टीका

 

Exploring the Meaning of John 20

द्वारा Ray and Star Silverman

The disciples Peter and John running to the tomb on the morning of the Resurrection, a painting by Eugène Burnand

Chapter Twenty


The Resurrection


1. And the first [day] of the week Mary Magdalene comes in the morning, it being yet dark, to the sepulcher, and looks at the stone taken away from the sepulcher.

2. Then she runs, and comes to Simon Peter, and to the other disciple whom Jesus loved, and says to them, They have taken away the Lord out of the sepulcher, and we know not where they have put Him.

3. Then Peter and the other disciple went out, and they came to the sepulcher.

4. And they both ran together; and the other disciple outran Peter and came first to the sepulcher.

5. And stooping down, he looks at the sheets laid out; however he came not in.

6. Then comes Simon Peter following him, and came into the sepulcher, and beholds the sheets laid out,

7. And the napkin which was over His head, not laid with the sheets but apart, wrapped together into one place.

8. Then therefore the other disciple entered also, who came first to the sepulcher, and he saw and believed.

9. For they knew not yet the Scripture, that He must rise again from the dead.

10. Then the disciples went away again to themselves.

At the end of the previous chapter, Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus anointed Jesus’ body with an abundance of oil and spices, wrapped it in strips of linen, and laid it in a tomb. We noted that this act represents the tender, reverent regard for the literal sense of the Word. While we may not fully understand the inner meaning of a particular passage, we still sense its holiness. Therefore, we regard it with the deepest respect and lay it in a special place in our minds. All this is represented by the way Joseph and Nicodemus care for Jesus’ body.

When Joseph and Nicodemus placed Jesus’ body in the tomb, it was Friday evening just before the beginning of the Sabbath. As this next episode begins, it is now the third day since Jesus’ crucifixion and burial, and the beginning of a new week. As it is written, “On the first day of the week, Mary Magdalene came to the tomb early, while it was still dark.” The darkness signifies Mary’s lack of understanding about what has happened to Jesus. The first thing she notices is that “the stone had been taken away from the tomb” (John 20:1).

Normally, after a body is laid in a tomb, a heavy stone is placed by the opening, effectively sealing the tomb. But this is different. The stone has been moved. Seeing this, Mary assumes that someone has taken away Jesus’ body. As she runs from the tomb, she meets Peter and John and says to them, “They have taken away the Lord out of the tomb, and we do not know where they have put Him” (John 20:2). Without hesitating, John and Peter run to the tomb to see what has happened. As it is written, “So they both ran together, and the other disciple [John] outran Peter and came to the tomb first” (John 20:4).

Only in the Gospel According to John do we read that John and Peter run to the tomb together, and that John eventually outruns Peter. Throughout the gospel narratives, we have seen that “Peter” signifies the faith that comes through understanding truth, and “John” signifies the love of serving others. As we learn truth and put it into our life, we begin to receive a new will. This is when the love of service gradually takes the lead. We not only begin to see the goodness within the truth, but we begin to experience that goodness as well. 1

From this point onwards, a reversal takes place. We begin to live according to the truth, not just because it is the right thing to do, but because we genuinely love God and love serving others. Moreover, we feel joy in being useful. Therefore, it is written that John, who signifies the love of service, outruns Peter and is the first to arrive at the tomb. 2

Although John arrives first, Peter is the first to enter. As it is written, “And he [John], stooping down and looking in, saw the linen cloths lying there; yet he did not go in. Then Simon Peter came, following him and went into the tomb” (John 20:5-6). In our own spiritual development, this refers to the vital role that the understanding of truth continues to play in our regeneration. Although a reversal takes place when love takes the lead, the understanding of truth is not abandoned. While no longer in first place, truth still works together with the love of service.

In this case, Peter, who signifies truth in the understanding (which is faith), enters first. As he enters, he carefully examines the details. As it is written, “And he [Peter] saw the linen cloths lying there, and the handkerchief that had been around His head, not lying with the linen cloths, but folded together in a place by itself” (John 20:6-7). These outer coverings, when separated from Jesus’ body, signify the external truths of the Word without their spiritual meaning. 3

Though faith is the first to enter, love quickly follows. Thus, after Peter enters, he is joined by John. As it is written, “Then the other disciple, who came to the tomb first, went in also; and he saw and believed” (John 20:8). In the literal story, both Peter and John believe, as did Mary Magdalene, that someone has moved the stone and taken away Jesus’ body. This is because, “They did not as yet know the scripture, that He must rise again from the dead” (John 20:9).

For the moment, and especially because they did not understand the scriptures that prophesied Jesus’ resurrection, Mary, John, and Peter are feeling lost and confused. They only know that their beloved teacher has been crucified, and now His body has been taken away. They do not know that Jesus has risen. The only thing they can see are the linen clothes that had covered Jesus’ body and the folded cloth that had covered His head.

Bewildered and disappointed, the disciples depart from the tomb. As it is written, “The disciples went away again to their own homes” (John 20:10). It should be noted that the phrase “to their own homes” is a loose translation of the Greek phrase pros hautous [πρὸς αὑτοὺς] meaning “to their own” or “to themselves.” While it makes sense to take this to mean that John and Peter returned “to their own homes,” the actual Greek teaches that they returned again “to themselves”—that is, to their old attitudes and familiar behavior patterns.

Mary, however, does not return to her home, or go anywhere. Instead, she remains at the tomb.


A practical application


Whenever we hear upsetting news, face challenging circumstances, or experience a disappointing loss, we might be tempted to revert to old ways of thinking, feeling, and acting. These are the times when we are tempted to “return to ourselves”—that is, to return to our old attitudes, behaviors, and responses. This tendency to relapse into old patterns is represented by John and Peter “returning to themselves.” It’s a cautionary lesson for all of us. As a practical application, then, be careful about tendencies to relapse into former ways of thinking and behaving. Instead of reverting to your old patterns, follow Mary’s example. Remain steadfast. Even if the tomb appears to be empty at the moment, Jesus is still very present, encouraging you to rise above old responses, and act from your new will.


Mary Sees the Angels


11. But Mary stood at the sepulcher weeping outside. Then as she wept, she stooped to the sepulcher,

12. And beholds two angels in white sitting, the one at the head and one at the feet, where the body of Jesus had lain.

13. And they say to her, Woman, why weepest thou? She says to them, Because they have taken away my Lord, and I know not where they have put Him.

14. And saying these things, she turned back, and beheld Jesus standing, and she knew not that it was Jesus.

15. Jesus says to her, Woman, why weepest thou? Whom seekest thou? She, thinking that He was the gardener, says to Him, Lord, if Thou hast carried Him hence, tell me where Thou hast put Him, and I will take Him away.

16. Jesus says to her, Mary. She, turning, says to Him, Rabboni, which is to say, Teacher.

17. Jesus says to her, Touch Me not, for I have not yet ascended to My Father; but go to My brothers, and say to them, I ascend to My Father and your Father, and My God and your God.

18. Mary Magdalene comes, reporting to the disciples that she had seen the Lord, and [that] He had said these things to her.

Mary Magdalene does not leave the area or return to her home. Instead, she remains at the tomb. This is where the next episode begins. As it is written, “But Mary stood outside by the tomb weeping, and as she wept, she stooped down and looked into the tomb” (John 20:11). Out of her love for Jesus, Mary is able to see things of the spirit that John and Peter could not see. In fact, it is written that Mary “saw two angels in white sitting, one at the head and the other at the feet, where the body of Jesus had lain” (John 20:12).

When John and Peter looked in, they saw only the lifeless linen and the folded cloth. But when Mary Magdalene looks in, through her grief and through her tears, she sees living beings—in fact, she sees two angels. Similarly, there are times when we look into the Word and see nothing more than lifeless words that do not move us or speak to us. It is altogether different, however, when we look into the Word and see angels speaking to us, inviting us to reflect on our inner states. Therefore, these angels ask Mary, most appropriately, “Woman, why are you weeping?” (John 20:13).

Mary’s response is simple and straightforward. She says, “Because they have taken away my Lord and I do not know where they have laid Him” (John 20:13). In this case, Mary is representatively speaking for each of us. Like Mary, we, too, experience times when the Lord appears to be absent, and we don’t know where to find Him. At the moment, goodness and truth seem to be absent from our life. This is what is contained, more interiorly, in Mary’s lament, “They have taken away my Lord.” 4

The truth is, however, that the Lord is never “taken away,” nor does He ever abandon us. It’s just that there are times when we cannot sense His presence. Even at those times when God seems to be absent, He is, in reality, still very near. As it is written, “Now when she had said this, she turned around and saw Jesus standing there, and did not know that it was Jesus” (John 20:14). Repeating the same question that the angels asked, Jesus says, “Woman, why are you weeping?” And then Jesus adds these words: “Whom are you seeking?” (John 20:15). 5

Although Mary loves Jesus, she still does not understand His true nature. That is why she is not able to recognize Him, even as He stands before her. We read, “She, supposing Him to be the gardener, said to Him, ‘Sir, if You have carried Him away, tell me where you have laid Him, and I will take Him away’” (John 20:15). In the depth of her grief, Mary does not realize that the One whose loss she so desperately mourns is standing right in front of her. Overwhelmed by her grief, Mary sees in Him only a person that might help her find Jesus’ body. It is at this point that Jesus says to her, “Mary” (John 20:26).

