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Should we Fear God?

Napsal(a) Rev. Dan Goodenough

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A question from a friend: "Could you please explain how to understand the following statement?:

“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom: a good understanding have all they that do His commandments.” (Psalm 111:10, and, similarly, Proverbs 9:10.)

It's a good question: How can FEAR be a beginning of wisdom? Especially if the object of fear is a God of love?

This theme of fearing the Lord Jehovah runs strongly through the Old Testament, the revelation given to the Hebrews who lived before He came to earth as Jesus Christ. Here's one example to start with:

"Let all the earth fear Jehovah: let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of Him. For He spoke, and it was done; He commanded, and it stood fast." (Psalms 33:8-9)

Jehovah is Creator. The Old Testament often describes Him as a powerful and demanding God. He commands that people learn to obey Him. He rewards the obedient and punishes those who disobey and turn away from Him. He sometimes changes His mind, and at times Moses and others apparently argued with Him, persuading Him to reach different conclusions. (2 Samuel 24:16) He can even “laugh at” the wicked. (Psalms 37:13) David once lamented that God “cast us off and humiliated us;” and that He sleeps while evil is done. (Psalms 44:9,23)

The spiritual meaning of these Old Testament passages, explained in the Heavenly Doctrines given through Swedenborg, shows that in fact God punishes no one. The pain and penalty of bad consequences come from the evil that drives human beings from within. God allows punishment to restore order, and He brings good from its evil – acting always from the infinite love that is His essence. But the "natural man" – including the low earthly mind within us all – sees God as wrathful, arbitrary and vengeful. In reality, God is loving, and it is the natural man who is wrathful against God, feeling He is angry at us.

Still, a number of Old Testament passages urge us to fear God in some sense. Psalm 34 describes clearly the kind of person who truly “fears” the Lord. These passages are written especially for the natural man in all of us, and for children – to help us understand how in our low natural minds we should listen seriously to the Lord God our Creator, and obey Him, especially His Ten Commandments.

At first this may feel like the fear of God as Lawgiver because He may punish us – and so a young person, or an angry sinner, is addressed bluntly: the way to wisdom is to begin by fearing God who created us and set before us a life of order and goodness. If we learn to obey our Maker, we will grow and learn about God’s love, and the fear we felt at first changes its character, and our love for God can grow.

WHAT IS THE SPIRITUAL SENSE OF FEARING GOD?

The New Testament and the Heavenly Doctrines call us to a higher understanding of God, and of fearing God, including the concept of holy fear. Here is one summary:

To fear the Lord’s name means, symbolically, to love, because everyone who loves another is afraid of injuring the one he loves. There is no genuine love without that fear. Accordingly, someone who loves the Lord is afraid of doing evil, because evils go counter to the Lord, as they go counter to His Divine laws in the Word…. To fear God means, symbolically, to love things having to do with God, by doing them, and refusing to do things which go counter to Him.” (Apocalypse Revealed 527)

One short summary of the spiritual sense says simply that fearing the Lord as “the beginning of wisdom" means that it is wisdom to worship the Lord. (Prophets and Psalms 361).

More explanation about fearing God comes in a discussion about “the small and the great” who “fear” the Lord’s name (Revelation 11:18). After death all people, Christian or not, spiritually small and great, “are saved who fear God and live in mutual love, in uprightness of heart and in sincerity from a religious principle, for all such, by an intuitive faith in God and by a life of charity, are associated together as to their souls with angels of heaven, and are thus conjoined to the Lord and saved.” (Apocalypse Explained 696:1)

Scriptural passages urging us “to fear Jehovah” also say that we should “keep and do” His words and commandments – because we worship God by means of truths and goods both. “Fearing” relates to a person’s understanding, and goodness in life relates to the will within us. Divine truth can bring a scary fear, in that it condemns the evil to hell. But Divine good does not condemn, since so far as a person receives and acts out of authentic goodness, that good takes away condemnation. “So far as a person is in the good of love there is fear of God;… also dread and terror disappear and become holy fear attended with reverence, so far as a person is in the good of love and in truths….” (Apocalypse Explained 696:6) Similarly, awe and reverence in worship vary with everyone according to our state of life.

Fear is not absent in love of God and the neighbor:

Spiritual fear is a holy fear that abides within every spiritual love, variously according to the quality and quantity of the love. In such a fear is the spiritual person, and he knows that the Lord does not do evil to anyone…, but does good to all, and desires to raise up everyone … into heaven to Himself. This is why the fear of the spiritual person is a holy fear, lest by evil life and false doctrine a person should turn away and so do harm to that Divine love in himself. (Apocalypse Explained 696:23)

Many passages in Swedenborg’s Writings discuss “holy fear” further – our fear of harming God and people whom we love.

SO, SHOULD I BE AFRAID OF GOD?

