Servant

“Servant” literally means “a person who serves another,” and Swedenborg offers a similar spiritual meaning when it used in the Bible.

Our lives in their most outward form – the physical actions we take and the thoughts and feelings directly connected to them – are in a way “servants” to our deeper, more hidden, more internal thoughts and desires. So in most cases, Swedenborg says “servants” in the Bible represent things we’re doing and thinking on that outward, external level.

Servants can have good masters or evil ones, obviously, and servants doing their work well in service of evil masters are actually making the world a more evil place. So the precise meaning of a given servant in the Bible depends on the nature of the master he or she is serving.

Finlly, Swedenborg says that when the Bible is addressing the Lord’s own spiritual development, “servant” respresents the Lord’s most outward aspect: the human body he inherited from Mary, with all its frailties and potential for temptation.


Passages from Swedenborg

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 3463

3463. ‘That Isaac’s servants came’ means rational concepts. This is clear from the meaning of ‘servants’ as rational concepts, and also as facts, dealt with in 2567, and from the representation of ‘Isaac’ as the Lord’s Divine Rational, dealt with in 1893, 2066, 2072, 2083, 2630, 3012, 3194, 3210. From what has gone before it is clear what aspect of the Lord is represented here by Isaac, namely the Word as regards its internal sense. For by ‘Abimelech, Ahuzzath, and Phicol’ are meant matters of doctrine concerning faith which are drawn from the literal sense of the Word, like those matters of doctrine possessed by people who are called ‘Philistines’ in the good sense. That is, they are people who have no other matters of doctrine than those concerning faith, and yet so far as life is concerned they do what is good, though it is the good of truth. And these matters of doctrine do have a certain link with the internal sense, and so with the Lord.

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 2159

2159. That ‘servant’ means the Lord’s human before it was made Divine becomes clear from many places in the Prophets. The reason, which has been given frequently already, is this: The Lord’s human, before He cast it off and made it Divine, was nothing else than aservant. His human came from the mother and was for that reason imperfect. From her it possessed a hereditary element which He overcame and utterly cast aside by means of the conflicts brought about by temptations. He did so even to the point when nothing was left of the imperfect and hereditary element received from the mother, indeed until at length nothing whatever from the mother remained. He cast off that which came from the mother so completely that He was no longer her son, as He also Himself declares in Mark,

They said to Jesus, Behold, Your mother and Your brothers are outside, asking for You. And He answered them. saying, Who is My mother, or My brothers? And looking around on those who were sitting around Him He said, Behold My mother and My brothers! For whoever does the will of God is My brother, and My sister, and My mother. Mark 3:32-35; Matt. 12:46-50; Luke 8:20-21.

[2] Once He had cast off this human He put on the Divine Human, by virtue of which He called Himself the Son of Man, as may be seen many times in the New Testament Word, and also the Son of God. By ‘the Son of Man’ He meant truth itself and by ‘the Son of God’ good itself which belonged to His Human Essence once this had been made Divine. The former state was that of the Lord’s humiliation but the latter that of His glorification, which has been dealt with already in 1999.

[3] In the former state, namely the state of humiliation, when He still had the imperfect human with Him, He worshipped Jehovah as one other than Himself, and was indeed like a servant, for the imperfect human is by comparison nothing else. In the Word also therefore that human is referred to as ‘a servant’, as in Isaiah,

I will protect this city to save it for My own sake and for the sake of David My servant. Isa. 37:35.

This refers to the Assyrians in whose camp an angel slew a hundred and eighty-five thousand. ‘David’ stands for the Lord who, because He is yet to come, is, as regards the human, called ‘a servant’. That ‘David’ in the Word stands for the Lord, see 1888.

[4] In the same prophet,

Behold, My servant on whom I will lean, My chosen [in whom] My soul is well pleased. I have put My spirit upon him; he will bring forth judgement to the nations. Isa. 42:1.