It is not until Jesus calls her by name that Mary has a moment of recognition. This brings to mind Jesus’ words earlier in this same gospel when He said that the Good Shepherd “calls his own sheep by name … and the sheep follow Him, for they know His voice” John 10:3-4). In calling Mary by name, Jesus touches something deep within her, awakening her spirit. It is then that Mary recognizes Jesus and exclaims, “Rabboni!” (John 20:16).

Mary’s choice of the title “rabboni” rather than “Lord” is significant. The word “rabboni” simply means “teacher.” This is the origin of the word “rabbi”—a title given to a Jewish religious teacher or spiritual leader. In this case, there is a distinct difference between seeing Jesus as her spiritual leader and seeing Jesus as her Lord. Mary, for all her love and devotion, still calls Him—at least in this moment—“Rabboni.” Because of this, Jesus’ response is clear. He says to her, “Touch me not, for I have not yet ascended to My Father” (John 20:17). 6

While it is true that Mary is devoted to Jesus, her understanding has only developed to the point where she recognizes Him as her beloved teacher. It is for this reason that Jesus says, speaking in accommodation to Mary’s state of understanding, that she should not touch Him—for He is not yet—in her mind—ascended to the Father. The continuing obscurity in Mary’s mind is suggested by the context. Mary had come to the tomb that morning while it was still dark. Although she was gradually coming into greater light, the dawning of a full awareness had not yet arrived. In brief, Mary still regards Jesus as her rabbi, but does not yet see Him in His risen glory. 7

Jesus then adds, “But go to My brethren and say to them, ‘I am ascending to My Father and your Father, and to My God and your God’” (John 20:17). Although the process of glorification had been fully completed on the cross, this has not yet become a reality to Mary or to the disciples. In fact, to their minds, the only thing they know is that Jesus died on the cross, and that His body has been taken away.

This is why Jesus now sends Mary to the disciples with a message that is similar to what He told them in His farewell address. At that time, He said to them, “A little while and you will not see Me; and again, a little while and you will see Me because I go to the Father” John 16:16). This time Mary is to tell them that Jesus is “ascending to His Father.”

While this is not the fullest expression of what really happened on the cross, it is an explanation that the disciples can understand at this point. Meanwhile, Jesus will continue to rise in their understanding until He is fully ascended in their minds and seen as the risen and glorified Lord. It is then that they will be able to understand the true meaning of the resurrection.


The empty tomb


The mysterious disappearance of Jesus’ body has been both alarming and confusing for Jesus’ followers. Unaware of the biblical prophecies that predict that the Messiah would rise on the third day, Mary, John, and Peter all assume that Jesus’ body has somehow been taken away. And yet, seven hundred years earlier, the resurrection had been prophesied in the Hebrew scriptures. The prophet Jonah spoke about being “raised on the third day” (Jonah 2:10), and Hosea said, “On the third day He will raise us up” (Hosea 6:2).

According to scripture, then, Jesus was “raised up”—that is, resurrected—on the third day. But how? What happened in the tomb? Why did they only find the linen strips for Jesus’ body and the folded cloth for His head? Where was Jesus? And what happened to His body? In order to answer these questions, it is important to understand that the crucifixion was the final step by which Jesus fully glorified His humanity. In doing so, He put off the last vestige of His infirm humanity and became fully divine.

To help us understand this concept, biblical scholars have compared this process to first removing a thread of wool from a garment and then replacing it with a thread of gold. As the woolen threads are removed and replaced by golden ones, the entire garment eventually becomes pure gold. Similarly, but in a much greater way, Jesus gradually replaced everything that was imperfect and finite in Himself with that which is Perfect and Infinite. He did this through successive temptation combats in which He utterly eradicated every inclination to evil and falsity. Finally, nothing was left except Divinity Itself—that is, a Divine Body of pure love and pure wisdom. 8

All of this, however, was a gradual process. As long as Jesus was still on earth, He was continually in the process of uniting the divine truth He came to teach with the divine love that was His very soul. There were times, of course, when this unition seemed to be relatively complete, for example, when He said, “I and My Father are One” John 10:30). But these moments were part of the continual progress towards complete glorification. This process only became complete at the time of the resurrection and ascension. It was only then, when everything that He had inherited from the mother was dissipated, that a new “resurrection body” was put on. Only then could He truly say, “It is finished” John 19:30)—His very last words from the cross. 9

The idea that the Lord’s material body was dissipated, leaving nothing behind, can be compared to the way that anger ceases to exist when understanding is found, or how resentment disappears when forgiveness is given, or how hatred vanishes when love arises. These negative attributes do not “go” anywhere. They simply cease to exist in the presence of understanding, forgiveness, and love. Similarly, every appearance of truth in the literal sense of the Word, for example that the Lord is angry, vengeful, and punitive, disappears as we enter more deeply into the spiritual sense of the Word.” 10

Another way to understand the Lord’s glorification process is to compare it to a marriage. In the beginning, the husband and wife promise to love each other. Vowing to put away hereditary tendencies towards unkindness and selfishness, they turn to the Lord in order to do so. Over time, as they live according to God’s commandments, their joy in living together increases. At the same time, the promises and pledges made at the time of the wedding and in the early years of marriage seem to “vanish.” Instead, the husband and wife now love each other, not because they have promised to do so, but because, from their hearts, it has become their way of life. Because their spirits have become united, they are, so to speak, “one flesh.” 11

A similar process takes place on the individual level as well. In the beginning, truth appears to be outside of us. It is something we learn. Eventually, as we sincerely live by the truth, especially during difficult times, deliberate decisions become spontaneous actions. What was once experienced as dutiful self-compulsion to live by the truth eventually becomes a heavenly habit. Gradually, truth and goodness become indistinguishable in thought, word, and deed. In this way, as we develop a new or “second” nature, the truth becomes so united with love that the truth seems to have vanished. In a comparable way, but to a much greater degree, Jesus vanished from the tomb leaving nothing behind except the linen cloths that had covered His body. Divine wisdom had become one with divine love. 12

Mary, of course, could not have known any of this, because it had yet been revealed. At this point, all Mary can do is marvel at Jesus’ sudden appearance and follow His instructions. Therefore, as this episode ends, Mary leaves the tomb and goes off to tell the disciples what Jesus has told her to tell them—that He is ascending to His Father and to their Father, to His God and to their God. When she arrives, she tells them that she has seen the Lord, and that “He had spoken these things to her” (John 20:18).

The message that Mary brings to the disciples is accommodated to their understanding. Although Jesus has indeed risen and become fully united with His divine soul which He calls “the Father,” this is still beyond the comprehension of His disciples. For them, at this point, it is enough to know that Jesus is still in the process of ascending to the Father. This is something that takes place in each of our minds as well. It is only over time that Jesus “ascends” in our understanding until we come to the realization that He is indeed “one” with the Father—that in Him perfect wisdom and perfect love are inseparable.


A practical application


Regeneration begins by learning truth and striving to live according to it. Eventually, what begins as a matter of deliberate decision and strenuous effort becomes easier as we develop “spiritual muscle.” Of course, spiritual development is impossible without God who does the heavy lifting for us in secret, but we must do this lifting anyway, as if by ourselves. While none of our struggles can compare with Jesus’ combats against the entirety of hell, we all have our own crucifixions and resurrections. As a practical application, then, consider the possibility that any moment could be a resurrection experience for you. For example, when you notice a negative thought or feeling coming in, perhaps after a setback, loss, or disappointment, acknowledge it, pray to the Lord for help, call truth to mind, and then allow the Lord to rise in you, giving you all the strength you need. Even as He totally vanquished evil and falsity in Himself, He can subdue the evils and falsities in you. In this way, the Lord’s resurrection and subsequent ascension can become living realities in your own life. Not only are there continual resurrections, but there are also continual ascensions into higher states of love and wisdom. Beyond your conscious awareness, Jesus is both rising and ascending in you. As He told Mary to tell the disciples in another I AM statement, “I AM ascending.” 13


Jesus Gives the Holy Spirit


19. Then, it being evening on that day, on the first of the week, and the doors being shut where the disciples were gathered for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood into the midst, and says to them, Peace [be] to you.

20. And saying this, He showed them His hands and side; then the disciples rejoiced, seeing the Lord.

21. Then Jesus said to them again, Peace [be] to you; as the Father has sent Me, I also send you.

22. And saying this, He breathed into [them], and says to them, Receive ye the Holy Spirit.

23. Whosever sins you forgive, they are forgiven to them; whosever you retain, they are retained.

As the next episode begins, it is still the day of the resurrection, but it is now evening, and the disciples are gathered together behind closed doors “for fear of the Jews” (John 20:19). While we know today that the Lord’s resurrection brought the possibility of salvation to humanity, the disciples were still a long way from understanding this. They remained, so to speak, “in the dark” and afraid.

Their fear is understandable. The religious leaders, particularly those who had conspired to bring about Jesus’ death, might now be seeking to kill them as well, especially as the rumor spreads that Jesus’ body has been taken away. We can imagine that the disciples may be talking about the mysterious disappearance of Jesus’ body from the tomb, and what might happen to them now that Jesus is gone. They might also be wondering about the message that Jesus had given to them through Mary, saying, “I am ascending to My Father and to your Father, to My God and to your God.”

