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Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 412 412. Scarcely any who enter the other life know what heavenly blessedness and happiness are, because they do not know what internal joy is, deriving their perception of it solely from bodily and worldly gladness and joy; and in consequence what they are ignorant of they suppose to be nothing, when in fact bodily and worldly joys are of no account in comparison. In order, therefore, that the well d... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=412 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 415 415. XLIII. THE IMMENSITY OF HEAVEN. The immensity of the heaven of the Lord is evident from many things that have been said and shown in the foregoing chapters, especially from this, that heaven is from the human race (n. 311-317), both from those born within the church and from those born out of it (n. 318-328); thus it consists of all from the beginning of this earth that have lived a goo... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=415 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 430 430. With every man there are two gates; one that leads to hell and that is open to evils and their falsities; while the other leads to heaven and is open to goods and their truths. Those that are in evil and its falsity have the gate to hell opened in them, and only through chinks from above does something of light from heaven flow into them, and by that inflowing they are able to think, to reaso... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=430 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 432 432. XLV. IN RESPECT TO HIS INTERIORS EVERY MAN IS A SPIRIT. Whoever duly considers the subject can see that as the body is material it is not the body that thinks, but the soul, which is spiritual. The soul of man, upon the immortality of which many have written, is his spirit, for this as to everything belonging to it is immortal. This also is what thinks in the body, for it is spiritual,... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=432 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 433 433. As everything in the body that lives, and that acts and feels from that life, belongs exclusively to the spirit, and nothing of it to the body, it follows that the spirit is the man himself; or what is the same thing, that a man viewed in himself is a spirit possessing a like form; for whatever lives and feels in man belongs to his spirit and everything in man, from his head to the sole of hi... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=433 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 434 434. Unless man were a subject which is a substance that can serve a source and containant he would be unable to think and will. Any thing that is supposed to exist apart from a substantial subject is nothing. This can be seen from the fact that a man is unable to see without an organ which is the subject of his sight, or to hear without an organ which is the subject of his hearing. Apart from the... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=434 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 457 457. When the spirit of man first enters the world of spirits, which takes place shortly after his resuscitation, as described above, his face and his tone of voice resemble those he had in the world, because he is then in the state of his exteriors, and his interiors are not as yet uncovered. This is man's first state after death. But subsequently his face is changed, and becomes entirely differe... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=457 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 461 461. AFTER DEATH MAN IS POSSESSED OF EVERY SENSE, AND OF ALL THE MEMORY, THOUGHT, AND AFFECTION, THAT HE HAD IN THE WORLD, LEAVING NOTHING BEHIND EXCEPT HIS EARTHLY BODY. It has been proved to me by manifold experience that when man passes from the natural world into the spiritual, as he does when he dies, he carries with him all his possessions, that is, everything that belongs to him as a... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=461 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 462 462. [a.] And yet there is a great difference between man's life in the spiritual world and his life in the natural world, in regard both to his outer senses and their affections and his inner senses and their affections. Those that are in heaven have more exquisite senses, that is, a keener sight and hearing, and also think more wisely than when they were in the world; for they see in the light o... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=462 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 463 463. In disclosing his acts to a man after death, the angels to whom the office of searching is assigned look into his face, and their search extends through the whole body, beginning with the fingers of each hand, and thus proceeding through the whole. As I wondered at this the reason was given, namely, that as all things of the thought and will are inscribed on the brain, for their beginnings ar... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=463 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 465 465. A certain spirit was indignant because he was unable to remember many things that he knew in the life of the body, grieving over the lost pleasure which he had so much enjoyed, but he was told that he had lost nothing at all, that he still knew each and everything that he had known, although in the world where he now was no one was permitted to call forth such things from the memory, and that... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=465 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 469 469. Spirits and angels, equally with men, have a memory, whatever they hear, see, think, will and do, remaining with them, and thereby their rational faculty is continually cultivated even to eternity. Thus spirits and angels, equally with men, are perfected in intelligence and wisdom by means of knowledges of truth and good. That spirits and angels have a memory I have been permitted to learn by... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=469 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 479 479. (i) Man after death is his own love or his own will. This has been proved to me by manifold experience. The entire heaven is divided into societies according to differences of good of love; and every spirit who is taken up into heaven and becomes an angel is taken to the society where his love is; and when he arrives there he is, as it were, at home, and in the house where he was born; this t... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=479 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 498 498. This first state of man after death continues with some for days, with some for months, and with some for a year; but seldom with any one beyond a year; for a shorter or longer time with each one according to the agreement or disagreement of his interiors with his exteriors. For with everyone the exteriors and interior must make one and correspond. In the spiritual world no one is permitted t... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=498 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 503 503. In this state the spirit thinks from his very will, thus from his very affection, or from his very love; and thought and will then make one, and one in such a manner that he seems scarcely to think but only to will. It is nearly the same when he speaks, yet with the difference that he speaks with a kind of fear that the thoughts of the will may go forth naked, since by his social life in the... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=503 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 504 504. All men without exception are let into this state after death, because it is their spirit's own state. The former state is such as the man was in regard to his spirit when in company; and that is not his own state. That this state, namely, the state of the exteriors into which man first comes after death (as shown in the preceding chapter) is not his own state, many things show, for example,... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=504 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 506 506. All that have lived a good life in the world and have acted from conscience, who are such as have acknowledged the Divine and have loved Divine truths, especially such as have applied those truths to life, seem to themselves, when let into the state of their interiors, like one aroused from sleep into full wakefulness, or like one passing from darkness into light. They then think from the lig... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=506 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 521 521. NO ONE ENTERS HEAVEN BY MERCY APART FROM MEANS. Those that have not been instructed about heaven and the way to heaven, and about the life of heaven in man, suppose that being received into heaven is a mere matter of mercy, and is granted to those that have faith, and for whom the Lord intercedes; thus that it is an admission from mere favor; consequently that all men without exception... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=521 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 532 532. Everyone may know that thoughts are led or tend in accord with the intentions, that is, in the directions that one intends; for thought is man's internal sight, and resembles the external sight in this, that to whatever point it is directed or aimed, thither it turns and there it rests. Therefore when the internal sight or the thought is turned towards the world and rests there, the thought i... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=532 Heaven and Its Wonders and Hell - From Things Heard and Seen 535 535. I have been permitted to talk with some in the other life who had withdrawn from worldly affairs that they might live in a pious and holy manner, also with some who had afflicted themselves in various ways, believing that they were thereby renouncing the world and subduing the lusts of the flesh. But as most of these have thus acquired a sorrowful life and had withdrawn from the life of chari... http://www.smallcanonsearch.com/read.php?book=hh§ion=535
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