Sinai is obviously a place of great importance in the Bible: The Lord appeared to Moses there, giving him the Ten Commandments and all the other laws that would govern Jewish worship. Its spiritual meaning, as described in Swedenborg, is fittingly both important and complex in its layers.
Swedenborg says the area around the mountain — the “wilderness of Sinai” — represents a state in which a person has been through temptation, has a fierce desire to be good, and is ready to take in an understanding what it is to be good and how to be good — to learn the truth about the life of heaven. The mountain itself is generally described as representing Divine Truth, and the higher reaches of the mountain — where Moses meets with the Lord — are described variously as representing Divine Truth, Divine Goodness, heaven or simply the Lord. That might seem confusing, but in essence those are all the same thing. Swedenborg says heaven is an image of the Lord, and the Lord is goodness itself, the infinite desire to bring blessings on all people. That goodness takes form as truth, much as our thoughts take form as words so they can have an effect. So what we see in Sinai is always the Lord, but it is the Lord in the particular form that is most relevant to our own states, to what we need at any given point in our lives.
Passages from Swedenborg
Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 8753
8753. ‘They came to the wilderness of Sinai’ means, they entered a state of good in which the truths of faith were to be implanted. This is clear from the meaning of ‘the wilderness of Sinai’ as a state of good in which the truths of faith are to be implanted. Here ‘wilderness’ is good in which truths have not as yet been implanted, and ‘Sinai’ is actual truths. For ‘wilderness’ has a number of meanings, 3900, in general what is uninhabited and uncultivated, 2708, so that in the spiritual sense it means good which as yet has no truths in it; for good without truths is spiritually uncultivated. Consequently ‘wilderness’ means a new will which has not as yet been formed by means of the truths of faith, 8457.
[2] As regards ‘Mount Sinai’, in the highest sense it means Divine Truth emanating from Divine Good, Divine Good being meant by ‘mountain’ and Divine Truth by ‘Sinai’. In the internal sense it means the truth of faith springing from good, in this instance the truth of faith that is to be implanted in good since the Law had not as yet been declared from there. The reason why ‘Mount Sinai’ has these meanings is that the Law was declared from there by the Lord, and the Law is Divine Truth emanating from Divine Good, and also is the truth of faith springing from good, 6752, 7463, 8695. This explains why the children of Israel encamped in the wilderness beside this mountain; for not only the Ten Commandments, which are the Law in a restricted sense, were declared from there, but also all the statutes of the Church, which, being representative, held within themselves the spiritual and celestial truths and forms of good of the Lord’s kingdom. The fact that the Law was declared from that mountain is clear from Chapter 20 below; and the fact that the statutes of the Church were as well is clear from Exodus 21 and following chapters; and Lev. 7:37, 38; 27:34. ‘Sinai’ has the same meaning in David,
O God, when You went out before Your people, when You marched in the wilderness, the earth trembled; the heavens also dropped [rain] before God. This Sinai [trembled] before God. the God of Israel. You cause a rain of blessings to drop down, O God. Ps. 68:79.
Here ‘Sinai’ stands for truth which springs from good, for these are meant by ‘the heavens dropped [rain] before God’ and by ‘God dropped a rain of blessings’.
[3] In the Book of Judges,
O Jehovah, when You went forth from Seir, when You set out from the field of the earth trembled, the heavens also dropped, the clouds indeed dropped water, the mountains flowed down before Jehovah, Sinai itself before Jehovah God of Israel. In the days of Shamgar, son of Anath, in the days of Jael, the roads ceased to be, and those who went along by pathways kept to twisting roads; the streets in Israel ceased to be. They ceased until I, Deborah, arose, until I arose a mother in Israel. Judg. 5:4-7.
Here also ‘Sinai’ stands for the Law or Divine Truth emanating from Divine Good, from which the truths of faith were implanted in the good of faith, those truths also being meant by ‘the heavens dropped, and the clouds dropped water’. A lack of the truths of faith and the perversion of them is meant by ‘the roads ceased to be, and those who went along by pathways kept to twisting roads’, truths being meant by ‘roads’ or ‘ways’, ‘pathways’, and ‘streets’, see 627, 2333, 3123, 3477. For the theme of this prophetic song, which is the Song of Deborah and Barak, is the perversion of the Church’s truth and the renewal of it.
[4] In Moses,
Jehovah came from Sinai, He dawned from Seir upon them; He shone from Mount Paran, and came out of myriads of holiness. From His right hand came a fiery law for them. Deut. 33:2.
Here the children of Jacob are blessed by Moses before his death. He begins the prophetic utterance in his blessing with Jehovah came from Sinai, and in this instance ‘Sinai’ means the truths of faith in their entirety. The reason why he begins with these words is that all the truths and forms of the good of faith are meant by ‘the children of Jacob’, 3858, 3862, 3926, 3939, 6335, and in a similar way by ‘the children of Israel’, 5414, 5951, 5879.
Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 8399
8399. ‘Which is between Elim and Sinai’ means a continuation and the essential nature. This is clear from the meaning of ‘Elim’ and from the meaning of ‘Sinai’, from which one may see what this location between the two means. Because of the springs and palm trees that were there ‘Elim’ means truth and good that belong to comfort after temptation – see the final verse of the previous chapter. And because of the Law which was declared from it ‘Sinai’ means good and the truth that flows from it. Consequently the continuation and the essential nature meant by ‘Sin’ is good that results from truth. Good that results from truth is the good done by a spiritual person prior to regeneration; for at that time he does it as a result of truth, that is, because truth demands it, and therefore he does it in a spirit of obedience. But good from which truth flows is done by a spiritual person after regeneration, for now he does it as a result of his affection for it. The former kind of good is meant by ‘Sin’, the latter by ‘Sinai’.
Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 9420
9420. ‘And Moses went up into the mountain of God’ means in the direction of heaven. This is clear from the meaning of Mount Sinai, to which ‘the mountain of God’ refers here, as the law or Divine Truth which comes from the Lord, thus the Word as it exists in heaven, and therefore also heaven itself, dealt with in 8399, 8753, 8793, 8805. The reason why the revelation took place on a mountain and why that mountain is called ‘the mountain of God’ is that ‘the mountain’ means the heavenly attribute of love, which is good, and consequently means heaven, and in the highest sense the Lord, 795, 796, 2722, 4210, 6435, 8327, and ‘the mountain of God’ means Divine Truth springing from the Divine Good of the Lord’s Divine Love, 8758. For the Lord is called ‘God’ in the Word by virtue of Divine Truth, and ‘Jehovah’ by virtue of Divine Good, 2769, 2807, 2822, 3921(end), 4295, 4402, 7010, 7268, 8192, 8301, 8988, 9167. This is why the words the mountain of God are used.
[2] The fact that ‘Mount Sinai’ means the law or Divine Truth emanating from the Lord’s Divine Good, and so means the Word, and in the highest sense the Lord, is clear in David,
The earth trembled, the heavens also dropped [rain] before God. This Sinai [trembled] before God, the God of Israel. The chariots of God are myriad on myriad,* thousands of peacemakers; the Lord is within them, Sinai is within the sanctuary. Ps. 68:8, 17.
‘The earth’ and ‘the heavens’ are the external and the internal dimensions of the Church, see 1733, 2117, 2118 (end), 3355, 4535, and ‘a chariot’ is doctrinal teachings, 2760, 5321, 8146, 8148, 8215, so that ‘the chariots of God’ are matters of doctrine or God’s truths as they exist in heaven. From all this it is evident that ‘this Sinai before God, the God of Israel’ and ‘Sinai within the sanctuary’ mean the law or Divine Truth emanating from the Lord’s Divine Good, and in the highest sense the Lord in heaven. In the Book of Judges,
O Jehovah, when You went forth from Seir, when You set out from the field of Edom, the earth trembled, the heavens also dropped, the clouds indeed dropped water, the mountains flowed down before Jehovah, this Sinai before Jehovah. Judg. 5:4, 5.
‘This Sinai’ again stands for Divine Truth emanating from the Lord’s Divine Good. Similarly in Moses,
Jehovah came from Sinai, and dawned from Seir upon them; He shone from Mount Paran, and came out of myriads of holiness. From His right hand came a fiery law for them. Deut. 33:2.
* lit. two myriads
Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 8805
8805. ‘And Moses went down from the mountain to the people’ means application and preparation by the truth from God, in order that truths may be received within good. This is clear from the meaning of ‘going down’ – when said of ‘Moses’, who represents the truth from God – as application and also preparation by that truth; from the representation of ‘Moses’ as the truth from God, dealt with in 8760, 8787, which also acts as an intermediary, 8787, thus which also prepares and applies; from the meaning of ‘the mountain’ as the Divine within heaven, thus heaven itself; and from the representation of ‘the children of Israel’ as those belonging to the spiritual Church, thus those guided by truth through which good comes, and governed by good from which truth springs, at this point good in which truths are to be received. It is important to know what is meant specifically by ‘Mount Sinai’ in this and subsequent chapters of the Book of Exodus, also what is represented by ‘the people Israel’, and what by ‘Moses’ as well.
[2] Specifically Mount Sinai means heaven, out of which truths flow in from the Lord. Consequently ‘Jehovah came down onto that mountain’ means His presence in heaven. And since heaven – in which Jehovah, that is, the Lord, is present – is meant by ‘Mount Sinai’, Divine Good united to Divine Truth there is also meant by it; for these are what make it heaven.
[3] But The People Israel beside this mountain represent the spiritual Church in respect of good in which the truths of faith are to be implanted. It has been shown already that those belonging to the spiritual Church pass through two states. The first is when they are led by means of truths to good, and the second state is when they are governed by good and consequently by truths. At this point the state is one when they are governed by good in which truths are to be implanted, which state is an intermediate state that comes between those first and second ones. The truths that are implanted within good are contained in those which were declared by the Lord from Mount Sinai and conveyed by Moses to the people.
[4] Moses in this and subsequent chapters represents the truth from God below heaven joined to God’s truth in heaven. He therefore represents the intermediary between the Divine in heaven and the good in which truths are to be implanted, the spiritual Church’s good, and so represents the intermediary between the Lord and the people.
It is important to know these things for the understanding of what follows below in the Book of Exodus. All this also shows that ‘Moses went down from the mountain to the people’ means application and preparation through the truth from God for truths to be received within good.