The gathering of the disciples behind closed doors represents those times when worry, grief, or fear seem to shut out the presence of the Lord. However, Mary’s message about Jesus’ ascension must have cheered them with hope and opened the way for Jesus to appear to them in their minds and in their midst. As it is written, “Jesus came and stood in their midst, saying to them, ‘Peace be with you’” (John 20:19). 14

Then, to further reassure them, and to accommodate to their level of understanding, Jesus shows them the wounds in His hands and in His side. This moment of recognition brings both comfort and joy to the disciples. As it is written, “Then the disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord” (John 20:20).


The power of the Holy Spirit


After showing His disciples His hands and His side, Jesus reassures and calms them for a second time, saying, “Peace be with you.” Jesus then adds, “As the Father has sent Me, I also send you” (John 20:21). Jesus, who came forth from love, now sends His disciples forth in love. This is what is meant by the words, “As the Father has sent Me, I also send you.”

This, however, will not be possible without the Holy Spirit—that is, Jesus’ continual presence with them. It is this Spirit that will make it possible for them to go forth in love; it will enable them to preach, teach, and baptize; it will empower them to forgive sins as Jesus has forgiven them, and it will inspire them to love others as Jesus has loved them. That is why Jesus breathes on them and says, “Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them. And if you retain the sins of any, they are retained” (John 20:22-23).

This moment, which is recorded only in the Gospel According to John, is one of the clearest indications of Jesus’ divinity. It brings to mind the words spoken by God when He first created human life. As it is written in the Hebrew scriptures, “Then the Lord God formed the man of dust from the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being” (Genesis 2:7). 15

This passage from the Hebrew scriptures seems to be speaking about the creation of physical life. But when Jesus’ breathes on His disciples and says, “Receive the Holy Spirit,” He is speaking about the creation of spiritual life. Whereas the birth into natural life requires no conscious effort on our part, the birth into spiritual life requires both a conscious decision and an unceasing effort to align ourselves with God’s will. Only then do we become receptive to the love and wisdom that continually flow in from God. This is our second birth—the birth that takes place within us when the spirit of God enters our life. This is what it means to “receive the Holy Spirit.”

The Holy Spirit, then, is not a separate divine person of the trinity. In the language of sacred scripture, the Holy Spirit is really Jesus Himself, the divine truth fully united with divine love coming forth into our lives as divine power for useful service. This is the power that enables us not only to perceive the truth from love, but also the power to use that truth in our lives. Sometimes called “the inspiration of the Holy Spirit,” it is as vital to our inner spirit as breath is to our physical bodies. 16

The Holy Trinity, then, is not three separate persons. Rather, it is three aspects of One God—divine love, divine wisdom, and divine power for useful service. These divine qualities, which exist in the Lord alone, radiate out to all people, and are received by those who align themselves with God’s will. 17


The remission of sins


As already mentioned, when Jesus breathed upon His disciples, He said, “Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any they are forgiven.” Obviously, there is an important connection between the reception of the Holy Spirit, which comes first, and the subsequent ability to forgive sins.

In the original Greek, the word which is translated as “forgive” is aphēte [ἀφῆτε], meaning “to send away.” This idea, that sins must be “sent away” is known as the “remission of sins.” In the Hebrew scriptures, when the sins of the people were placed on the head of a goat, the goat was sent away into the wilderness, symbolically “sending away” the sins of the people (see Leviticus 16:21). While a goat cannot actually take away human sin, this ritual does speak about the necessity of removing evil from oneself and sending it far away “into the wilderness.” Throughout Christianity, this process is known as “the remission of sins.” 18

The idea that forgiveness is related to the remission of sins is an important one. To remit sins is to send them away. And yet, sins can only be remitted—that is, removed and driven out of our lives—through the power of the Holy Spirit. This is what can occur within us whenever we respond to a current situation from a new understanding and a new will. When we are operating at this higher level, ascending above previous states, prior habits, and earlier attitudes, our sins are forgiven. That is, when we are closer to God, our sins are further removed from us. 19

When the Lord’s Holy Spirit is received as the truth which is infilled with His love, we no longer entertain lower thoughts and feelings, nor do we repeat earlier behaviors. They are, so to speak, behind us. That’s because we are now living at a new level where previous sins are no longer a part of who we are. While we may have occasional slip-ups, we are now humbly operating from God-centered states rather than self-centered states. We have a new nature. This is what takes place when our repentance is actual. It is not just repentance of the lips, but repentance of life. 20

While the driving out of sinful tendencies is accomplished over time and in innumerable ways, our part in that process is summed up in the Ten Commandments. As we strive to keep them, we not only allow God to remove evil, but we also allow God’s love to flow in and work through us. Whenever this takes place, it can be said that the Holy Spirit is working in us and through us, effecting and accomplishing all things that are good, true, and useful. 21


The retention of sins


It should not be forgotten, however, that Jesus does not only speak about the remission of sins. He also speaks about the retention of sins. As He puts it, “If you retain the sins of any, they are retained.” This cannot possibly mean that we have the power to release people from sin or keep them in sin. It does mean, however, that if we forgive the sins of any, we will experience a sense of forgiveness in ourselves. Conversely, if we retain the sins of any, we will retain the bitterness, the resentment, and the unforgiveness in ourselves.

Because we are all born with tendencies to evils of every kind, it is inevitable that self-serving, unforgiving thoughts will flow into our minds from time to time, even if we have not invited them. These thoughts can do us no harm as long as we do not allow them to remain. Therefore, it’s best to send them away as quickly as possible. However, if we do choose to hang on to them—that is to retain them—they can have a destructive influence on our character. A sickness that goes untreated, can spread to various parts of our body, leading to a worsening condition, and eventually to death. The same can be said about negative thoughts that are allowed to linger. 22

Jesus, then, is giving His disciples a most powerful lesson about the importance of forgiveness, and the consequences of unforgiveness. Beginning with themselves, they can call upon the power of the Holy Spirit to send away every negative influence so that they might be filled with God’s spirit of forgiveness. At the same time, they are being cautioned about the danger of harboring bitter, resentful, and hateful thoughts.

This also includes the tendency to lock people into the negative pictures and prejudices we may have had based on previous experiences with them or rumors about them. No one wants to be seen in terms of their earlier misbehaviors or through the lens of past mistakes. When people repent, change, and grow, they need to be seen in terms of their best qualities—that is, the Lord’s qualities in them. As long as we “retain” their sins, we fail to bring out the best in them. Similarly, if we retain our negative thoughts about others, refusing to give up those thoughts, even justifying them, it can become a part of our essential nature. This is why Jesus says, “If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven, and if you retain the sins of any, they are retained. 23


A practical application


If our repentance is sincere, previous sins are sent away and are no longer associated with us. We have begun and are now living a new life. Because the Lord has forgiven us, we can forgive ourselves. Just as we would not want to be defined by the sins of our past, we can give others the same consideration. As a practical application, then, when you see people striving to change and grow, support and encourage them in their efforts. If negative thoughts and prejudices arise based on someone’s past, send those thoughts and images away as soon as possible. Do not let them linger. When you do this for others, it frees you to think higher thoughts about them and to put the best interpretation on their actions. As Jesus says, “If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven. If you retain the sins of any, they are retained.” 24


“My Lord and My God!”


24. But Thomas, one of the twelve, called Didymus, was not with them when Jesus came.

25. Therefore the other disciples said to him, We have seen the Lord. But he said to them, Unless I see in His hands the print of the nails, and thrust my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into His side, I will not believe.

26. And after eight days again His disciples were inside, and Thomas with them. Jesus came, the doors being shut, and stood in the midst, and said, Peace [be] to you.

27. Then He says to Thomas, Bring hither thy finger, and see My hands, and bring thy hand and thrust [it] into My side; and be not unbelieving, but believing.

28. And Thomas answered and said to Him, My Lord and my God.

29. Jesus said to him, Because thou hast seen Me, Thomas, thou hast believed; happy [are] they who have not seen, and have believed.

30. And indeed many other signs therefore Jesus did in the presence of His disciples, which are not written in this book.

31. But these are written, that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing, you might have life in His name.

When Jesus breathed on His disciples and said to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit,” Thomas was not present. Therefore, when Thomas returns, they say to him, “We have seen the Lord” (John 20:25). But Thomas has not had this experience. Therefore, he says, “Unless I see in His hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of the nails, and put my hand into His side, I will not believe” (John 20:25).

Thomas is not willing to believe merely because the disciples say, “We have seen the Lord.” He wants to see for himself. After all, Thomas was not there when Jesus suddenly appeared in the room, offered a greeting of peace, and said to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit.” While this must have been a profound experience for the disciples, they were unable to transfer this spiritual experience to Thomas. 25

Believing what others say without understanding or experiencing it for ourselves is called “blind faith.” This kind of faith should not replace rational understanding. When our spiritual eyes are opened, we can see the Lord for ourselves and hear His voice in His Word. This is the understanding that goes hand in hand with true faith. As it is written in the Hebrew scriptures, “Open my eyes, that I may see wondrous things in Your law.” (Psalms 119:18). Also, “In Your light we see light” (Psalms 36:9).

