The Bible

 

Psalms 42

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1 As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God.

2 My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God: when shall I come and appear before God?

3 My tears have been my meat day and night, while they continually say unto me, Where is thy God?

4 When I remember these things, I pour out my soul in me: for I had gone with the multitude, I went with them to the house of God, with the voice of joy and praise, with a multitude that kept holyday.

5 Why art thou cast down, O my soul? and Why art thou disquieted in me? hope thou in God: for I shall yet praise him for the help of his countenance.

6 O my God, my soul is cast down within me: therefore will I remember thee from the land of Jordan, and of the Hermonites, from the hill Mizar.

7 Deep calleth unto deep at the noise of thy waterspouts: all thy waves and thy billows are gone over me.

8 Yet the LORD will command his lovingkindness in the daytime, and in the night his song shall be with me, and my prayer unto the God of my life.

9 I will say unto God my rock, Why hast thou forgotten me? Why go I mourning because of the oppression of the enemy?

10 As with a sword in my bones, mine enemies reproach me; while they say daily unto me, Where is thy God?

11 Why art thou cast down, O my soul? and Why art thou disquieted within me? hope thou in God: for I shall yet praise him, who is the health of my countenance, and my God.

   

Commentary

 

Exploring the Meaning of Psalms 42

By Julian Duckworth

Psalm 42 is a song of intense longing for the Lord, a deep yearning which carries the speaker through times of great distress. This longing is described in vivid words and images. The opening verse says, “As the deer pants for the water brooks, so pants my soul for You, O God.” Later, words and phrases like ‘thirsts’, ‘my tears’, ‘I pour out my soul’, ‘my soul is cast down within me’ and ‘in the night His song shall be with me’.

The spiritual meaning of this psalm of longing is concerned with two needs in us: first our need always to be in a state of longing for the Lord as we go through our lives, because ‘longing’ keeps us mindful and in conjunction with the Lord. This kind of longing is a very positive and joyful one in which we maintain and feed our relationship with the Lord in whatever ways we do that, in prayer, through the Word, through good towards others and by holding the Lord in our mind in the right way. (Heaven and Hell 349 and Arcana Caelestia 5130)

The other longing is about our need to remember the Lord and to seek to return to the Lord as and when we feel we have become separated from him. This separation may be due to our own forgetfulness or indulgence in worldly things or it may just be because our physical senses tend to take us away from the sensation of feeling the Lord in our lives. (Arcana Caelestia 5089.2)

A ‘deer’ stands for an affection for truth (see Arcana Caelestia 6413). This is because the deer, especially the does, are more timid than other animals, and such timidity describes the sensitive nature of affection very well. The ‘water brooks’ represent the power of what is true, especially the truths of the Word which are from the Lord. This is because water itself corresponds to truth. In this vein, let us notice the use of water-related words in the expressions of longingness for God: thirsts, tears, pour out, and later in the psalm, waterfalls.

‘Remembering’ has an important part in this psalm, first, of going with the multitude to the house of God with joy and praise. The ‘multitude’ stands for the joy of being in concert with many in adoration of God. But it can also mean more spiritually, a remembering of the time when our whole being was in accord in feeling joy in the Lord. This looking back remembrance is important when we are in temptation in which we feel separated and with no joy. It offers us a reminder of having been in a different and better state. (Divine Providence 279.5)

Later, in verses 6 and 7, remembering is made, using geographical names. Biblical names always stand for spiritual qualities, and here, the Jordan, a low-lying river which was the boundary of the land, stands for our natural life whereas the heights of Hermon and the Hill Mizar, being higher, stand for our spiritual levels of life. In other words, our remembrance of the Lord is to come from all parts of our life. (Apocalypse Explained 375.26)

The fascinating phrase, ‘Deep calls unto deep at the noise of Your waterfalls’ may actually have two different meanings. The first one is that the ‘deeps’ stand for the intentions of hell to work against the Lord and His heaven. But they are thrown into confusion by the noise of God’s waterfalls, and cry out one to another in their despair. (Arcana Caelestia 756)

The other spiritual meaning is that one deep refers to the divine depths of the Lord which will always meet with the other depths in ourselves, the depths of devotion, the depths of despair or temptation, and will aim to speak to them and where needed, restore them to their true state. The ‘waterfalls’ of the Lord stand for the abundance of truth that the Lord is able to give us, which, when we are receptive and in need, he will bring to us. (see Apocalypse Revealed 889)

