The idea of spiritual “states” is a familiar one; we’re used to thinking about being in a certain “state of mind” on an intellectual level or in a “state of rage” or a “state of infatuation” on an emotional level. It generally indicates that we have a certain pattern of thoughts or feelings, that those patterns are affecting our internal lives (for better or for worse), and that the patterns are temporary or transitional.
That’s much the way “state” is used in Swedenborg, but it’s given a great deal of emphasis. It says that all the places in the Bible represent different spiritual states, that traveling (40 years in the wilderness, for instance) represents a progression from state to state, and even wars represent states of spiritual conflict. In a sense, the entirety of the Bible (and the entirety of our lives) is about our spiritual “travels” from the time we are born through countless spiritual and emotional states until the time we (hopefully) enter heaven.
It’s also pretty clear that those spiritual states matter far more than any physical ones. If you go serve at a soup kitchen a couple of times so you can list volunteer work on your resume, you haven’t really done yourself any good. Physically you may have been in a state of service, but spiritually you were only serving yourself. The same is true of physical places: You can live in the most beautiful place in the world and be a horrible person; you can live in the worst place and be a wonderful person.
Such dichotomies, however — in which we can be in one physical state and an entirely different spiritual state — are a temporary condition, true only of our lives in the physical world. Swedenborg says that after we die, our external experiences (what we “see,” what we “hear,” what we “smell,” “taste,” and “feel”) slowly merge with our spiritual states until spiritual state becomes our whole reality. At that point everything around us is a projection of the things in our hearts and minds, as beautiful or as ugly as we have chosen to be. And at that point, when we are with other people (other spirits, really), we “see” their spiritual states, and our closeness and sharing is based on how similar our spiritual states are. In fact, Swedenborg says that time and space do not exist in spiritual reality, and that what we experience there as time and space are really matters of spiritual state.
That’s a lot to take in, and we are so immersed in time and space that it can sound more strange than inviting. But as scientists explore human consciousness they are discovering more and more about how our mental states shape our awareness, our experiences and our memories — and at the quantum level, even physical reality itself.
Passages from Swedenborg
Divine Love and Wisdom (Dole) n. 73
73. Divinity is in all time, nontemporally. Just as Divinity is in all space nonspatially, it is in all time nontemporally. Nothing proper to the physical world can be attributed to Divinity, and space and time are proper to the physical world. Space in the physical world can be measured, and so can time. Time is measured in days, weeks, months, years, and centuries; days are measured in hours; weeks and months in days; years in the four seasons; and centuries in years. The physical world gets these measurements from the apparent circuit and rotation of earth’s sun.
It is different in the spiritual world. Life does seem to go on in time there in much the same way. People live with each other the way we do on earth, which cannot happen without some appearance of time. However, time there is not divided into segments the way it is in our world because their sun is always in its east. It never moves. It is actually the Lord’s divine love that angels see as their sun. This means that they do not have days, weeks, months, years, or centuries, but states of life instead. It provides them with divisions that cannot be called divisions into time segments, only divisions of state. This is why angels do not know what time is, and why they think of state when time is mentioned. Further, when it is state that determines time, time is only an appearance. A pleasant state makes time seem brief, and an unpleasant one makes it seem long. We can therefore see that time in the spiritual world is simply an attribute of state.
This is why hours, days, weeks, months, and years in the Word mean states and their sequences, viewed either serially or comprehensively. When the church is described in terms of time, its morning is its initial state, its noon is its fulfillment, its evening is its decline, and its night is its end. The same holds true for the four seasons of the year: spring, summer, fall, and winter.
Divine Love and Wisdom (Dole) n. 7
7. Divinity is not in space. Given the divine omnipresence–presence with everyone in the world, with every angel in heaven, and with every spirit under heaven–there is no way a merely physical image can compass the thought that Divinity, or God, is not in space. Only a spiritual image will suffice. Physical images are inadequate because they involve space. They are put together out of earthly things, and there is something spatial about absolutely every earthly thing we see with our eyes. Everything that is large or small here involves space, everything that is long or wide or high here involves space–in a word, every measurement, every shape, every form here involves space. This is why I said that a merely physical image cannot compass the fact that Divinity is not in space when the claim is made that it is everywhere.
