THE SECOND COMMANDMENT
Selection from Apocalypse Explained ~ Emanuel Swedenborg
In the preceding
chapter the first commandment of the Decalogue is treated of at the
end of the several articles. In the following articles in this
chapter the other commandments of the Decalogue will be treated of;
and here the second commandment, "Thou shalt not profane the name of
God."
In the first place,
what is meant by "the name of God" shall be told, and afterwards
what is meant by "profaning" it. "The name of God" means every
quality by which God is worshiped. For God is in His own quality,
and is His own quality. His essence is the Divine love, and His
quality is the Divine truth therefrom united with the Divine good;
thus with us on earth it is the Word; consequently it is said in
John:
The Word was with
God, and God was the Word (1:1).
Thence also, it is the
doctrine of genuine truth and good from the Word; for worship is
according to that.
Now as His quality is
manifold, for it comprises all things that are from Him, so He has
many names; and each name involves and expresses His quality in
general and in particular. He is called "Jehovah," "Jehovah of
Hosts," "Lord," "Lord Jehovih," "God," "Messiah or Christ," "Jesus,"
"Savior," "Redeemer," "Creator," "Former," "Maker," "King," and "the
Holy One of Israel," "the Rock" and "the Stone of Israel," "Shiloh,"
"Shaddai," "David," "Prophet," "Son of God," and "Son of man," and
so on. All these names are the names of the one God, who is the
Lord; and yet where they occur in the Word they signify some
universal Divine attribute or quality distinct from the other Divine
attributes or qualities. So, too, where He is called "Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit," three are not meant, but one God; that is, there
are not three Divines, but one, and this trine which is one is the
Lord.
Since each name
signifies some distinct attribute or quality, "to profane the name
of God" does not mean to profane the name itself but His quality.
"Name" signifies quality for the reason that in heaven everyone is
named according to his quality; and the quality of God or the Lord
is everything that is from Him by which He is worshiped. For this
reason, since no Divine quality of the Lord is acknowledged in hell,
the Lord cannot be named there; and in the spiritual world His names
cannot be uttered by anyone except so far as His Divine is
acknowledged; for there all speak from the heart, thus from love and
consequent acknowledgment.
Since "the name of
God" means that which is from God and which is God, and this is
called the Divine truth, and with us the Word, this must not be
profaned, because it is in itself Divine and most holy; and it is
profaned when its holiness is denied, which is done when it is
despised, rejected, and treated contemptuously. When this is done
heaven is closed and man is left to hell. For the Word is the only
medium of conjunction of heaven with the church; therefore when the
Word is cast out of the heart that conjunction is dissolved; and
because man is then left to hell he no longer acknowledges any truth
of the church.
There are two things
by which heaven is closed to the men of the church. One is the
denial of the Lord's Divine, and the other is the denial of the
holiness of the Word; and for this reason that the Lord's Divine is
the all of heaven, and the Divine truth, which is the Word in the
spiritual sense, is what makes heaven; which makes clear that he who
denies the one or the other denies that which is the all of heaven,
and from which heaven is and exists, and thus deprives himself of
communication and thence of conjunction with heaven. To profane the
Word is the same as "blaspheming the Holy Spirit," which is not
forgiven to anyone, consequently it is said in this commandment that
he who profanes the name of God shall not be left unpunished.
As the Divine truth or
the Word is meant by "the name of God," and the profanation of it
means a denial of its holiness, and thus contempt, rejection, and
blasphemy, it follows that the name of God is interiorly profaned by
a life contrary to the commandments of the Decalogue. For there is
profanation that is interior and not exterior, and there is
profanation that is interior and at the same time exterior, and
there can be also a kind of profanation that is exterior and not at
the same time interior. Interior profanation is produced by the
life, exterior by the speech. Interior profanation, which is
produced by the life, becomes exterior also, or of the speech, after
death. For then everyone thinks and wills, and so far as it can be
permitted, speaks and acts, according to his life; thus not as he
did in the world. In the world, for the world's sake and to gain
reputation, man is wont to speak and act otherwise than as he thinks
and wills from his life. This is why it has been said that there is
profanation that is interior and not at the same time exterior.
There can also be a kind of profanation that is exterior and not at
the same time interior. It can come from the style of the Word,
which is not at all the style of the world, and for this reason it
may be to some extent despised from ignorance of its interior
sanctity.
He who abstains from
profaning the name of God, that is, the holiness of the Word, by
contempt, rejection, or any blasphemy, has religion; and such as his
abstinence is such is his religion. For no one has religion except
from revelation, and with us revelation is the Word. Abstinence from
profaning the holiness of the Word must be from the heart, and not
merely from the mouth. Those who abstain from the heart live from
religion; but those who abstain merely from the mouth do not live
from religion, for they abstain either for the sake of self or for
the sake of the world, in that the Word can be made to serve them as
a means of acquiring honor and gain; or they abstain from some fear.
But of these many are hypocrites who have no religion.
Apocalypse Explained 959 - 963
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