The Bible

 

Luke 23

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1 And the whole company of them rose up, and brought him before Pilate.

2 And they began to accuse him, saying, We found this man perverting our nation, and forbidding to give tribute to Caesar, and saying that he himself is Christ a king.

3 And Pilate asked him, saying, Art thou the King of the Jews? And he answered him and said, Thou sayest.

4 And Pilate said unto the chief priests and the multitudes, I find no fault in this man.

5 But they were the more urgent, saying, He stirreth up the people, teaching throughout all Judaea, and beginning from Galilee even unto this place.

6 But when Pilate heard it, he asked whether the man were a Galilaean.

7 And when he knew that he was of Herod's jurisdiction, he sent him unto Herod, who himself also was at Jerusalem in these days.

8 Now when Herod saw Jesus, he was exceeding glad: for he was of a long time desirous to see him, because he had heard concerning him; and he hoped to see some miracle done by him.

9 And he questioned him in many words; but he answered him nothing.

10 And the chief priests and the scribes stood, vehemently accusing him.

11 And Herod with his soldiers set him at nought, and mocked him, and arraying him in gorgeous apparel sent him back to Pilate.

12 And Herod and Pilate became friends with each other that very day: for before they were at enmity between themselves.

13 And Pilate called together the chief priests and the rulers and the people,

14 and said unto them, Ye brought unto me this man, as one that perverteth the people: and behold, I having examined him before you, found no fault in this man touching those things whereof ye accuse him:

15 no, nor yet Herod: for he sent him back unto us; and behold, nothing worthy of death hath been done by him.

16 I will therefore chastise him, and release him.

17 [Now he must needs release unto them at the feast one prisoner.]

18 But they cried out all together, saying, Away with this man, and release unto us Barabbas: --

19 one who for a certain insurrection made in the city, and for murder, was cast into prison.

20 And Pilate spake unto them again, desiring to release Jesus;

21 but they shouted, saying, Crucify, crucify him.

22 And he said unto them the third time, Why, what evil hath this man done? I have found no cause of death in him: I will therefore chastise him and release him.

23 But they were urgent with loud voices, asking that he might be crucified. And their voices prevailed.

24 And Pilate gave sentence that what they asked for should be done.

25 And he released him that for insurrection and murder had been cast into prison, whom they asked for; but Jesus he delivered up to their will.

26 And when they led him away, they laid hold upon one Simon of Cyrene, coming from the country, and laid on him the cross, to bear it after Jesus.

27 And there followed him a great multitude of the people, and of women who bewailed and lamented him.

28 But Jesus turning unto them said, Daughters of Jerusalem, weep not for me, but weep for yourselves, and for your children.

29 For behold, the days are coming, in which they shall say, Blessed are the barren, and the wombs that never bare, and the breasts that never gave suck.

30 Then shall they begin to say to the mountains, Fall on us; and to the hills, Cover us.

31 For if they do these things in the green tree, what shall be done in the dry?

32 And there were also two others, malefactors, led with him to be put to death.

33 And when they came unto the place which is called The skull, there they crucified him, and the malefactors, one on the right hand and the other on the left.

34 And Jesus said, Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do. And parting his garments among them, they cast lots.

35 And the people stood beholding. And the rulers also scoffed at him, saying, He saved others; let him save himself, if this is the Christ of God, his chosen.

36 And the soldiers also mocked him, coming to him, offering him vinegar,

37 and saying, If thou art the King of the Jews, save thyself.

38 And there was also a superscription over him, THIS IS THE KING OF THE JEWS.

39 And one of the malefactors that were hanged railed on him, saying, Art not thou the Christ? save thyself and us.

40 But the other answered, and rebuking him said, Dost thou not even fear God, seeing thou art in the same condemnation?

41 And we indeed justly; for we receive the due reward of our deeds: but this man hath done nothing amiss.

42 And he said, Jesus, remember me when thou comest in thy kingdom.

43 And he said unto him, Verily I say unto thee, To-day shalt thou be with me in Paradise.

44 And it was now about the sixth hour, and a darkness came over the whole land until the ninth hour,

45 the sun's light failing: and the veil of the temple was rent in the midst.

46 And Jesus, crying with a loud voice, said, Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit: and having said this, he gave up the ghost.

47 And when the centurion saw what was done, he glorified God, saying, Certainly this was a righteous man.

48 And all the multitudes that came together to this sight, when they beheld the things that were done, returned smiting their breasts.

49 And all his acquaintance, and the women that followed with him from Galilee, stood afar off, seeing these things.

50 And behold, a man named Joseph, who was a councillor, a good and righteous man

51 (he had not consented to their counsel and deed), [a man] of Arimathaea, a city of the Jews, who was looking for the kingdom of God:

52 this man went to Pilate, and asked for the body of Jesus.

53 And he took it down, and wrapped it in a linen cloth, and laid him in a tomb that was hewn in stone, where never man had yet lain.

54 And it was the day of the Preparation, and the sabbath drew on.

55 And the women, who had come with him out of Galilee, followed after, and beheld the tomb, and how his body was laid.

56 And they returned, and prepared spices and ointments. And on the sabbath they rested according to the commandment.

   

Commentary

 

Exploring the Meaning of Luke 23

By Ray and Star Silverman

Low Angle Photography of Cross on Top of Mountain

The Crucifixion

1. And all the multitude of them stood up and led Him to Pilate.

2. And they began to accuse Him, saying, We found this [Man] perverting the nation, and forbidding to give tribute to Caesar, saying that He Himself is Christ a King.

3. But Pilate asked Him, saying, Art Thou the King of the Jews? And He answering him declared, Thou sayest.

4. And Pilate said to the chief priests and the crowds, I find no guilt in this man.

5. But they were urgent, saying, He stirs up the people, teaching throughout all Judea, beginning from Galilee even to here.

6. And when Pilate heard of Galilee, he asked whether the Man were a Galilean.

7. And when he knew that He was from Herod’s authority, he sent Him to Herod, who himself also was in Jerusalem in those days.

8. And Herod, seeing Jesus, rejoiced exceedingly, because for a considerable [time] he was desiring to see Him, since he had heard many things about Him, and hoped to see some sign done by Him.

9. And he asked Him with a considerable [number of] words; but He answered him nothing.

10. And the chief priests and scribes stood vehemently accusing Him.

11. And Herod, making Him as nothing with his armies, and mocking, arrayed Him in a splendid cloak, [and] sent Him again to Pilate.

12. And in the same day Pilate and Herod became friends with one another, for before they were at enmity between themselves.

At the end of the previous episode, Jesus was under interrogation by the council of chief priests and elders. Their intent was to get a confession from Jesus, something that would enable them to convict Him of blasphemy. So, they asked Jesus, “Are you the Son of God?” Jesus’ reply was simply, “You say that I am.” This was enough for them to go forward with their conviction. According to the Hebrew scriptures, the punishment for blasphemy was death (Leviticus 24:16).

At that time, however, all decisions about capital punishment were in the hands of the Roman government. Therefore, the religious leaders, who were subject to Roman law, did not have the authority to kill Jesus. They would need to take Jesus to Pilate, the chief Roman official at that time. Pilate’s job is to maintain civil order, not resolve religious disputes. Therefore, instead of accusing Jesus of blasphemy, which is a religious offense, the religious leaders accuse Jesus of inciting a rebellion against the Roman government, which is a political crime worthy of the death penalty.

This is where this next episode begins. As it is written, “the whole multitude of them arose and led Jesus to Pilate” (Luke 23:1). Not only does Pilate have the authority to collect taxes, but he also has the power to punish criminals, even, if necessary, by death. In this regard, Pilate can determine whether or not a particular person is an enemy of the state, and if so, that person can be crucified for treason. It is for this reason that when the religious leaders bring Jesus to Pilate, they say nothing about the claim that He is the Son of God. Instead, they say, “We found this man perverting the nation, and forbidding us to pay taxes to Caesar, saying that He Himself is Christ, a King” (Luke 23:2).

We know, of course, that this allegation is simply not true. Jesus never said that they should not pay taxes to Caesar, nor did He ever declare that His kingdom would replace Caesar’s. What He did say was, “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s” (Luke 20:25), and also, “The kingdom of God is within you” (Luke 17:21). But the allegation is effective. After all, it’s Pilate’s job to preserve order in the kingdom, and not allow for rebellion. If Jesus is in fact a rebel, challenging civil authority, Pilate will have to deal with Him severely. Therefore, Pilate turns to Jesus and asks, “Are You the King of the Jews?” (Luke 23:3). Once again, Jesus responds with the ambiguous statement, “You say” (Luke 23:3). This is almost the same wording that Jesus used when the high priest asked Jesus if He were the Son of God. Jesus said, “You say that I am” (Luke 22:70).

Pilate is not upset by Jesus’ response, nor does He interpret it as a confession. He simply says to the chief priests and to the crowd, “I find no fault in this man” (Luke 23:4). Jesus’ accusers, however, are not willing to be put off. They are adamant about having Jesus condemned, and their words become fierce as they accuse Him of being a rabble rouser: “He stirs up the people,” they say, “teaching throughout all Judea, beginning from Galilee to this place” (Luke 23:5).

The mention of Galilee catches Pilate’s attention because that area is not under Pilate’s jurisdiction. That district belongs to Herod Antipas. Therefore, Pilate asks if Jesus is a Galilean. When Pilate discovers that Jesus is indeed from Galilee, he sends Jesus to Herod, who happens to be in Jerusalem at that time. Interestingly, we read that when Herod sees Jesus, “He rejoiced exceedingly, because for a considerable [time] Herod was desiring to see Jesus, since he had heard many things about Him, and hoped to see some miracle done by Him” (Luke 23:8).

Curious about the signs and miracles that have been attributed to Jesus, Herod questions Him at great length. Jesus, however, remains silent, and gives no answer, fulfilling the prophecy, “Like a lamb led to the slaughter … He did not open his mouth” (Luke 23:9; Isaiah 53:7).

Jesus’s silence enrages the religious leaders who are standing nearby. As it is written, “the religious leaders began to vehemently accuse Him” (Luke 23:10). As Jesus stands there, saying nothing, the religious leaders together with Herod and his soldiers heap scorn and ridicule upon Jesus. As it is written, “Then Herod, with his soldiers, treated Jesus with contempt, mocked Him, put a gorgeous robe on Him and sent Him back to Pilate” (Luke 23:11).