Still, we can grasp this with our earthly thinking if only we let in a little spiritual light. This requires that I first say something about spiritual concepts and the spiritual thinking that arises from them. Spiritual concepts have nothing to do with space. They have to do solely with state, state being an attribute of love, life, wisdom, desires, and the delights they provide–in general, an attribute of what is good and true. A truly spiritual concept of these realities has nothing in common with space. It is higher and looks down on spatial concepts the way heaven looks down on earth.
However, since angels and spirits see with their eyes the way we do on earth, and since objects can be seen only in space, there does seem to be space in the spiritual world where angels and spirits are, space like ours on earth. Still, it is not space but an appearance of space. It is not fixed and invariant like ours. It can be lengthened and shortened, changed and altered; and since it cannot be defined by measurement, we here cannot grasp it with an earthly concept, but only with a spiritual one. Spiritual concepts are no different when they apply to spatial distances than when they apply to “distances” of what is good and “distances” of what is true, which are agreements and likenesses as to state.
Heaven and Hell (Dole) n. 154
154. How the States of Angels in Heaven Change
By “the changes of angels’ states,” we mean their changes in regard to love and faith and therefore in regard to wisdom and intelligence-to the state of their life, that is. States are attributes of life and of matters that pertain to life; and since angelic life is a life of love and faith and thereby of wisdom and intelligence, states are attributes of these, and we talk about states of love and faith and states of wisdom and intelligence.
Heaven and Hell (Dole) n. 155
155. Angels are not constantly in the same state as to love, and consequently they are not in the same state as to wisdom, for all the wisdom they have is from their love and in proportion to it. Sometimes they are in a state of intense love, sometimes in a state of love that is not intense. It decreases gradually from its most to its least intense. When they are in the highest level of love, they are in the light and warmth of their lives, or in their greatest clarity and delight. Conversely, when they are in the lowest level they are in shadow and coolness, or in what is dim and unpleasant. From this latter state they return to the first, and so on. The phases follow each other with constant variety.
These states follow each other like variations of light and shade, warmth and cold, or like the morning, noon, evening, and night of individual days in our world, varying constantly throughout the year. Not only that, they correspond-morning to the state of their love in clarity, noon to the state of their wisdom in clarity, evening to the state of their wisdom in dimness, and night to a state of no love or wisdom. It should be known, though, that there is no correspondence of night with the states of life of people in heaven, but rather a correspondence of the half-light that comes before dawn. The correspondence of night is with people who are in hell.(a)
Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 9383
9383. ‘All Jehovah’s words and all the judgements’ means things in the Word which are rules of life in the spiritual state and in the natural state. This is clear from the meaning of ‘Jehovah’s words’ as things in the Word which are rules of life in the spiritual state, dealt with below; and from the meaning of ‘the judgements’ as things in the Word which are rules of life in the natural state. The terms ‘in the spiritual state’ and ‘in the natural state’ are used because in general every person has two states. The first is peculiar and proper to the internal man and is called the spiritual state, the second is peculiar and proper to the external man and is called the natural state. The internal man’s state is called spiritual because it is conditioned by truths belonging to the light of heaven, and by good belonging to the heat of that light, which is love. That light is called spiritual light because it enlightens the understanding part of the mind, and that heat is called spiritual heat, which is love and warms the will part. This is the reason why the internal man’s state is called spiritual. But the external man’s state is called natural because it is conditioned by truths belonging to the light of the world and by good belonging to the heat of this light, which too is love, but love for such things as exist in the world, for all heat of life is love. This is the reason why the external man’s state is called natural. Rules of life in the natural state are meant by ‘the judgements’, while rules of life in the spiritual state are meant by ‘Jehovah’s words’.
True Christian Religion (Rose) n. 366
366
(c) The qualities that flow in from the Lord are received by us according to our form. “Form” here means our state in regard to love and wisdom. Therefore it includes the state of our desires to do good out of goodwill and the state of our insights about the truths of faith.
