Pleasant

Generally, when the Bible describes something as “pleasant” or “desirable,” it is talking (according to Swedenborg) about true ideas and concepts, things of the intellect. A good example is in Genesis 49:15, where Jacob is prophesying about his son Issachar: “And he saw that rest was good, and the land that it was pleasant…” Swedenborg says that “rest was good” refers to celestial things, or things led by love of the Lord; “the land that it was pleasant” refers to spiritual things, or things led by the understanding of what is true.


Passages from Swedenborg

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 6392

  1. ‘And the land that it is pleasant’ means that those in the Lord’s kingdom enjoy that happiness. This is clear from the meaning of ‘the land’ as the Church, thus also the Lord’s kingdom, dealt with in 662, 1066, 1067, 1413, 1607, 1733, 1850, 2117, 2118, 4447 (the reason why ‘the land’ has this meaning is that the land of Canaan, to which ‘the land’ refers in the Word, represented the Lord’s kingdom; and it had this representation because the Church had existed there since the most ancient times, 3038, 3481, 3686, 3705, 4447, 4454, 4516, 4517, 5136); and from the meaning of ‘that it is pleasant’ as the happiness which works of goodness without thought of recompense entail. The reason why it says ‘he will see rest that it is good, and the land that it is pleasant’, by both of which statements is meant the happiness that exists in the Lord’s kingdom, is that ‘seeing rest that it is good’ has reference to what is celestial or to good, while ‘seeing the land that it is pleasant ‘has reference to what is spiritual or to truth, both of which are mentioned on account of the marriage of goodness and truth, spoken of in 6343.

 

Apocalypse Explained 739

[7] …  That they were permitted to acquire knowledges from the world, and to view them by a prior way, is signified by Out of the ground Jehovah God caused to grow every tree that is pleasant to the sight, and good for food, – for trees signify knowledges and perceptions, pleasant to the sight signifies what the understanding desires, and good for food that which conduces to the nourishment of the mind. The cognitions of good and evil from the Lord, from which wisdom is derived, and knowledges of good and evil from the world, from which knowledge (scientia) is derived, were represented by the tree of lives, and by the tree of the knowledge (scientia) of good and evil in the midst of the garden.

 

Arcana Coelestia 9272

[3] The fact that ‘sowing the land (or the field)’ means teaching and learning about the truths and forms of the good of faith which belong to the Church, and the fact that ‘the produce’ means resulting forms of the good of truth may be seen from many places in the Word, as in Isaiah,

 Because you have forgotten the God of your salvation, therefore you will plant pleasant plants;* but you will plant out the land** with the vine-sprig of the foreigner. In the day you will cause your plant to grow, and in the morning your seed to flourish. The harvest will be a heap on the day of possession; but the grief will be desperate. Isa. 17:10, 11.

 Here such things as grow on earth are mentioned, but holy things of the Church are plainly meant by them. That is to say, ‘planting pleasant plants’ means such things as delight the affections, and ‘planting out the land with the vine-sprig of the foreigner’ teaching unauthentic truths.

 

AE 799

[17] … In Lamentations:

 “The Lord hath bent his bow as a foe, he stood with his right hand as an enemy, and slew all things that were pleasant to the eyes; into the tabernacles of the daughter of Zion he poured out his anger like fire” (ii. 4).

 Here, the subject treated of is the devastation of the church as to truths and as to goods. Devastation as to the truths thereof is signified by slaying all things that were pleasant to the eyes; and devastation as to goods by pouring out His anger like fire into the tabernacles of the daughter of Zion. Things pleasant, in the Word, are said of truths, and eyes of the understanding of truth; tabernacles are said of goods, and anger, like fire, of the vastation of good. The daughter of Zion signifies the church which is in the affection of truth from the love of good.

 

AE 433

[12] In Malachi:

 “Behold, I send my messenger, who shall prepare the way before me; and the Lord shall suddenly come to his temple. Then shall the meat-offering of Judah and Jerusalem be pleasant to Jehovah, according to the days of an age, and according to the former years” (iii. 1, 4).

