LORD AND THE SPIRITUAL SUN GEORGE DE CHARMS 1946
Vol. LXVI
January, 1946
No. 1
New Church Life
A MONTHLY MAGAZINE DEVOTED TO THE TEACHINGS
REVEALED THROUGH EMANUEL SWEDENBORG.
The Lord and the Spiritual Sun.
An Address George de Charms 1
Human Pride.
A Sermon on Isaiah 2: 11. 12 Hugo Lj. Odhner 13
A Story for Children.
The Iron Age Amena Pendleton Haines 20
A Talk to Children.
Happiness Ormond Odhner 22
The "As Of One's Self." W. Cairns Henderson 25
The University.
A Means of the Growth of the Church F. E. Gyllenhaal 31
Editorial Department.
The Zionist Movement 37
South African Mission.
New Church Day, 1945 F. W. Elphick 42
Church News 44
Announcements.
General Assembly-June 15-19, 1946 48
Council Meetings-January 24-26, 1946 48
PUBLISHED AT
PRINCE AND LEMON STS., LANCASTER. PA.
BY
THE GENERAL CHURCH OF THE NEW JERUSALEM
BRYN ATHYN, PA.
Rev. W. B. Caldwell, Editor. Mr. H. Hyatt, Business Manager.
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Vol. LXVI
February, 1946
No. 2
The Seed That Fell Upon Stony Places.
A Sermon on Matthew 13: 5, 6 Karl R. Alden 49
The Two Rationals.
Ishmael and Isaac Martin Pryke 57
A Story for Children.
Iron and Clay Amena Pendleton Haines 62
The Earth Will Abide Forever Willis L. Gladish 65
The Spiritual World.
A Radio Talk Gilbert H. Smith 68
Scandinavia.
Church Activities in Wartime Alfred Acton 72
Editorial Department.
Liberty and Education 80
Who is a New-Churchman? Ambrose Cotleston 86
Review.
"New Horizon" (Sigstedt) Morley D. Rich 87
Church News 88
Announcements.
Baptisms, Marriages and Deaths 95
General Assembly-June 15-19, 1946 96
Western States 96
March, 1946
Vol. LXVI
No. 3
Divine Revelation.
A Sermon on Revelation 1: 1 Charles F. Doering 97
The Seven Last Words W. Cairns Henderson 106
Where Do Spirits Live? F. E. Gyllenhaal 111
The Visible and the Invisible.
An Address F. W. Elphick 119
Editorial Department.
Belief in the Divinity of Christ 131
Addressing University Students 133
Corporation of the General Church.
Committee on Nominations-Notice 134
Church News 136
Announcements.
baptisms, Marriages and Deaths 143
General Assembly-June 15-19, 1946 144
Vol. LXVI
April, 1946
No. 4
The Joy of Easter.
A Talk to Children George de Charms 145
The Real Purpose of Life.
A Sermon on John 18: 37, 38 F. E. Gyllenhaal 149
Seven Planets Alfred Acton 153
Communications.
Love to the Lord and Love towards the Neighbor.
Harold F. Pitcairn 154
Special Council Meetings.
Council of the Clergy Sessions Norbert H. Rogers 157
Joint Council Sessions Hugo Lj. Odhner 158
Annual Reports.
Secretary of the General Church Hugo Lj. Odhner 169
Council of the Clergy Norbert H. Rogers 172
Corporation of the General Church Edward H. Davis 179
Military Service Committee Doris G. Pendleton 180
Editor of "New Church Life." W. B. Caldwell 181
The Word Explained, Volume VII.
Vessels of Earth and of Brass 182
Church News 185
Announcements.
Eighteenth General Assembly-Program 191
Baptisms, Marriages and Deaths 192
Vol. LXVI
May, 1946
No. 5
Going Down To Egypt.
A Sermon William Whitehead 193
The Affirmative Response.
Address to the General Faculty Willard D. Pendleton 203
The Meaning of Victory.
Post-War Effects Morley D. Rich 214
Editorial Department.