God is one indivisible entity that is the same from eternity to eternity. He is not the same simple thing; he is the same infinite thing. All variation is supplied by the object in which it occurs, as I showed above [364]. It is the receiving form or state that causes variations, as we can see from the life that is in little children, teenagers, young adults, middle-aged adults, and the elderly. Because we keep the same soul, we have the same life inside from infancy to old age; but as our state goes through life stages and different circumstances, we perceive the life inside us differently.
[2] God’s life is present in all its fullness not only in people who are good and religious but also in people who are evil and ungodly. That life is the same in angels of heaven as it is in spirits of hell. The difference is that evil people block the road and shut the door to prevent God from coming down into the lower areas of their mind. Good people, on the other hand, smooth the road and open the door. They invite God to enter the lower areas of their mind since he already inhabits the highest areas of it. They change the state of their will so that love and goodwill may flow in, and change the state of their intellect so that wisdom and faith may flow in – they open themselves to God.
Evil people block that inflow with various bodily cravings and spiritual garbage that they spread around to prevent access. Nevertheless, God with all his divine essence still dwells in the highest parts of evil people and gives them the ability to will what is good and understand what is true. This ability is something that all human beings have, although it would not be theirs at all if life from God were not present in their soul. Many experiences have taught me that even the evil have this ability.
rcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 10134
10134. ‘You shall offer one lamb in the morning’ means the removal of evils by means of the good of innocence from the Lord in a state of love and consequently of light in the internal man. This is clear from the meaning of ‘offering a lamb’, or sacrificing it, as the removal of evils by means of the good of innocence from the Lord, dealt with below; and from the meaning of ‘the morning’ as a state of love and consequently of light in the internal man, also dealt with below. The reason why ‘offering (or sacrificing) a lamb’ means the removal of evils by means of the good of innocence from the Lord is that burnt offerings and sacrifices were signs of purification from evils and consequently from falsities, or what amounts to the same thing, the removal of them, and the implantation of goodness and truth and the joining together of these by the Lord, 9990, 9991, 10022, 10042, 10053. As regards purification from evils, that it is the removal of them, see the places referred to in 10057; and as regards ‘a lamb’, that the good of innocence is meant, 10132.
[2] The reason why the removal of evils, and the implantation of goodness and truth and the joining together of these, is accomplished by means of the good of innocence from the Lord is that all good, if it is to be good, must have innocence within it. Without it good is not good; for innocence is not only the ground in which truths are sown but also the very essence of good. Therefore how far a person possesses innocence determines how far his good becomes good and his truth has life from good, consequently how far he is endowed with life and the evils present with him are removed. And so far as these are removed determines how far goodness and truth are implanted and are joined together by the Lord. All this explains why the continual burnt offering was made with lambs.
All good in heaven and in the Church has innocence within it, and without it good is not good, see 2736, 2780, 6013, 7840, 7887, 9262.
What innocence is, 3994, 4001, 4797, 5236, 6107, 6765, 7902, 9262, 9936.
[3] The reason why ‘the morning’ means a state of love and consequently of light in the internal man is that in the heavens angels experience different states involving their love and therefore their faith, just as in the world people pass through different times of day that affect the heat and at the same time the light there, those times of day being, as is well known, morning, midday, evening, and night. So it is that in the Word ‘morning’ means a state of love, ‘midday’ a state of light in clearness, ‘evening’ a state of light set in obscurity, and ‘night’ or twilight prior to morning a state of love set in obscurity.
Such changes from one state to another take place in heaven, see 5672, 5962, 6110, 7218, 8426.
Morning there is a state of peace and innocence, thus a state of love to the Lord, 2405, 2780, 8426, 8812, 10114.
Midday is a state of light in clearness, 3708, 5672, 9642.
Evening is a state of light set in obscurity, 3056, 3833, 6110.
There is no night in heaven, only twilight, 6110, by which a state of love set in obscurity is meant.