This is a plain reference to the Lord, of whom, when He was in the human, the expressions ‘servant’ and ‘chosen one’ are used. In the same prophet,

Who is blind but My servant, and deaf as My angel* whom I will send? Who is blind as the perfect one, and blind as the servant or Jehovah? Isa. 42:19.

This too is a reference to the Lord, of whom in a similar way, when He was in the human, the expressions ‘servant’ and ‘angel’ are used.

[5] In the same prophet,

You are My witnesses, said Jehovah, and My servant whom I have chosen, that you may know and believe Me, and understand that I am He. Isa. 43:10.

In the same prophet,

[Then] said Jehovah who formed me from the womb, to be a servantto Him, to bring back Jacob to Him, and that Israel might be gathered to Him – He said, It is a light thing that you should be aservant to Me to raise up the tribes of Jacob. I have given you as a light of the nations, to be My salvation right to the ends of the earth. Isa. 49:5, 6.

This too is a plain reference to the Lord and to His human before it was made ‘a light of the nations’ and ‘a salvation to the ends of the earth’. In the same prophet,

Who among you fears Jehovah, hearkens to the voice of His servantwho walks in darkness and has no brightness? Let him trust in the name of Jehovah and lean on his God. Isa. 50:10.

‘Servant’ again stands for the Lord’s human. His teaching of the way of truth, while He was in that Human, is meant by ‘the voice of Jehovah’s servant’.

[6] In the same prophet,

Jehovah goes before you, and the God of Israel gathers you up. Behold, My servant will deal wisely; he will be raised up and exalted and lifted up very high. Isa. 52:12, 13.

‘Servant’ is clearly used in reference to the Lord when He was in the human, because it is said of Him that He will be raised up, exalted, and lifted up. In the same prophet,

He had no form and no honour. We saw him, but there was no beauty in him. He was despised, a man of sorrows, acquainted with sickness. Jehovah was willing to bruise him and make him imperfect. If he makes his soul guilt he will see his seed he will prolong his days, and the will of Jehovah will prosper by his hand. He will see [the fruit of] the travail of his soul and be satisfied; by his knowledge will the righteous one My servant make many righteous; and He has borne their iniquities. Isa. 53:2, 3, 10, 11.

Here reference is openly made, as in the whole of this chapter, to the Lord’s state of humiliation. The fact that in that state He was in the imperfect human is also declared, namely in the statements that He was ‘a man of sorrows, acquainted with grief’, ‘was made imperfect’, and experienced ‘the travail of his soul’, besides many other statements, in which state He is referred to as ‘a servant’.

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 2181

2181. ‘And gave it to the servant, and he hastened to make it ready’ means the joining of this good to rational good, ‘the servant’ meaning the natural man. This is clear from the meaning of ‘a servant’ as one who ministers and administers. And that which is ministered or effected is the making ready of the young bull, by which natural good is meant, as has been shown. To perceive the implications of this more clearly one should recognize that there exists in every person an internal, a rational in a middle position, and a natural, and that these three are distinct and separate from one other, as dealt with in 1889, 1940. One should also recognize that these should be made to conform so that they make one, thus so that rational good conforms with natural good, and recognize that unless they do conform and so are joined together, there cannot be any Divine perception. Since the Lord’s Divine Perception is the subject here, it is the conformity and conjunction of the two kinds of good that are meant in the internal sense by the words that appear here.

