ADDRESS TO CHILDREN Rev. GEORGE DE CHARMS 1932
NEW CHURCH LIFE
VOL. LII JANUARY, 1932 No. 1
THE STARRY HEAVEN.
When David was a little boy he helped to take care of his father's sheep. Often he sat alone through the long hours of the night, guarding them lest some wild beast should come upon them. And as he watched, he looked up into the sky at the bright stars shining there,-so many that he could not count them,-so far away that, although they were great suns, they looked like tiny points of light. He loved the stars because they were like friends who kept him company and talked with him during his lonely vigil. They spoke to him especially about the Great God who created this vast universe of suns and earths. They seemed to tell him that this same God, although so far away that He could order the movements of the stars, was at the same time very near, protecting even him, a little shepherd boy. When David thought of this, he felt very small indeed. But his heart was filled with a great love to the Lord, the merciful Heavenly Father, and he sang this song of praise to Him: "O Lord, our Lord, how excellent is Thy name in all the earth! who hast set Thy glory above the heavens. When I consider Thy heavens, the work of Thy fingers, the moon and the stars which Thou hast ordained; what is man, that Thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, that Thou visitest him!"
If you go out some starry night and look up into the heavens thinking of the Lord, you also will feel very much as David did. But you can know more about the starry heaven than David knew, and the more you know the more wonderful will appear the Divine Providence of the Lord. New and marvelous things have been revealed to the New Church about the stars, in order that we may better understand how wise, how good, is the Lord, and so may learn to love and worship Him more truly.
If you think that all those stars are suns, many of them much larger than our sun, only very, very far away; and if you think that, around each of these suns; earths are turning-earths like ours-on which millions of people are living; if you think that these people have been living on those earths for millions of years, and that everyone who has been born on any earth, even from the beginning of time, has gone into the other world, there to live forever; then you may realize how immense the heavens are, and how innumerable the angels. Yet the Lord takes care of them all, He watches over every little boy and girl in all the earths of the starry heaven. Indeed, He says in His Word that "not a sparrow shall fall on the ground without your Father, and the very hairs of your head are all numbered." This is a wonderful thing,-that the Lord, the infinite Creator of the universe, can still be near to watch over every little child, to guard him, and to care for him every moment of his life on earth, and in the other world forever. It makes us feel very small and very humble; and it makes us love the Lord, to think how tenderly He cares for us.
It is well that we should think sometimes about the greatness of the Lord, and that we should not only look up into the sky to see the stars as lovely diamonds on a velvet cloth, but should learn from the Lord to know the people who live upon the earths in the starry heaven. If we think of the men and women, boys and girls, living on these distant earths, the stars will mean much more to us; for we can think of those people as friends and playmates. The Lord wants us so to think of them. He wants us to love them because they also are His children, and the sheep of His pasture.
And this is why He sent His prophet, Emanuel Swedenborg, to visit those far-off earths, that he might tell us something about them.
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This is indeed a wonderful thing in itself. For those earths are so far apart that it seems impossible that anyone could visit them. You know that you cannot walk a single mile in less than about fifteen minutes. Now the nearest of all the earths to us is Venus, and when it is closest to us it is about twenty-five million miles away. If you were to start from here, and walk a mile every fifteen minutes, it would take you seven hundred and thirteen years, five months, and twenty-five days to come to Venus.
Yet Swedenborg visited the heavens of those who live on planets a thousand times farther away than Venus. This he could do because he was in the other world where there is no space, and where the angels of all those distant earths appear together in the sight of the Lord, as if they were one Great Man. Because of this, when Swedenborg's spiritual eyes were opened, and when the Lord sent an angel to direct his way, it was possible for him to travel almost instantly to the heavenly societies of those who had lived upon those distant planets. He could see them and talk with them, and they could show him how they live, and the strange things that exist upon their earths.
We are going to learn something about these people, and about the earths from which they came. First we shall hear of those who are nearest to us,-the planets that turn around our sun. Swedenborg tells us about five of these,-Mercury, Jupiter, Mars, Saturn and Venus. These planets you can see. Each one is different, and if you know where to look for them you can always tell them from the other stars. We shall go with Swedenborg to visit the people who live on each of these earths, so that when you look up into the sky at night, and find their planet, you may think of them. Afterwards we shall learn about the Moon, and lastly about planets that are so far, far away that they can never be seen in our sky, and yet on which are men and women, boys and girls, plants, and animals, and birds. If you come to know these things, will not the stars become your friends, when you are out alone at night? And will they not speak to you, even as they did to David long ago, singing to your hearts with joy, "O Lord, our Lord, how excellent is Thy name in all the earth!"
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LESSON: Psalm 8.
MUSIC: Hymnal, pages 87, 92, and 100 (no. 22).
[EDITORIAL NOTE: The above Address is the first of a series by Bishop de Charms on the subject of The Earths in the Universe. He has kindly made them available for publication in our pages, and one will appear each month until the series is completed.]