter
do not receive Him and believe in Him, He teaches in John:--
As many as received Him, to them gave He power to be sons of God, to them
that believe in His name; who were born, not from bloods, nor from the will
of the flesh, nor from the will of man, but from God (John 1:12, 13); "to
be born from bloods, from the will of the flesh, and from the will of man,"
denotes to be in the evils of the love of self and of the world, and in the
derivative falsities. "To be born from God" denotes to be regenerated.
AC 10830. When the Lord had fully glorified His Human, He then put off the
human from the mother, and put on the Human from the Father; and therefore
He was then no longer the son of Mary, but the Son of God, from Whom He came
forth
AC 10831. That there is a trine in the Lord, namely, the Divine Itself, the
Divine Human, and the proceeding Divine, is a secret from heaven, and is for
those who will be in the holy Jerusalem.