Following this contemptuous mockery of Jesus, it is written that “Herod and Pilate became friends with each other that very day, for before that they had been enemies” (Luke 23:12). This is a powerful picture of an unholy alliance of evil and falsity. Even robbers can appear to be friends when temporarily united in a common effort to steal and destroy. In this regard, the temporary friendship between Herod and Pilate represents the way evil desires and false thinking can make common cause in ridiculing truth and destroying goodness. 1

A practical application

Although Jesus has been mocked and ridiculed, neither Pilate nor Herod is eager to have Him executed. Whether Jesus is crucified or set free, there will be consequences—someone will be upset. That’s why Pilate and Herod find it most expedient to pass Jesus back and forth between them. Similarly, there is a tendency in each of us to avoid making the tough decisions that conscience demands. Instead of living by what we know to be true, we can succumb to the inclination to drift with the crowd and yield to popular opinion. As a spiritual practice, notice Herod and Pilate teaming up in you, getting you to avoid tough decisions—especially those decisions that might make you unpopular. The need to be accepted by others is a powerful one, but it should never replace the deliberate decision to live by the teachings of the Lord’s Word, spiritually understood, and taken to heart. 2

Pilate’s Decision

13. And Pilate, having called together the chief priests, and the rulers, and the people,

14. Said to them, you have brought to me this Man as one that turns away the people, and behold, I, having examined [Him] before you, have found no guilt in this Man concerning those things of which you accuse Him.

15. But neither [did] Herod, for I sent you to him, and behold, nothing worthy of death has been committed by Him.

16. Therefore, having chastised Him, I will release [Him].

17. And of necessity he must release one to them at [the] festival.

18. But they cried out all at once, saying, Take this [Man] away, and release unto us Barabbas;

19. Who for a certain insurrection which was made in the city, and [for] murder, had been cast into prison.

20. Again, therefore, Pilate summoned [them], willing to release Jesus.

21. But they cried out, saying, Crucify, crucify Him!

22. And he said to them a third [time], Why? What evil has He done? I have found no guilt of death in Him; therefore, having chastised Him, I will release [Him].

23. But they pressed upon [him] with loud voices, asking that He might be crucified; and the voices of them and of the chief priests prevailed;

24. And Pilate assented that it should be as they required.

25. And he released to them him who for insurrection and murder had been cast into prison, whom they had asked; but he delivered up Jesus to their will.

As we have seen, Pilate has been unwilling to convict Jesus, saying rather, “I find no fault in Him” (Luke 23:4). The truth of the matter is that Jesus has done nothing wrong. He has come to teach and to heal; He has come to offer a new way to understand God and a new way to serve the neighbor. Everything He does has been motivated by the deepest love. At this point, Pilate finds no fault in Jesus (Luke 23:4). Therefore, Pilate calls together the religious leaders and the people, and presents his case to them, saying, “You have brought this man to me as one who has been inciting a rebellion. However, having examined Him in your presence, I have found no fault in this man regarding the charges you have made against Him” (Luke 23:14). Pilate then says that both he and Herod have found that Jesus “has done nothing deserving of death” (Luke 23:15). To this he adds that he will “punish Jesus and release Him” (Luke 23:16).

The crowd, however, does not agree. “Away with this man,” they cry out, “and release to us Barabbas” (Luke 23:18). Barabbas is a well-known criminal who has been imprisoned for insurrection and murder (Luke 23:19). As the chief Roman official in that jurisdiction, Pilate is surely aware of Barabbas’ criminal record, and would therefore be reluctant to release him. Therefore, he calls out to the crowd a second time, suggesting that Jesus be set free. But the crowd becomes even more insistent, shouting, “Crucify Him, crucify Him!” (Luke 23:21).

The relentless crowd, in this case, represents the relentless demands of our lower nature. This is a picture of how our unregenerate will can overwhelm our understanding. Again and again, we might offer up our reasons for doing the right thing, but if our corrupt will is adamant, reason and understanding will be overpowered. This clash between an insistent lower nature, represented by the crowd, and our understanding, represented by Pilate, is a continual one. Therefore, we read that Pilate says to the crowd a third time, “Why, what evil has He done? I have found no reason for death in Him. I will therefore punish Him and let Him go” (Luke 23:22).

There is a part of us that has no desire to harm what is true and good. It could be called “reason” or “common sense.” But if reason is not well-developed and led by truth from the Word of God, it will crumble when challenged by an assertive and aggressive lower nature. If we drop our guard, just a little, the desires of our lower nature will inundate, overwhelm, and shout down our understanding. As it is written, “But the crowd was insistent, demanding with loud voices that He be crucified. And the voices of these men and the chief priests prevailed” (Luke 23:23). 3

As a result, Pilate relented and gave in to the insistent demands of the crowd. Not only did he agree to crucify Jesus, but he also agreed to release the known criminal, Barabbas (Luke 23:24). As it is written, “So Pilate released to them the one who for rebellion and murder had been thrown into prison, and he delivered Jesus to their will” (Luke 23:25).

A practical application

Barabbas, who was imprisoned for rebellion and murder, represents those parts of ourselves that are determined to rebel against divine order and destroy what is good and true. Whenever we succumb to the promptings of our lower nature, we “release Barabbas” and “crucify Jesus.” Instead of doing God’s will, we do whatever our lower nature demands. And so, this episode concludes with the chilling words that describe Pilate’s final decision: “He delivered Jesus to their will” (Luke 23:25). With this in mind, refuse to be bullied by the unregenerate will of your lower nature, even when it cries with a loud voice, “Release Barabbas.” When the inner crowd makes this demand, remain steadfast in higher truth, keeping Barabbas locked up. Instead, “Release Jesus.”

Taking Up The Cross

26. And as they led Him away, taking [hold] on one Simon, a Cyrenian, coming out of the field, they laid the cross on him to bring [it] after Jesus.

27. And there followed Him a multitude of many people and of women, who also bewailed and lamented Him.

28. But Jesus turning to them said, Daughters of Jerusalem, weep not over Me, but weep over yourselves and over your children.

29. For behold, the days are coming, in which they shall say, Happy [are] the barren, and the wombs which have not given birth, and the breasts which have not nursed.

30. Then shall they begin to say to the mountains, Fall on us; and to the hills, Cover us.

31. For if they do these things in the moist tree, what shall be done in the withered?

Jesus has been very clear about the significance of the cross. Earlier in this gospel, Jesus said, “If anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow Me” (Luke 9:23). And, again, shortly after telling the parable of the great supper, Jesus said, “Whoever does not bear his cross and come after Me cannot be My disciple (Luke 14:27). Jesus is saying that we will each have many trials and temptations, signified by “the cross.” During these times of spiritual combat, we must “follow Him,” meaning that we must remain steadfast, following the truth that He teaches. This is the only way to overcome in temptation. 4

As we have mentioned, Jesus has been undergoing spiritual combats during the course of His entire life. As the final and most grievous temptation approaches, Jesus is physically depleted. After being arrested on the Mount of Olives, He was taken to the high priest’s house where He was blindfolded, mocked, and beaten throughout the night. When morning came, He was interrogated by the council of chief priests and elders who delivered Him to Pilate for further questioning. Pilate then passed Jesus on to Herod where He was treated contemptuously by Herod’s soldiers, and then sent back to Pilate. At this point, Jesus is weary, so weary that He cannot physically carry His own cross. This is perhaps why the soldiers took hold of a certain man who was coming in from the country, and laid the cross on him (Luke 23:26). 5

The man who carries Jesus’ cross is named “Simon.” His name comes from the Hebrew word Shim'on [ שִׁמְעוֹן ] which means “to hear.” Little is known about this man except that he is a Cyrenian and is “from the country.” His role in the divine narrative suggests that he represents those people who have a simple, uncomplicated faith in Jesus. Although they are “from the country,” they have heard Jesus’ message, and have been drawn to Him. Through them—the Simons of the world—the message of the cross, and the truth it represents, will be carried on.

At a deeper level, however, Jesus is still carrying His cross. He is still bearing the suffering, feeling the agony, and fighting off despair as He undergoes the severest temptations. For Jesus, as for each of us, times of temptation reveal our essential character. During these times, our true nature is revealed in how we respond, what we say, and what we do. This is how each of us bears our cross.

As Jesus continues to make His way to the place of crucifixion, a multitude of people, including many women, are following Him. The women are deeply grieving what is happening to Jesus. (Luke 23:27). Turning to the women, Jesus tells them not to weep for Him. He knows that this crucifixion is not just about Him, but, more deeply, it is about the denial and rejection of the truth He came to teach. Without that truth to lead and guide humanity, there will be nothing to control or subdue the unregenerate human will. Instead, it will reign supreme, unleashing greed, hatred, revenge, cruelty, and chaos. Therefore, Jesus says to them, “Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for Me, but weep for yourselves and for your children” (Luke 23:28).

This is a low point for Jesus. In His weakened state, His vulnerable, infirm humanity feels the deepest despair, not for Himself, but for the future of the human race. In a world without truth to guide and protect it, hell would most certainly flood the land with fury, producing limitless suffering for people. 6

A new spiritual era

Nevertheless, even as Jesus approaches His crucifixion, fully aware of the devastation that will follow, He also foresees the birth of a new spiritual era based on the truth He has been teaching. It will be a time when people who are good at heart but without spiritual guidance will eagerly receive the genuine truths of religion. In sacred scripture, these good people who are without truth, yet yearn for it, are called the “barren.” When the long-awaited truth comes to them, and especially when they live their lives according to that truth, they will give birth to works of love and charity. They will be blessed. Therefore, Jesus says, “Indeed, the days are coming when people will say, ‘Blessed are the barren, the wombs that never bore, and the breasts which never nursed’” (Luke 23:29). 7

These “new births” of love and charity are spiritual offspring. They refer to what can be produced through us when a new understanding based on the inner meaning of the Lord’s Word, and a new will based on a life according to those truths, are united in us. The result, so to speak, is a “new church” or a “new temple”—that is, the union of goodness and truth in an individual. As it is written in the Hebrew scriptures, “I will make this new temple more glorious than the first” (Haggai 2:9). 8

People in whom this new church or new temple exists will feel the Lord’s power working through them. Evil desires and false beliefs that had held them captive for so long will run for cover. Tormented and tortured by the light of truth, those evil desires and false thoughts will seek refuge in the lowest places they can find. As Jesus puts it, “Then they will begin to say to the mountains, ‘Fall on us!’ and to the hills, ‘Cover us.’” (Luke 23:30). This is a physical description of how far evil and falsity will be flee from us and run for cover when we live in the powerful and protective light of divine truth. 9

A world without truth

After Jesus prophesies the coming of a new religious era when the truth He teaches will be received and lived, He describes the opposite—a world without His presence and without the truth He came to teach. As Jesus puts it, “For if they do these things in the green wood, what will be done in the dry?” (Luke 23:31). In other words, if they do these things to Him while He is still alive and present with them, what horrors will take place when Jesus is no longer there, that is, when the truth is rejected? 10

To understand the deeper meaning of Jesus’ words, we need to reflect on the meaning of a well-watered green wood as opposed to a dry one. In sacred scripture, water corresponds to truth. Just as water cleanses, refreshes, and nourishes the body, truth does the same for the soul. As it is written in the Hebrew scriptures, in regard to those who remain rooted in the nourishing truths of the Lord’s Word, “They shall be like a tree planted by the water that sends out its roots by the stream. It does not fear when heat comes; its leaves are always green. It is not anxious in a time of drought and never fails to bear fruit” (Jeremiah 17:8). 11

As long as Jesus was with His people, teaching truth, their inner lives could remain fresh, green, and well-watered through the truth they were willing to receive. But not all were willing to receive. As Jesus has told His disciples, “the Son of Man must suffer many things and be rejected by the elders, chief priests, and scribes” (Luke 9:22). Also, “the Son of Man must first suffer many things and be rejected by this generation ” (Luke 17:25). In this regard, the crucifixion of Jesus represents the way truth is falsified and rejected.