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 2541

2541. ‘And called his servants’ means rational concepts and factual knowledge. This is clear from the meaning of ‘servants’ in the Word, dealt with further on at verse 14, in 2567. Within the person who is in the Lord’s kingdom, that is, who is the Lord’s kingdom, there are celestial things, spiritual things, rational concepts, factual knowledge, and sensory impressions; and all these are ordered one beneath another. Celestial things and spiritual things hold the primary position and are the Lord’s; rational concepts come next in order beneath them and are subservient to them; factual knowledge in turn comes beneath and serves rational concepts; and lastly sensory impressions come beneath and serve factual knowledge. The things which are subservient, or which serve, are in these relationships servants, and in the Word they are called ‘servants’. Anyone whose thought is based solely on sensory impressions and factual knowledge is unaware of these things existing in their ordered sequence; and anyone who does know something about them nevertheless has only a very obscure idea because he is still immersed in bodily interests. Angels however have a very distinct idea, for thousands, indeed myriads, of distinct and separate ideas existing with angels do not present themselves to men except as one single obscure idea, as for example with the words that occur here, ‘Abimelech called his servants and spoke all these words in their ears; and the men were very much afraid’. In these words angels perceive deeper arcana than man can possibly grasp or is indeed able to believe; that is to say, they perceive how the Lord brought rational concepts and factual knowledge into a condition of obedience, yet in such a way that He did not bring into that condition the rational concepts and the factual knowledge themselves but the affections rising up against the celestial and the spiritual things of doctrine; for it was when those affections had been brought into subjection that rational concepts and factual knowledge were brought into a condition of obedience and at the same time into order. These matters are to angels some of the most common and general; but to man they are perhaps some of the most obscure or are unintelligible.

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 2567

2567. ‘And men servants and women servants’ means, and also with rational truths and natural truths, as well as with affections for these…… This is clear from the meaning of ‘men servants and women servants’. Men servants and women servantsare mentioned in various places in the Word, and in the internal sense they mean those things which are relatively lower or baser, as rational and natural things are in comparison with spiritual and celestial. By natural truths are meant facts of every kind, since these are natural. That men servants and women servants have this meaning in the Word is evident from the internal sense of these words where they are used, as in Isaiah,

Jehovah will have compassion on Jacob, and will still choose Israel, and will set them on their own ground, and the sojourner will attach himself to them, and they will join themselves to the house of Jacob. And the peoples will take them and bring them to their place, and the house of Israel will inherit them on Jehovah’s ground as men servants and women servants. Isa. 14:1, 2.

[2] Here ‘Jacob’ stands for the external Church, ‘Israel’ for the internal, ‘sojourners’ for people who receive instruction in truths and goods, 1463, 2025. ‘Men servantsand women servants’ stands for natural truths and rational truths, together with the affections for them, which are to be of service to the Church meant by Jacob and Israel. The fact that Jacob and Israel, or Jews and Israelites, were not meant here, is quite evident, for once they had been dispersed among the gentiles the Israelites became gentiles. Yet the Jews still cherish and await an even literal fulfilment of this prophecy – that sojourners will attach themselves to them, and after that peoples will bring them [to their place] and will become their men servants and women servants. But in fact where reference is made in the prophetical parts of the Word to Jews and Israelites, not even the least thing is meant in regard to these, as must also be plain to the Jews themselves from the fact that in various places it is said equally of Israel as of Judah that they were to be led back.

[3] In the same prophet,

Behold, Jehovah is emptying the earth and making it desolate, and He will disfigure the face of it and will cause its inhabitants to scatter. And it will be, as with the people so with the priest, as with the man servant so with his master, as with the woman servant so with her mistress. Isa. 24:1, 2.

Here ‘the earth’ stands for the Church, 662, 1066, 1067, 1850, which is ’emptied and made desolate, and its face disfigured and inhabitants scattered’, when interior truths and goods, meant by ‘priest and people’, and when exterior truths and goods, meant by ‘man servant and woman servant’, are no more, which comes about when external things have dominion over internal.

[4] In the same prophet,

I will bring forth seed from Jacob, and from Judah the heir of My mountains, and My chosen ones will possess it, and My servants will dwell there. Isa. 65:9.

Here ‘Jacob’ stands for the external Church, ‘Judah’ for the internal celestial Church, ‘chosen ones’ for its goods, and ‘servants’ for its truths.

[5] In Joel,

I will pour out My spirit on all flesh, and your sons and your daughters will prophesy. Even on your men servants and women servants in those days I will pour out My spirit. Joel 2:28, 29.