Memorial to Bishop Tilson 221
Divine Authority-An Australian Discussion 223
Wartime Persecution 229
Communications.
Duration of the Earth Felix Elphick 232
Church News 234
Announcements.
Academy Joint Meetings-June 8, 1946 238
Baptisms, Marriages and Deaths 239
Eighteenth General Assembly-Program 240
Vol. LXVI
June, 1946
No. 6
Making All Things New.
A Sermon on Revelation 21:5 Hugo Lj. Odhner 241
A Talk to Children.
The Banner of the New Church George de Charms 249
Photograph 250
The New Church Philip Graham Cockerell 253
Swedenborg and The Word Explained.
An Address Alfred Acton 256
Mr. F. R. Cooper.
Photograph 268
Obituary Colley Pryke 269
Editorial Department.
Peace After Judgment 271
Testimony of a Clergyman 275
General Assembly Music 276
Corporation of the General Church.
Committee on Nominations-Special Notice 277
Church News
Announcements.
Academy Joint Meetings-June 8, 1946 286
British Assembly-August 3-5, 1946 286
Eighteenth General Assembly-Program 286
Vol. LXVI
July, 1946
The Salvable Remnant.
A Sermon on Luke 17: 34-36 Norbert H. Rogers 289
Rev. Willis L. Gladish.
Memorial Address Elmo C. Acton 297
Biographical Sketch 301
Photograph 302
Swedenborg and the Word Explained.
An Address. (Concluded.) Alfred Acton 304
Scandinavian Publications. Reviewed Hugo Lj. Odhner 309
Editorial Department.
Duration of the Earth-A Communication F. E. Gyllenhaal 314
Arcana Coelestia 931 315
Editorial Comment 315
"End of the World" 320
The Writings in Portuguese E. E. Iungerich 323
Communications.
Seven Planets Wertha Pendleton Cole 324
Church News 326
Announcements.
Baptisms, Marriages and Deaths 334
Thirty-Third British Assembly-August 3-5, 1946 336
Vol. LXVI
August, 1946
No. 8
EIGHTEENTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
BRYN ATHYN, JUNE 15-19, 1946.
The Church and its Growth.
Episcopal Address George de Charms 337
The Growth of the Church.
A Sermon on Revelation 12: 6 Willard D. Pendleton 347
Power.
Address at the Second Session Erik Sandstrom 354
Academy Commencement Address A. Wynne Acton 365
Assembly Impressions Morley D. Rich 372
Church News 376
Bryn Athyn-Ladies' Luncheon.
Academy Schools-Closing Exercises.
Hurstville; London.
Announcements.
Fall Assemblies and Episcopal Visits 383
Assembly Report 383
Baptisms, Marriages and Deaths 383
Vol. LXVI
September, 1946
No. 9
EIGHTEENTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
Report, Part II.
Journal of the Proceedings Hugo Lj. Odhner 385
Corporation of the General Church Edward II. Davis 406
Messages to the Assembly 407
Reports to the General Assembly.
Secretary of the General Church Hugo Lj. Odhner 412
Secretary of the Corporation Edward H. Davis 415
Editor of "New Church Life" W. B. Caldwell 416
Treasurer of the General Church Hubert Hyatt 418
Military Service Committee Doris C. Pendleton 422
The Academy.
Address at the Third Session C. E. Doering 426
The Nineteenth of June Banquet Hugo Lj. Odhner 437
Church News 461
Announcements.
Fall Assemblies and Episcopal Visits 463
Charter Day-October 25-26, 1946 463
Baptisms, Marriages and Deaths 464
October, 1946
No. 10
New Church Life
EIGHTEENTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
Report, Part III.
The Mystery of the Human Will.
Address at the Fourth Session Hugo Lj. Odhner 465
The Lord We Worship
Address at the Fifth Session Alfred Acton 478
The Pension Plan.
Address at the Sixth Session Edward C. Bostock 493
Ordination-19th of June.