[4] The reason why ‘the morning’ means a state of love and consequently of light in the internal man is that when an angel’s state is one of love and light he functions in his internal man; but when his state is one of light and love in obscurity he does so in his external man. For angels have an internal man and an external, but when they function in the internal the external is virtually dormant, whereas when they do so in the external their state is grosser and duller. So it is that when their state is one of love and light they function in their internal man, thus in what is for them the morning, and when their state is one of light and love set in obscurity they do so in their external, thus in what is for them the evening. From this it is evident that changes of state are effected by their being raised to more internal things, thus to a higher sphere of heavenly light and heat, consequently nearer to the Lord, or by their being let down to more external ones, into a lower sphere of heavenly light and heat, and therefore further away from the Lord. [5] It should be remembered that more internal things are higher ones and so are closer to the Lord, whereas more external things are lower ones and so are further away from the Lord, and that light in the heavens is Divine Truth which composes faith, while heat in the heavens is Divine Good that constitutes love, both emanating from the Lord. For the Lord is the Sun in heaven, the source of all the life that angels have, and consequently of all the spiritual and celestial life that people in the world have, see the places referred to in 9548, 9684. Regarding more internal things, that they are higher ones and so are closer to the Lord, see 2148, 3084, 4599, 5146, 8325.
[6] The love and faith of a person who is being regenerated, and also of a person who has been regenerated, in like manner undergo changes of state by being raised to more internal things or let down to more external ones. But there are few who are able to reflect on this matter, because they are unaware of what thinking and willing within the internal man and within the external man are, or even of what the internal man is and what the external man is. Thinking and willing in the internal man implies doing so in heaven, for this is where the internal man is; but thinking and willing in the external man implies doing so in the world, for that is where the external man is. Therefore when love to God and faith resulting from it govern a person he functions in his internal man, since he is now up in heaven; but when his love and resulting faith are set in obscurity he functions in his external, since he is then down in the world. [7] These states too are meant in the Word by ‘morning’, ‘midday’, ‘evening’, and ‘night’ or early morning twilight, as are states of the Church. The first state of the Church is likewise called ‘morning’ in the Word, the second state ‘midday’, the third ‘evening’, and the fourth or last ‘night’. But when the Church has reached its night time, that is, when love to God and faith exist there no longer, morning emerges from twilight for another nation, where a new Church is established. [8] For the situation with the Church in general is like that with a person in particular. His first state is a state of innocence, thus also one of love towards parents, nursemaid, and also children of his own age. His second state is a state of light, for when he becomes a youth he learns the things of light, that is, the truths of faith, and believes them. The third state is reached when he begins to love the world and to love himself, which happens when he becomes a young adult and when he thinks for himself; and to the extent that these loves increase, faith decreases, and together with faith charity towards the neighbour and love to God. The fourth and last state is reached when he has no interest in these, more so when he rejects them.
[9] Such states are also the states of every Church from its beginning to its end. Its first stateis in like manner a state of early childhood, thus also one of innocence, and consequently of love to the Lord. This state is called ‘morning’. The second state is a state of light. The third state is a state of light set in obscurity, which is that Church’s ‘evening’. And the fourth state is a state when there is no love nor consequently any light, which is its ‘night’. This is so because evils increase daily; and to the extent that they increase, one person like a contagious disease infects another, especially parents their children. Furthermore hereditary evils are intensified by each succeeding generation and in that condition passed down.
[10] The fact that ‘morning’ means the first state of a Church and also a state of love is clear in Daniel,
The holy one said, For how long is this vision, the continual [burnt offering], and the desolating transgression? He said to me, Up to the evening, [when it is becoming] the morning, two thousand three hundred times; then the sanctuary will be made correct. Dan. 8:13, 14.
This refers to the Lord’s Coming. ‘The evening’ is the state of the Church before His Coming, but ‘the morning’ is the first state of the Church after His Coming, and in the highest sense it is the Lord Himself. The Lord is meant in the highest sense by ‘the morning’ because He is the Sun of heaven, and the Sun of heaven never sets but is always rising in the east. This also explains why the Lord is called ‘the Rising’ or ‘the East’, consequently ‘the Morning’ as well, see 101, 2405, 2780, 9668.
[11] In Isaiah,
One was calling to me from Seir, What of the night, what of the night, O watchman? The watchman said, Morning comes, and also the night. Isa. 21:11, 12.
