The Lord's Omnipresence and
Omniscience
Spaces and times must be removed
from the ideas before the Lord's omnipresence with all and with
each individual, and His omniscience of things present and future,
can be comprehended.
Selection from
Apocalypse Explained
According to the spiritual sense
in which the arcana there predicted
but heretofore concealed are revealed.
Emanuel Swedenborg
(2) But inasmuch as
spaces and times cannot easily be removed from the ideas of the
thoughts of the natural man, it is better for a simple man not to think
of the Divine omnipresence and omniscience from any reasoning of the
understanding; it is enough for him to believe in them simply from his
religion, and if he thinks from reason, let him say to himself that
they exist because they pertain to God, and God is everywhere and
infinite, also because they are taught in the Word; and if he thinks of
them from nature and from its spaces and times, let him say to himself
that they are miraculously brought about. But inasmuch as the church is
at present almost overwhelmed by naturalism, and this can be shaken off
only by means of rational considerations which enable man to see what
is true, it will be well by means of such to draw forth these Divine
attributes out of the darkness that nature induces into the light; and
this can be done because, as has been said, the understanding with
which man is endowed is capable of being raised up into the interior
light of heaven if only man desires from love to know truths. All
naturalism arises from thinking about Divine things in accord with what
is proper to nature, that is, matter, space, and time. The mind that
clings to these, and is unwilling to believe anything that it does not
understand, cannot do otherwise than make blind its understanding, and
from the dense darkness in which it is immersed, deny that there is any
Divine providence, and thus deny the Divine omnipotence, omnipresence,
and omniscience, although these are just what religion teaches both
within nature and above nature. And yet these cannot be comprehended by
the understanding unless spaces and times are separated from the ideas
of its thought; for these are in some way present in every idea of
thought, and unless they are separated man cannot think otherwise than
that nature is everything, that it is from itself, and consequently
that the inmost of nature is what is called God, and that all beyond it
is merely ideal. And such, I know, will wonder how anything can
possibly exist where there is no time or space; and that the Divine
itself is without them, and that the spiritual are not in them, but are
only in appearances of them; and yet Divine spiritual things are the
very essence of all things that have existed or that exist, and natural
things apart from these are like bodies without souls, which become
carcasses.
Every man who has become naturalistic by thoughts from nature
continues such after death, and calls all things that he sees in the
spiritual world natural, because they are similar. Such, however, are
enlightened and taught by angels that these things are not natural, but
are appearances of natural things; and they are so far convinced as to
affirm that it is so. But they soon fall back and worship nature as
they did in the world, and at length separate themselves from the
angels and fall into hell, and cannot be taken out to eternity. The
reason is that their soul is not spiritual, but natural like the soul
of beasts, although with the ability of thinking and speaking because
they were born men. And because the hells at this day more than ever
before are full of such, it is important that such dense darkness
arising from nature, which at present fills and closes up the
thresholds of the understanding of men, should be removed by means of
rational light derived from spiritual.
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(Apocalypse Explained
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