They Know Not What They Do

32. And there were also others, two malefactors, led with Him to be slain.

33. And when they had come to a place called Skull, there they crucified Him and the malefactors, one on the right hand and the other on the left.

34. And Jesus was saying, Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do. And dividing His garments, they cast lots.

35. And the people stood beholding. And the rulers with them also derided, saying, He saved others; let Him save Himself, if He be the Christ, the chosen of God.

36. And the soldiers also mocked Him, coming and offering Him vinegar,

37. And saying, If Thou be the King of the Jews, save Thyself.

38. And an inscription was also written over Him in letters of Greek, and Latin, and Hebrew: This is the King of the Jews.

39. And one of the malefactors who were hanging [beside Him] blasphemed Him, saying, If Thou be the Christ, save Thyself and us.

40. But the other, answering, rebuked him, saying, Dost thou not fear God, because thou art in the same judgment?

41. And we indeed justly, for we receive the [things] [of which we are] worthy for what we have committed, but this [Man] has committed nothing amiss.

42. And he said to Jesus, Remember me, Lord, when Thou comest in Thy kingdom.

43. And Jesus said to him, Amen I say to thee, today thou shalt be with Me in paradise.

As Jesus is led to the place of crucifixion, two criminals are led along with Him. (Luke 23:32). As it is written, “When they came to the place called the Skull, they crucified Him and the criminals there, one at His right hand, the other at his left” (Luke 23:33). It is at this point, as Jesus is being nailed to the cross, that He says, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do” (Luke 23:34).

In both the Gospel According to Matthew and the Gospel According to Mark, Jesus’ last words are, ‘My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” (Matthew 27:46; Mark 15:34). But in Luke, Jesus says, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.” These are very different statements. In Matthew and Mark, Jesus’ sense of being separate from His inner divinity is extreme. His anguished expression, “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” is comparable to those states of despair in us when we feel abandoned by God.

But in Luke, we find a very different response. Jesus does not call out to “God,” but rather to His “Father”—a more intimate term. Moreover, there is no indication of abandonment or separation, but rather a close relationship similar to that which takes place between a father and a son. In addition, Jesus’ plea for forgiveness contains one of the major themes of the Gospel According to Luke: it is the importance of a developed understanding. We need knowledge, we need instruction, we need to know what we are doing. Therefore, Jesus says, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.” 12

Meanwhile, at the foot of the cross, the soldiers are gambling for Jesus’ clothing, paying little attention to His suffering. This callous attitude represents a place within each of us that is primarily concerned with the demands of our lower nature and the acquisition of material goods. As it is written, “And they threw dice, dividing up His garments among themselves” (Luke 23:34). Their insensitivity is especially poignant in the light of the fact that Jesus has just cried out, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.”

Leaders, soldiers, and criminals at the cross

As Jesus hangs on the cross, slowly dying the painful death of crucifixion, three groups of people revile Him. The first group of people are the leaders who sneer at Him, saying, “He saved others; let Him save Himself if He is the Christ, the chosen of God” (Luke 23:35). These leaders have already judged and condemned Jesus for claiming to be the Son of God. Now, even as Jesus hangs on the cross, they continue to challenge Him. Their taunting words and cruel sneers represent the part of us that demands that God come down to our level and do our will; it is not interested in humbly learning the truth so that we might do God’s will.

The next group of people are the soldiers. Following the example of the leaders who have begun the taunting, they also mock Jesus, offer Him sour wine, and say, ‘If You are the King of the Jews, save Yourself’” (Luke 23:37). These soldiers represent the tendency to turn religion into a joke and make a mockery of what is true. This is the tendency to take pleasure in ridiculing, deriding, and making fun of both people and the sacred. This is evidenced by the scornful, sarcastic inscription the soldiers place over Jesus’ head as He hangs on the cross: “This is the King of the Jews” (Luke 23:38). 13

The third and final group is the one represented by the two criminals who are crucified on the left and right side of Jesus. The first criminal taunts Jesus as did the first two groups, saying, “If You are the Christ, save Yourself,” and then he adds, “and us” (Luke 23:39). He represents the part of ourselves which is willing to believe, but only if we can get something out of it. This is the tendency to promote our own self-interest rather than to use truth as a means through which goodness can be expressed. 14

The second criminal, however, has a different response. Turning towards the first criminal, he rebukes him, saying, “Do you not even fear God, seeing you are under the same condemnation?” (Luke 23:40). This second criminal believes not only that he is guilty and deserves to die, but also that Jesus is innocent and deserves to live. As He puts it, “We receive the due reward for our deeds. But this Man has done nothing wrong” (Luke 23:41). Then, humbly turning to Jesus, he says, “Lord, remember me when You come into Your kingdom” (Luke 23:42).

It is significant that this second criminal is the only individual who does not ask Jesus to come down from the cross, or to prove that He is the Christ. Instead, he first of all acknowledges his own guilt, and then turns to Jesus. While Jesus has not responded to the taunts of the leaders, the soldiers, or the first criminal, He does respond to the request of the man who acknowledges his guilt and asks to be remembered. Jesus says to him, “Assuredly, today you will be with Me in Paradise” (Luke 23:43).

A practical application

The second criminal represents that aspect of ourselves which is willing to do the work of self-examination, including acknowledging our sins. This is the aspect of ourselves that sincerely turns to God for help and support, asking Him to be mindful of our needs. Here, in the simple story of a humble criminal who acknowledges his guilt, we see a practical application for our lives: we must first humbly acknowledge our guilt, take responsibility for what we have done, and then, turn to God so that we might start a new life in His kingdom—a life that can begin today.

The Final Agony

44. And it was about the sixth hour, and there was darkness over the whole land until the ninth hour.

It should not be forgotten that the mocking of the leaders, the bitter ridicule of the soldiers, the blasphemous taunts of the first criminal, and the repentant request of the second criminal all took place while Jesus hung on the cross. While little is said about Jesus’ physical agony, which must have been extreme, we are given prophetic glimpses of it in the psalms. As it is written, “I am poured out like water, and all of My bones are out of joint. My heart is like wax. It has melted within Me. My strength has dried up like baked clay…. They pierce My hands and My feet” (Psalm 22:17-18). This physical agony is representative of the deeper torments that Jesus is experiencing during His final temptation.

Of all the temptations going through Jesus’ mind, one of the most severe must have been the temptation to abandon His mission, save Himself, and come down from the cross. In this regard, consider the way Jesus was taunted by each group. The first group said, “He saved others; let Him save Himself.” The second group said, “If You are the King of the Jews, save yourself.” And the first criminal said, “If You are the Christ, save Yourself, and us.”

These taunts bring to mind the struggle that Jesus had gone through on the Mount of Olives. At that time, He entertained a moment of doubt about His divine mission, saying, “Father, if it is Your will, remove this cup from Me.” Then, He added, “Nevertheless, not My will but Yours be done” (Luke 22:42). Through the pain, through the grief, through the doubt, through it all, Jesus remains steadfast, entering ever more deeply into the divine love within Him. 15

The sixth hour

As Jesus enters the final agony, it is the sixth hour, and there is darkness over all the earth until the ninth hour” (Luke 23:44). The “sixth” hour in biblical times is noon, and the “ninth hour” is three PM. These words fulfill the prophecy given in the Hebrew scriptures: “‘It shall come to pass in that day,’ says the Lord God, ‘that I will make the sun go down at noon, and I will darken the earth in broad daylight’” (Amos 8:9).

The darkening of the earth at mid-day represents the darkness and depravity into which humanity had fallen, even while the light of truth was with them. People had sunk so low that they were willing to crucify the very One who had come to save them. The utter darkness that filled the land, even when it should have been broad daylight, represents the ignorance, disbelief, and false teachings that had prevented people from understanding the truth that Jesus taught. 16

The Triumph

45. And the sun was darkened, and the veil of the temple was ripped in the midst.

46. And calling [out] with a great voice, Jesus said, Father, into thy hands I commend My spirit. And having said these things, He let out the spirit.

Despite the appearance that all is lost and that His mission has failed, despite the most diabolical onslaughts of hell urging Him to abandon His mission and come down from the cross, Jesus remains steadfast. Beyond the feelings of despair that are attacking Him and the false messages that are assailing Him, Jesus summons the love that has been within Him from the Father, and from that love He chooses to forgive those who know not what they are doing. This decision is not the parting words of a defeated victim. Rather, it is the beginning of Jesus’ final triumph. Every onslaught, every pain, every torment is driving Him deeper within, helping Him to become united with the divinity that is His own soul.

As we have already seen, three groups of people taunted Jesus to come down from the cross. “Come down,” they said, again and again. But each time Jesus refuses because coming down is the very opposite of Jesus’ mission. His mission is to use every temptation and every onslaught of hell as an opportunity to ascend to a higher place—to move closer to the divine within Him. In the same proportion that devils of hell endeavor to pour their wrath upon Him, Jesus draws from the Father within Him the power to conquer and subjugate these diabolical forces. These are the same forces that have been destroying humanity, possessing people’s minds with destructive thoughts, and controlling their wills with selfish desires. If Jesus can overcome in these temptations, there is hope for humanity.