‘The watchman’ is used to mean in the internal sense one who observes the states of the Church and the changes it undergoes, and so to mean every prophet. ‘The night’ is used to mean the final state of the Church, ‘morning’ its first state. ‘Seir’ from where the watchman calls means the enlightenment of nations who are in darkness, for which meaning of ‘Seir’, see 4240; and for that of ‘the night’ as the final state of the Church, 6000. ‘Morning comes, and also the night’ means that even though enlightenment comes to those who belong to the new Church, night remains with those who are in the old one. ‘Morning’ has the same meaning in David,
In the evening weeping will abide*, in the morning singing. Ps. 30:5.
And in Isaiah,
Around evening time, behold, terror! Before the morning, he is no more. Isa. 17:14.
Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 10114
[2] A new state is every state in which good and truth are joined together, and this occurs when the actions of a person who is being regenerated spring from good, thus from affection and love, and not as previously from truth or mere obedience. A new state also occurs when the good of love arises among those in heaven, a state called ‘the morning’ there; for different states of love and faith come round there, like midday, evening, [pre-dawn] twilight, and morning on earth. In addition a new state occurs when an old Church comes to an end and a new one begins. All these new states are meant in the Word by ‘the morning’; each has been dealt with specifically in various places in the explanations of Genesis and Exodus.
Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 10225
10225. ‘From a son of twenty years and over’ means the state in which the understanding of truth and good exists. This is clear from the meaning of the word ‘twenty’, when it refers to a person’s age, as the state in which the understanding of truth and good exists. The reason why ‘twenty’ means the state in which the understanding of truth and good exists is that when a person attains twenty years he starts to think for himself. For from earliest childhood to extreme old age a person passes inwardly through a number of states, which are those of understanding (or intelligence) and wisdom. The first state lasts from birth to the person’s fifth year. It is a state of ignorance and of innocence within ignorance; and it is called early childhood. The second state lasts from the fifth to the twentieth year. This is a state in which instruction is received and knowledge is acquired; and it is called later childhood. The third state lasts from the twentieth to the sixtieth year, which is a state in which understanding exists; and it is called adulthood, maturity, or full manhood. The fourth or last state lasts from the sixtieth year onwards, which is a state of wisdom and of innocence within wisdom.
Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 1377
1377. The fact that place, change of place, or distance in the world of spirits is an appearance has been made clear from the consideration that all the souls and spirits that there have been since the beginning of creation appear to remain all the time in their own place. Nor does their place alter unless their state does. And as their state alters so are places and distances with them changed. But since everyone has a general governing state, and particular and individual changes of state nevertheless have regard to the general, spirits consequently go back after such changes to their own position.
Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 1458
1458. ‘Towards the south’ means into goods and truths, thus into a state that is bright as regards interior things. This is clear from the meaning of ‘the south’. That ‘the south’ means a state that is bright arises from the fact that the four quarters, as with periods of time, do not actually exist in the next life, only the states meant by the four quarters and periods of time. The successive states of ideas in the understanding are like the states that belong to the times of the day and to the seasons of the year, and also to those of the four quarters. The successive states of a day are evening, night, morning, and midday; the states of the year are autumn, winter, spring, and summer; and the states of the four quarters are those of the sun in relation to west, north, east, and south. Similar to these are the successive states of ideas in the understanding. And what is remarkable, in heaven those whose state is one of wisdom and intelligence are in light. The intensity of that light is in exact proportion to their state, with those in the greatest light whose state is one of highest wisdom and intelligence; but the wisdom there is that which goes with love and charity, and the intelligence that which goes with faith in the Lord.
Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 1463
1463. That ‘sojourning’ means receiving instruction becomes clear from the meaning in the Word of ‘sojourning’ as receiving instruction, and it has this meaning because sojourning and passing on, or moving from one place to another, is in heaven nothing else than a change of state, as shown already in 1376, 1379. Therefore every time travelling, sojourning, or transferring from one place to another occurs in the Word nothing else suggests itself to angels than a change of state such as takes place with them.