In actual living, when we love someone, we like to think of good things to do for him or her. But maybe the very first essential – the beginning of wisdom – is to avoid anything that would hurt a person or somehow be overbearing. An early enthusiastic love can be too powerful if we don’t think through the possible effects of our words or actions. A very strong religious convert can make promises beyond what his inner being can sustain until he has taken actual new steps in his living. In that way “fear” is, in time, a first or primary for our love for anyone, including love of God.

On the other hand, there is a contrary fear of God that in itself does not begin wisdom. “Fear of God in evil people is not love, but a fear of hell.” (Apocalypse Revealed 527) This natural fear is “a fearfulness, dread and terror of dangers and punishments, and thus of hell.…” (Apocalypse Explained 696:23) – far distant from a fear that is attached to love for God.

Old Testament descriptions portraying God as angry, changeable, and arbitrary speak to this low spiritual mentality, and should not be taken as the truth about God – though they do picture how many people envision God. And they do show us a key reality – that God the Creator does exist, and this universe, and my life, are more than just my personal possessions to play with, enjoy, and build up my own self-image. And if I am a creation and live His way, perhaps He can make me happy in this His world.

The realities of this God and His creation can be known truly only through a higher spiritual kind of fear flowing from love – yet a low natural fear may come first in time. When a person examines himself rationally and discovers “some evil, and says to himself, ‘This is a sin,’ and abstains from it through fear of eternal punishment … then for the first time the person from a pagan, becomes a Christian.” (True Christian Religion 525)

Jacob once awoke afraid after a strong dream about God, and he said, “Surely Jehovah is in this place; and I knew it not…. How dreadful is this place! This is none other but the house of God…., and this is the gate of heaven.” (Genesis 28:16-18) After a little time to reflect, he vowed: “If God will be with me, and will keep me in this way that I go, and will give me bread to eat, and raiment to put on, so that I come again to my father’s house in peace, then shall Jehovah be my God….” (Genesis 28:20-21) We know not if this fearful and rather selfish vow made Jacob a wise follower of Jehovah, but later chapters do show Jacob as obedient to God.

I personally believe the literal meaning of “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom”. Obedience and faith often do begin with a low-level, natural-minded fear.

And that fear does contain a felt sense that there IS a Creator God (“I AM”) who wants humans to act according to His created systems. In this way fear is, in time, the beginning of wisdom.

Even though rooted at first in self-love, fear of God can be part of God’s “Let there be light” that begins our spiritual rebirth, and goes with our first vision “that there is something higher” than self. (See Arcana Coelestia 20: that “a person begins to know the good and the true are something higher.”) If you are in a state of fearful darkness, and think that “there is something higher,” something good and true above your control, you may be starting to let your Creator’s light show you the way.

Of course, a low-level scary fear needs to mature and grow into a spiritual fear. If we repent and shun evils, we open our door to the Lord, and allow Him to lead us through spiritual reform and rebirth (regeneration). He leads us towards holy fear, from a good love that is far different from “the darkness upon the faces of the deep” (our mental state before regeneration; Genesis 1:2)

Yes, even starting from a natural dread of hell, if you ACT from that fear by stopping some foul thing you do, you are beginning towards wisdom, by believing the fear is real – because God is real, and an unhappy afterlife is real. And, you point yourself on a path in God’s direction. This beginning in time may feel uncertain, cloudy, even silly – yet come from a feeling that an imperative from your Maker is real and makes sense. And if you act from that belief, then the belief begins to be a reality within you – a tiny beginning of wisdom. If you repeat and continue in it, the Lord leads you into a holier fear which flows from love. The key here might be if you’re willing to do God’s teachings even at times when you’re NOT feeling fear of Him or of hell. Perhaps this is the moment that wisdom actually begins.

People who live in the stream of God’s providence are “carried along constantly toward happier things, whatever appearance the means may present.” (Arcana Coelestia 8478:4) They trust in God with a spiritual fear of acting against His love, or bringing harm to others, because they wish to serve other people in God’s creation, and to receive within themselves something that comes from God.

“Thou wilt show me the path of life. In Thy presence is fullness of joy; at Thy right hand are pleasures for evermore.” (Psalm 16:11)

Bible

 

Genesis 27

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1 It happened, that when Isaac was old, and his eyes were dim, so that he could not see, he called Esau his elder son, and said to him, "My son?" He said to him, "Here I am."

2 He said, "See now, I am old. I don't know the day of my death.

3 Now therefore, please take your weapons, your quiver and your bow, and go out to the field, and take me venison.

4 Make me savory food, such as I love, and bring it to me, that I may eat, and that my soul may bless you before I die."

5 Rebekah heard when Isaac spoke to Esau his son. Esau went to the field to hunt for venison, and to bring it.

6 Rebekah spoke to Jacob her son, saying, "Behold, I heard your father speak to Esau your brother, saying,

7 'Bring me venison, and make me savory food, that I may eat, and bless you before Yahweh before my death.'