Even as the darkness deepens, every word that Jesus utters from the cross gives hope. “Forgive them for they know not what they do,” He says as He calls upon His Father. “Assuredly, today you will be with Me in paradise,” He says to the criminal on the cross. Even in the darkness, Jesus refuses to give in to temptation. He will not come down. Instead, He continues to rise higher, even until the ninth hour.

The veil of the temple

It was at this moment that “the veil of the temple was torn in two” (Luke 23:45). In the tabernacle, the veil hung between the Holy of Holies and the Holy Place. It divided the Most Holy place, where the Ten Commandments were kept, from the Holy Place, which was the place of prayer. It was sixty feet high, thirty feet wide, and four inches thick. When this veil was suddenly and miraculously torn in two, there was no longer any separation between the Most Holy Place and the Holy Place. On the spiritual level, this means that there would no longer be any separation between the life of prayer (the Holy Place) and the life of service (the Most Holy Place). Also, there would no longer be any separation between knowing the truth and living according to it.

More deeply, there would no longer be any separation between the Son and the Father. Our idea of God would no longer be that of a distant, angry deity who thundered from the mountaintop. Rather, God could now be seen as an approachable, loving Father, who is among us as one who serves (Luke 22:27). 17

Through His struggles to overcome every temptation, Jesus had triumphed. Again and again, He drew power from His infinite soul, casting out every demon and every selfish passion as He became united with the divinity that was within Him. It was at this point that He cried out in a loud voice, “Father, into Your hands I commend My spirit” (Luke 23:46). This was the fulfillment of the prophecy given through David a thousand years earlier, “In You, O Lord, I put My trust…. You are My strength. Into Your hand I commit My spirit; You have redeemed Me, O Lord God of truth” (Psalm 31:1, 5).

It was only then that the struggle was over. As it is written, “And having said this, He breathed His last” (Luke 23:46).

A practical application

When hardships, temptations and adversity arise, people tend to respond in a variety of ways. They might fight back in anger, run away in fear, become frustrated, get anxious, or sink into despair. Jesus, however, demonstrates that there is another way. He uses temptation to draw closer to His inner divinity. We can do something similar. We can call upon God in prayer, allowing Him to bring truth to our remembrance. Then we can respond to the situation from love guided by truth. If we do this during the lesser temptations, it will strengthen us for the greater ones. This is how we build “spiritual muscle.” Therefore, whenever irritation, anxiety, defensiveness, or discouragement arises, use it as a signal to go higher. Choose to draw closer to God. Say to yourself, “This is an opportunity for me to become a finer person.” Like Jesus, refuse to come down. Rise higher.

Caring for Jesus’ Body

47. But when the centurion saw what came to pass, he glorified God, saying, Truly this was a just Man.

48. And all the crowds who came together to that sight, beholding the things that were done, striking their chests, returned.

49. And all His acquaintances, and the women who followed with Him from Galilee, stood afar off, beholding these things.

50. And behold, [there was] a man named Joseph, a counselor, being a good and just man,

51. Who had not consented to the counsel and deed of them; [he was] of Arimathea, a city of the Jews, who also himself was waiting for the kingdom of God.

52. This [man], going to Pilate, asked for the body of Jesus;

53. And taking it down, he wrapped it in a cloth, and placed it in a sepulcher that was hewn in stone, where no one had yet been laid.

54. And that day was the Preparation, and a Sabbath began to dawn.

55. And the women also, who came together [with] Him from Galilee, followed after and observed the sepulcher, and how His body was laid.

56. And returning, they prepared spices and ointments. And indeed they were quiet for the Sabbath according to the commandment.

The people who witnessed the crucifixion saw an innocent Man who was able to rise above the taunts and jeers of the crowd, forgive His accusers, promise eternal life to a repentant criminal, and express His complete trust in God. Many were deeply moved. One of the Roman soldiers who stood guard at the foot of the cross exclaimed, “Certainly this was a righteous Man” (Luke 23:47). The crowds who had witnessed the crucifixion beat their breasts in sorrow. Others stood by in silence, stunned by what had just happened. As it is written, some “beat their breasts” while others “stood afar, beholding these things” (Luke 23:48-49).

While some beat their breasts and others stand afar, a man named Joseph of Arimathea is moved to act. After Jesus “breathed His last,” Joseph goes to Pilate, seeking permission to take Jesus’ body from the cross. Although this incident appears in every gospel, only in Luke is Joseph described as a “good and just man” (Luke 23:50). Moreover, only in Luke do we discover that although Joseph was a member of the council of chief priests and elders who convicted Jesus, “he had not consented” to the decision of the council to convict Jesus of blasphemy (Luke 23:51).

In dissenting from the decision of the majority, Joseph of Arimathea represents the use of reason and understanding to rise above the demands of the selfish will. While the selfish will demands that it should be served, Jesus teaches unselfish service and sacrifice. While the selfish will demands anger and revenge, Jesus teaches love and forgiveness. The process of reformation begins when the understanding of higher truth is used to subordinate the demands of the selfish will. 18

Joseph of Arimathea, then, in refusing to concur with the scornful, self-serving demands of the council, represents this higher understanding. In doing so, he becomes a living example of what is taught in the Hebrew scriptures: “Blessed is the man who walks not in the council of the ungodly, nor sets foot on the path of sinners, nor sits in the seat of the scornful” (Psalm 1:1). Also, “You shall not follow a multitude to do evil” (Exodus 23:2).

When Joseph of Arimathea asked Pilate for Jesus’ body, he was demonstrating his loyalty to Jesus. At the same time, He was obeying Mosaic law which specified that dead bodies were not allowed to remain on the cross overnight. The crucified person must be buried the same day (See Deuteronomy 21:22-23). And so, after obtaining permission to take Jesus’ body, Joseph “took it down, wrapped it in linen cloth, and placed it in a new tomb cut out of a rock, where no one had ever lain” (Luke 23:53). Joseph of Arimathea, this good and just man, the one who dissented from the council and had been waiting for the kingdom of God, gave Jesus an honorable burial.

In addition, it is written that “the women who had come with Jesus from Galilee followed after, and observed the tomb and how His body was laid” (Luke 23:55). It was late in the day, sunset was approaching, and the Sabbath was drawing near. These women, who represent the tender affection for truth in each of us, could only observe Joseph’s actions and how Jesus was laid in the tomb. For the moment, there is no time to anoint Jesus’ body with fragrant spices and oils, representing the respect and love they have for Jesus’ life and teaching. But they would return, after the Sabbath, to do so (Luke 23:56). 19

It had been a difficult time. Jesus had been crucified, placed in a tomb, and laid to rest. He had defeated the enemy, subjugated hell, and glorified His humanity. It was time, at least for the moment, to rest. Therefore, this episode closes with the words, “And they rested on the Sabbath according to the commandment” (Luke 23:56). 20

Footnotes:

1AC 1322: “Evil spirits are joined together by their having similar delusions and evil desires. In this way, they act together in persecuting truths and goods. Thus, there is a certain common interest by which they are held together.”

2NJHD 131: “Conscience is formed through the truths of faith from the Word, or from doctrine derived from the Word, according to a person’s reception in the heart. For when people know the truths of faith and grasp them in their own manner, and so come to will and do them, then they develop a conscience…. They also have their mind undivided, for they act in accordance with what they understand and believe to be true and good.”

3SE 4165: “Concerning the inundation arising from evil spirits. I have often experienced that I was withheld, and, as it were, elevated, that is, towards interior things, thus into the societies of the good, and in this manner kept from evil spirits. I have also perceived and felt that if I had been let down but a little, the evil spirits would have inundated me with their persuasions and false and evil principles; I also perceived that in proportion as I was let down, they did inundate me.” See also AC 8194:2: “Since a person’s own will is nothing but evil a person undergoes regeneration of the understanding part of the mind. It is there, in the understanding, that the new will is formed.”

4AC 10490: “Spiritual combats are temptations to be undergone by those who are to be regenerated. These combats are the contentions arising in people between the evils and falsities which are with them from hell, and the goods and truths which are with them from the Lord…. By the ‘cross’ is meant the state of a person when in temptations.” See also 2343:2: “When people persevere and overcome in temptation, the Lord stays with them, confirms them in good, brings them to Himself into His kingdom, and dwells together with them, and there purifies and perfects them.”

5AC 1414: “The Lord was like other men, except that He was conceived of Jehovah, but still was born of a virgin mother, and by birth derived infirmities from the virgin mother like those of people in general. These infirmities are corporeal, and it is said that He should recede from them, in order that celestial and spiritual things might appear. There are two hereditary natures connate in people, one from the father, the other from the mother. The Lord’s heredity from the Father was the Divine, but His heredity from the mother was the infirm human.”

6AC 3340: “Those who are in hell breath out nothing else but all kinds of hatred, revenge, and murder, and they do so with such vehemence that they wish to destroy everybody throughout the universe. Consequently, if the Lord was not constantly driving back that rage the entire human race would perish.” See also AC 1787: “The Lord, who endured the most dire and cruel temptations of all, could not but be driven into states of despair…. From this we may see the nature of the Lord’s temptations —that they were the most terrible of all.”

7AC 710: “The words ‘the barren,’ and ‘the wombs that have not borne,’ signify those who have not received genuine truths, that is, truths from the good of love, and ‘the breasts that have not given suck’ signify those who have not received genuine truths from the good of charity.” See also AC 9325:7: “By ‘the barren’ are also signified those who are not in good because not in truths, and yet long for truths that they may be in good; as is the case with upright nations outside the church.”

8TCR 599: “After the act of redemption, the Lord established a new church. Likewise, too, He establishes in a person those things that make the church [good and truth]. Thus, He makes the person a [new] church at the level of the individual.” See also AC 40: In Ezekiel, the {w219} describes the new temple, or new church in general the person who has been regenerated. This is because every regenerate person is a temple of the {w219}.” 9AE 411: “The state of the wicked is such that they cannot endure the light of heaven. Because they are tormented and tortured by it, they cast themselves from the mountains and rocks, into hells which are deep according to the quality of their evil and falsity; some into gaps and caves, and some into holes and under rocks…. When they are in the caves and under the rocks, the anguish and torment which they suffered from the influx of the light of heaven, then cease; for they have rest in their evils and in the falsities thence, because these were their delights.”

10AC 9127: “They had been doing violence to the truths of the Word, to such an extent that they were unwilling to accept any inner, heavenly truth at all. Therefore, they did not accept the Lord either. The shedding of His blood by them was a sign of their total rejection of God’s truth; for the Lord was divine truth itself.”