Declaration of Faith and Purpose Willard D. Pendleton 499
The Soul of Heaven, A Sermon Gustaf Baeckstrom 501
Assembly Notes 507
Editorial Department.
Swedenborg Manuscript Discovered Alfred Acton 510
Publications Received 513
Communications.
Duration of the Earth Felix Elphick 514
The Term "Sunday School" Bert M. Berg 516
Held in Trust Gwynne Dresser Mack 517
Church News 519
Announcements 526
Index of the General Assembly Report 528
Vol. LXVI
November, 1946
No. 11
Faith and Experience.
Sermon on John 9 24-25 William Whitehead 529
The Last Judgment and the World Today.
An address Gustaf Baeckstrom 537
Thin y-Third British Assembly.
Group Photograph 548
Report of The Assembly Martin Pryke 549
Religious Education Program.
An Announcement F. E. Gyllenhaal
Canadian Northwest.
Pastoral Visit Karl R. Alden
Editorial Department.
A Precious Volume Preserved 561
Wanted: A New Church Edition of the Scriptures 564
The Dean Tells a Wopper 566
Church News 567
Announcements.
Baptism, Marriages and Deaths 575
Vol. LXVI
December, 1946
No. 12
The Sign to the Shepherds.
A Christmas Sermon on Luke 2: 12 F. E. Gyllenhaal 577
Charter Day Address W. Cairns Henderson 580
The Life of Regeneration-Selected Passages 586
Mrs. Mary E. Bostock.
Memorial Address Alfred Acton 587
Mr. David F. Gladish.
Memorial Address Elmo C. Acton 591
Canadian Northwest.
A Pastoral Visit Karl R. Alden 594
The Mother in the Home 602
Publishers of Potts' Concordance.
A Communication Mrs. Freda G. Griffith 606
Directory of the General Church.
Officials and Councils 607
The Clergy 608
Church News 61:2
Announcements.
Baptisms, Marriages and Deaths 624
NEW CHURCH LIFE
VOL. LXVI
JANUARY, 1946
No. 1
(Delivered at Local and District Assemblies in 1945.)
Man has been so created that he may see God. On this premise all religion rests. Yet the philosophic question as to how any finite being can possibly see the Infinite has baffled the most profound thinkers in every age. It implies a seeming contradiction, for all human sight, whether of the eye or of the mind, depends upon noticeable distinctions. The eye sees differences of light and shade, of form and color that mark the boundaries between things. The mind perceives differences between abstract qualities whereby ideas and thoughts are distinguished and defined. If all such limiting distinctions are removed nothing can be seen. And since, by definition, what is Infinite can have neither boundaries nor limits of any kind, it can be conceived of only as invisible. How, then, can God be seen?
From time immemorial men have of course pictured God in their imagination and, what is remarkable, while their ideas of Him have been extremely various, it has been impossible for any one to envisage Him otherwise than as a Man. In primitive religions the Deity has been identified with many animal forms, and even with plants and stones, but these objects have always been endowed with human qualities. Indeed, it would appear that there are only two ways in which man can possibly think of God, namely, either as a visible or as an invisible Being. If He is thought of as visible at all. He can be conceived only under a human form. If He is thought of as invisible, no other idea is possible except that of an all-powerful life force pervading the entire universe. These two seemingly incompatible ideas have always struggled for supremacy in human minds. Each is a half-truth which, taken by itself, becomes a falsity. Man's unaided reason turns to one or to the other, but has no power to embrace them both. Yet man cannot see God truly except as these two ideas are perfectly united. Their unition is perhaps the greatest of all miracles. It can be brought about only by means of Divine Revelation. But when it is accomplished, and so far as it is accomplished. God is truly seen.