 That these words relate to the coming of the Lord, and that by the messenger who should be sent to prepare the way before Him is meant John the Baptist, is known in the church. That the meat offering of Judah and Jerusalem shall then be pleasant to Jehovah, signifies that then there shall be acceptable worship from the good of love to the Lord. The meat-offering, of Judah signifies that worship. That the worship of the Jewish nation and of Jerusalem was not acceptable is plain, for they did not acknowledge the Lord, but rejected Him altogether. According to the days of an age, and according to the former years, signifies according to the worship in the ancient churches. The Most Ancient Church which was before the flood, and was in love to the Lord, is signified by “the days of an age,” or of eternity, and the Ancient Church which existed after the flood, and was a spiritual church, is meant by “the former years.”

 

AE 375

[26] In David:

 “Behold how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together! It is like the good oil upon Aaron’s head, that descendeth upon the beard, even Aaron’s beard; which descendeth upon the collar (os) of his garments; as the dew of Hermon that descendeth upon the mountains of Zion; there Jehovah hath commanded the blessing of life even to eternity” (Ps. cxxxiii. 1-3).

 No one can know what these words signify, unless he knows also what brethren signify, what the oil upon the head of Aaron, his beard, and the collar of his garments, and further what the dew of Hermon, and the mountains of Zion. By brethren are here signified good and truth, for these are called brethren in the Word; therefore, by, “Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together,” is signified that all heavenly good and delight are in the conjunction of good and truth, because all heavenly good and pleasure is from the conjunction of good and truth; by the oil upon the head “that descendeth upon the beard, even Aaron’s beard, that descendeth upon the collar of his garments,” is signified that thence are all the good and delight of heaven, from inmost to ultimates. For by the head is signified the inmost, by the beard the ultimate; by descending upon the collar of his garments are signified the influx and conjunction of celestial good and spiritual good.

 

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 102

  1. Verse 9 And Jehovah God caused to spring up out of the ground every tree desirable to the sight and good for food; and the tree of life* in the middle of the garden, and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
    ‘Tree’ means perception, ‘tree desirable to the sight’ the perception of what is true, ‘tree good for food’ the perception of what is good, ‘tree of life’ love and faith deriving from love, and ‘the tree of the knowledge of good and evil’ faith derived from sensory evidence, that is, from knowledge.
    * lit. of lives

 

AE 799

[14] In Hosea:
Egypt shall gather them together, Moph shall bury them, thedesirable things of their silver the thistle shall possess, and the thorn shall be in their tabernacles (9:6).
This describes the vastation of a church by the falsifications of truth. “Israel,” of which this is said, signifies this church; that the natural man and his cupidity will destroy them is signified by “Egypt shall gather them together, Moph shall bury them;” that falsity will destroy all truth is signified by “the desirable things of their silver the thistle shall possess;” and that the evils of falsity will destroy all their good is signified by “the thorn shall be in their tabernacles.”

 

AC 1201

[2] In Joel,

 What are you to Me, O Tyre and Sidon, and all the borders of Philistia? You have taken My silver and gold, and My good anddesirable treasures you have carried into your temples. Joel 3:4, 5.

 Here ‘Tyre’ and ‘Sidon’ clearly stand for cognitions and are called ‘the borders of Philistia’, for ‘gold and silver’ and ‘good anddesirable treasures’ are cognitions.

 

AC 8869

[5] In Isaiah,

 Makers of the graven image, all are vanity; and their mostdesirable things are profitless. And they are their own witnesses; they do not see, nor do they know. Isa. 44:9-11.

 ‘Makers of the graven image’ stands for those who hammer out teachings which are not products of truths from the Word but products of self-intelligence, in reference to which teachings the words ‘their most desirable things are profitless’ and ‘they do not see, nor do they know’ are used. Verses 12-16 of that chapter go on to refer to the art of conceiving ideas and of using reasonings to hatch them from self-intelligence – ideas which they wish to be recognized as Divine.