11AE 481:2: “The tree planted by the waters signifies the person in whom there are truths from the Lord. This is because water signifies truth…. Their leaf shall be green, signifies living from truth…. The year of drought signifies a state in which there are loss and deprivation of truth.”

12AC 1690: “The whole of the Lord's life in the world, from His earliest childhood, was continual temptation and continual victory. The last was when He prayed on the cross for His enemies, and thus for all in the whole world.” See also AC 1820: “{W877}’s love was the salvation of the whole human race was most ardent. {w174}equently, it was the whole sum of the affection of good affection of truth in the highest degree. Against these, with the most malignant wiles venom, all the hells waged the combat; but still the {w219} conquered them all by His own power.” 13TCR 38: “The pleasure of falsity is like the light that finds its way into a wine-skin in which are worms swimming about in sour wine.”

14AC 9776: “What is good and true should be done for the sake of goodness and truth, not for selfish and worldly reasons.” See also AC 4247:2: “Good flows constantly into truth, and truth receives good, since truths are the vessels for good.”

15AC 1820: “Anyone who is undergoing temptation experiences doubt as regards the end in view. That end is the love against which evil spirits fight and in so doing place the end in doubt. And the greater one’s love is, the more they place it in doubt. Unless the end in view which a person loves is placed in doubt, and even in despair, there would be no temptation…. Evil spirits never contend against any other things than those which a person loves, and the more intensely a person loves them the more fiercely do those spirits contend…. This explains the nature of the Lord’s temptations which were the most dreadful of all, for as is the intensity of the love so is the dreadfulness of the temptations. The Lord’s love—a most ardent love—was the salvation of the whole human race.”

16AE 401:15: “That ‘darkness came over all the land’ signifies that there remained mere falsity, and no truth whatever…. And because there were falsities and evils with them, from the Lord’s having been denied, therefore it is said, ‘and darkness came, and the sun was darkened.’ The ‘sun’ that was darkened refers to the Lord, who is said to be ‘obscured’ when false beliefs so prevail that He is not acknowledged, and evils so prevail that He is crucified.”

17AC 2576:4: “‘The veil shall divide unto you between the Holy and the Holy of Holies’ (Exodus 26:31-34; 36:35-36)…. The veil of the temple being torn in two signifies that the Lord entered into the Divine Itself by dispersing all appearances; and that He at the same time opened the way to His Divine Itself through His Human made Divine.”

18AE 140: “The possibility of having the understanding enlightened has been granted to all people for the sake of reformation. For in the will dwells every kind of evil, both that into which people are born, and that into which they come by themselves. The will cannot be amended unless people know, and by the understanding acknowledge, truths and goods, and also evils and falsities. Otherwise, they cannot turn away from the latter and love the former.”

19AC 3974: “In the Word, ‘females’ or ‘women’ signify the affections of truth.”

20DP 247: “The suffering of the cross was the last temptation or trial, or final combat, by which the Lord fully overcame the hells and fully glorified His humanity.” See also AR 150: “When He was in the world, the Lord acquired for Himself all power over the hells, by virtue of His Divinity that He had in Him. See also HD 295: “When the Lord fully glorified His humanity, then He put off the humanity He inherited from His mother, and put on the humanity He inherited from the Father, which is the Divine humanity. He was therefore then no longer the son of Mary.”

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Apocalypse Explained #411

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411. Verse 16. And they said to the mountains and to the rocks, Fall on us, signifies to be covered over by evils and by falsities therefrom. This is evident from the signification of "mountains," as being the evils that flow from the loves of self and of the world (of which above, n. 405; also from the signification of "rocks," as being the falsities from evil (of which below); also from the signification of "fall on us," as being to be covered by them. These things, too, are to be illustrated by such things as occur in the spiritual world when the Last Judgment takes place; for they are said respecting the Last Judgment, as is evident from the following verse, where it is said, "For the great day of His anger is come, and who is able to stand?" that "day" meaning the time and state of the Last Judgment. The state of the wicked then is such that from the mountains and rocks upon which they have made their habitations they cast themselves down into the hells, more or less deeply according to the atrocity of the evils and falsities with them; and this they themselves do, because they cannot endure Divine good and Divine truth, the higher heavens then being opened, from which the light of heaven flows in, which is Divine truth united to Divine good, by which light their pretended goods and truths are constricted, and these being constricted their evils and falsities are loosened; and as evils and falsities cannot endure the light of heaven, for they are pained and tortured by it, these spirits cast themselves from the mountains and rocks into the hells, more or less deeply according to the quality of their evil and falsity; some into gaps and caves, and some into holes and rocks, which then stand open before them; but as soon as they have cast themselves in, the openings are closed up. In this way the casting out of evil spirits from the mountains and hills which they have occupied is effected (See above, n. 391-392, 392, 394); and when they are in the caves and among the rocks the pains and torments they suffered from the influx of the light of heaven cease; for they find rest in their evils and in the falsities therefrom, because these had been their delights; for the delights of his life remain with everyone after death, and the delights of life are the delights of their loves, for every delight of life is from love.

[2] From this the signification of their "calling to the mountains and the rocks to fall on them" can be seen; likewise what is signified in Hosea:

They shall say to the mountains, Cover us, and to the hills, Fall on us (Hosea 10:8).

And in Luke:

Then shall they begin to say to the mountains, Fall on us, and to the hills, Hide us (Luke 23:30).

This, too, treats of the Last Judgment. The light of heaven, which is Divine truth united to Divine good, by the influx and presence of which the evil who cast themselves down are pained and tormented, is meant by the words immediately following in this verse; "hide us from the face of Him that sitteth on the throne, and from the anger of the Lamb;" it is said "the anger O the Lamb" because they are in torment; but their torment is not from that, but from the evils of their loves and from the falsities of their faith; and because these evils and falsities have formed all the interiors of their mind (for each one's mind is formed by his love and its faith, even so as to be a likeness of these in form), and because the interiors of the mind of those who are in evils and in falsities therefrom are turned away in a contrary direction, or to a quarter opposite to Divine goods and truths, therefore when Divine truth flows in and endeavors to reverse the action of the interiors of their mind, and thereby to lead them into heaven (for this is what Divine truth proceeding from the Lord does everywhere where it flows in), and they are unwilling to abandon the delights of their loves, they suffer anguish and torment; but these cease when they come into the hells where like delights or like loves prevail.

[3] Having shown above n. 405 what "mountains and hills" signify, it shall now be shown what "rocks" signify, namely, that they signify truth from spiritual good, also the truth and good of faith, but in the contrary sense the falsity of faith. This signification of "rocks" is also from appearances in the spiritual world; for rocks and crags are seen there as mountains and hills are seen, as was shown above, and upon the rocks there those dwell who are in truths from spiritual good, and who are in the truth and good of faith. The difference between the mountains and hills, and the rocks and crags, is that the former are of soil, and the latter of stone, and "soil" corresponds to and thus signifies the good of love, and "stone" corresponds to and thus signifies the truth of faith. And as most things in the Word have also a contrary sense, so do "rocks," and in that sense they signify the falsity of faith, and this also from correspondence; for those who are in the falsities of faith dwell there within the rocks in caverns.

[4] That "rock" signifies truth from good and the truth of faith, and in the highest sense the Lord in respect to these, is evident from the following passages. In Daniel:

Thou sawest 1 till that a stone was cut out, not by hands, and it smote the image upon his feet, that were iron and clay. And the stone that smote the image became a great rock and filled the whole earth (Daniel 2:34-35).

This was said of the image that Nebuchadnezzar saw in his dream. "The stone that became a great rock" means the Lord, as is evident from the particulars there. But first let the signification of what precedes be told; "the head of the image" which was gold, signifies the Most Ancient Church, which was a celestial church, or a church in which the good of love to the Lord reigned; this good is signified in the Word by "gold," and also by "the head;" "the breast" and "the arms" which were silver, signify the Ancient Church, which succeeded the Most Ancient, and this church was a spiritual church, or a church in which the good of charity towards the neighbor, and truth from that good, reigned; this truth and good are signified by "silver," and also by "the breast" and "the arms;" "the belly and the thighs which were brass" signify the church that succeeded the ancient spiritual church and which may be called spiritual-natural; in this church the good of faith and the truth from that good reigned; this good is signified in the Word by "brass," and also by "the belly" and "the thighs;" but "the legs and the feet, which were part iron and part clay," signify the Israelitish and Jewish Church, which was an external church without any internal, and which therefore had no truth and good, but truth falsified which in itself is falsity, and good adulterated which in itself is evil; therefore it is said respecting it in this chapter:

Whereas thou sawest iron mixed with miry clay, they shall mingle themselves with the seed of man; but they shall not cohere one with the other, even as iron doth not mingle with clay (Daniel 2:43).

"Iron" signifies natural truth, and "miry clay" natural good; "the feet and legs" have a like meaning; but here "clay" signifies good adulterated, and "iron" such truth as there is in the external sense of the Word; for "the seed of man" means the Word where there are goods and truths, the adulterations and falsifications of which are described by "iron mixed with clay, which do not cohere one with the other." (That there have been four churches, one after another, may be seen in The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem 247, 248 .) "The stone" that smote the image means Divine truth from the Lord; that "it became a great rock and filled the whole earth" signifies that the Lord by Divine truth is to rule over heaven and the church; "the earth" here meaning the church and also heaven; therefore it is added that this kingdom "shall stand forever" (verse Daniel 2:44), "kingdom" also signifying the church and heaven, for there is the kingdom of God. That Divine truth is here meant by "stone," and the Lord in respect to Divine truth by "rock," is evident from the signification of "stone" in the Word when predicated of the Lord (as in Genesis 49:24; Psalms 118:22-23; Isaiah 28:16; Matthew 21:42, 21:44; Mark 12:10-11; Luke 20:17-18). Whether you say the Lord or Divine truth it is the same, since all Divine truth is from Him, and thence He is in it; and it is from this that the Lord is called "the Word," for the Word is Divine truth. (That "stone" in the highest sense signifies the Lord in respect to Divine truth, and thence in a lower sense truth from good, see Arcana Coelestia 643[1-4], 1298, 3720, 6426, 8609, 10376)

[5] That "rock" signifies the Lord in respect to Divine truth, is plain from:

The rock in Horeb from which waters were given to the Israelitish people (Exodus 17:5-6);

and that it was commanded:

That Moses and Aaron should speak unto the cliff, and thus should sanctify Jehovah in the eyes of the sons of Israel; but that Moses smote it with a staff two times, therefore it was declared to Moses and Aaron that they should not bring the people into the land of Canaan (Numbers 20:8-13).

