来自斯威登堡的著作

 

The Worship and Love of God#1

  
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1. INTRODUCTION.

WALKING once alone in a pleasant grove to dispel my disturbing thoughts, and seeing that the trees were shedding their foliage, and that the falling leaves were flying about - for autumn was then taking its turn in the revolution of the year, and dispersing the decorations of summer-from being sad I became serious, while I recollected the delights which that grove, from spring even to this season, had communicated, and so often diffused through my whole mind.

(From the visible things of the world it appears that there is nothing which does not pass through its times and its ages, consequently also the whole earth with human societies.) 1

But on seeing this change of scene I began to meditate on the vicissitudes of times; and it occurred to me whether all things relating to time do not also pass through similar vicissitudes, namely, whether this is not the case, not only with forests but also with our lives and ages; for it is evident that they, in like manner, commencing from a kind of spring and blossom, and passing through their summer, sink rapidly into their old age, an image of autumn. Nor is this the case only with the periods of men's individual lives, but also with the ages or eons of the world's existence, that is, with the general lives of societies, which from their infancy, integrity, and innocence, were formerly called the golden and silver ages, and which, it is now believed, are about to be succeeded by the last or iron ages, which will shortly moulder away into rust or the dust of clay.

1 The text has inserted comments on the side of the page. These comments exist periodically throughout the text and have been placed in parentheses at approximately where they occur.

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Foundation for permission to use this text on our site.

来自斯威登堡的著作

 

The Worship and Love of God#39

  
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39. SECTION SECOND.

CONCERNING THE INFANCY OF THE FIRST-BORN, OR ADAM.

It was midnight, and the constellations of heaven also, as if about to applaud, did not now shine with brightness only, but glittered with a kind of flaming splendor; they burned to delay their setting, but Aurora, hastening to her rising, dimmed their lustre, and instantly opened the day for the sun.

(The time of the birth and a further description, and that [the infant] lay on his back with folded hands.)

The inhabitants of heaven, as was said, stood around, and by their little flames prevented the rays of any other lumen from kindling the first spark of the light of his life; gladdened also at the sight of an infant, the first-born and hope of the whole human race, lying with his breast and face upward, and his tender hands folded and lifted up to heaven, moving also his little lips, as if he would venerate the Supreme Builder, and his Parent, not in mind only, but also by a certain posture and correspondent gesture of the body, showing purest thanksgiving that the workmanship of the world was now completed in himself.

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Foundation for permission to use this text on our site.