Where now
is the Church ?
Selection from Arcana Cœlestia ~ Emanuel Swedenborg
And Reuben
returned unto the pit, and behold Joseph was not in the pit, and
he rent his garments. And he returned unto his brethren, and said, The
child is not; and I, whither do I come? And they took Joseph's tunic, and killed a he-goat
of the goats, and dipped the tunic in the blood; And they sent the tunic of various colors, and they
brought it to their father, and said, This have we found; know now
whether it be thy son's tunic or not. And he knew it, and said, It is my son's tunic; an
evil wild beast hath devoured him; Joseph is surely torn in pieces. And Jacob rent his garments, and put sackcloth upon
his loins, and mourned over his son many days. And all his sons and all his daughters rose up to
comfort him; but he refused to comfort himself, and he said, For I
shall go down to the grave to my son, mourning. And his father
wept for him.
Genesis 37:29-35
AC 4766. And I, whither do I come?
That this signifies Where now is the church is evident from the
representation of Reuben as being the faith of the church in general
(n. 4731, 4734, 4761); and as Reuben says of himself, "and I,
whither do I come?" it signifies "Where now is the faith of the
church," or what is the same, "Where now is the church?" That there
is no church where the heavenly Joseph is not (that is, the Lord as
to Divine truth, specifically as to the Divine truth that the Lord's
Human is Divine, and that charity is the essential of the church and
consequently the works of charity) may be seen from what has been
shown in this chapter concerning both these truths.
[2] If this Divine truth that the Lord's Human is Divine is not
received, it necessarily follows that a trine should be adored, and
not one; and also that half of the Lord, namely, His Divine, should
be adored, but not His Human; for who adores what is not Divine? And
is the church anything where a trine is adored, one separately from
another, or what is the same, where three are equally worshiped? For
although the three are called one, still the thought distinguishes
and makes three, and only the speech of the mouth says one. Let
everyone consider in himself when he says that he acknowledges and
believes in one God, whether he does not think of three; and when he
says that the Father is God, the Son is God, and the Holy Spirit is
God, and these also distinct in persons, and distinct as to
functions, whether he can think that there is one God, except in the
way that three distinct from one another make one by harmony, and
also by condescension insofar as one proceeds from another. When
therefore three gods are adored, where is the church?
[3] But when the Lord only is adored, in whom there is a perfect
trine, and who is in the Father and the Father in Him, as He Himself
says:
Though ye believe not Me, believe the works; that ye may know and believe, that the Father is in Me, and I in the Father
(John 10:38);
He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father; believest thou not
Philip 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 14:9-11),
He that seeth Me seeth Him that sent Me (John 7:45);
All Mine are Thine, and Thine are Mine (John 17:10)
then there is the Christian Church, as there is when the church
abides in this that the Lord said:
The first of all the commandments is, Hear O Israel, the Lord our
God is one Lord; and thou shalt love the Lord thy God from all thy
heart, and from all thy soul, and from all thy mind, and from all
thy strength, this is the first commandment; and the second is like,
namely this, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself; there is none
other commandment greater than these (Mark 12:29-31).
That the "Lord our God" is the Lord may be seen in other places
(Matt. 4:7, 10; 22:41-45; Luke 1:16, 17; John 20:28), as also that
"Jehovah" in the Old Testament is called "Lord" in the New (see n.
2921).
[4] If also this Divine truth is not received both in doctrine and
in life-that love toward the neighbor, or charity, and hence the
works of charity, are an essential of the church, it necessarily
follows that it is of the church to think what is true, but not to
think what is good; and thus that the thought of the man of the
church may be in contradiction and opposition to itself; that is,
may think what is evil and at the same time may think what is true;
thus may by thinking evil be with the devil, and by thinking truth
be with the Lord; when yet truth and evil do not at all agree, for
"No servant can serve two lords, for either he will hate the one and
love the other" (Luke 16:13). When faith separate establishes this,
and also confirms it in life, no matter how it may speak of the
fruits of faith, where then is the church?
...
AC 4772 ... To bring such a tunic
to this church, is in the internal sense to institute a comparison
of falsified goods and truths with the goods and truths of the
genuine church. That by Jacob is here represented not only the
Ancient, but also the Primitive Church, that is, the Christian
Church in its beginning, is because these are altogether the same as
to internals, and differ only in externals. The externals of the
Ancient Church were all representative of the Lord and of the
celestial and spiritual things of His kingdom, that is, of love and
charity and the faith thence derived, consequently of such things as
are of the Christian Church. Thus when the externals of the Ancient,
and also of the Jewish Church, are unfolded and as it were
unwrapped, the Christian Church is disclosed. This was signified
also by the veil of the temple being rent asunder (Matt. 27:51; Mark
15:38; Luke 23:45). It is for this reason that by Jacob the father
is represented not only the Ancient, but also the Primitive
Christian Church.
...
AC 4776. An evil wild beast hath devoured him.
That this signifies that the cupidities of evil had extinguished it,
is evident from the signification of an "evil wild beast," as being
a lie from a life of cupidities (n. 4729), consequently cupidities;
and from the signification of "devouring," as being to extinguish,
because predicated of the truth of the church.
The veriest truth of
the church is that love to the Lord and love toward the neighbor are
the primary things (Mark 12:29-31).