It is known in the church that this "rock" signified the Lord; but it is not known that it had this signification because "rock" in the Word signifies the Divine truth that proceeds from the Lord; this was why Moses and Aaron were commanded to speak to it, and thus to sanctify Jehovah in the eyes of the sons of Israel. Also "the waters" that flowed forth signify Divine truth; and "the people drinking of them" signifies to nourish spiritually, which is done by instructing and teaching. (That "waters" signify truths, see above, n. 71; and that "to drink," and "to be given to drink," signify to be instructed and to be taught, see Arcana Coelestia, n. (Arcana Coelestia 3069, 3772, 4017-4018, 8562, 9412) The like is signified by "rock" in Isaiah:

They shall not thirst; He will lead them in desolate places; He will cause the waters to flow out of the rock for them, when He cleaveth the rock that the waters may issue (Isaiah 48:21).

In David:

He clave the rocks in the wilderness, and made them to drink of the great depths; and He brought streams out of the cliff; and they remembered that God was their Rock, and the most high God their Redeemer (Psalms 78:15-16, 20, 35).

In the same:

He opened the rock that the waters might issue out; they flowed in the dry places, a river (Psalms 105:41).

In the same:

Before the Lord thou art in travail, O earth, before the God of Jacob, who turned the rock into a pool of waters, the flint into a fountain of waters (Psalms 114:7-8).

That "rock" in these passages signifies the Lord in respect to Divine truth, or what is the same, Divine truth from the Lord, is evident from what has been said above, also from the fact that these two passages in David treat of the redemption and the regeneration of the men of the church, and this is effected by means of Divine truth from the Lord. Redemption is treated of in these words, "they remembered that God was their Rock, and the most high God their Redeemer;" regeneration in these words, "Before the Lord thou art in travail, O earth;" "to be in travail" when predicated of the church, signifying to be reformed and regenerated.

[6] In Isaiah:

Hearken unto me, ye that follow after righteousness, ye that seek Jehovah; look unto the rock out of which ye were hewn, and to the digging out of the pit out of which ye were digged (Isaiah 51:1).

The "rock" means the Lord in respect to Divine truth, and the "pit" signifies the Word, as also in other places; "to be hewn out of the rock" and "to be digged out of the pit," signify to be regenerated by Divine truths and Divine goods, thus by truths from good from the Lord; for "stones," that are cut out of a rock, signify truths from the Lord; and "soil," that is dug out of a pit, signifies good from the Lord, therefore it is called "the digging out of the pit."

[7] In Moses:

Give ye greatness unto our God; the rock, whose work is perfect, and all His ways are judgment. He made him to ride on the high places of the earth, and feedeth him with the increase of the fields; He maketh him to suck honey out of the cliff, and oil out of the flint of the rock. The rock that begat thee hast thou given to forgetfulness, and hast forgotten God thy Former. Is it not because their rock hath sold them, and Jehovah hath shut them up? For their rock is not as our rock, neither are our enemies judges (Deuteronomy 32:3-4, 13, 18, 30-31).

This is said of the Ancient Church, which was a church that was in truths from good; therefore truths from good are described by various things that correspond, as "He made him to ride on the high places of the earth, He fed him with the increase of the fields; He made him to suck honey out of the cliff, and oil out of the flint of the rock." Intelligence in the spiritual things of this church is signified by "He made him to ride on the high places of the earth;" "to ride" signifying to understand; "the high places of the earth" meaning the spiritual things of the church; spiritual nourishment therefrom is signified by "He fed him with the increase of the fields;" "to feed" meaning to nourish, and "the increase of the fields" meaning all things of the church. That they had natural good and spiritual good through Divine truth from the Lord is signified by "He made him to suck honey out of the cliff, and oil out of the flint of the rock;" "honey" meaning natural good, "oil" spiritual good; "cliff" external Divine truth from the Lord which is for the natural man, and "flint of the rock" internal Divine truth from the Lord which is for the spiritual man. The Jewish Church, which was not in any Divine truth, is next treated of, and respecting this it is said, "the rock that begat thee hast thou given to forgetfulness, and hast forgotten God thy Former," which signifies that the Lord, and thence Divine truth, by which the church is reformed, were rejected; "rock" meaning the Lord in respect to Divine truth, and "that begat thee," and "God the Former" signifying to be reformed by the Lord by means of Divine truth. That they were altogether deprived of truth and good is signified by "their rock hath sold them, and Jehovah hath shut them up," "rock" having reference to truth, and "Jehovah" to good; "to sell" and "to shut up" means to be deprived of. That they would be in falsity from evil is signified by "their rock is not as our rock, neither are our enemies judges" "their rock" meaning falsity, "our enemies" evils, "not judges" signifying not truths and goods. From this it can be seen that "rock" signifies the Lord in respect to Divine truth, and in the contrary sense, falsity.

[8] In the second book of Samuel:

The spirit of Jehovah spoke in me, and His speech was upon my tongue. The God of Israel said, the Rock of Israel spoke [to me]. He that ruleth over the righteous man, that ruleth over the fear of God (2 Samuel 23:2-3).

"Rock" here manifestly stands for the Lord, for in the Word "the God of Israel" means the Lord; therefore it is said "the spirit of Jehovah spoke in me, and His speech was upon my tongue," also "the God of Israel said, the Rock of Israel spoke to me." The "spirit of Jehovah" and "His speech" signify Divine truth, and the Lord is called "the God of Israel" from worship, and "the Rock of Israel" from Divine truth, from which is worship. Because it is the Lord who is meant, it is said that "the Rock of Israel spoke." His dominion over those who are in good and those who are in truth is signified by "He that ruleth over the righteous man, that ruleth over him that hath the fear of God;" righteousness" is predicated of good, and "fear of God" of truth; for this Psalm of David treats of the Lord, which makes clear that the Lord is meant by "the God of Israel," and "the Rock of Israel."

[9] In David:

O that My people may hearken unto Me, that Israel might walk in My ways! I would feed 2 them with the fat of wheat; and with honey out of the rock I would satisfy them (Psalms 81:13, 16).

Here, too, "rock" means the Lord in respect to Divine truth (as may be seen above, n. 374, where this is explained). In the same:

Who is God save Jehovah, or who is a Rock besides my 3 God? Jehovah liveth: and blessed be my Rock; and the God of my salvation shall be exalted (Psalms 18:2, 31, 46; 2 Samuel 22:2-3, 32, 47).

It is said, "Who is God save Jehovah, and who is a Rock besides my God?" because where Divine good is treated of the Lord is called "Jehovah," and where Divine truth is treated of he is called "God," and also "Rock," as here; so afterwards, "Jehovah liveth, and blessed be my Rock;" "the God of my salvation shall be exalted" signifies that He must be worshiped by means of truths from good, from which is salvation; "to be exalted," in reference to God is predicated of worship from good by means of truths.

[10] In the same:

Let the sayings of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be well pleasing before Thee, O Jehovah, my Rock and my Redeemer (Psalms 19:14).

"Jehovah the Rock" has a like signification as "Jehovah God," namely, the Lord in respect to Divine good and Divine truth; and He is called "Redeemer" from regeneration, which is effected by Divine truth; "sayings of the mouth" signify the understanding of truth, and "the meditation of the heart" the perception of good. In the same:

I say unto God my Rock, Why hast Thou forgotten me? (Psalms 42:9).

"God the Rock" means the Lord in respect to Divine truth, here in respect to defense. In the same:

Unto Thee do I call, O Jehovah my Rock; be not silent from me; lest Thou be silent from me (Psalms 28:1).

Here, too, "Jehovah" and "Rock" are mentioned, because "Jehovah" means the Lord in respect to Divine good, and "Rock" the Lord in respect to Divine truth, and as both are meant it is twice said, "be not silent from me," "lest Thou be silent from me;" one having reference to Divine good, the other to Divine truth, for in the Word there is a heavenly marriage in every particular, which is the marriage of good and truth. In Habakkuk:

O Jehovah, Thou hast placed him for judgment; and thou, O Rock, hast founded him for correction (Habakkuk 1:12).

In Isaiah:

Trust ye in Jehovah forevermore; for in Jah Jehovah is the Rock of Eternity (Isaiah 26:4).

Ye shall have a song as of the night of celebrating the feast; and gladness of heart as of one going with a pipe to come into the mountain of Jehovah, to the Rock of Israel (Isaiah 30:29).

Is there a God beside me? yea, there is no Rock, I know not any (Isaiah 44:8).

In David:

We will make a joyful noise unto the Rock of our salvation; we will come before His faces with confession (Psalms 95:1-2

In the first book of Samuel:

There is none holy as Jehovah; and there is no Rock like our God (1 Samuel 2:2).

In David:

Upright is Jehovah my Rock (Psalms 92:15).

He shall call me, Thou art my Father, my God, the Rock of my salvation. I also will make Him the firstborn, high above the kings of the earth (Psalms 89:26-27).

[11] In these passages, "rock" means Divine truth from the Lord and the Lord Himself, as well as in other passages. As in the gospels:

Everyone that heareth My words and doeth them, I will liken him to a prudent man, who built his house upon a rock; and the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house, yet it fell not, for it was founded upon a rock (Matthew 7:24-25; Luke 6:48).

"The house founded upon a rock" means the church and the man of the church who has founded his doctrine and life upon the Divine truth, which is from the Lord, thus upon those things that are in the Word, consequently one who is in truths from good from the Lord. It is said, "who is in truths from good," because Divine truth is not received by anyone who is not in good. To be in good is to be in the good of life, which is charity; therefore it is said "he that heareth My words and doeth them;" "doing the Lord's words" is the good of life, for truth, when a man does it, becomes good because it then enters the will and love, and whatever becomes of the will and love is called good. Temptations, in which such a man of the church does not fall but conquers, are signified by "the rain descended, the floods came, the winds blew, and beat upon the house, and yet it fell not, for it was founded upon a rock;" for in the Word "floods of waters" and "rains," and also "tempests of wind," signify temptations. This, to be sure, is a comparison, but it should be known that all comparisons in the Word are as much according to correspondences as are the things not said comparatively (See above, n. 69; and Arcana Coelestia 3579, 8989).

This makes plainly evident that "rock" in the Word signifies the Lord in respect to Divine truth, or Divine truth from the Lord.

[12] From this it can be seen what is signified by the Lord's words to Peter, in Matthew:

Jesus said to the disciples, But who say ye that I am? Simon Peter answered, Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God. Jesus answering said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon son of Jonah; for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but My Father who is in the heavens. I say unto thee, Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of the heavens, that whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in the heavens, and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in the heavens (Matthew 16:15-19).