Eight days later, when Jesus again manifests Himself to the disciples, Thomas is in the room. Once again, Jesus appears in their midst while the doors are shut. And once again, Jesus begins by saying, “Peace be with you” (John 20:26). Jesus then turns to Thomas and says to him, “Reach your finger here, and look at My hands; and reach your hand here and put it into My side. Do not be unbelieving, but believing” (John 20:27). Now that Thomas’ spiritual eyes are open, and he is experiencing the spiritual presence of Jesus for himself, he is deeply affected. Although he had wanted to physically touch Jesus, Jesus has spiritually touched him. Therefore, Thomas exclaims, “My Lord and My God!” (John 20:28).

Thomas’ exclamation, perhaps more than any other utterance in the gospels, comes the closest to describing Jesus’ true nature. Thomas sees, understands, and believes that Jesus is both his Lord and his God. In this rare and blessed moment, Thomas sees for himself that Jesus is not just the Messiah, or the Son of man, or even the Son of God. He is God Himself—fulfilling the words spoken at the beginning of this Gospel: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God…. And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us” John 1:1;14).


Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet have believed


As this episode draws to a close, Jesus says to Thomas, “Because you have seen Me, you have believed. Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet have believed.” (John 20:29). Here Jesus teaches that spiritual belief does not depend on physical proof. A belief that is truly spiritual comes about when our spiritual eyes are opened, and we see truth in the light of higher understanding. Just as the physical eye sees things in the natural world, spiritual eyesight gives us the ability to understand spiritual reality. When we suddenly comprehend something, we might be inclined to say, “I see,” meaning that we understand. 26

External sight is based on the evidence of the external senses. It tells us that the sun rises and sets, that the earth is flat, and that the stars are very tiny. It also tells us that there is no heaven, there is no hell, there is no God, and no life after death. After all, it cannot “see” any of these things. Sometimes we are so blinded by the physical that we cannot see what is truly spiritual. 27

But internal sight is quite different. It’s why Jesus so often opened the eyes of the blind (see John 9:1-41; 10:21; 11:37). These physical healings represent the deeper healing that can take place within each of us when the Lord opens our spiritual eyes. Only then can we truly see that there is a God, that death is the continuation of life, and that all life is from the Lord alone. These are the essential things that are invisible to our physical eyes, but visible to our spiritual eyes. This, then, is what Jesus means when He says, “Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet have believed.”


Deeper signs


As this chapter closes, the narrator tells us that “Jesus did many other signs in the presence of the disciples, which are not written in this book” (John 20:30). In His wondrous mercy, God allows us from time to time to experience moments when we sense His presence working in our lives. 28

For some of us, these miraculous moments might include an extraordinary coincidence, a serendipitous meeting, or an unexpected surprise that turns out to be a great blessing. It could also include seeing angels, having a prophetic dream, experiencing a vision, or receiving a message from a departed loved one. While we should, of course, be grateful for these signs and wonders, they should not be the center or basis for our belief.

Instead, we can let them confirm what we already believe—that God loves us with a love we can scarcely fathom, that His wisdom is an infallible guide to happiness, and that He leads us in marvelous ways that are incomprehensible to our finite minds.

The many wonders of God’s invisible leading are all there, even those that are beyond our conscious awareness. These are the wonders that are “not written in this book” (John 20:30). But still, they are there, silently running beneath the surface of our lives, going on with precision and order every moment. This is the Lord’s divine providence, secretly guiding us at all times. Although we cannot see it all, God does provide that we see enough—just enough to know and to believe “that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing we may have life in His name” (John 20:31). 29

These are the deeper signs that demonstrate how the Lord is working secretly within us. When we have “life in His name,” we are being regenerated. As changes take place in our inner spirit, we are continuously ascending. In this way, our existence becomes a series of steady, progressive, and miraculous resurrections to new life. 30


A practical application


“To believe in His name,” and “to have life in His name,” is to live according to the qualities that God gives us—specifically the qualities that are manifested in the life and teachings of Jesus Christ. In doing so, we will experience signs of His presence along the way. As a practical application, then, be on the lookout for those “signs” that indicate that you are indeed experiencing “life in His name.” Some of these signs might include a growing willingness to admit wrong and seek forgiveness, an expanding ability to see the good in others, an increasing tendency to respond from your higher nature, a greater awareness of and appreciation for the blessings in your life, and an increasing faith and trust in God. Let these signs of spiritual development serve to strengthen your spirit and deepen your faith. 31

फुटनोट:

1Apocalypse Explained 444:11: “The three sons of Leah born in succession were Reuben, Simeon, Levi. These three signify the chief and primary essentials of the church, that is, truth in the understanding, truth in the will, and truth in action. Similarly, the three disciples of the Lord, Peter, James, and John have a like signification. Peter signifies truth in the understanding, James, truth in the will, and John, truth in action, which is the good of life.” See also Arcana Coelestia 7167: “That which proceeds from the Lord is divine good and truth; and divine good is love and charity, and divine truth is faith.”

2Arcana Coelestia 5773:2: “With people who are being regenerated a reversal takes place. That is to say, first they are led by means of truth to good, but after that they are led from good to truth.” See also Arcana Coelestia 3995:2: “While people are being regenerated, they do what is good from the truth they have learned, it being from truth that they learn what good is…. Then a reversal takes place and truth is done from good.” See also Arcana Coelestia 3563:5: “Before regeneration, the will, to which good belongs, exists outwardly, while the understanding, to which truth belongs, exists inwardly. But in the state following regeneration, the situation is different. In this case people desire truth not only because they have life in view but more still because they desire the good itself which constitutes that life. Previous desires, that is to say, those connected with outdoing others, with childish envy, and with glory, now fall away, so much so that they seem to have been dispelled. At this point, good which belongs to the will exists inwardly, and truth which belongs to the understanding exists outwardly. The result then is that truth acts as one with good since it stems from good. This order is genuine order.”

3Arcana Coelestia 7601:5: “In the Word, ‘linen’ signifies the truth of the exterior natural, and the exterior natural is what clothes things more internal.” See also Arcana Coelestia 10177:5: “Whatever proceeds from love to the Lord and charity towards the neighbor is heard and received by the Lord. When holiness and piety are not from this source … they are merely externals without internals…. A holy external without an internal is merely from the mouth and the gestures, whereas a holy external from an internal is at the same time from the heart.”

4Arcana Coelestia 2689: “In the Word, ‘lifting up the voice and weeping’ represents the utmost extremity of grief…. Those who are being reformed are maintained in the affection for good and in the thought of truth. Therefore, when they are deprived of these, they become distressed …. This state of grief is more interior, and therefore more severe because it is not the death of the body that distresses them, but rather the loss of goodness and truth, the loss of which, to them, is spiritual death.”

5True Christian Religion 126: “In temptations apparently a person is left alone, although this is not the case; for God is then most nearly present in one’s inmosts and sustains the person.” See also True Christian Religion 774: “The Lord's presence is unceasing with every person, both the evil and the good, for without His presence no one can live.”

6Apocalypse Explained 899:14: “Because people rise again after death, therefore the Lord was willing to suffer death and to rise again the third day; but for this reason, that He might put off everything human which He derived from the mother, and put on a Divine Human. For the whole human which the Lord took from the mother He rejected from Himself by temptations, and lastly by death; and by the putting on of a Human from the Divine itself, which was in Him, He glorified Himself, that is, made His Human Divine. This is why, in heaven, by His death and burial, are not meant death and burial, but the purification of His Human, and glorification. That this is the case, the Lord taught … when He said to Mary Magdalene, ‘Touch Me not, for I am not yet ascended to My Father.’ By ascending to His Father, is meant the unition of His Human with His Divine, the human from the mother being completely rejected.”

7Arcana Coelestia 6832: “When the Lord appears, He appears according to the quality of a person, because a person receives the divine no otherwise than according to one’s own quality.” See also Arcana Coelestia 865: “After a period of temptation, the truths of faith start to appear as a first glimmer of light. This is the kind of state in which falsities continue to give trouble, making this state resemble the morning twilight when the obscurity of the night is still lingering on.”

8Apocalypse Explained 178: “When He glorified His Human, He dissipated all evils and falsities arising from the human that He had from the mother.” See also Arcana Coelestia 2288: “While He lived in this world, the Lord had two states, namely, a state of humiliation and a state of glorification. His state of humiliation was when He was in the human which He took by inheritance from the mother; His state of glorification was when He was in the Divine which He had from Jehovah His Father. The former state, namely, that of the human from the mother, the Lord altogether put off, and put on the Divine Human, when He passed out of the world, and returned to the Divine Itself.” Note: the golden thread replacement analogy is attributed to Rev. Samuel Noble (1779-1853).

9Arcana Coelestia 5078:2: “The Lord made the very bodily in Himself Divine, both its sensuous things and their recipient organs; and He therefore rose again from the sepulcher with His body.” See also Arcana Coelestia 10252:7: “It is known that the Lord rose again with the whole body which He had in the world, differently from other men, for He left nothing in the sepulcher.”

10. The The Athanasian Creed 162: “The Lord, in the sepulcher, and thus by death, rejected all the human from the mother and dissipated it.” See also Arcana Coelestia 1799:4: “If love to the Lord and charity to the neighbor were the principal of faith … all the dissensions that come forth from doctrine would vanish; indeed, all hatreds of one against another would be dissipated in a moment, and the Lord’s kingdom would come upon the earth.” See also Arcana Coelestia 1874: “The literal sense of the Word perishes as it ascends and becomes spiritual, then celestial, and at last Divine.”

