Spiritual Life and the Word of God eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 166 pages of information about Spiritual Life and the Word of God.

Spiritual Life and the Word of God eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 166 pages of information about Spiritual Life and the Word of God.
the Lord Himself in John (xiv. 20); for this would not be possible if there were not in the conjunction something belonging as it were to man.  What man does as if of himself he does as if of his will, of his affection, of his freedom, consequently of his life.  Unless these were present on man’s part as if they were his there could be no receptivity, because nothing reactive, thus no covenant and no conjunction; in fact, no ground whatever for the imputation that man had done evil or good or had believed truth or falsity, thus that there is from merit a hell for anyone because of evil works, or from grace a heaven for anyone because of good works. (A.E., n. 971.)

He who refrains from thefts, understood in a broad sense, and even shuns them from any other cause than religion and for the sake of eternal life, is not cleansed of them; for only by such refraining is heaven opened.  For it is through heaven that the Lord removes evils in man, as through heaven He removes the hells.  For example, there are higher and lower managers of property, merchants, judges, officers of every kind, and workmen, who refrain from thefts, that is, from unlawful modes of gain and usury, and who shun these, but only to secure reputation and thus honor and gain, and because of civil and moral laws, in a word, from some natural love or natural fear, thus from merely external constraints, and not from religion; but the interiors of such are full of thefts and robberies, and these burst forth when external constraints are removed from them, as takes place with everyone after death.  Their sincerity and rectitude is nothing but a mask, a disguise, and a deceit.  (A.E., n. 972.)

So far then as the various kinds and species of theft are removed, and the more they are removed, the kinds and species of goods to which they by opposition correspond enter and occupy their place; and these have reference in general to what is sincere, right and just.  For when a man shuns and turns away from unlawful gains through fraud and craft he so far wills what is sincere, right, and just, and at length begins to love what is sincere because it is sincere, what is right because it is right, and what is just because it is just.  He begins to love these things because they are from the Lord, and the love of the Lord is in them.  For to love the Lord is not to love the person, but to love the things that go forth from the Lord, for these are the Lord in man; thus it is to love sincerity itself, right itself, and justice itself.  And as these are the Lord, so far as a man loves these, and thus acts from them, so far he acts from the Lord and so far the Lord removes insincerity and injustice in respect to the very intentions and volitions in which they have their roots, and always with less resistance and struggle, and therefore with less effort than in the first attempts.  Thus it is that man thinks from conscience and acts from integrity,—­not the man of himself but as if of himself; for he then acknowledges from faith and also from perception that it seems as if he thought and did these things from himself, and yet he does them not from himself but from the Lord. (A.E., n. 973.)

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Spiritual Life and the Word of God from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.