"Peter" here does not mean Peter, but Divine truth from the Lord (as in the passages cited above) for all the Lord's disciples together represented the church; and each one of them some constituent of the church; "Peter" the truth of the church, "James" its good, and "John" good in act, that is, works; the rest of the disciples represented the truths and goods that are derived from these, just as the twelve tribes of Israel. That this is so will be seen in what follows, where the tribes and the disciples are treated of. This is why these three disciples are mentioned in the Word more than the others.

[13] The Lord addressed these words to Peter because he then confessed, saying, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God," which in the spiritual sense signifies that He is the Divine truth; this is signified by "Christ," also by "the Son of God." (That this is signified by "Christ" see Arcana Coelestia 3004, 3005, 3009; and by "the Son of God" above, n. 63, 151, 166.) By virtue of this confession "Peter" represented Divine truth from the Lord in the church, and for this reason he was called "a rock" [petra], and it is said "thou art a rock [petra], upon this rock [petra] I will build My church," which signifies upon Divine truth from the Lord, or what is the same, upon truths from good, for upon these the church is built. That Peter might represent this in the church he was called by the Lord "a rock [petra]." as is evident in John:

Jesus looking upon him said unto him, Thou art Simon, the son of Jonah; thou shalt be called Cephas, which is, by interpretation, a rock [petra] (John 1:42).

Cephas in the Syriac language means a rock, and so Peter in that version is everywhere called "Cephas;" moreover, the same word in the Hebrew means a rock (as is evident in Jeremiah 4:29; andJob Job 30:6, where "rocks" are mentioned in the plural number); but Peter is not called a rock [petra] in the Greek and Latin because the name was bestowed upon him as a personal name.

[14] The Lord said "Simon son of Jonah" and afterwards he was called "a rock," because "Simon son of Jonah" signifies truth from good, or faith from charity; and as truth from good or faith from charity is granted only to those who are in Divine truth from the Lord, and Peter then confessed [the Lord], so he is called "a rock," not himself as a person, but that Divine truth which was from the Lord with him in his confession. That this was from the Lord is meant by the Lord's words, "flesh and blood has not revealed it unto thee, but My Father who is in the heavens;" "the Father in the heavens" meaning the Divine in the Lord, since the Father was in Him, and He in the Father and they were one (John 14:7-11; 10:30, 38). That "Simon" signifies truth in the will, see in the following chapter; and that "dove," which is what "Jonah" means, signifies spiritual good, see Arcana Coelestia 870[1-3], 1826, 1827); consequently "Simon son of Jonah" signifies the truth of good or truth from good. Because the hells have no power against Divine truth proceeding from the Lord, or against any man in whom there is Divine truth from the Lord, therefore the Lord says that "the gates of hell shall not prevail against it."

[15] The Lord further said, "I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of the heavens; and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in the heavens, and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in the heavens," which signifies that all things are possible to those who are in truths from good from the Lord, in full agreement with these words:

All things whatsoever ye ask for, praying, believe that ye are to receive, then shall it be done unto you (Mark 11:24; Matthew 7:8; Luke 11:9).

How these words are to be understood see above (n. 405i), namely, that to ask from the faith of charity is to ask not from self but from the Lord, for whatever anyone asks not from self but from the Lord he receives. That such is the signification of these words, "whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in the heavens, and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in the heavens," is clear from the Lord's words to the disciples and to all who are in truths from good from the Lord, in Matthew:

Verily I say unto you, What things soever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and what things soever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in the heavens (Matthew 18:18).

[16] These words were spoken to all, thus not to Peter only, as the Lord immediately declares in that chapter in these words:

I say unto you, That if two of you shall agree on earth in My name respecting anything that they shall ask, it shall be done for them by My Father, who is in the heavens. For where two or three are gathered in My name, there am I in the midst of them (Matthew 18:19-20).

"The Lord's name" means everything by which He is worshiped; and as He is worshiped by means of truth from good, which is from Him, so this is meant by "His name." (That this is what is meant by the "Lord's name," see above, n. 102, 135.) So "every thing they shall ask on earth shall be done for them in the heavens" has a similar signification as "whatsoever ye shall bind and shall loose on earth shall be bound and shall be loosed in the heavens," for the Lord explains the former words by the latter. One who knows the spiritual sense of the Word can know also why it is said "if two agree," and afterwards, "where there are two or three," namely, because "two" is predicated of good, and "three" of truth, consequently "two and three" of all who are in truths from good. (That Divine truth from the Lord has all power in the heavens and on earth, see above, n. 209, 333; and in the work on Heaven and Hell 230-231, 539; and Arcana Coelestia 3091, 3563, 6344, 6423, 6948, 8200, 8304, 9643, 10019, 10182. "Two" is predicated of good because it signifies conjunction by love, n. 1686, 5194, 8423; "three" is predicated of truths because it signifies all truths in the complex, in like manner as "twelve," n. 577, 2089, 2129, 2130, 3272, 3858, 3913; therefore when "two" and "three" are mentioned in the spiritual world, two and three, are not meant, but all who are in truths from good. That "Peter" signifies truth from good, which is from the Lord, see in the small work on The Last Judgment 57.)

[17] Thus far it has been shown what "rock" signifies in this sense; it shall now be shown what "rock" signifies in the contrary sense. In the contrary sense "rock" signifies infernal falsity that is trusted in; as in the following passages. In Isaiah:

Hewing out 4 thy sepulcher in the height, graving for himself a habitation in the cliff (Isaiah 22:16).

This chapter treats of "the valley of vision," which signifies the falsity of doctrine confirmed by the sense of the letter of the Word; the love of falsity is signified by "the sepulcher in the height," and the belief of falsity by "the habitation in the cliff;" their making such things for themselves is signified by "hewing out" and "graving for themselves."

[18] In the same:

In that day they shall reject every man the idols of his silver and the idols of his gold which your hands make for you; then shall Asshur fall by the sword not of a man [vir], and the sword not of a man [homo] shall devour him: and his cliff shall pass away for awe, and his princes shall be dismayed at the banner (Isaiah 31:7-9).

This treats of judgment upon those who from self-intelligence believe themselves to be wise in Divine things. Such are those who are in the love of self and the world, and who seek after a reputation for learning for the sake of self; these, because they are unable to see truths, seize on falsities and proclaim them as truths. The falsities that favor their principles and their loves are signified by "the idols of silver and the idols of gold;" that these are from self-intelligence is signified by "which your hands have made for you;" that they will perish by their own falsities is signified by "then shall Asshur fall by the sword not of a man [vir], and the sword not of a man [homo] shall devour him;" "Asshur" meaning the rational perverted, and thence those who are in falsities from self-intelligence; "to fall and to be devoured by the sword" meaning to perish. This was represented also by the king of Assyria in that he was slain by his own sons (Isaiah 37:38); "his sons" there signifying his own falsities by which he perished; "his cliff, which shall pass away for awe," signifies all falsity in general, in which such have trusted; and "the princes, who shall be dismayed at the banner," signify the primary falsities; it is said "at the banner," because such falsities are dispersed not by any combat with truths, but by a mere sign of combat, which a banner is. I have seen such cast down from the rocks upon which they were by the waving of an ensign.

[19] In Jeremiah:

The whole city fleeth before the voice of the horseman and the shooter of the bow; they entered the clouds and went up into the rocks, the whole city is forsaken, not a man [vir] dwelleth therein (Jeremiah 4:29).

This describes the church desolated in respect to truths. The desolation of all the truth of doctrine by false reasonings and false doctrinals therefrom is signified by "the whole city fleeth before the voice of the horseman and of the shooter of the bow;" "the voice of the horseman" signifying false reasonings, and "the voice of the shooter of the bow" false doctrinals; "the whole city fleeth" signifies the desolation of all the truth of doctrine, "city" meaning doctrine. That no truth is acknowledged, but falsity alone, is signified by "they entered the clouds and went up into the rocks;" "to enter the clouds" signifying into the non-acknowledgment of truth, and "to go up into the rocks" signifying into mere falsity.

[20] I have also seen rocks that consisted of stones heaped together, with no level place where verdure grew as elsewhere upon rocks; upon these were spirits who while they lived in the world as men had been in faith separate from charity, which is called faith alone, and had confirmed themselves therein both in doctrine and in life. This is what is meant by "the dryness of the rock," in Ezekiel:

She set 5 it upon the dryness of the cliff; she poured it not upon the earth that dust might cover it (Ezekiel 24:7).

And in the same:

I will cause many nations to come up against thee; and they shall destroy the walls of Tyre and throw down her towers; and I will purge her dust from her, and make her the dryness of a cliff (Ezekiel 26:3-4, 14).

"Dust" in these two passages means the soil, which signifies the good of the church. When there is no soil on the rocks, but the rocks are dry, that is, consist of mere heaps of stones, as was said above, it is a sign that there is no good, and where there is no good there is mere falsity; so this is what is signified by "the dryness of a cliff," and "she poured it not upon the earth, that the dust might cover it," and "I will purge her dust from her." This makes evident what is signified by the Lord's words in the Gospels:

Other seed fell upon the rocky places, where they had not much soil; and straightway they sprang up because they had no depth of earth; and they dried up (Matthew 13:5-6).

This may be seen explained above n. 401.

[21] Most of those in the spiritual world who have their light from the moon there, dwell upon rocks. Those who are spiritual-natural dwell upon rocks that are covered with a thin surface of soil, where consequently there are level places, verdure, and shrubberies, but not such as are upon the mountains and hills where those dwell who receive light from the sun of heaven; while those who are not spiritual-natural, but merely natural, are not at this day upon the rocks, but in caverns in the rocks there; and those who are in falsities from evil, dwell among heaps of stones there; all these things are correspondences.

[22] In Jeremiah:

Behold, I am against thee, O mountain destroying the whole earth; and I will stretch out Mine hand against thee and roll thee down from the cliffs, and will make thee a mountain of burning (Jeremiah 51:25).

This is said of Babylon, whose damnation through falsities is signified by "I will roll thee down from the cliffs," and whose damnation through evils is signified by "I will make thee a mountain of burning" (but this may be seen more fully explained above, n. 405.

[23] In the same:

O ye inhabitants of Moab, forsake the cities and dwell in the cliff, and be like the dove that maketh her nest in the passages of the mouth of the pit (Jeremiah 48:28).

