The Lord's Omnipresence and
Omniscience
In the natural world there are
spaces and times,
but in the spiritual world these are appearances.
Selection from
Apocalypse Explained
According to the spiritual sense
in which the arcana there predicted
but heretofore concealed are revealed.
Emanuel Swedenborg
(1) The reason is that all
things that appear in the spiritual world are immediately from the sun
of heaven, which is the Lord's Divine love; but all things that appear
in the natural world are from the same, but by means of the sun of the
world, which is pure fire. Pure love, from which all things in the
spiritual world exist immediately, is immaterial; but pure fire,
through which all things in the material world exist mediately, is
material. This is why all things that come forth in the spiritual world
are by virtue of their origin spiritual, and all things that exist in
the natural world are by virtue of their secondary origin material; and
material things in themselves are fixed, permanent, and measurable.
They are fixed because they endure, however the states of men may be
changed, like the lands, mountains, and seas. They are permanent,
because they recur regularly in turn, like the seasons, generations,
and germinations. And they are measurable, because all things can be
defined, as spaces by miles and furlongs, and these by feet and spans,
and as times by days, weeks, months, and years. But in the spiritual
world all things are as if they were fixed, as if they were permanent,
and as if they were measurable, and yet in themselves they are not so.
For they exist and continue according to the states of the angels, so
that they make one with those states, and consequently they change in
whatever way those states change. But this takes place especially in
the world of spirits, into which every man first comes after death, and
is not so in heaven or in hell. This occurs in the world of spirits,
because every man there undergoes changes of state, and is thus
prepared for heaven or for hell.
But spirits do not reflect upon these changes and variations, because they
are spiritual and are thus in spiritual thought, and with this each and
all things that they perceive by sense make one; also because they are
separated from nature, and yet they see in the spiritual world things
exactly like those they saw in the world, as lands, mountains, valleys,
waters, gardens, forests, plants, palaces, houses, garments with which
they are clothed, food by which they are nourished, animals, and
themselves as men. All these things they see in a clearer light than that
by which they saw like things in the world, and they feel them by a more
exquisite touch than they had in the world. For these reasons man after
death is wholly ignorant that he has put off his material part, and that
he has emigrated from the world of his body into the world of his spirit.
I have heard many declaring that they have not died, and that they could
not understand how anything of their body could have been rejected in the
grave; and for the reason that all things in that world are like those in
this world; and they do not know that the things they there see and feel
are not material, but are substantial from a spiritual origin, and yet are
real things, since they have the same origin that all things in this world
have, with this difference only, that something additional like an outer
garment has been added from the sun of the world to those things that are
in the natural world by virtue of which they have become material, fixed,
permanent, and measurable. But yet I can assert that those things that are
in the spiritual world are more real than those in the natural world, for
the dead part that is added in nature to the spiritual does not constitute
reality but diminishes it. This is evident from the state of the angels of
heaven compared with the state of men on the earth, and from all things
that are in heaven compared with all things in the world.
As
there are like things in heaven and in our world, in the heavens there are
spaces and times, but the spaces there, like the lands themselves and the
things upon them, are appearances; for they appear according to the states
of the angels, and the extensions of spaces and distances appear according
to the similarities and dissimilarities of states. By states are meant
states of love and wisdom, or of affections and of thoughts therefrom,
which are manifold and various. According to these the angelic societies
in the heavens are distant from each other, also the heavens are distant
from the hells, and the societies of the hells from each other. It has
been granted me to see how likeness of state conjoins, and lessens the
extension of space or distance, and how unlikeness of state separates, and
produces extension of space or distance. Those there who appear to be a
mile apart can instantly be present with each other when the love of one
for the other is stirred up, and on the other hand those who are talking
together can instantly become a mile apart when anything of hatred is
aroused.
That spaces in the spiritual world are mere appearances has also been made
evident to me by this, that many from distant lands, as from various
kingdoms of Europe, from Africa, and from India, also the inhabitants of
different planets and of widely separated earths, have been present with
me. And yet spaces in the heavens appear extended in the same way as the
spaces of our earth. But as the spaces there have only a spiritual origin,
and not at the same time a natural origin, and thus appear according to
the states of the angels, so the angels can have no idea of spaces, but
they have instead an idea of their states; for the changeableness of the
spaces gives rise to the idea that they are from a spiritual origin, thus
from a likeness or unlikeness of affections and of thoughts therefrom.
It
is the same in regard to times, for as spaces are, so are times, since
progressions through spaces are also progressions through times. Times
also are appearances of states because the sun of heaven, which is the
Lord, does not there make days and years by its revolutions and
progressions, as the sun of the world seems to do; consequently in the
heavens there is perpetual light and a perpetual spring, and therefore
times there are not fixed, permanent, and measurable. And as times also
vary according to the states of the affections and of the thoughts
therefrom, for they are short or diminished by things delightful to the
affections, and are long or lengthened by things undelightful to the
affections, so the angels cannot have from appearance an idea of time, but
they have instead an idea of states from its origin. All this makes clear
that the angels in heaven have no idea of space and time, but they have a
spiritual idea about these, which is an idea of state.
But this idea of state with the consequent idea of the appearance of space
and time comes solely in and from the ultimates of creation there; the
ultimates of creation there are the lands upon which angels dwell. It is
there that spaces and times appear, and not in the spiritual things
themselves by which the ultimates were created; nor do they appear in the
affections themselves of angels, except when the thought from them extends
to ultimates. But it is otherwise in the natural world where spaces and
times are fixed, permanent, and measurable, and therefore enter into the
thoughts of men and limit them, and distinguish them from the spiritual
thoughts of angels. This is the chief reason why man cannot easily
comprehend the Divine omnipresence and omniscience, for even when he
wishes to comprehend them he is liable to fall into the error that God is
the inmost of nature, and is for that reason omnipresent and omniscient.
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(Apocalypse Explained
1218 -1219)
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