11Arcana Coelestia 3703:2: “In the heavens all things in general and particular are seen in terms of the way love for the Lord and faith in Him are related to each other—that is to say, all things are seen as a relationship between goodness and truth. Because of this the earliest people compared each and all things to a marriage.” Apocalypse Explained 725:3: “In the Word, ‘male and female’ signify in the spiritual sense truth and good, consequently the doctrine of truth, which is the doctrine of life, and the life of truth, which is the life of doctrine; these must be not two but one, since truth does not become truth with a person without the good of life, nor does good become good with anyone without the truth of doctrine…. When these are one, then truth is of good and good is of truth, and this oneness is meant by ‘one flesh.’” See also Apocalypse Explained 1004:3: “When, therefore, two minds act as one their two bodies are potentially so united that they are no more two but one flesh. To will to become one flesh is conjugial love; and such as the willing is, such is that love.”

12Heaven and Hell 533: “That it is not so difficult to live the life of heaven as some believe can now be seen from this, that when anything presents itself to people that they know to be dishonest and unjust, but to which their mind is inclined, it is simply necessary for them to think that it ought not to be done because it is opposed to the divine precepts. If people accustom themselves so to think, and from so doing establish a habit of so thinking, they are gradually conjoined to heaven.” Arcana Coelestia 9394:4: “When the things of the memory become a part of a person’s life, they vanish from the exterior memory, just as the gestures, actions, speech, reflections, intentions, and in general the thoughts and affections normally do when by continual practice or habit they become spontaneous and natural.” See also Arcana Coelestia 9918: “When a person lives according to doctrine, truth becomes faith … and good becomes charity. It is then that they are called spiritual. When this happens, they almost vanish out of the external or natural memory, and seem to be innate. This is because they are now implanted in a person’s life. It is the same with all those things which have become, through daily use, second nature.”

13Arcana Coelestia 2405:7: “When a person is being regenerated, and being made new … the Lord’s kingdom is arising in that person…. Hence the Lord’s resurrection on the third day in the morning [represents] His rising again in the minds of the regenerate every day, and even every moment.” See also Divine Providence 36: “I have sometimes conversed with angels about wisdom…. They said that they picture to themselves wisdom as a palace, magnificent and highly adorned, the ascent to which is by twelve steps, and that no one reaches the first step unless from the Lord through conjunction with Him. Further, they said that people ascend according to the measure of the conjunction; and as they ascend they perceive that no one is wise from oneself, but only from the Lord, and that the things in which they are wise, compared with those in which they are not wise, are as a few drops of water to a great lake. By the twelve steps leading to the palace of wisdom are signified principles of good conjoined to those of truth, and principles of truth conjoined to those of good.”

14Arcana Coelestia 6893: “In the internal sense, to be ‘seen’ does not signify being seen by the eyes, but by the thought. Thought causes presence. This is because the person who is thought of appears as if present before the internal sight. In the other life this is actually the case, for when anyone is there thought of intently, that person becomes present.” See also Apocalypse Explained 628: “The Lord is present with all according to their love to Him.” See also Last Judgement (posthumous): “In the spiritual world distances are only appearances; and when anyone is thought of, the distance perishes, and that person becomes present.”

15Arcana Coelestia 9229:3: “After His resurrection, when speaking with the disciples, the Lord ‘breathed on them’ and said, ‘Receive the Holy Spirit.’ The breathing upon them was representative of making them alive by faith and love, as also in the second chapter of Genesis where it is written that ‘Jehovah breathed into [Adam’s] nostrils the breath of life, and man became a living soul.” See also Apocalypse Revealed 962:12: “In our Lord Jesus Christ there is a Divine Trinity, which is, the Divine from which, that is called the Father; the Divine Human, which is the Son; and the proceeding Divine, which is the Holy Spirit. Thus, there is one God in the church.”

16Arcana Coelestia 9818:14-18: “This holy thing which proceeds from the Lord, and flows into people through angels and spirits, whether manifestly or not manifestly, is the Holy Spirit…. It is the divine truth that proceeds from the Lord…. It is said that ‘He [the Holy Spirit] will lead into all truth’… and also that when the Lord departed from the disciples, ‘He breathed into them, and said, “Receive ye the Holy Spirit.”’ Since respiration signifies the life of faith, the inspiration [or breathing] of the Lord signifies a capability imparted to people to perceive divine truths, and thus to receive the life of faith.”

17True Christian Religion 188:12: “In the Lord God the Savior Jesus Christ, there is a Divine Trinity. This Trinity is made up of the originating Divine called ‘the Father,’ the Human Divine called ‘the Son,’ and the emanating Divine Influence called ‘the Holy Spirit.’” See also Last Judgement (posthumous): “In the literal sense of the Word, three names for the one God are used. By ‘the Father’ is meant the Creator of the universe, by ‘the Son’ the Savior of the human race, and by ‘the Holy Spirit’ is meant the Enlightener. Moreover, these three aspects exist in the Lord alone.” See also True Christian Religion 167: “The three essential components that are Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are one in the Lord, just as soul, body, and actions are one in a person.” See also Divine Love and Wisdom 299: “Love, wisdom, and use, are in the Lord, and are the Lord.”

18The New Jerusalem and Its Heavenly Teachings 170: “Being withheld from evil and kept in good is remission of sins.” See also True Christian Religion 614:1-2: “The remission of sins means their removal and separation…. It may be compared to the casting out of what was unclean from the camp of the children of Israel.” See also Arcana Coelestia 9670:6: “The confession of sins over the living goat which was to be sent away into the wilderness represents the casting away of evil.” See also Divine Providence 127: “It is the commonly held religion throughout the Christian world that people should examine themselves, see their sins, acknowledge them, confess them before God, and desist from them, and that this is repentance, remission of sins, and thus salvation.”

19True Christian Religion 142: “The divine power and activity meant by the Holy Spirit are, generally speaking, reformation and regeneration, which lead to renewal, enlivening, sanctification, and justification. These, in turn, lead to purification from evils which is the forgiveness of sins, and ultimately to salvation… While all of this done by means of divine truth, it must be understood as divine truth acting from good. To put it another way, it is by means of faith inspired by charity that a person’s reformation and regeneration is effected. This is how a person is renewed, enlivened, sanctified, and justified. As all these processes advance and increase, a person is cleansed from evils, and this cleansing is what is meant by the forgiveness of sins.”

20Arcana Coelestia 8910: “Evil and falsity are introduced into a person’s thought by hell and are sent back there again.” See also Arcana Coelestia 5398: “They who are of the church at this day talk about the remission of sins and about justification, and believe that sins are remitted in a moment, and some that they are wiped away like filth from the body by water, and that a person is justified by faith alone or by the confidence of a single moment. They believe this because they do not know what sin or evil is. If they knew this, they would know that sins can by no means be wiped away from anyone, but that when a person is kept in good by the Lord, evils are separated or rejected to the sides so as not to rise up. This, however, cannot be accomplished unless evil is continually cast out.”

21True Christian Religion 329: “When a person keeps the Ten Commandments by shunning evils, love and charity flow in. This is evident from the Lord’s words in John: ‘He that has My commandments and keeps them, he it is that loves Me and he that loves Me shall be loved of My Father; and I will love him, and will manifest Myself to him: and We will make our abode with him.’ By commandments here the commandments of the Decalogue are particularly meant, which are that evils must not be done or lusted after, and that the love of a person toward God and the love of God toward a person then follow as good follows when evil is removed.”

22True Christian Religion 524: “The sins which are retained in an unrepentant person may be compared with the various illnesses people suffer, and unless cures are applied to get rid of the harmful element, they may die of those illnesses.”

23Arcana Coelestia 6204: “It should be recognized that evil entering a person’s thought does not do that person any harm; for spirits from hell are constantly pouring in evil, but angels are constantly driving it away. But when evil enters the will, it does do harm, for it leads on to actions as often as external restraints do not hinder it. Evil enters the will when it is retained in one’s thought, is approved of, and especially when it is acted upon and therefore delighted in.”

24Arcana Coelestia 6206: “All evil flows in from hell, and all good through heaven from the Lord. But the reason why evil is appropriated to people is that they believe and persuade themselves that they think and do evil from themselves, and in this way, they make it their own. If they believed as is really the case [that evil flows in from hell] … the moment that evil flowed in, they would reflect that it was from the evil spirits with them, and as soon as they thought this, the angels would avert and reject it.” See also Arcana Coelestia 6818: “When the good in people is loved, the Lord is loved.”

25The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem Regarding Faith 1-2: “At the present day, the term ‘faith’ is taken to mean the mere thought that the thing is so because the church so teaches, and because it is not evident to the understanding. For we are told to believe and not to doubt, and if we say that we do not comprehend, we are told that this is just the reason for believing. So that the faith of the present day is a faith in the unknown, and may be called blind faith. Because it is faith in something that somebody has said, it is faith in somebody else. That is, it is faith in hearsay…. People who have true faith think and speak in this way: ‘This is true, and therefore I believe it.’ This is because faith is related to truth, and truth to faith. Moreover, if they do not understand how something could be true, they say, ‘I do not know whether this is true or not. Therefore, I do not yet believe it. How can I believe what I do not comprehend? It may possibly be false.’”