The subject here is the Lord’s kingdom. ‘Prophesying’ stands for teaching, 2534, ‘sons’ for truths themselves, 489, 491, 533, 1147, ‘daughters’ for goods themselves, 489-491. ‘Men servants and women servants’ stands for lower truths and goods on which it is said that the spirit is to be ‘poured out’ when these serve to support and strengthen. That such things are meant here and elsewhere by ‘menservants and women servants’ is not too apparent, both because of the common idea which one has of men servants and women servants, and because of this being a prophecy of some seemingly historical event.

[6] In John,

I saw an angel standing in the sun, who called out with a loud voice saying to all the birds flying in mid-heaven, You may eat the flesh of kings, and the flesh of captains, and the flesh of mighty men, and the flesh of horses and those seated on them, and the flesh of all, free men and slaves, both small and great. Rev. 19:17, 18.

Here it is quite plain that not the flesh of kings, captains, mighty men, horses, those seated on these, free men and slaves, which they were to eat, is meant but internal and external truths of the Church which became ‘flesh’ for them.

[7] That ‘men servants’ means truths and ‘women servants’ goods which were subservient to and so serve spiritual and celestial truths and goods is quite clear from the laws laid down in the representative Church which had to do with menservants and woman servants. All these laws have regard to the state of the Church and of the Lord’s kingdom in general and in particular, and to the way in which lower truths and goods, which are natural and rational, have to serve those that are spiritual and celestial, and thus those that are Divine.

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 3463

3463. ‘That Isaac’s servants came’ means rational concepts. This is clear from the meaning of ‘servants’ as rational concepts, and also as facts, dealt with in 2567, and from the representation of ‘Isaac’ as the Lord’s Divine Rational, dealt with in 1893, 2066, 2072, 2083, 2630, 3012, 3194, 3210. From what has gone before it is clear what aspect of the Lord is represented here by Isaac, namely the Word as regards its internal sense. For by ‘Abimelech, Ahuzzath, and Phicol’ are meant matters of doctrine concerning faith which are drawn from the literal sense of the Word, like those matters of doctrine possessed by people who are called ‘Philistines’ in the good sense. That is, they are people who have no other matters of doctrine than those concerning faith, and yet so far as life is concerned they do what is good, though it is the good of truth. And these matters of doctrine do have a certain link with the internal sense, and so with the Lord.

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 3019

3019. ‘Abraham said to his servant, the oldest of his house’ means the ordering and influx of the Lord into His Natural, meant by ‘the servant, the oldest of the house’. This is clear from the meaning of ‘saying’ here as commanding since it is a servant to whom Abraham’s words are addressed; and since the subject is the re-arranging by the Divine of the things that exist in the natural man, ordering and influx are meant. For everything that is done in the natural or external man is an ordering by the rational or internal, and is effected by means of influx. The use of the expression ‘the servant, the oldest of the house’ to mean the natural, or the natural man, may be seen from the meaning of ‘a servant’ as that which is lower and serves what is higher, or what amounts to the same, that which is exterior and serves what is interior, see 2541, 2567. All things that belong to the natural man, as facts of every kind do, are nothing else than a body of servants, for they serve the rational by enabling it to be thoroughly fair in what it thinks and righteous in what it wills. That ‘the oldest of the house’ is the natural man becomes clear from what follows below.

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 3441

3441. ‘For the sake of Abraham My servant’ means because of the Lord’s Divine Human. This is clear from the representation of ‘Abraham’ as the Lord’s Divine, and also His Divine Human, dealt with in 2833, 2836, 3251, and from the meaning of ‘My servant’, when used in reference to the Lord, as the Divine Human. Not that the Divine Human is a servant, for the Divine Human also is Jehovah, 1736, 2156, 2329, 2921, 3023, 3035, but ‘My servant’ means the Divine Human because by means of that Divine Human the Lord serves the human race. Indeed it is by means of the Divine Human that a person is saved, for unless the Lord had united the Human to the Divine so that man could with his mind behold and worship the Lord’s Human, and in so doing approach the Divine, he could not possibly be saved. The joining of man to the Divine Himself, called the Father, is effected through the Divine Human, called the Son, and so through the Lord, by whom one who is spiritual understands the Human, but one who is celestial understands the Divine Himself.