 

AE 654

[29] So also it is said of Solomon, who represented the Lord as to His celestial kingdom and His spiritual kingdom, that “his wisdom excelled the wisdom of all the sons of the East, and all the wisdom of the Egyptians” (1 Kings v. 10). The sons of the East mean all those who at that time were in the knowledges of truth and good, and became wise through these. The Egyptians mean all those who were learned in knowledges (scientiis), especially in the knowledge (scientia) of correspondences, and were consequently in intelligence. The knowledges of the Egyptians are therefore called “the hidden things of gold and silver,” and “desirable things,” in Daniel:

 The king of the north “shall put forth his hands over the lands, and the land of Egypt shall not escape, for he shall have power over the treasures of gold and silver, and over all the desirable things of Egypt” (xi. 42, 43).

 

AE 357

[24] In Lamentations:
The Lord hath bent His bow like an enemy; He hath stood with His right hand as an adversary; He hath slain all things desirable to the eyes (Lam. 2:4).
Here, too, like things are attributed to the Lord, for a like reason as above; “He bends His bow like an enemy, and stands with His right hand as an adversary” signifies that the evil man does this in respect to himself, namely, he defends evil against good, and falsity against the truths of good from doctrine that he has framed for himself out of self-intelligence and confirmed by the sense of the letter of the Word; for in Lamentations the vastation of all good and all truth with the Jewish nation, from their applying the sense of the letter of the Word in favor of their own loves is treated of; “bow” here meaning the doctrine of falsity therefrom, “enemy” evil, and “adversary” falsity. That in consequence all the understanding of truth and good would perish is signified by “the Lord hath slain all things desirable to the eyes,” “things desirableto the eyes” meaning all things that are of intelligence and wisdom.

 

AE 242

[12] In Joel:
What are ye to Me, O Tyre and Zidon? My silver and My gold ye have taken, and the desirable things of My goods have ye brought into your temples, and the sons of Judah, and the sons of Jerusalem ye have sold to the sons of the Grecians, that ye might remove them far from their borders (Joel 3:4-6).
“Tyre and Zidon” mean those within the church who are in the knowledges of truth and good; here those who have perverted these, and applied them to falsities and to the evils of falsities; this is signified by “Ye have taken My silver and My gold, and thedesirable things of My goods have ye brought into your temples;” “silver” signifying truth, “gold” good, and “the desirable things of goods” signifying derived truths and goods, which are knowledges from the sense of the letter of the Word; “to bring them into their temples” signifies to turn them into profane worship; that “they sold the sons of Judah and the sons of Jerusalem to the sons of the Grecians” means that they changed all the truths of good into the falsities of evil; “removing them far from their borders” means far from truths themselves. 

 

AE 750

[12] In Lamentations:

 “All the people groan, they seek bread, they have given theirdesirable things for food to refresh the soul. He is far from me the comforter that refresheth my soul, my sons are become desolate, because the enemy hath prevailed. My priests and my elders expired in the city, because they sought food for themselves with which they might refresh their souls” (i. 11, 16, 19).

 This is said of a church where there is no longer any truth and good of doctrine, whence the men of the church who desire these are lacking. The deficiency of good and truth in doctrine, and a desire for them in order to nourish the life of faith and of the understanding, is signified by “All the people groan, they seek bread, they have given their desirable things for food to refresh the soul”; deficiency is signified by their groaning, the desire for good by seeking bread, the desire for truth by giving their desirablethings for food, while the nourishment of faith and understanding is signified by refreshing the soul. 

 

AE 504

[25] Again:

 “Our house of holiness and our glory, where our fathers praised thee, is burned up with fire; and all our desirable things are laid waste” (lxiv. 11).

 The house of holiness and our glory signifies the celestial and the spiritual church; the house of holiness signifies the celestial church, and glory the spiritual church. Where our fathers praised thee, signifies the worship of the Ancient Church, to praise signifies to worship, and fathers, those who were of the Ancient Church; to be burned up with fire, signifies that all the goods of that Church were turned into evils, by which the goods were consumed and perished. And all our desirable things are laid waste, signifies that all truths were similarly consumed; desirable things in the Word denote the truths of the church.