This is said of Moab, which signifies the adulteration of good and truth, and thus those who pervert the good and truth of the Word. "Forsake the cities" signifies to leave the truths of doctrine; "dwell in the cliff" signifies in falsities and the doctrine of falsities; "be like the dove that maketh her nest in the passages of the mouth of the pit" signifies looking at truth from without and not from within, for "a pit" signifies the Word where truths are; "to make a nest in the passages of its mouth" means outside of it and not within, "to make a nest" having the same signification as to dwell, namely, to live a life; but "to build a nest" is predicated of a bird, and "to dwell" of man. What it is to regard the Word from without and not from within may be seen in the Arcana Coelestia 10549-10551), namely, to look at it not from doctrine but from the mere letter; and in consequence of this men wander in every direction whither the disposition, thought, and affection may lead; they are sure of nothing, whence come the perpetual adulterations that are signified by "Moab." This is the case with those who study the Word for the sake of glory and honor; because such regard themselves in everything when studying the Word, they remain outside of the Word; while those who love truth and good from the Word are within the Word, for they look at it not from self, but from the Lord. This makes clear what is signified by "O ye inhabitants of Moab, forsake the cities and dwell in the cliff, and be like the dove that maketh her nest in the passages of the mouth of the pit."

[24] In the same:

Is not My word like as fire? and like a hammer that scattereth the cliff? (Jeremiah 23:29.)

The Word is said to be "like a fire and like a hammer" because "fire" signifies the good of love, and "hammer" the truth of faith, for "the hammer" has a similar signification as "iron," and "iron" signifies truth in ultimates, and the truth of faith. Both are mentioned, namely, "fire" and "hammer," and accordingly good and truth, because of the marriage of good and truth in every particular of the Word. "The cliff that is scattered" signifies the falsity in the whole complex and the doctrine of falsity; and these are scattered or destroyed, when man with whom they exist is judged.

[25] In Nahum:

Who shall stand before His indignation? or who shall stand up in the glowing of His anger? His wrath is poured out like fire, and the rocks shall be overturned before Him (Nahum 1:6).

That the "indignation," "wrath," and "anger" of Jehovah signify the Last Judgment, and the state of damnation of those who are in evils and in falsities therefrom will be seen in the following articles. The damnation of evils is signified by "His wrath, which is poured out like fire;" and the damnation of falsities from evils by "His anger," and "the rocks shall be overturned before Him;" "fire" also signifying the evils of the loves of self and of the world, and "rocks" the falsities therefrom, and "to be overturned" signifies to perish. Moreover, the rocks, upon which are those who are in the principles of falsity and thus in falsities of every kind, are visibly overturned, and those who are upon them are thus cast down into hell; but this occurs in the spiritual world, where all have their dwelling places according to the quality of their interiors to which their externals correspond.

[26] In Isaiah:

Ye that have heated yourselves with gods under every green tree, that slaughter the children in the brooks under the shelves of the cliffs (Isaiah 57:5).

What is meant by "heating oneself with gods under every green tree, and slaughtering the children in the brooks under the shelves of the cliffs," no one can know except from the internal sense. In that sense "to heat oneself with gods under every green tree" signifies to worship God from every falsity that occurs; "to heat oneself with gods" means ardent worship, and "every green tree" means every falsity that occurs, for "tree" signifies knowledges and perceptions, here the knowledges and perceptions of falsity; and "to slaughter the children in the brooks, under the shelves of the cliffs" signifies to extinguish truths by falsities from self-intelligence; "children" meaning truths, "brooks" self-intelligence, "shelves of the cliffs" falsities; "under the shelves of these" signifies from the sensual, in which there is the ultimate natural light, for those who are in that light only stand under precipitous rocks and do not see any truth, and if it is told them they do not perceive it. In such a position I also have seen them in the spiritual world. This makes evident that "to slaughter the children" means not to slay children, but to extinguish truths.

[27] So in David:

Happy is he who shall seize and shatter thy babes against the cliff (Psalms 137:9).

"Babes" mean here not babes but falsities springing up; for Babylon is here treated of, which signifies the falsities of evil destroying the truths of good of the church; the destruction of these is signified by "shattering them against the cliff;" "cliff" meaning the ruling falsity of evil, and "to shatter" meaning to destroy. He who abides in the mere sense of the letter of the Word and does not think beyond it, can easily be led to believe that he is called "happy" who does this with the babes of his enemies, when yet that would be an enormous crime; but he is called "happy" who disperses the falsities of evil springing up in the church, which are here signified by "the babes of Babylon. "

[28] In Jeremiah:

Who hath heard such a thing as this? The virgin of Israel hath done a horrible thing. Shall the snow of Lebanon from the rock leave My fields? Shall the strange cold waters flowing down be snatched away? My people have forgotten Me, they have burned incense to vanity (Jeremiah 18:13-15).

"The virgin of Israel" means here and elsewhere the spiritual church, for this the Israelites represented; "the horrible thing that they did" means that they turned the goods of the church into evils, and the truths of the church into falsities, and from these evils and falsities worshiped Jehovah. The evils from which is such worship are signified by "My people have forgotten Me," for he who forgets God is in evils; and the falsities from which is such worship are signified by "they have burned incense to vanity," "vanity" meaning falsity, and "to burn incense" worship; "shall the snow of Lebanon from the rock leave My fields?" signifies, have they not the truths of the church from the Word? "rock" here signifies the Word, because it signifies Divine truth (as above); "the snow of Lebanon" signifies the truths of the church therefrom. Here "snow" has a similar signification as water, namely, truths, but "snow" signifies cold truths, because a cold church is here treated of. "Lebanon" means the church from which these are, and "fields" mean all goods and truths of the church; "the strange cold waters flowing down," signify the falsities in which there is no good; "strange waters" meaning falsities, and "cold" meaning in which there is no good, for truths have all their heat from the good of love.

[29] In the same:

Behold, I am against thee, thou inhabitant of the valley, thou rock of the plain; that say, Who shall descend against us, and who shall enter into our abodes? (Jeremiah 21:13).

"The inhabitant of the valley" and "the rock of the plain" signify those who are in the ultimates of the Word, and do not permit themselves to be illustrated from the interior; and such do not see truths, but falsities instead; for all the light of truth, because it is out of heaven from the Lord, comes from the interior and descends. Such are meant by "the inhabitant of the valley" and "the rock of the plain;" "valley" and "plain" meaning the ultimates of the Word in which they are; and "inhabitant" and "rock" signifying falsities, "inhabitant" the falsity of life, and "rock" the falsity of doctrine. The belief in falsity and evil in which such are firmly fixed, believing falsity and evil to be truths and goods, is signified by their saying, "Who shall descend against us, and who shall enter into our abodes?"

[30] In Isaiah:

Enter into the rock, and hide thee in the dust, for the dread of Jehovah (Isaiah 2:10).

"To enter into the rock" means into falsity, and "to hide themselves in the dust" means in evil. This treats of the Last Judgment, when those who are in the falsities of evil and in the evils of falsity cast themselves into the hells which are in the rocks and under the lands in the spiritual world. (But these things may be seen more fully brought out and explained in the preceding article.) In Job:

The mountain falling passeth away, and the rock is removed out of its place (Job 14:18).

"Mountain" signifies the love of evil; and "rock" the belief of falsity; and "to melt away" and "be removed out of its place" signifies to perish.

[31] In David:

Let their judges be cast down by the sides of the cliff (Psalms 141:6).

"Judges" signify those who are in falsities, and in an abstract sense, the falsities of thought and of doctrine. "Judges" in the Word have a similar signification as "judgments," and "judgments" signify the truths from which judgments are formed and in the contrary sense falsities. Because those who are in falsities dwell in the spiritual world in cliffs it is said, "let them be cast down by the sides of the cliff," which signifies that they should be let into their falsities and dwell in the hells corresponding to their falsities. In Job:

To dwell in the cleft of the valleys, in holes of the earth, and in the rocks (Job 30:6).

This treats of those who are in the hells, because they are in evils and in falsities therefrom; the hells of those who are in evils in respect to life are under valleys and in caves there; and the hells of those who are in falsities from evil are in rocks. This makes clear what is signified by "dwelling in the cleft of the valleys, in holes of the earth, and in rocks." (But respecting the caverns and caves in which those dwell who are in the hells, and the clefts and holes by which these are entered, see the article just preceding, n. 410.)

[32] These things have been adduced to make known that "rock" in the contrary sense signifies falsity in general; and this signification of "rock" is from correspondence, as can be seen from the appearances and phenomena in the spiritual world, where all dwell according to the correspondences of the interiors of their mind and life. Consequently those who are in wisdom and intelligence, because they are in love to the Lord and in charity towards the neighbor, and thence in the spiritual affection of truth, dwell upon mountains and hills of earth, where there are paradises, gardens, rose-beds, and lawns; but those who are in the belief in the doctrinals of their church and in some degree of charity, dwell upon rocks where there are level places upon which are some groves and some trees and grassy places; while those who have been in faith alone, as it is called, in respect to doctrine and life, and thence in falsities of faith and evils of life, dwell within the rocks, in caverns and cells there.

[33] This signification of "rock" is from the correspondence spoken of. But there is a signification of "rock" from its hardness, as in the following passages.

In Jeremiah:

They have made their faces harder than a rock (Jeremiah 5:3).

In Ezekiel:

As an adamant stronger than rock have I made thy forehead; fear not (Ezekiel 3:9).

In Job:

They shall be graven with an iron pen and with lead in the rock forevermore (Job 19:24).

In Isaiah:

The hoofs of the horses are accounted as rock (Isaiah 5:28).

Hardness is expressed by "rock" from the correspondence of rock with truth from good, for truth from good has all power, as has been said above; but when truth acts against falsity from evil then good is blunted, and truth then remaining acts with hardness, according to the above words in Ezekiel, "As an adamant stronger than rock have I made thy forehead." Truth without good is also hard, but still is easily broken. But what has been here adduced respecting rocks will be more fully elucidated by what will be said hereafter respecting the signification of stones.

Footnotes:

1. The photolithograph has "for I trust;" Hebrew "that trusteth."

2. The photolithograph has "thou wast seen;" for Chaldean "thou sawest," which is also found in Appendix 2.

3. The photolithograph has "I would feed," but Hebrew has "He would feed." The former reading is also found in 374, 619; Arcana Coelestia 5620, 5943; the latter in Arcana Coelestia 3941, 8581.

4. The photolithograph has "my;" Hebrew has "our," which is also found in Arcana Coelestia 4402

5. The photolithograph has "I set;" the Hebrew "she set."

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Foundation for their permission to use this translation.