[2] From these considerations it is evident why the Divine Human is called aservant, namely that it serves the Divine for the purpose of giving man access to Himself, and it serves the human race in their salvation. This then is what is meant by ‘Abraham My servant’, as also in David, Remember His marvellous acts that He has done, the signs and the judgements of His mouth, O seed of Abraham Hisservant, O sons of Jacob His chosen ones. He sent Moses His servant, Aaron whom He had chosen. He remembered His Holy word, with Abraham His servant. Ps 105:5, 6, 26, 42.

Here ‘Abraham His servant’ is used to mean the Lord’s Divine Human. In a similar way the Lord’s Divine Human is also meant in the highest sense by ‘servant Israel’, ‘servant Jacob’, and ‘servant David’:

SERVANT ISRAEL

In Isaiah,

You, Israel, My servant, Jacob, whom I have chosen, the seed of Abraham My friend, you whom I took from the ends of the earth, and called from the extremities* of it, and said to you, You are My servant, I have chosen you. Isa. 41:8, 9.

Here, in the highest sense, ‘Israel My servant’ is the Lord in relation to

the internal aspects of the spiritual Church, and ‘Jacob’ to the external aspects of that Church. In the same prophet,

He said to me, You are My servant Israel in whom I will be rendered glorious. It is a light thing that You should be a servant to Me to raise up the tribes of Jacob and to bring back the preserved of Israel. And I have given You as a light of the nations, that You may be My salvation right to the ends of the earth. Isa. 49:3, 6.

Here ‘servant Israel in whom I will be rendered glorious’ clearly stands for the Lord’s Divine Human. Plainly He is called ‘a servant’ from the service He performs, for it is said ‘that You may be a servant to Me to raise up the tribes of Jacob and to bring back the preserved of Israel’.

[3] SERVANT JACOB

In Isaiah,

I will give you the treasures of darkness and the secret riches of hiding-places for the sake of My servant Jacob, and of Israel My chosen. Isa. 45:3, 4.

Here ‘servant Jacob’ and ‘Israel the chosen’ are used to mean the Lord – ‘servantJacob’ in relation to the external Church, ‘Israel the chosen’ in relation to the internal Church.

[4] SERVANT DAVID

In Ezekiel,

I will gather the children of Israel from all around. My servant David will be king over them, and they will all have one shepherd. They will dwell in the land which I gave to My servant Jacob. And they will dwell in it, they and their sons, and their sons’ sons even for ever. And David My servant will be their pence for ever. Ezek. 37:21, 24, 25.

‘Servant David’ clearly stands for the Lord’s Divine Human, 1888, and does so by virtue of Divine Truth which is meant by ‘the king’, who is David in this case, 1728, 2015, 3009. Also, in relation to good truth itself is the servant, see 3409. This being so the Lord calls Himself one who serves or ministers, in Mark,

Whoever would be great among you must be your minister; and anyone who would be first among you must be the servant of all, even as the Son of Man did not come to be ministered to but to minister. Mark 10:43-45; Matt. 20:26-28.

And in Luke,

Who is the greater, one who sits at table or one who ministers? Is it not the one who sits at table? But I am in the midst of you as one who ministers. Luke 22:27.