26Apocalypse Explained 1156:2: “‘Those who ‘believe and do not see’ are those who do not desire signs, but truths from the Word, that is, ‘Moses and the prophets,’ and who believe them. Such people are internal, and because of this they become spiritual.” See also The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem Regarding Faith 10: “The Lord said to Thomas, ‘Because you have seen Me, you have believed. Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.’ This does not imply a faith divorced from any internal acknowledgment of truth. Rather it means that those people are blessed who have not seen the Lord with their eyes, as Thomas had, and yet believe that He exists. For this is seen in the light of truth drawn from the Word.”

27Arcana Coelestia 129: “Those who assume as a principle that nothing is to be believed until it is seen and understood, can never believe, because spiritual and celestial things cannot be seen with the eyes, or conceived by the imagination.” See also Divine Love and Wisdom 46: “It can now be established how sensually, that is, how much from the senses of the body and their darkness in spiritual things, those people think who declare that nature is from herself. They think from the eye and cannot think from the understanding. Thought from the eye closes the understanding, but thought from the understanding opens the eye.”

28Arcana Coelestia 2016: “To say that the Lord is the source of all good, and from this of all truth, is to express an unchanging truth. Angels see this truth with perception, so clearly that they perceive that insofar as anything is derived from the Lord it is good and true, and insofar as anything is derived from themselves it is evil and false…. Indeed, they go so far as to declare that they are withheld by the Lord from evil and falsity which arise from their proprium and are kept by Him in good and truth. The actual withholding from their evil and falsity and the actual entrance of the Lord with good and truth is also perceptible to them.” See also Arcana Coelestia 1102:3: “When people feel or perceive in themselves that they have good thoughts concerning the Lord, and that they have good thoughts concerning their neighbor, and desire to perform kind offices for their neighbor, not for the sake of any gain or honor for themselves; and when they feel that they have sympathy for anyone who is in trouble, and still greater sympathy for one who is in error in respect to the doctrine of faith, then they may know that … they have internal things in them through which the Lord is working.”

29Arcana Coelestia 144: “To ‘call by name’ signifies to know the quality. This is by the ‘name’ the people of ancient times understood the essence of a thing, and by ‘seeing and calling by name’ they understood to know the quality.” See also True Christian Religion 682: “By the name of the Lord Jesus Christ nothing else is meant in the Word but an acknowledgment of Him and a life according to His commandments.” See also Arcana Coelestia 8455: “Peace has in it confidence in the Lord, that He directs all things, and provides all things, and that He leads to a good end.”

30Arcana Coelestia 5202:4: “People who are in good are reborn every moment, from their earliest infancy to the last period of their life in the world, and afterwards to eternity, not only as to their interiors, but also as to their exteriors, and this by stupendous processes.” See also Arcana Coelestia 6611: “I have spoken with spirits about the changes of state of people’s lives, that it is inconstant, and that they are carried upward and downward, now toward heaven and now toward hell. But they who suffer themselves to be regenerated are being carried continually upward, and thus always into more interior heavenly societies.”

31Conjugial Love 185: “From infancy to the end of life, and afterwards to eternity, a person’s state of life is continually changing…. The changes that take place in the inner qualities are changes in the state of the will in respect to its affections, and changes in the state of the intellect in respect to its thoughts.” See also Arcana Coelestia 5847: “While people live in the world, they induce a form on the purest substances of their interiors, so that it may be said that they form their own soul, that is, its quality; and according to this form is received the life of the Lord.”

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Arcana Coelestia #9818

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9818. 'Whom I have filled with the spirit of wisdom' means who have Divine Truth inscribed upon them. This is clear from the meaning of 'the spirit of wisdom', when used in reference to those governed by celestial good, as Divine Truth, dealt with below. People are said to be filled with it when it is inscribed permanently on them. The situation is that those in the Lord's celestial kingdom are acquainted with truths not as a result of coming to know and consequently believe them, but as a result of inward perception; for they are governed by the good of love received from the Lord, and this good has all truths rooted within it. The actual good itself has been implanted in the will part of their minds, and truth springing from it in the understanding part. And with these people the will and understanding parts act altogether as one, quite differently from the way the two parts act with those who are in the spiritual kingdom. So it is that the understanding part of the mind in those who are in the Lord's celestial kingdom serves to give them not a knowledge but a perception of truths. For the good implanted in the will presents itself - its inward nature and its outward form - in the understanding, and in so to speak blazing light there. For those people the outward form of the good and its inward nature is truth, which they do not see, but instead perceive from good. For this reason they never argue about truths; they so avoid it that whenever there is talk about truths they say Yes or No, and no more than that. For if they said anything more it would not come from good. These are the ones who are meant in Matthew,

Let your words be Yes, yes; No, no; anything beyond this is from evil. 1 Matthew 5:37.

The fact that those who are in the Lord's celestial kingdom are like this, see 2715, 2718, 3246, 4448, 5113, 6367, 7877, 9166 (end), 9543. What the difference is between those who are in the celestial kingdom and those who are in the spiritual kingdom, see the places referred to in 9277.

[2] From all this people may now recognize what should be understood when it is said that Divine Truths have been inscribed upon someone. Many places in the Word use the term 'spirit', and when they use it in reference to a person his 'spirit' means goodness and truth inscribed on the understanding part of his mind and consequently on the life of that part of it. The reason why 'spirit', when attributed to a person, has this meaning is that inwardly a person is a spirit, indeed inwardly is in the company of spirits. See what has already been shown abundantly on this matter in the following places,

Spirits and angels reside with a person, and the person is governed by the Lord through them, 50, 697, 986, 2796, 2886, 2887, 4047, 4048, 5846-5866, 5976-5993.

A person is among spirits and angels such as he himself is like, 4067, 4073, 4077, 4111.

Every person has a spirit through which his body has life, 4622.

[3] From this one may know what 'spirit' means when used in reference to the Lord, namely that it is Divine Truth emanating from His Divine Good, and that when this Divine Truth flows in and is received by a person it is the Spirit of truth, Spirit of God, and Holy Spirit; for it flows directly from the Lord, and also indirectly through angels and spirits, see the places referred to in 9682. The fact that the Spirit of truth, Spirit of God, and Holy Spirit have this meaning will be seen further on below; for prior to that it must be shown that, when used in the Word in reference to a person, 'spirit' means goodness and truth inscribed on the understanding part of a person's mind and consequently means the life of that part of it. For there is the life of the understanding part, and there is the life of the will part. That of the understanding part consists in knowing, seeing, and understanding that truth is indeed truth and good is indeed good. But the life of the will part consists in willing and loving truth for truth's sake and good for goodness' sake. In the Word the life of the will is called 'heart', but that of the understanding 'spirit'.

[4] The following places in the Word show that this is so: In Ezekiel,

Make for yourselves a new heart and a new spirit. Why will you die, O house of Israel? Ezekiel 18:31.

And in the same prophet,

I will give you a new heart, and a new spirit will I give in the midst of you. Ezekiel 36:26.

'A new heart' stands for a new will. and 'a new spirit' for a new understanding. In Zechariah,

Jehovah stretches out the heavens, and founds the earth, and forms the spirit of man within him. Zechariah 12:1.

'Stretching out the heavens and founding the earth' stands for the establishment of a new Church, this Church being meant by 'heaven and earth', see 1733, 1850, 2117, 2118 (end), 3355 (end), 4535. 'Forming the spirit of man within him' stands for regenerating a person as to his understanding of truth and good.

[5] In David,

Create for me a clean heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me. Do not cast me away from before You, and do not take the spirit of Your holiness from me. Bring back to me the joy of Your salvation, and let a generous spirit uphold me. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O God, You will not despise. 2 Psalms 51:10-12, 17.

'A clean heart' stands for a will that detests evils, which are forms of uncleanness; 'a steadfast spirit' stands for an understanding of and belief in truth; 'a broken spirit' and 'a broken heart' stand for a state of temptation and the consequent humbling of the life in both. The fact that 'spirit' means life is evident from every detail in these verses. Divine Truth, from which that life springs, is meant by 'the spirit of holiness'. In the same author,

A generation that did not make its heart right, nor was its spirit steadfast with God. Psalms 78:8.

'Heart that is not right' stands for a will that is not right, and 'spirit that is not steadfast with God' stands for an understanding of and belief in God's truth that are not steadfast.

[6] In Moses,

Jehovah God had hardened the spirit of Sihon king of Heshbon and made his heart obstinate. Deuteronomy 2:30.

Here also 'spirit' and 'heart' stand for the life in both parts, which is said to have been 'made obstinate' when the will has no desire to understand truth and good and put them into practice. In Ezekiel,

Every heart will melt, and all hands will hang down, and every spirit will shrink. Ezekiel 21:7.

Here the meaning is similar. In Isaiah,

Jehovah is He who gives soul 3 to the people on the earth, and spirit to those who walk on it. Isaiah 42:5.

'Giving soul to the people' stands for endowing with the life of faith, 'soul' meaning the life of faith, see 9050; and 'giving spirit' stands for providing with an understanding of truth. In the same prophet,

With my soul I desired You in the night; even with my spirit within me I waited for You early. Isaiah 26:9.