Next comes the day-time and the night-time. Spiritually, ‘day’ is when we feel the presence of the Lord, we see clearly, and we feel confident in our faith and purpose. ‘Night’, spiritually, is when we do not feel the nearness of the Lord, and we become confused by darkness in ourselves. In the psalm, the Lord assures us of his loving presence with us in both states, but differently; lovingkindness in the day, His song and our prayer to the God of my life during the night. (Arcana Caelestia 8106 7193.3)

From verse 9 through to the end of the psalm comes a restoration to faith and trust in the Lord, even though he is unfelt and seems absent. God is ‘my Rock’ even though he seems to have forgotten me, which is our own impression; God is ‘my Rock’ even when my enemies within and around ask ‘Where is your God?’ This assurance leads on to the twice-mentioned ‘Hope in God’ with the accompanying words which are confident of a coming renewed state where we will openly praise God who is the help of my countenance. The spiritual idea of ‘countenance’ that it describes the face which has on it all that goes to make our whole life and being. (Arcana Caelestia 4292.4)

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Divine Providence #279

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279. 3. To the extent that our evils are set aside, they are forgiven. One currently popular misconception is that our evils are taken from us and discarded when they are forgiven, and that the state of our life can be changed instantly, even totally reversed, so that we become good instead of evil. This would be leading us out of hell and transporting us instantly into heaven, all by some direct mercy of the Lord.

However, people who hold this kind of belief or thought have no idea whatever of what evil and good really are or what the state of our own life is. They are utterly unaware that the feelings of our volition are simply shifts and changes of state of the purely organic substances of our minds, that the thoughts of our discernment are simply shifts and changes of their forms, and that memory is the ongoing effect of these changes. This enables us to see clearly that evil can be taken away only gradually and that the forgiveness of evil is not the same as its removal. This, though, is presenting the ideas in condensed form. If they are not explained at greater length, they can be recognized but not grasped; and if they are not grasped, that is like a wheel that we turn by hand. I need to explain these propositions, then, one at a time in the order just given.

[2] (a) One currently popular misconception is that our evils are taken from us and discarded when they are forgiven. I have been taught in heaven that no evil that we are born with or that we ourselves adopt by our behavior is taken completely away from us. Evils are set aside so that they are no longer visible. Like so many other people in this world, I used to believe that when our evils are forgiven they are thrown away just as dirt is rinsed and washed away from our faces by water. That is not what it is like with our evils or sins, though. They are all still there, and when they are forgiven after we have repented, they are moved from the center to the sides. Whatever is in the middle is right in front of our eyes and seems to be out in broad daylight. What is off to the sides seems to be in the shade, or at times, even in the dark of night. Since our evils are not taken completely away, then, but are only displaced or put off to the side, and since we can be transported from the center to the boundaries, it can happen that we once again get involved in evils we thought we had left behind. It is part of our own nature that we can move from one desire to another, and sometimes into an opposite one. This means that we can move from one center to another. A desire determines our center as long as we are caught up in it. Then we are absorbed in its pleasure and its light.

[3] There are some people who are raised into heaven by the Lord after death because they have lived good lives but who bring with them a belief that they are free and clean from sins and therefore wholly without guilt. At first they are given white robes that reflect this belief, since white robes portray a state of having been purified from evils. Later, though, they begin to think the way they did in the world, to think that they have been washed clean from all evil; so they boast that they are no longer sinners like everyone else. It is almost impossible to separate this from a kind of mental "high" that includes a measure of looking down on others. So at this point, in order to free them from the faith they imagine they have, they are sent down from heaven and back into the evils they had fallen prey to in the world. This shows them that they have inherited evils that they had not known about before. This brings them to admit that their evils have not been taken away from them but only set aside, and that they themselves are still unclean, and in fact nothing but evil; that it is the Lord who is protecting them from their evils and keeping them focused on those good qualities; and that all this seems to be their own doing. Once this has happened, the Lord brings them back up into heaven.

[4] (b) A second popular misconception is that the state of our life can be changed instantly, so that we become good instead of evil. This would be leading us out of hell and transporting us instantly into heaven, all by some direct mercy of the Lord. This is the misconception of people who separate charity from faith and attribute salvation to faith alone. That is, they think that the mere thought and utterance of a statement of that faith, performed with trust and confidence, will justify and save them. Many of them also think that this can happen instantaneously, either before the hour of death or as it approaches. They cannot avoid believing that the state of our life can be changed in an instant and that we can be saved by direct mercy. We shall see in the last section of this book, though, that the Lord's mercy does not operate in this direct way, that we cannot become good instead of evil in an instant and be led out of hell and transported into heaven except by the ongoing efforts of divine providence from our infancy to the end of our lives.