The primary idea-the first in time with the race and with every individual-is of God under a human form. This is insinuated together with the earliest conscious sensations of every infant. It is conveyed to the mind by the tender care of the mother or the nurse who personifies the Providence of a loving Heavenly Father. Because of this, every child, as if by instinct, pictures God as a Man possessing unlimited power, being everywhere present, seeing and knowing all things. The simple cling tenaciously to this idea throughout life. It is strengthened and enriched with advancing age by the stories of the Word-the stories about the Angel of Jehovah who appeared to the prophets, and who led the descendants of Israel through all the varied struggles of their national history: and then the life story of Jesus Christ,-how He was born in Bethlehem and grew up in Nazareth; how He became a Teacher mighty in deed and word, healing the sick, raising the dead, compelling the winds and the waves to obey His will, confounding all His enemies by His surpassing wisdom, yet permitting them at last to take His life that He might rise again.
All this weaves the pattern of childhood's thought concerning God. The fact that He is pictured as a finite being, however big and wonderful, at that time presents no difficulty, because as yet the term "Infinite" has no meaning. A child has no basis for his thought save that which he derives from sense experience. His mind is formed by contact with the objects and the persons in the material world about him. At least it so appears to him, for he has no conscious realization of anything else. All his affections, his emotions and desires, seem to come to him from the things he sees and touches. His thinking, therefore, is inextricably bound up with matter, with measurable space and time, with natural incidents and personalities, and thus with finite limitations. For as yet he is not capable of abstract thought.
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It is of Providence that God should at first in this natural way be visualized by every man. Otherwise He could not be seen at all. For God is in very truth a Man. Yet He is at the same time Infinite, and to conceive of Him as a finite being is not to see Him as He truly is. For this reason a genuine vision of God is impossible to children. Indeed, many throughout their life retain this childish and inadequate concept of the Deity. But the true vision of God is the very gate of heaven. No one can enter there unless the limitations that mar his thought concerning the Creator and Supreme Ruler of the universe have been removed, in some degree at least; and this without removing the idea of what is human. In no finite mind can this removal ever be complete or absolute for the thought itself would then be infinite altogether one with the boundless wisdom of God. This indeed was accomplished by the Lord during His life on earth, and it constitutes the glorification of His Human. But to man it is impossible. And yet the marvel is, that by the aid of Divine Revelation, even with man, the limiting imperfections of natural thought can in part be removed. So far as this is done, the Lord appears in His glorified Divine Human. To this extent man enters into the wisdom of the angels,-a wisdom that can continue to be perfected more and more to all eternity.
In mediaeval times men regarded the true vision of God as a matter of grave concern. It was correctly thought that none could be saved but those who had this vision. But it was not known that all who acknowledged God under any form, however childish and imperfect, and who sincerely strove to keep His Law, could be instructed by the angels after death, and thus introduced into the genuine worship of the Lord. Because this was not known, there arose the mistaken idea that the salvation of the Gentiles-that is, of all who were in false religions-depended upon their conversion to the true faith while they were still on earth. As a consequence. Christian scholars vied with one another in their efforts to establish the one true faith and to do so they had to answer the question as to now God could be truly seen. But their opinions were divided, and the church was split into warring factions, each claiming to have the only saving faith, and striving by every possible means to impart that faith to others.
In our day, however, the search for a philosophic answer to the question has been almost completely abandoned.
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It is no longer considered as important. The prevailing opinion is that it matters not how a man thinks of God so long as he leads a good life. As we have noted, this in a sense is true. But the conclusion commonly drawn from it-that a true vision of God is of no real importance-is by no means true. While all who are innocently mistaken as to their concept of God can in the Lord's Providence, he instructed after death, this would not be possible if there were not somewhere on the earth a Church wherein the Lord is truly known and worshipped. If the genuine vision of God should altogether perish from among men, all connection between heaven and earth would be severed. There would then be no influx from the angels to preserve a state of innocence with those who are simple in heart. Men could not be protected against the danger of confirming their mistaken beliefs, and thus of closing their minds against any reception of the truth. There would be nothing to check the hells from exerting an overpowering influence over men. Evils would multiply beyond all bounds, to the utter destruction of the race, and redemption would be impossible. It follows that the preservation with men of a true idea of God is of the utmost importance. The very salvation of mankind depends upon it.