Here the meaning is similar.

[7] In the same prophet,

Conceive chaff, bring forth stubble; fire will devour your spirit. Isaiah 33:11.

'Spirit' which fire will devour stands for an understanding of truth, and so for intelligence; 'fire' stands for a craving which, because it springs from evil, is destructive.

[8] In Ezekiel,

Woe to the foolish prophets, who go away after their own spirit! Ezekiel 13:3.

In the same prophet,

What comes up onto your spirit 4 will not ever be brought about. Ezekiel 20:32.

In Malachi,

Not one has done so, nor those remaining who had spirit. Why then is there one seeking God's seed? Therefore take heed through your spirit, to see that it does not act treacherously against the wife of your youth. Malachi 2:15.

In David,

Blessed is the person to whom Jehovah does not impute iniquity; only let there be no guile in his spirit. Psalms 32:2.

In Matthew,

Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Matthew 5:3.

In the same gospel,

Jesus said to the disciples, Watch and pray, lest you enter into temptation. The spirit indeed is eager, but the flesh is weak. Matthew 26:41.

In these places, as is plainly evident, 'spirit' is used to mean the actual life in a person. That the life of the understanding, or the life of truth, is meant becomes clear from the consideration that in the natural sense 'spirit' is used to mean human life and breath. And drawing breath, which is the work of the lungs, corresponds to the life of truth, which is the life of faith and consequently of the understanding, whereas the beating of the heart corresponds to the life of the will and so of love. For this correspondence of lungs and heart, see 3635, 3883-3896, 9300, 9495. All this makes clear what type of life is meant in the spiritual sense by 'spirit'.

[9] The fact that 'spirit' in the ordinary sense means human life and breath is clearly evident in David,

You hide Your face, they are dismayed; You gather up their spirit, they breathe their last. You send forth Your spirit, they are created. Psalms 104:29-30.

In the same author,

Answer me, O Jehovah. My spirit is consumed. Do not hide Your face from Me. Psalms 143:7.

In Job,

My spirit is consumed, my days are extinguished. Job 17:1.

In Luke,

Jesus took the dead girl's hand, saying, Girl, arise. Her spirit therefore returned, and she arose at once. Luke 8:54-55.

In Jeremiah,

Every person has been made stupid by knowledge; his graven image is a lie, and there is no spirit in it. Jeremiah 10:14; 51:17.

In Ezekiel,

He brought me out in the Spirit of Jehovah and set me down in the midst of the valley. And there the Lord Jehovih said to the dry bones, Behold, I am bringing spirit into you that you may live. Thus said the Lord Jehovih, Come from the four winds, O spirit, and breathe into these killed. And spirit came into them, and they were alive again. Ezekiel 37:1, 5, 9-10.

In the Book of Revelation,

The two witnesses were killed by the beast ascending from the abyss. But after three and a half days the spirit of life from God entered them, so that they stood on their feet. Revelation 11:7, 11.

[10] From these places it is plainly evident that 'spirit' is a person's life. The fact that more specifically it is the life of truth, which is the life of the understanding part of a person's mind, and is called intelligence, is made plain in John,

The hour is coming, and now is, when the true worshippers will worship the Father in spirit and truth. God is a Spirit, therefore those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth. John 4:23-24.

In Daniel,

... that there was in him an excellent spirit, both of knowledge and of intelligence. Daniel 5:12, 14.

In Luke,

John grew and became strong in spirit. Luke 1:80.

And regarding the Lord, in the same gospel,

The child Jesus grew and became strong in spirit, and was filled with wisdom. Luke 2:40.

In John,

He whom the Father has sent speaks the words of God, for God has not given Him the spirit by measure. 5 John 3:34.

Here 'the spirit' stands for intelligence and wisdom; 'speaking the words of God' means declaring Divine Truths.

[11] From all this it may now be seen what 'spirit' means in John,

Jesus said to Nicodemus, Unless a person has been born from water and the spirit he cannot enter the kingdom of God. That which has been born of the flesh is flesh, but that which has been born from the spirit is spirit. John 3:5-6.

'Being born from water' means [being regenerated] by means of truth, and 'being born from the spirit' means life from the Lord which comes as a result of this, called spiritual life. For the meaning of 'water' as the truth by means of which regeneration is accomplished, see 2702, 3058, 3424, 4976, 5668, 8568, 9323. 'Flesh' however means the human proprium or selfhood, in which there is no spiritual life at all, 3813, 8409.

[12] Something similar is meant by 'spirit' and 'flesh' in the same gospel,

It is the Spirit which bestows life, the flesh does not profit anything. The words which I speak to you, they are spirit and they are life. John 6:63.

'The words' which the Lord spoke are Divine Truths, the life which comes as a result being 'the spirit'. In Isaiah,

Egypt is man (homo), not God, and his horses are flesh and not spirit. Isaiah 31:3.

'Egypt' stands for knowledge in general, 'his horses' for factual knowledge supplied from the understanding, which is spoken of as 'flesh and not spirit' when it does not have any spiritual life at all within it.

'Egypt' is knowledge, see the places referred to in 9340, 9391. 'Horses' are the power of understanding, 2761, 2762, 3217, 5321. 'The horses of Egypt' are known facts supplied from the understanding, 6125, 8146, 8148.

Anyone who does not know what is meant by 'Egypt', what is meant by 'his horses', and also what is meant by 'flesh' and 'spirit', cannot possibly know what these words [in Isaiah 31:3] imply.

[13] Once people know what 'spirit' present in a person means they may know what is meant by 'spirit' when this term is used in reference to Jehovah or the Lord. Everything a human being has, such as face, eyes, ears, arms, and hands, also heart and soul, He is said to have. Thus spirit as well is attributed to Him, and in the Word it is called Spirit of God, Spirit of Jehovah, Spirit of His mouth, and Spirit of Holiness or Holy Spirit. The fact that the term is used to mean Divine Truth emanating from the Lord is clear from a large number of places in the Word. The reason why Divine Truth emanating from the Lord is meant by 'Spirit of God' is that all of a person's life comes from there, as does the heavenly life possessed by those who receive that Divine Truth in faith and love. The Lord Himself teaches in John that this is what 'Spirit of God' means,

The words which I speak to you, they are spirit and they are life. John 6:63.

'The words' which the Lord spoke are Divine Truths.

[14] In the same gospel,

Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying, If anyone thirsts let him come to Me and drink. Whoever believes in Me, as the Scripture has said, Out of his belly will flow rivers of living water. This He said about the Spirit which those believing in Him were to receive; for the Holy Spirit was not yet because Jesus was not yet glorified. John 7:37-39.

'The Spirit' which those believing in the Lord were to receive from Him means the life coming from the Lord that is the life of faith and love, as is evident from the specific expressions used in these verses. For 'thirsting' and 'drinking' means the desire to know and understand truth; and 'rivers of living water' which will flow from the belly are God's truths. From this it is clear that 'the Spirit' which believers were to receive, also called 'the Holy Spirit', means the life brought by Divine Truth emanating from the Lord. This life, as stated just above, is called the life of faith and love, being the spiritual and heavenly life itself present in a person. The reason why it says 'the Holy Spirit was not yet because Jesus was not yet glorified' is that while He was in the world the Lord Himself taught Divine Truth; but when He had been glorified, which was after the Resurrection, He taught it through angels and spirits. That holy influence present with a person, emanating from the Lord through angels and spirits, whether in a discernible manner or an indiscernible one, is the Holy Spirit there. For in the Word Divine Truth emanating from the Lord is called that which is holy, 9680.

[15] This explains why the Holy Spirit is called the Spirit of truth and why it is said that He would lead into all truth, that He would not speak on His own [authority], but speak what He hears from the Lord, and that He would receive from the Lord what He was to declare, John 16:13-14. It also explains why the Lord, when He was going to leave the disciples, breathed into them and said, Receive the Holy Spirit, John 20:21-22. 'Breathing' means the life of faith, 9229, 9281, so that the Lord's breathing into someone means imparting the ability to understand Divine Truths and thereby receive that life. So it is also that 'the Spirit', being a name derived from 'breathing', is a derivation also of 'blowing' and of 'wind'; and this is why the spirit is frequently called the wind. Breathing, which is the work of the lungs, corresponds to the life of faith, while the beating of the heart corresponds to the life of love, see 3883-3896, 9300, 9495.

[16] Something similar is meant by 'breathing into' in the Book of Genesis,

And Jehovah breathed into man's nostrils the soul of life. Genesis 2:7.

This is why in Lamentations 4:20 the Lord is called the Spirit of our nostrils; and since Divine Truth consumes and devastates the evil it says in David,

The foundations of the world were revealed at the blast of the Spirit of Your nose. Psalms 18:15.

And in Job,

By the breath of God they perish, and by the Spirit of His nose they are consumed. Job 4:9.

In David,

By the Word of Jehovah were the heavens made, and all their host by the Spirit of His mouth. Psalms 33:6.

'The Word of Jehovah' is Divine Truth, as is 'the Spirit of His mouth'. The fact that the Lord is that Word is clear in John,

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. All things were made though Him. And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us. John 1:1-3, 14.

