570.
And the four angels were loosed.- That this signifies liberty to reason from fallacies, is clear from the signification of the four angels bound at the river Euphrates, as denoting reasonings from fallacies
pertaining to the sensual man, not received before (see above, n. 569:1); it therefore follows, that by their being loosed is signified that there is now liberty to reason from fallacies. The
reason that there is now this liberty, is, that the sensual man reasons only from such things as are in the world, and that he can see with his eyes; but he says that those things which are within or
above them have no existence, because he does not see them. For this reason he denies, or does not believe in the existence of those things which pertain to heaven and the church, because they are above
his thoughts, and because he ascribes all things to nature. The sensual man thinks thus with himself, or in his spirit, but otherwise before the world, for before the world he speaks from his memory,
also concerning spiritual things from the Word, or from the doctrine of the church, and the things which he utters resemble those which are spoken by the spiritual man. Such is the state of the men
of the church at its end; and although they may speak eloquently, or preach as it were from a spiritual source, still all this proceeds from the ultimate Sensual, in which their spirit is, which, when
left to itself, reasons against these things, because it reasons from fallacies, and therefore from falsities.