As a matter of fact, so far as man forsakes the teaching of the Word, and seeks by his own intelligence to unlock the secrets of the universe, he is inevitably led away from any idea of God as a Man. For he cannot escape from the thought of space. Man is a tiny creature in a universe vast beyond all imagination. God must be everywhere. He must heed the fall of every sparrow, and clothe the lilies of the field. He must control the destiny of every individual, and at the same time direct the motions of the stars a million light-years distant. Here indeed is a challenge to childhood's first formed concept of the Deity. Everyone who thinks from space, and at the same time contemplates the immensity of visible creation, is faced with an insoluble difficulty in any effort to retain his thought of God as a Man. As Solomon expressed it: "Will God indeed dwell on the earth? Behold, heaven, and the heaven of heavens cannot contain Thee: how much less this house that I have builded?" (I Kings 8: 27.)
On the other hand, the more deeply man probes into the heart of nature, the more he becomes convinced that there is an invisible and omnipresent force back of all phenomena.
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It is present in every atom of matter, mysteriously harnessed and contained. It is the source of all motion, the progenitor of all physical and chemical activity. Bound by its normal coverings, it operates in all nature according to fixed laws, whose wonders may be in definitely explored and used by man in ways forever new. But released from its bonds, it is revealed as pure energy, possessing terrifying and unimaginable potentiality. That this is true has long been known. But the recent discovery that man can release it at will, together with the actual demonstration of its destructive power, places upon man a new and terrible responsibility.
To the natural mind this energy appears to be the final reality of the universe. From it all things derive their origin. In it all things vanish. Beyond it nothing can be seen or even imagined. If man can learn to release it under controlled conditions, there is every promise that he can utilize his knowledge to the incalculable benefit of human society. But the realization that any man or group of men could at any time, for selfish reasons, either blast entire nations out of existence, or perhaps enforce obedience to their will under threat of doing so, outmodes all traditional ideas of warfare, and compels men completely to revise their thinking as to how the peace and security of the world may be preserved. Everything now seems to depend upon man's ability to use this newfound power only under the restraints of the highest moral and ethical principles, and prevent its abuse by unscrupulous nations or individuals. For atomic energy itself is totally destructive. It is utterly devoid of human qualities. It is the acme of ruthless, impersonal force. If this be regarded as the ultimate reality, then indeed it wipes out any possible thought of God as Human, and leaves man as the sole and final arbiter of his own destiny.
To this point the human mind is drawn inevitably by the logic of natural reasoning based on sense experience. But here this kind of reason stops, for it can go no further. Atomic energy would seem to be the last frontier of scientific investigation. If there is any higher truth that men may learn, it must come by way of Divine Revelation. Yet in modern times the stories of the Word have come to be regarded as the product of primitive thought,-the spontaneous imaginings of immature minds, which belong to the dreams of childhood.
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They have no place in the realistic thinking of the adult, except so far as they can be reinterpreted in the light of scientific knowledge. When so interpreted, the Bible becomes at best no more than a valuable collection of savings preserved from the wisest writers of antiquity. It may still be called the Word of God; but by this is no longer meant a Divine Revelation of eternal Truth, that comes to man with infallible Divine Authority. Wherever it runs counter to the dictates of natural reasoning, firmly founded on the facts of science, it must either be rejected or radically revised to agree with the informed opinions of the day. Because of this, the Bible in our modern age has no power to set man free from the limitations of his natural wind. Religions founded purely upon a faith in its literal teachings cannot lift man's thoughts above the reaches of scientific exploration with any assurance of a higher truth. These religions may be cherished because of their in exalted ideals, their moral principles, their personally satisfying explanations of life. But these, after all, are merely human opinions, differing with every church and every sect, in many respects mutually contradictory. Who shall say which of them is the real Truth of God? Because there seems to be no reliable proof to establish religious ideas, the search for authoritative truth has shifted from the Bible to the laboratory. This being the case how can the true vision of God be preserved? What can prevent the concept of God as a Cosmic Force from ultimately destroying all remnants of childhood's faith in Him as a Man?