[17] The fact that Divine Truth, from which heavenly life comes to a person, is the Holy Spirit is further evident from the following places: In Isaiah,

There will come forth a shoot from the trunk of Jesse, and the Spirit of Jehovah will rest upon Him, the Spirit of wisdom and intelligence, the Spirit of counsel and strength, the Spirit of knowledge and the fear of Jehovah. Isaiah 11:1-2.

These words refer to the Lord, in whom there is Divine Truth. Consequently Divine Wisdom and Intelligence is called 'the Spirit of Jehovah', and in these verses 'the Spirit of wisdom and intelligence, counsel, strength, and knowledge'. In the same prophet,

I have put My Spirit upon Him; He will bring forth judgement to the nations. Isaiah 42:1.

These words too refer to the Lord. 'The Spirit of Jehovah' upon Him is Divine Truth, and consequently Divine Wisdom and Intelligence. Divine Truth is also called 'judgement', 2235.

[18] In the same prophet,

He will come like a rushing 6 river; the Spirit of Jehovah will place a sign on Him. Isaiah 59:19.

In the same prophet,

The Spirit of the Lord Jehovih is upon Me, therefore Jehovah has anointed Me to bring good tidings to the poor. Isaiah 61:1.

This too refers to the Lord. Divine Truth, which was in the Lord when He was in the world, and which He was then, is meant by 'the Spirit of Jehovah'.

[19] The fact that 'the Spirit of Jehovah' means Divine Truth and consequently heavenly life that comes to the person who receives that Truth is further evident from the following places: In Isaiah,

... until the Spirit is poured out on us from on high; then the wilderness will become a ploughed field, then judgement will dwell in the wilderness. Isaiah 32:15-16.

The subject here is regeneration. 'The Spirit from on high' is life from the Divine; for the promises that 'the wilderness will become a ploughed field' and that 'judgement will dwell in the wilderness' mean the presence of intelligence where none existed previously, thus new life there.

[20] Something similar occurs in Ezekiel,

... in order that you may know that I will put My Spirit in you, in order that you may live. Ezekiel 37:14.

In the same prophet,

I will no longer hide My face from them, because I shall pour out My Spirit on the house of Israel. Ezekiel 39:29.

In Joel,

I will pour out My Spirit on all flesh; and on men servants and women servants in those days I will pour out My Spirit. Joel 2:28-29.

In Micah,

I have been filled with strength by 7 the Spirit of Jehovah, and with judgement and might, to declare to Jacob his transgression and to Israel his sin. Micah 3:8.

In Zechariah,

The horses going out into the north land have caused My Spirit to rest on the north land. Zechariah 6:8.

In Isaiah,

I will pour out waters upon the thirsty land, and streams upon the dry. I will pour out My Spirit upon your seed. Isaiah 44:3.

In these places it is evident that 'the Spirit of Jehovah' means Divine Truth and the life of faith and love which come through that Truth. It flows in directly from the Lord, also indirectly from Him through spirits and angels, see 9682 (end).

[21] Something similar occurs elsewhere in Isaiah,

On that day Jehovah Zebaoth will be a crown of adornment and a tiara of beauty for the remnant of His people, and a Spirit of judgement to him who sits in judgement, and strength to those ... Isaiah 28:5-6.

'A crown of adornment' stands for the wisdom that comes with good, 'a tiara of beauty' for the intelligence that comes with truth, and 'a Spirit of judgement' for Divine Truth, since 'judgement' is spoken of in reference to truth , 2235, 6397, 7206, 8685, 8695, 9260, 9383.

[22] In the same prophet,

The angel of Jehovah's face 8 delivered them; because of His love and His pity He redeemed them. But they rebelled, and exasperated the Spirit of His holiness; consequently He was turned by them into an enemy. He put the Spirit of His holiness in the midst of them. The Spirit of Jehovah led them. Isaiah 63:9-11, 14.

'The Spirit of holiness' here is the Lord in respect of Divine Truth, thus Divine Truth which comes from the Lord; 'the angel of His face' is the Lord in respect of Divine Good, for 'Jehovah's face' is love, mercy, and good. In the Book of Revelation,

The testimony of Jesus is the Spirit of prophecy. Revelation 19:10.

'The testimony of Jesus' is Divine Truth that comes from Him and has regard to Him, 9503.

[23] In David,

Jehovah God makes His angels spirits, 9 and [His] ministers flaming fire. Psalms 104:4.

'Making angels spirits' stands for making them recipients of Divine Truth; 'making them flaming fire' stands for making them recipients of Divine Good or Divine Love. In Matthew,

John said, I baptize you with water for repentance. But He who will come after me will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. Matthew 3:11.

'Baptizing' means regenerating; 'with the Holy Spirit' means doing so through Divine Truth; and 'with fire' means springing from the Divine Good of Divine Love. For the meaning of 'baptizing' as regenerating, see 5120 (end), 9088; and for that of 'fire' as the Divine Good of Divine Love, 4906, 5215, 6314, 6832, 6834, 6849, 7324.

[24] In Luke,

If you, being wicked, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the Father who is in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him? Luke 11:13.

'Giving the Holy Spirit' means enlightening with Divine Truth and endowing with life from that Truth, which is the life of intelligence and wisdom. In the Book of Revelation,

The seven lamps of fire burning before the throne are the seven spirits of God. Revelation 4:5.

And in addition,

In the midst of the elders [there was] a Lamb standing, having seven horns and seven eyes, which are the seven spirits of God sent out into all the earth. Revelation 5:6.

It is self-evident that the word 'spirits' in these places is not used to mean spirits, since they say that the lamps and the Lamb's eyes are the spirits of God . For Divine Truths are meant by 'lamps', 4638, 7072; the understanding of truth is meant by 'the eyes', or Divine Intelligence and Wisdom when the expression refers to the Lord, 2701, 4403-4421, 4523-4534, 9051; and the power of truth derived from good is meant by 'horns' 2832, 9081, 9719-9721. From all this it is evident that Divine Truths are meant by 'the spirits of God'.

[25] When people know therefore that the Holy Spirit is the Divine Truth emanating from the Lord, which is real Holiness, they may know the Divine meaning in the Word wherever the terms 'Spirit of God' and 'Holy Spirit' are used, as in the following places: In John,

I will ask the Father to give you another Paraclete, to remain with you forever, the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it neither sees Him nor knows Him. But you know Him, because He remains with you and will be in you. I will not leave you orphans. The Paraclete, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in My name, He will teach you all things and remind you of all that I said to you. John 14:16-18, 26.

And in another place,

When the Paraclete comes, whom I shall send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth who goes forth from the Father, He will bear witness to Me. And you will bear witness. John 15:26-27.

And in yet another place,

I tell you the truth. It is to your advantage that I go away. If I do not go away the Paraclete will not come to you; but if I go away I will send Him to you. John 16:7.

[26] From these places it is again evident that the Divine Truth which emanates from Divine Good, or from the Father, is the Paraclete and Holy Spirit. This also explains why He is called 'the Spirit of truth', and why it is said that He will remain in them, teach them all things, and bear witness to the Lord. In the spiritual sense 'bearing witness to the Lord' means teaching about Him. The reason why [in the first of these quotations] it is said that the Paraclete, who is the Holy Spirit, is sent in the Lord's name from the Father, then [in the second] that the Lord Himself will send Him from the Father, and after this [in the third] that the Lord will send Him, is that 'the Father' means the Divine [Being] Himself within the Lord, so that the Father and He are one, as the Lord teaches explicitly in John 10:30; 14:9-11.

[27] In Matthew,

Every sin and blasphemy will be forgiven people, but the blasphemy of the Spirit will not be forgiven people. If anyone speaks a word against the Son of Man, it will be forgiven him; but he who speaks against the Holy Spirit, it will not be forgiven him, either in this age or in the one to come. Matthew 12:31-32.

'Speaking a word against the Son of Man' takes place when a person goes against God's truth that has not yet been implanted in or inscribed on his life; for 'the Son of Man' is Divine Truth, see above in 9807. But 'speaking a word against the Holy Spirit' takes place when a person goes against Divine Truth, especially Divine Truth concerning the Lord, that has been implanted in or inscribed on his life. Speaking against or denying that Truth when it has formerly been acknowledged is profanation; and profanation is such that it completely destroys a person interiorly. This is why it says that this sin cannot be forgiven. What profanation is, see 3398, 3898, 4289, 4601, 6348, 6960, 6963, 6971, 8394, 8882, 9298.

[28] And in the same gospel,

Jesus said to the disciples, Go and baptize in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Matthew 28:19.

'The Father' is the Divine [Being] Himself, 'the Son' is that Divine [Being] Himself in a human form, and 'the Holy Spirit' is the emanation from the Divine [Being], so that there is one Divine [Being] yet still a Trinity. The truth that the Lord is the Divine [Being] Himself under human form is His own teaching in John,

From now on you know the Father and have seen Him. He who sees Me sees the Father. I am in the Father and the Father is in Me. John 14:7, 9-10.

फुटनोट:

1. or from the evil one

2. The Latin means God does not despise but the Hebrew means O God, You will not despise

3. or breath

4. i.e. What you have in mind

5. Swedenborg here follows the Latin version of Sebastian Schmidt. The Greek means He who God has sent speaks the words of God, for God does not give the spirit by measure.

6. literally, narrow

7. literally, with

8. i.e. presence

9. or makes winds His messengers

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Society for the permission to use this translation.