8 Now therefore, my son, obey my voice according to that which I command you.

9 Go now to the flock, and get me from there two good young goats. I will make them savory food for your father, such as he loves.

10 You shall bring it to your father, that he may eat, so that he may bless you before his death."

11 Jacob said to Rebekah his mother, "Behold, Esau my brother is a hairy man, and I am a smooth man.

12 What if my father touches me? I will seem to him as a deceiver, and I would bring a curse on myself, and not a blessing."

13 His mother said to him, "Let your curse be on me, my son. Only obey my voice, and go get them for me."

14 He went, and got them, and brought them to his mother. His mother made savory food, such as his father loved.

15 Rebekah took the good clothes of Esau, her elder son, which were with her in the house, and put them on Jacob, her younger son.

16 She put the skins of the young goats on his hands, and on the smooth of his neck.

17 She gave the savory food and the bread, which she had prepared, into the hand of her son Jacob.

18 He came to his father, and said, "My father?" He said, "Here I am. Who are you, my son?"

19 Jacob said to his father, "I am Esau your firstborn. I have done what you asked me to do. Please arise, sit and eat of my venison, that your soul may bless me."

20 Isaac said to his son, "How is it that you have found it so quickly, my son?" He said, "Because Yahweh your God gave me success."

21 Isaac said to Jacob, "Please come near, that I may feel you, my son, whether you are really my son Esau or not."

22 Jacob went near to Isaac his father. He felt him, and said, "The voice is Jacob's voice, but the hands are the hands of Esau."

23 He didn't recognize him, because his hands were hairy, like his brother, Esau's hands. So he blessed him.

24 He said, "Are you really my son Esau?" He said, "I am."

25 He said, "Bring it near to me, and I will eat of my son's venison, that my soul may bless you." He brought it near to him, and he ate. He brought him wine, and he drank.

26 His father Isaac said to him, "Come near now, and kiss me, my son."

27 He came near, and kissed him. He smelled the smell of his clothing, and blessed him, and said, "Behold, the smell of my son is as the smell of a field which Yahweh has blessed.

28 God give you of the dew of the sky, of the fatness of the earth, and plenty of grain and new wine.

29 Let peoples serve you, and nations bow down to you. Be lord over your brothers. Let your mother's sons bow down to you. Cursed be everyone who curses you. Blessed be everyone who blesses you."

30 It happened, as soon as Isaac had made an end of blessing Jacob, and Jacob had just gone out from the presence of Isaac his father, that Esau his brother came in from his hunting.

31 He also made savory food, and brought it to his father. He said to his father, "Let my father arise, and eat of his son's venison, that your soul may bless me."

32 Isaac his father said to him, "Who are you?" He said, "I am your son, your firstborn, Esau."

33 Isaac trembled violently, and said, "Who, then, is he who has taken venison, and brought it me, and I have eaten of all before you came, and have blessed him? Yes, he will be blessed."

34 When Esau heard the words of his father, he cried with an exceeding great and bitter cry, and said to his father, "Bless me, even me also, my father."

35 He said, "Your brother came with deceit, and has taken away your blessing."

36 He said, "Isn't he rightly named Jacob? For he has supplanted me these two times. He took away my birthright. See, now he has taken away my blessing." He said, "Haven't you reserved a blessing for me?"

37 Isaac answered Esau, "Behold, I have made him your lord, and all his brothers have I given to him for servants. With grain and new wine have I sustained him. What then will I do for you, my son?"

38 Esau said to his father, "Have you but one blessing, my father? Bless me, even me also, my father." Esau lifted up his voice, and wept.

39 Isaac his father answered him, "Behold, of the fatness of the earth will be your dwelling, and of the dew of the sky from above.

40 By your sword will you live, and you will serve your brother. It will happen, when you will break loose, that you shall shake his yoke from off your neck."

41 Esau hated Jacob because of the blessing with which his father blessed him. Esau said in his heart, "The days of mourning for my father are at hand. Then I will kill my brother Jacob."

42 The words of Esau, her elder son, were told to Rebekah. She sent and called Jacob, her younger son, and said to him, "Behold, your brother Esau comforts himself about you by planning to kill you.

43 Now therefore, my son, obey my voice. Arise, flee to Laban, my brother, in Haran.

44 Stay with him a few days, until your brother's fury turns away;

45 until your brother's anger turn away from you, and he forgets what you have done to him. Then I will send, and get you from there. Why should I be bereaved of you both in one day?"

46 Rebekah said to Isaac, "I am weary of my life because of the daughters of Heth. If Jacob takes a wife of the daughters of Heth, such as these, of the daughters of the land, what good will my life do me?"