To this vital question the only satisfactory answer is that which the Lord Himself now gives in the Writings of His Second Advent. There it is amply demonstrated, by personal experience and by appeal to self-evidencing reason, that atomic energy is not and cannot be the ultimate reality. The source of that energy is the fire of the natural sun, from which every atom is a tiny offshoot. But, contrary to all appearance, this sun has no power in itself. It is utterly dead, and all that is derived from it is dead. (D. L. W. 157.) Within it and above it there is another sun, by means of which all natural suns have been created: by means of which they are perpetually maintained in existence, and from which, from moment to moment, they derive all their apparent power. This spiritual sun is not dead, but living.
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It is a sun, not of fire, but of love,-the very love of God which is the real First Cause of all creation, the real Source of all activity, all motion in the universe.
To know that there are two suns-one spiritual and the other natural-is a matter of supreme importance. Unless this be known, we are told, "nothing concerning creation or concerning man can rightly be understood." (D. L. W. 107.) Without this knowledge we cannot conceive of a spiritual world, where those who are deprived of their physical senses by death may still have warmth and light, where they may see and feel spiritual objects. For the spiritual sun is Divine Love, and this Love is the very substance of all spiritual things. (T. C. R. 76.) The activity of this substance is what is perceived as spiritual heat and light. In both worlds it is the Source of all life, of all love, of all intelligence. It gives the "esse of life to every man; and it is the vital fire itself which fills the interiors of man with heat, as can be seen from love: for in proportion as love increases with man he grows warm, and in proportion as love decreases he grows cold." (A. C. 6832.)
Concerning the spiritual sun, we are told that it appears before the sight of the angels, high above the heavens, as it were at a great distance, even as the sun of the world appears to men. Unlike our sun, however, it does not appear to rise and set, but remains constantly at a middle distance from the horizon, as if at midmorning, although its brilliance increases as the day advances, and grows less with the approach of evening. The cause of these apparent changes is not in the sun, but in the varying states of affection with the angels. (A. C. 3708, 5097, 10135.) But although the spiritual sun is thus seen as if in a distant place, it is really present everywhere in the entire universe, its living fire tempered by successive veilings to angelic and human reception. It is omnipresent in both worlds, the world of nature as well as the world of spirits and angels. (Divine Wisdom XII 3.) The natural sun, as we have said, has been produced by it, and through that sun it has produced all the substances of nature. (D. L. IF. 303.) The seeming power of the natural sun-so terrifyingly revealed in atomic energy-is what the Writings call a "dead force." By this is meant a force imposed from without, as when a man throws a stone; the stone exerts a force that is not its own, but that has been imparted to it by the man. All of nature is dead.
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Every motion in it, from greatest to least, is imposed upon it by the spiritual sun. The fire of the natural sun, with all its energy, is but a passive tool, fashioned and moved by the Lord from His Divine Love. (A. E. 1207.)
That there is a power greater than atomic energy, is clearly evident from the fact that this energy is held bound, as if in chains. No force can be restrained except by another force equal to or greater than itself. What power holds the electrons in their minute but marvelously perfect orbits? That this power is not a higher form of mechanical energy, but the living force of Divine Love, is equally evident, because the activities of nature are governed by preordained laws, are directed with surpassing wisdom to produce innumerable forms of use, and are organized for the accomplishment of one supreme, all dominating purpose, namely, the formation and continual perfection of a heaven from the human race. The same thing is apparent from the fact that man possesses the faculties of will and understanding, neither of which can be accounted for on the basis of atomic energy.