At this point we may rest the case simply on the fact that all the laws of divine providence are aimed at our reformation, and therefore at our salvation, which means inverting the hellish state into which we are born into its opposite, a heavenly state. This can be done only gradually as we move away from evil and its pleasure and move into what is good and its pleasure.

[5] (c) People who hold this kind of belief have no idea whatever of what evil and good really are. They do not really know that evil is the pleasure we find in the urge to act and think in violation of the divine pattern, and that goodness is the pleasure we feel when we act and think in harmony with the divine pattern. They do not realize that there are thousands of individual impulses that go to make up any particular evil, and that there are thousands of individual impulses that go to make up any particular good tendency. These thousands of impulses are so precisely structured and so intimately interconnected within us that no single one of them can be changed without changing all the rest at the same time.

If people are unaware of this, they can entertain the belief or the thought that an evil that seems to be all by itself can be set aside easily and that something good that also seems to be all by itself can be brought in to replace it. Since they do not know what good and evil are, they cannot help thinking that there are such things as instantaneous salvation and direct mercy. The last section of this book will show that this is not possible.

[6] (d) People who believe in instantaneous salvation and direct mercy are utterly unaware that the feelings of our volition are simply changes of state of the purely organic substances of our minds, that the thoughts of our discernment are simply changes and shifts of their forms, and that memory is the ongoing effect of those changes and shifts. Once someone mentions it, everyone will realize that feelings and thoughts can happen only with substances and their forms as subjects. Since they happen in our brains, which are full of substances and forms, we say that these forms are purely organic. If we think rationally, we cannot help laughing at the wild idea that feelings and thoughts do not happen in substantial subjects but are breezes affected by warmth and light, like illusions seen in the air or the ether. In fact, thought can no more happen apart from its substantial form than sight can happen apart from its substantial form, the eye, or hearing from its ear, or taste from its tongue. Look at the brain and you will see countless substances and fibers, and nothing there that is not structured. What need is there of more proof than this visual one?

[7] Just what is this "feeling," though, and just what is this "thought"? We can figure this out by looking at the body overall and in detail. There are many internal organs there, all set in their own places, all carrying out their functions by shifts and changes in their states and forms. We know that they are occupied with their tasks. The stomach has its task, the intestines have theirs, the kidneys have theirs, the liver, pancreas, and spleen have theirs, and the heart and lungs have theirs. All of them are inwardly activated solely for their tasks, and this inward activation happens by shifts and changes of their states and forms.

This leads us to the conclusion that the workings of the purely organic substances of the mind are no different, except that the workings of the organic substances of the body are physical and the workings of the organic substances of the mind are spiritual. The two act as a unity by means of responsiveness [to each other].

[8] There is no way to offer visual evidence of the nature of the shifts and changes of state and form of the organic substances of the mind, the shifts and changes that constitute our feelings and thoughts. We can see them in a kind of mirror, though, if we look at the shifts and changes of state of our lungs in the acts of speech and singing. There is a parallelism, since the sounds of speech and song as well as the differentiations of sound that make the words of speech and the melodies of song are produced by the lungs. The sound itself answers to our feeling and the language to our thought. That is what causes them; and it is accomplished by shifts and changes of the state and form of the organic substances in our lungs, from the lungs into the trachea or windpipe in the larynx and glottis, then in the tongue, and finally in our lips.

The first shifts and changes of state and form of sound happen in the lungs, the second in the trachea and larynx, the third in the glottis by opening its aperture in various ways, the fourth by the tongue by touching the palate and teeth in various places, and the fifth by our lips through taking different shapes. We can see from this that both the sound and its modifications that constitute speech and song are produced solely by sequential and constant shifts and changes in the states of these organic forms.

Since the only source of sound and speech is our mental feelings and thoughts--that is where they come from, and there is no other source--we can see that the feelings of our volition are shifts and changes of state of the purely organic substances of our minds, and that the thoughts of our discernment are shifts and changes of the forms of those substances, just the way it happens in our lungs.

[9] Further, since our feelings and thoughts are simply changes of state of the forms of our minds, it follows that our memory is nothing but their ongoing effect. It is characteristic of all the shifts and changes of state in organic substances that once they have been learned they do not disappear. So the lungs are trained to produce various sounds in the trachea and to modify them in the glottis, articulate them with the tongue, and shape them with the mouth; and once these organs have been trained to do these things, the actions are ingrained and can be repeated.

Material presented in Divine Love and Wisdom 119-204 [Divine Love and Wisdom 199-204] shows that the shifts and changes in the organic substances of the mind are infinitely more perfect than those in the body. There it is explained that all processes of perfection increase and rise by and according to levels. There is more on the subject in 319 below.

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Foundation for the permission to use this translation.