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 3463

3463. ‘That Isaac’s servants came’ means rational concepts. This is clear from the meaning of ‘servants’ as rational concepts, and also as facts, dealt with in 2567, and from the representation of ‘Isaac’ as the Lord’s Divine Rational, dealt with in 1893, 2066, 2072, 2083, 2630, 3012, 3194, 3210. From what has gone before it is clear what aspect of the Lord is represented here by Isaac, namely the Word as regards its internal sense. For by ‘Abimelech, Ahuzzath, and Phicol’ are meant matters of doctrine concerning faith which are drawn from the literal sense of the Word, like those matters of doctrine possessed by people who are called ‘Philistines’ in the good sense. That is, they are people who have no other matters of doctrine than those concerning faith, and yet so far as life is concerned they do what is good, though it is the good of truth. And these matters of doctrine do have a certain link with the internal sense, and so with the Lord.

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 5161

5161. ‘That he made a feast for all his servants’ means the introduction and joining to the exterior natural. This is clear from the meaning of ‘a feast’ as the introduction to a joining together, dealt with in 3832, and also as a joining together through love and a making one’s own, 3596; and from the meaning of ‘servants’ as the things which belong to the exterior natural. For when a person is being regenerated lower things are made subordinate and subject to higher ones, that is, exterior things are made so to interior ones. When this happens the exterior things become servants, and the interior become masters. This is the meaning ‘servants’ has in the Word, see 2541, 3019, 3020. But the kinds of people who become ‘servants’ are those who are loved by the Lord, for it is mutual love which joins them together and leads them to see their service to Him not as bondage but as whole-hearted allegiance, since good enters from within to produce that kind of delight there. In former times feasts were held for various reasons; and they meant an introduction into mutual love and so meant a joining together. Feasts were also held on birthdays; these represented the new birth or regeneration, which is a joining, through love, of a person’s interiors to his exteriors, consequently a joining together in him of heaven and the world. For what is worldly or natural in a person is joined to what is spiritual and celestial.

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 5164

5164. ‘in the midst of his servants’ means which were among the things present in the exterior natural. This is clear from the meaning of ‘in the midst’ as among those things; and from the meaning of ‘servants’ as the things within the exterior natural, dealt with just above in 5161. In the Word all things that occupy a lower position and are therefore subordinate and subject to higher ones are called ‘servants’. This is so in the case of things present in the exterior natural – that is, the sensory impressions there – when considered in relation to the interior natural. The things present in this interior natural, when considered in relation to the rational, are also referred to as ‘servants’. Consequently every single thing present in a person, inmost ones no less than outermost, are called such when considered in relation to the Divine, since the Divine is the highest of all.

Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 7355

7355. ‘And into the house of your servants, and of your people’ means everything in the natural. This is clear from the meaning of ‘the house’ as a person’s mind the natural mind since it is used in reference to the Egyptians and Pharaoh’s servants (for the meaning of ‘house’ as the mind, see just above in 7353); and from the meaning of ‘Pharaoh’sservants and people’ as everything in the natural. Things present in the natural which serve to substantiate falsities are called ‘servants’; and for the use of ‘people’ to refer to truths, or in the contrary sense falsities, see 1259, 1260, 3295, 3581, 4619, 6451, 6465. From all this it is evident that ‘into the house of your (Pharaoh’s) servants and people’ means into everything in the natural.

