Isinyathelo 64: Feeling the joy of another as joy in oneself, that is loving

     

Funda lesi Sigaba

Question to Consider:

Both self-centered love and love of others can be the basis of relationships. Why does the former eventually turn to hatred? Could you compare this to the relationship between an abusing husband and his wife (who keeps returning to him)?


Divine Love and Wisdom #47

Bona ulwazi lwe-bibliographic
Ngu Emanuel Swedenborg

47. Divine love and wisdom cannot but be and have expression in others it creates. The essence of love is not to love self, but to love others and through love to be conjoined with them. It is also the essence of love to be loved by others, for thus is conjunction achieved. The essential ingredient in all love consists in conjunction; indeed in it consists its life, which we call pleasure, gratification, delight, sweetness, bliss, happiness and felicity.

Love consists in willing what one has to be another's, and in feeling the other's delight as delight within oneself. That is what it is to love. In contrast, to feel one's own delight in another, and not the other's delight within oneself, is not to love; for this is loving self, whereas the first is loving the neighbor.

These two types of love are diametrically opposite each other in nature. Both indeed conjoin, and to love what one has in another - in other words, to love oneself in another - does not appear to undo that conjunction; but in fact it does so undo the conjunction that the more anyone has loved another in this way, the more the other eventually hates him. For such a conjunction gradually becomes undone of itself, and love then turns to hatred to the degree that it does.