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Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 110 110. But at the present day no one can know the spiritual things in heaven to which the natural things in the world correspond except from heaven, since the knowledge of correspondences is now wholly lost. But the nature of the correspondence of spiritual things with natural I shall be glad to illustrate by some examples. The animals of the earth correspond in general to affection, mild and useful... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=110 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 111 111. There is a like correspondence with things in the vegetable kingdom. In general, a garden corresponds to the intelligence and wisdom of heaven; and for this reason heaven is called the Garden of God, and Paradise;1 and men call it the heavenly paradise. Trees, according to their species, correspond to the perceptions and knowledges of good and truth which are the source of intelligence and wi... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=111 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 112 112. How conjunction of heaven with the world is effected by means of correspondences shall also be told in a few words. The Lord's kingdom is a kingdom of ends, which are uses; or what is the same thing, a kingdom of uses which are ends. For this reason the universe has been so created and formed by the Divine that uses may be every where clothed in such a way as to be presented in act, or in eff... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=112 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 141 141. THE FOUR QUARTERS IN HEAVEN. Both in heaven and in the world there are four quarters, east, south, west, and north, determined in each world by its own sun; in heaven by the sun of heaven, which is the Lord, in the world by the sun of the world. And yet there are great differences between them. In the first place, in the world that is called the south where the sun is in its greatest al... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=141 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 151 151. The reverse is true of those in the hells. Those who are there do not look to the Lord as a sun nor as a moon; but they look backward away from the Lord to that dense darkness that is in the place of the sun of the world, and to the darkness that is in the place of the earth's moon. Those that are called genii look to that dense darkness that is in the place of the world's sun, and those call... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=151 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 176 176. To show what the things are that appear to the angels in accordance with correspondences, I will here mention one only for the sake of illustration. By those who are intelligent, gardens and parks full of trees and flowers of every kind are seen. The trees are planted in a most beautiful order, combined to form arbors with arched approaches and encircling walks, all more beautiful than words... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=176 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 183 183. THE PLACES OF ABODE AND DWELLINGS OF ANGELS. As there are societies in heaven and the angels live as men, they have also places of abode, and these differ in accordance with each one's state of life. They are magnificent for those in higher dignity, and less magnificent for those in lower condition. I have frequently talked with angels about the places of abode in heaven, saying that sc... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=183 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 209 209. No influx is possible from the lower heavens into the higher, because this is contrary to order; but there is influx from the higher heavens into the lower. Moreover, the wisdom of the angels of a higher heaven surpasses the wisdom of the angels of a lower heaven as a myriad to one; and this is another reason why the angels of a lower heaven cannot converse with those of a higher heaven; and... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=209 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 217 217. In the Lord's spiritual kingdom there are various forms of government, differing in different societies, the variety being in accord with the functions performed by the societies; and the functions of these are in accord with the functions of all things in man to which they correspond. That these are various is well known, the heart having one function, the lungs another, the liver another, t... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=217 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 232 232. It has been shown above (n. 137) that the Divine truth that goes forth from the Lord has all power, and that angels have power to the extent that they are receptions of Divine truth from the Lord. But angels are so far receptions of Divine truth as they are receptions of Divine good, for truths have all their power from good, and none apart from good. So, too, good has all its power through t... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=232 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 246 246. THE SPEECH OF ANGELS WITH MAN. Angels who talk with man do not talk in their own language, nor in any language unknown to man, but in the man's own language, or in some other language with which he is acquainted. This is so because when angels speak with man they turn themselves to him and conjoin themselves with him; and this conjunction of angel with man causes the two to be in like t... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=246 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 261 261. This writing in characters of a heavenly form is in use in the inmost heaven, the angels of which surpass all others in wisdom. By means of these characters they express the affections, from which thoughts flow and follow in order in accordance with the subject treated of. Consequently these writings, which I have also been permitted to see, involve arcana which thought cannot exhaust. But su... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=261 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 265 265. THE WISDOM OF THE ANGELS OF HEAVEN. The nature of angelic wisdom can scarcely be comprehended, because it so greatly transcends human wisdom that the two cannot be compared; and whatever is thus transcendent does not seem to be any thing. Moreover, some truths that must enter into a description of it are as yet unknown, and until these become known they exist in the mind as shadows, and... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=265 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 298 298. The spirits who are with man, both those conjoined with heaven and those conjoined with hell, never flow into man from their own memory and its thought, for if they should flow in from their own thought, whatever belonged to them would seem to man to be his (see above n. 256). Nevertheless there flows into man through them out of heaven an affection belonging to the love of good and truth, an... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=298 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 308 308. There is also a conjunction of heaven by means of the Word with those who are outside of the church where there is no Word; for the Lord's church is universal, and is with all who acknowledge the Divine and live in charity. Moreover, such are taught after death by the angels and receive Divine truths;# on which subject more may be seen below, in the chapter on the heathen. The universal churc... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=308 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 315 315. Moreover, any one who has been taught about Divine order can understand that man was created to become an angel, because the outmost of order is in him (n. 304), in which what pertains to heavenly and angelic wisdom can be brought into form and can be renewed and multiplied. Divine order never stops midway to form there a something apart from an outmost, for it is not in its fullness and comp... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=315 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 336 336. It was also shown how tender their understanding is. When I was praying the Lord's Prayer, and from their under standing they flowed into the ideas of my thought, their influx was perceived to be so tender and soft as to be almost solely a matter of affection; and at the same time it was observed that their understanding was open even from the Lord, for what flowed forth from them was as if i... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=336 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 345 345. What the difference is between those who die in childhood and those who die in mature life shall also be told. Those dying in mature life have a plane acquired from the earthly and material world, and this they carry with them. This plane is their memory and its bodily natural affection. This remains fixed and becomes quiescent, but still serves their thought after death as an outmost plane,... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=345 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 350 350. All are received into heaven who have loved truth and good for the sake of truth and good; therefore those that have loved much are called the wise, and those that have loved little are called the simple. The wise in heaven are in much light, the simple in less light, everyone in accordance with the degree of his love for good and truth. To love truth and good for the sake of truth and good i... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=350 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 364 364. The poor come into heaven not on account of their poverty but because of their life. Everyone's life follows him, whether he be rich or poor. There is no peculiar mercy for one in preference to another;# he that has lived well is received, while he that has not lived well is rejected. Moreover, poverty leads and draws man away from heaven just as much as wealth does. There are many among the... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=364
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