Apocalypse Explained (Whitehead) n. 409

409. And every servant, and every freeman, signifies the natural man and the spiritual man. This is evident from the signification of “servant,” as meaning the natural man (of which presently); and from the signification of “freeman,” as meaning the spiritual man. The spiritual man is meant by “freeman” and the natural man by “servant” because the spiritual man is led by the Lord from heaven, and to be led by the Lord is freedom; while the natural man obeys and serves the spiritual, for it executes what the spiritual man wills and thinks. “Servant” is mentioned in many passages in the Word; and one who does not know that in these “servant” means what does service and effects the things the spiritual man wills and thinks, might suppose that “servant” there means one who is in servitude, thus he might understand it in its ordinary sense, but it will be plain from the passages in the Word that will presently be cited that it means what does service and effects. When “servant” is mentioned in the Word in this sense, the natural man is meant by it, which is “a servant” in the same sense as the body is a servantto its soul.
As what does service and effects is meant by “servant,” so “servant” is predicated not only of the natural man in its relation to the spiritual, but also of men who perform service for others and of the angels who execute God’s commands, yea, of the Lord Himself as to His Divine Human when He was in the world; it is also predicated of truths from good, because good acts and produces effects by means of truths, and truths perform the service to good which good wills and loves, and so forth. Moreover, “servant” is predicated of the natural man with regard to obedience and effect, although with the regenerate the natural man is just as free as the spiritual, for they act as one, like principal and instrumental; and yet the natural man, in relation to the spiritual, is called “a servant,” because, as was said, the natural man is of service to the spiritual in producing effects. But with those with whom the spiritual man is closed and the natural man only open, the whole man in a general sense is a servant, although in appearance it is like a freeman; for the exterior natural man is subservient to the evils and falsities which the interior wills and thinks, and is thus led by hell, and to be led by hell is to be altogether aservant, and after death such a man also becomes altogether a servant and vile slave in hell; for after death the delights of everyone’s life are changed into things that correspond, and the delights of evil are changed into servitude and into loathsome things (see in the work on Heaven and Hell, n. 485-490). In this sense also “servant” is mentioned in the Word. But here it shall be shown especially that “servant” means what is of service and what effects, and this in every respect.
[2] That “servant” means what is of service and effects is plainly evident from this, that the Lord in relation to His Divine Human is called “servant” and “minister,” as in the following passages. In Isaiah:
Behold My servant, on whom I lean, My chosen, in whom My soul is well pleased; I have given My spirit upon Him. [He shall bring forth judgment to the nations]. Who is blind but My servant? or deaf as My angel that I send? Who is blind as He that is perfect, and blind as My* servant? (Isa. 42:1, 19).
This is said of the Lord, who is treated of in the whole of this chapter, and the Lord in respect to His Divine Human is here called “a servant,” because He served his Father by doing His will, as He frequently declares; and this means that He reduced to order all things in the spiritual world, and at the same time taught men the way to heaven. Therefore by “My servant on whom I lean,” and by “My chosen, in whom My soul is well pleased,” the Divine Human is meant; and this is called “a servant” from the Divine truth by which it produced effects, and “chosen” from the Divine good. That it was by means of the Divine truth which belonged to Him that the Lord produced effects is meant by “I have given My spirit upon Him, He shall bring forth judgment to the nations;” “the spirit of Jehovah” meaning the Divine truth, and “to bring forth judgment to the nations” meaning to instruct. He is called “blind” and “deaf” because the Lord is as if He did not see and perceive the sins of men, for He leads men gently, bending and not breaking, thus leading away from evils, and leading to good; therefore He does not chastise and punish, like one who sees and perceives. This is meant by “who is blind but My servant? or deaf as My angel?” He is called “blind” and hence “a servant” from the Divine truth, and “deaf” and hence “an angel” from the Divine good; for “blindness” has reference to the understanding and thence to the perception, and “deafness” to the perception and thence to the will; it is therefore here meant that He as it were does not see, although He possesses the Divine truth from which He understands all things, and that He does not will according to what He perceives, although He has the Divine good, from which He is able to effect all things.

Apocalypse Revealed (Rogers) n. 3

3.Which God gave Him to show His servants. This symbolically means, for people who have faith arising from charity, or truths of wisdom arising from the goodness of love.
To show means, symbolically, to make evident, and servants here symbolize people who have faith arising from charity. The following things are made evident to them because they understand and accept.
Servants mean, in the spiritual sense, people who are governed by truths; and because truths spring from goodness, servants mean people who are governed by truths arising from goodness, thus also people governed by wisdom arising from love, because wisdom has to do with truth, and love with goodness. They also are people who have faith arising from charity, because faith, too, has to do with truth, and charity with goodness. And because the spiritual sense in reality is abstracted from person, therefore servants in that sense symbolize truths.
Now because truths, by teaching goodness, serve it, therefore in general, and properly speaking, by a servant in the Word is meant something serving, or someone or something that serves. In this sense not only were prophets calledservants of God, but so, too, was the Lord in respect to His humanity.
That prophets were called servants of God is evident from the following passages:

Jehovah has sent to you all His servants the prophets…. (Jeremiah 25:4)

…He has revealed His secret to His servants the prophets. (Amos 3:7)

…He has set before us by the hand of His servants the prophets. (Daniel 9:10)

Moses, too, is called a servant of Jehovah (Malachi 4:4). That is because a prophet, in the spiritual sense, means doctrinal truth, as discussed below.
[2] Moreover, because the Lord was the very embodiment of Divine truth, which also is the Word, and for that reason was called the prophet, and because He served in the world and serves all people to eternity by teaching, therefore He, too, is here and there called the servant of Jehovah, as in the following passages:

Of the labor of His soul He shall see; He shall be satisfied. By His knowledge My righteous Servant shall justify many…. (Isaiah 53:11)

Behold, My Servant shall deal prudently; He shall be exalted and extolled and be very high. (Isaiah 52:13)

Behold! My Servant on whom I rest, My Elect. My soul has good pleasure! I have put My Spirit upon Him…. (Isaiah 42:1, 19)

These things are said of the Lord. David is spoken of similarly, where by him is meant the Lord, as in the following:

I, Jehovah, will be their God, and My servant David a prince among them…. (Ezekiel 34:24)

David My servant shall be king over them, so that they all have one shepherd…. (Ezekiel 37:24)

I will protect this city to save it, for My sake and for My servant David’s sake. (Isaiah 37:35)

So, too, Psalm 78:70-72, 89:3, 4, 20. (That by David in these places is meant the Lord, may be seen in The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem Regarding the Lord, nos. 43, 44.)
The Lord Himself speaks similarly of Himself:

…whoever desires to become great among you must be your attendant, and whoever desires to be first among you must be your servant, even as the Son of Man did not come to be ministered to, but to minister…. (Matthew 20:25-28. Cf. Mark 10:42-45, Luke 22:27. So, too, Luke 12:37)

The Lord says this, because by a servant and attendant are meant one who serves and ministers by teaching, and abstractly from person, Divine truth, which He embodied.
[3] Since a servant therefore means someone who teaches Divine truth, it is apparent that servants in this place in the book of Revelation mean people who possess truths arising from goodness, or faith arising from charity, because they are able to teach from the Lord, that is to say, because the Lord is able to teach and minister through them.
It is in this sense that they are called servants in Matthew:

(At the end of the age,) who…is the faithful and prudent servant, whom his lord set over his household, to give them food in due season? Blessed is that servantwhom his lord, when he comes, will find so doing. (Matthew 24:45, 46)

And in Luke:

Blessed are those servants whom the lord, when he comes, will find watching. Truly I say to you that he will gird himself and have them sit down to eat, and will (himself) come and attend to them. (Luke 12:37)

In heaven, all people in the Lord’s spiritual kingdom are called His servants, while those in His celestial kingdom are called His ministers. That is because people in His spiritual kingdom are governed by wisdom derived from Divine truth, and those in the celestial kingdom by love derived from Divine good. And good ministers, while truth serves.
In an opposite sense, however, by servants are meant people who serve the devil. These are in a real state of servitude, whereas people who serve the Lord are in a state of freedom-as the Lord also teaches in John 8:31-36.*
* Then Jesus said to those Jews who believed Him, “If you abide in My word, you are My disciples indeed. And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” They answered Him, “We are Abraham’s descendants, and have never been in bondage to anyone. How can you say, ‘You will be made free’?” Jesus answered them, “Most assuredly, I say to you, whoever commits sin is a slave of sin. And a slave does not abide in the house forever, but a son abides forever. Therefore if the Son makes you free, you shall be free indeed. (John 8:31-36)