But what has this to do with the vision of God? It is by the acknowledgment that the life-force pervading the universe is not a purposeless mechanical energy, but is the living force of a boundless Divine Love, the very activity of which is Wisdom itself, that we can see that God is a man, and at the same time can understand how He is omnipresent in all creation. It is by this means that we can retain the simple concept of Him that is implanted in infancy, and is nourished by the literal stories of the Word, and at the same time remove the limitations of space whereby that concept is rendered inadequate to the adult mind imbued with scientific knowledge. For then we can continue to visualize Him as a Man, in personal form and aspect, and yet think of Him, not from space, not from person, but from the very essence of all that is human, that is, from love and Wisdom. In no other way can God be truly seen. To do this is to see God as a Man, and at the same time as the Sun of Heaven, the living Center and the Vital Soul of the entire universe.
As to the need for man to visualize God as a Man. we are taught that "it would be impossible for man to acknowledge God, or anything belonging to Him, unless God had manifested Himself in a personal human form." (Coronis 48.)
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The reason given is that "nature, or the material world of spatial objects, "surrounds man, and he does not see, feel, or breathe anything but what is from it, and in contact with the organs of his body. From this his mind conceives and adopts a rational which lies in the midst of the bosom of nature like an embryo in a womb." (Ibid.) By this is meant that man adopts an understanding of all things based on the properties of matter, measurable space, geometric form, and mechanical motion. "How then," the number continues, "can a man in this state, by any method, look through nature, and acknowledge anything that is above her, as everything Divine, heavenly, and spiritual is. . . . Wherefore it is an absolute necessity that God should manifest Himself and cause Himself to be acknowledged, and after acknowledgment should move man with His Divine inspiration, and by this, received in heart, lead man at length even to Himself in heaven."
Elsewhere we are given the reason why God cannot be conceived by man apart from the idea of a person. `When we consider that everything in the Lord is Divine, and that the Divine is above all thought, and altogether incomprehensible even to the angels, (while) man is such that he can have no idea of thought whatever about abstract things unless he adjoins something natural which has entered from the world through the senses (for without some such natural things his thought perishes as in an abyss and is dissipated)," (A. C. 5110), it becomes clear that the Lord must reveal Himself under some form.
The only form that can be a perfect embodiment of love and wisdom is the human form. Man is the only created being who possesses both these faculties with any degree of completeness. The sense image of the people with whom we come in contact is therefore the only adequate embodiment in which we can visualize the abstract idea of love, or of wisdom. These can have no meaning to us except as we think of some person who loves, or who is wise. If, therefore, we are to think of God at all in terms of love and wisdom, we must necessarily picture Him as a person, clothing His Divine Love and Wisdom in our thought with the natural form of man that we have derived from sense experience. No other form is at all adequate. "Lest, therefore, what is Divine should perish in man, . . . it pleased Jehovah to present Himself such as He actually is, and such as He appears in heaven, namely, as a Divine Man."
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God is Man because He is Infinite Love, and Infinite Wisdom, and love and wisdom are what make a man to be man. No one can be called a "man" merely from his bodily form. If this were true, a statute of wood or of stone would be a man. It is the ability to love and to become intelligent and wise that makes anyone "human" in the true sense. A man, therefore, is nothing but a form of love and wisdom. Nor can he in any way be seen or known except as these qualities are manifested through the speech and action of his body. Apart from the idea of "person," they are utterly invisible and intangible to us. For the same reason we cannot possibly have any idea of the Love and Wisdom of God unless we think of God as a Person.
Yet, if we think of this Divine Person from space, the idea is at once limited, and it becomes impossible to conceive of God as Infinite. It is possible, however, to think of the Person, not from space, but from essence, and in this case the limitations are or may be progressively removed. Concerning this we read: "The idea of persons and places limits the thought, since it confines it to persons and places, and thus limits it. This idea of thought is proper to the natural, while the idea abstracted from persons and places extends itself into heaven in every direction, and is no otherwise limited than the sight of the eye is limited when it looks up into the sky without intervening objects; such an idea is proper to the spiritual." (A. E. 405.)