Arcana Coelestia (Elliott) n. 3183
3183. ‘And her nurse’ means from the innocence belonging to that affection, that is to say, which also they sent away, or separated from themselves. This is clear from the meaning of ‘a nurse’ or wet nurse, as innocence. Sucklings and those who suckle them are mentioned frequently in the Word, where they mean the first state that young children pass through, which is plainly a state of innocence. For as soon as anyone is born he is brought into a stateof innocence. This state then serves as the basis of all other states and is the inner core of them all; and this state is meant in the Word by ‘a suckling’. After he has been brought into a state of innocence he is led into a state of affection for celestial good, that is, into a state of love towards parents, which with them exists in place of love to the Lord; this state is meant by ‘a young child’. After that he is led into a state of affection for spiritual good, which is mutual love, or charity towards those who are children like himself, which state is meant by the expression ‘boys’. When he grows up further still he is led into a state of affection for truth; this is meant by the expression ‘young men’. Subsequent states however are meant by ‘men’ and at last ‘old men’. This final state, which is meant by the expression ‘old men’, is a state of wisdom which has the innocence of earliest childhood within it, and so the first stateand the last are united. And when he is old, being so to speak a small child again yet one who is now wise, that person is led into the Lord’s kingdom.
Heaven and Hell (Dole) n. 181
181. We can tell that angels’ clothes do not merely look like clothes but really are because they not only see them, they feel them as well. Further, they have many garments that they take off and put on, and they put away the ones they are not using and put back on the ones they are. I have seen thousands of times that they wear different clothes.
I have asked them where they got their clothes, and they have told me that their clothes come from the Lord and are given to them, and that sometimes they are clothed without noticing it. They have also said that their clothes change depending on the changes of their state, that their clothes are radiant and gleaming white in their first and second state, while in the third and fourth states they are somewhat dimmer. This too is because of correspondences, because these changes of state have to do with their intelligence and wisdom, discussed above in 154-161.
True Christian Religion (Rose) n. 106
106
Because these two states follow the divine design, and the divine design fills everything large and small down to the least detail in the universe, therefore there are a number of different things in the universe that represent these two states.
The first state is represented by the stages we all go through from infancy to childhood and into our teenage years, our twenties, and our thirties. These stages entail our being deferential and obedient to our parents, and learning from teachers and ministers.
The second state, however, is represented by our stages later on when we are responsible for ourselves and our own choices, when we have our own will and our own understanding, and have authority in our own home.
The first state, then, is represented by the situation of a prince, the son of a king, or else a son of a duke, before he becomes the king or the duke himself; or by the situation of any citizens before they become civic leaders; or of any royal subjects before they take government positions; or of any students studying for the ministry before they become priests. The same applies to the situation of those priests before they become rectors, and of those rectors before they become deans. The same also applies to the situation of any young women before they marry; or to the situation of any female servants before they become heads of households. This is generally the situation of apprentices before they go into business for themselves, of soldiers before they become ranking officers, and of male servants before they become heads of households. The first state in every case is a kind of slavery while the second state belongs to our own will and intellect.
These two states are also represented by various things in the animal kingdom. The first stateis represented by animals and birds as long as they are still with their mothers and fathers, when they follow them around constantly and are fed and raised by them. The second state is represented when they leave their parents and take care of themselves.
Caterpillars are another example. They represent the first state when they inch along and eat leaves; the second, when they shed their old form and become butterflies.
These two states are also represented by members of the plant kingdom. The first state is represented when a plant grows from a seed and is decked out with branches, boughs, and leaves; the second is represented when the plant produces fruit and generates new seeds. This sequence is equivalent to the way truth and goodness join together, in that all parts of a tree correspond to kinds of truth, and pieces of fruit correspond to good things [that result].
If we stay in the first state and do not go on to the second we are like a tree that produces only leaves but no fruit. It says in the Word that this type of tree has to be uprooted and thrown into the fire (Matthew [7:19]; 21:19; Luke 3:9; 13:69; John 15:5, 6). This is also like a slave who does not want to be free. There used to be a law that slaves like this had to be taken to a door or a post and have their ears pierced with an awl (Exodus 21:6). “Slaves” are people who have no partnership with the Lord. “The free” are people who have such a partnership; for the Lord says, If the Son makes you free, you are truly free (John 8:36).