Cupidities extinguish this
truth; for those who are in a life of cupidities cannot be in a life
of love and charity, for the two are exact opposites. A life of
cupidities consists in loving self only, and not the neighbor except
from self, or for the sake of self. Hence those who are in this life
extinguish charity in themselves; and those who extinguish charity,
extinguish also love to the Lord; for there is no other means of
loving the Lord than charity, because the Lord is in charity. The
affection of charity is heavenly affection itself, which is from the
Lord alone. From this it may be seen that the cupidities of evil
extinguish the veriest truth of the church, on the extinction of
which a means is devised which is called saving, namely, faith; and
when this is separated from charity, truths themselves are defiled,
for then it is no longer known what charity is, nor even what the
neighbor is, and consequently neither what the internal of man is,
nor even what heaven is. For the internal of man, and heaven in man,
is charity-that is, willing well to another, to society, to one's
country, to the church, to the Lord's kingdom, and thus to the Lord
Himself. From this we may conclude what is the quality of the truths
of the church when those things which are essential are not known,
and when the things contrary to them, or cupidities, reign. When a
life of cupidities speaks concerning these truths, are not they
defiled to such a degree that they can no longer be recognized?
[2] That no one can be saved unless he has lived in the good of
charity, and so has become imbued with its affections, which are to
will well to others, and from willing well to do well to them; and
that no one can receive the truths of faith - that is, become imbued
with them and appropriate them to himself - but he who is in a life
of charity has been made manifest to me from those who are in
heaven, with whom I have been permitted to converse. There all are
forms of charity, with beauty and goodness according to the quality
of their charity; their delight, satisfaction, and happiness are
from their being able to do good to others from good will. The man
who has not lived in charity cannot possibly know that heaven and
its joy consist in willing well and in doing well from willing well,
because his heaven is willing well to himself, and from this willing
well doing well to others, when yet this is hell. For heaven is
distinguished from hell in this, that heaven, as above said, is
doing good from good will, and hell is doing evil from ill will.
They who are in love toward the neighbor do good from good will; but
they who are in the love of self do evil from ill will. The reason
of this is that they love no one but themselves, and others only so
far as they see themselves in them, and them in themselves; they
also regard these with hatred, which manifests itself as soon as
they recede and are no longer theirs. This is like robbers, who so
long as they are banded together love one another, but still at
heart desire to kill one another, if plunder may thus be obtained.
[3] From these things it may be seen what heaven is, that it is love
toward the neighbor; and what hell is, that it is the love of self.
They who are in love toward the neighbor are capable of receiving
all the truths of faith, and of being imbued with them and making
them their own; for in love toward the neighbor there is the all of
faith, because heaven and the Lord are in it. They on the other hand
who are in the love of self can in no wise receive the truths of
faith, because hell is in this love; nor can they receive the truths
of faith in any other way than for the sake of self-honor and gain;
thus they cannot possibly become imbued with them and make them
their own. But the things which they become imbued with and make
their own are denials of truth, for at heart they do not believe
even that there is a hell and a heaven, nor that there is a life
after death, and therefore they believe nothing that is said about
hell and heaven, or about a life after death, thus nothing at all
that is said from the Word and from doctrine about faith and
charity. When they are in worship they appear to themselves to
believe, but this because it has been implanted in them from early
childhood to put on this state at such a time; but as soon as they
are out of worship they are also out of this state; and then
thinking in themselves, they believe nothing at all, and also
according to the life of their loves devise things to favor them,
which they call truths, and which they confirm from the literal
sense of the Word, when yet they are falsities. Such are all who in
life and doctrine are in faith separate.
[4] Be it known, moreover, that all things are in the loves, for the
loves are what make the life; consequently, the Lord's life flows
solely into the loves. Such therefore as are the loves, such are the
lives, because such are the receptions of life. Love toward the
neighbor receives the life of heaven, and the love of self receives
the life of hell; thus in love toward the neighbor there is the all
of heaven, and in the love of self the all of hell. That all things
are in the loves may be illustrated from many things in nature.
Animals, both those that walk on the earth and those that fly in the
air or swim in the water, are all impelled according to their loves,
and into their loves flows whatever is conducive to their life, that
is, to their sustenance, habitation, and procreation. Hence animals
of every kind know their food, their abodes, and what concerns their
conjugial, such as mating, building nests, laying eggs, and bringing
up their young.
[5] The bees also know how to build cells, to suck honey from
flowers, to fill with it the honeycombs, and to make provision for
themselves against winter, and even to conduct a certain form of
government under a queen; besides other marvels. All these things
are effected by influx into their loves; the effects of life being
varied only by the forms of their affections. All these things are
in their loves; what then would there not be in heavenly love, if
man were in this? Would there not be the all of wisdom and
intelligence, which is in heaven? From this also it is that they who
have lived in charity, and no others, are received into heaven; and
that from charity they have the capacity of receiving and being
imbued with all truths, that is, with all things of faith. But the
contrary happens to those who are in faith separate, that is, in
some truths and not in charity. Their loves receive such things as
are in agreement with them, that is to say, the loves of self and of
the world receive those things which are contrary to truths, such as
are in the hells.
(Selections from Arcana Cœlestia 4766; 4772; 4776) |