This may be illustrated by the thought of any particular person, as a governor, a president, or a king, when compared with government or royalty, which is common to all such rulers. The one limits the thought to the peculiar idiosyncrasies and imperfections of an individual, while the other introduces the thought of an ideal and perfect governor, president, or king. "In the spiritual world, nothing is regarded as determined to person, because directing the attention in speech to person narrows and limits the idea, instead of extending it and making it unlimited. Extension and absence of limitation in speech cause it to be universal, and to comprise and be able to express innumerable and also ineffable things. Hence the speech of the angels is of this character, especially the speech of the celestial angels, which is relatively unlimited; and in consequence everything of their speech flows into the infinite and the eternal, consequently into the Divine of the Lord." (A. C. 5253.)
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The reason, we are taught, why "men do not comprehend that the Creator of the universe can be in a Human (form) is because their concept of the universe is from space, which idea does not reach God. . . . Of the Divine from which is the universe an idea is to be conceived in no other way than of the Divine Man in Firsts, who is Life Itself, and whose Divine Love appears as a Sun above the heavens, whence all things are." (Ath. Cr. 120.) Wherefore we are admonished to "think of God from His Essence, and from that of His Person, and not of His Person, and from that of His Essence. For to think of His Essence from His Person is to think materially of His Essence also; but to think of His Person from His Essence is to think spiritually even of His Person." (A. R. 611.) And finally, we read in Apocalypse Explained, no. 1097: "Allow me to add, that the idea of God as Man has been implanted in every nation throughout the whole world, but, what I lament, it has been destroyed in Christendom."
Commenting on this, we might note that this idea has not as yet been completely destroyed even in Christendom. Among simple Christians. God is still envisaged as a Man. But with the learned, for the most part, God is thought of as invisible, and is identified with the forces of nature that mark the boundary of natural knowledge As we have seen, these forces are the very antithesis of what is human. And while the simple can indeed cling for a time to their treasured belief in God as a Man, they cannot reconcile this belief with the seemingly unquestionable findings of modern scientific research. They have nothing with which to combat the arrogant claims of purely natural reason, except the literal teaching of the Old and New Testaments as these are commonly interpreted by the religious teachers of the day. This teaching is utterly unable to explain how God can be a Man and at the same time be infinite and omnipresent. Under the impact of modern thought, therefore, their faith is being steadily undermined, and it cannot long survive. Nothing can preserve it but the Revelation of spiritual-rational Truth now given to the New Church as the Divinely authoritative teaching of the Lord Himself.
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For this alone can lift man's mind above the binding limitations of thought from space and person, enabling him to unite the simple idea of God as a Man, which lies at the heart of his childhood faith, with the idea of God as the omnipresent Ruler of the universe, that he may know and worship the Lord Jesus Christ in His Glorified Human, as Divine Love and Divine Wisdom in human form.
How tremendously important it is that this spiritual vision of God should be received by men, and should spread to all nations is pointedly emphasized by the discovery of atomic energy. Since the almost unlimited power of destruction that lies latent in every atom of matter has been entrusted to man's keeping, it becomes clear, as never before, even to our natural understanding, that nothing but the Truth of the New Church, received in heart and life, can permanently ensure the future safety of the race.
This Truth concerning God, and how He may be rightly seen and known and worshipped, is the key to all wisdom. It is the key to an understanding of where the tremendous mechanical forces of nature belong in the Divine scheme of creation, and of how it is intended that these forces should be used for the spiritual as well as the temporal welfare of mankind. And the love of the Lord that is possible only to those who truly see and acknowledge Him as the Infinite Creator and Preserver of the universe-only to those who from love search out, learn, and strive to keep His Law-is the only power that can overcome the evil passions of self-love and love of the world that prompt man to abuse his knowledge for the sake of dominion or of wealth.
With the New Church rests the hope of the future; and the responsibility that this imposes upon New Churchmen is clear. Yet the protection of the Church, the protection of the race, is the work of the Lord alone. And we believe that He, who in His Providence has permitted the secret of atomic energy to be discovered, will withhold men from its abuse, by fear and by the remnant of simple faith that remains in all religions, until the New Church can become firmly and widely established throughout the world, that it may bring to fruition the blessings to be derived from the new found knowledge, rightly used.
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