1.
INDEX OF WORDS, NAMES, AND SUBJECTS
A
Aaron (Aharon). Aaron d. the doctrine of good and truth, 6998, 7009; the truth of doctrine which proceeds mediately from the Lord, 7009; the Lord as to good:
shown, 9806; the external of the Word, the Church, and worship, separated from the internal: illustrated, 10397. Moses d. the Word in the internal sense; Aaron d. doctrine therefrom, when they
are named together, 7089. Moses d. the internal law or truth; Aaron d. the external law or truth, 7382. Moses d. the internal; Aaron d. the external, 10468. Aaron d. the doctrine of truth from the external
sense of the Word, and Hur d. truth of that doctrine, 9424. The sons of Aaron d. Divine Truth proceeding from Divine Good, 9807. The priesthood succeeded from Aaron to his sons, because they rd.
the Lord as to Celestial Divine Good; consequently the celestial kingdom is a kingdom of priests: briefly shown, 9946. The priesthood of Aaron, his sons, and the Levites d. the work of the Lord's salvation
in successive order, 10017. Aaron and his garments r. the higher heavens, thus the celestial kingdom, and his sons and their garments r. the lower heavens, or the spiritual kingdom, 10068. Abel
(Abel). Abel d. charity, 342, 354. Abib, The Month (Abib mensis). Abib d. the beginning of a new state, 8053, 9291. [Abide, To. See To DWELL.] Abihu (Abihu). See NADAB. [Ability. See MIGHTY
and POWER.] Abimelech (Abimelechus). Abimelech, because he d. the doctrine of faith, also r., in the supreme sense, the Lord, 3393, 3401; those who are in the doctrine of faith, and regard truths in
cognitions, 3392; the doctrine of faith that regards rational things, 3391, 3397, 3447. The king of the Philistines d. doctrinal things, 3365, 3391. The king of Gerar d. the doctrine of faith that
regards rational things, 2504, 2509, 2510. [Abodes. See MANSIONS.] Abomination (abominatio). Abomination d. the separation of perverted things from goods, 6052; infernal foulness and defilement,
7454. [The abomination of desolation d. the state of the Church when there is no love and no charity, 2454:4, 3652.] Abortion (abortus). See To BRING FORTH. [About. See ROUND About.] Above (supra).
What is interior is expressed by that which is higher, 2148, 3084, 4599, 5146, 8325. Lower things may be seen from higher, not contrariwise, 8237. To look above and below self, 7814-7821. See CHARITY. [Abraham
(Abraham). See under ABRAM.] Abram (Abram). Abram knew not Jehovah, 1356; was an idolater, 1356, and worshipped the god Shaddai, 1992; is unknown in heaven, 1834:3, 1876; but when he
is named the Lord is understood, 1989. What Abram s., 1732, 1741. What Abram the Hebrew s., 1702, 1741. Abram r. the Lord in that state and in that age, 1989; the common stock of the Church where the
Word is, 3778, and the genuine Church, 4206, 4207. Because by Abram the Lord is rd., by him many things are rd., 1965, 3245. Abram was called Abraham, the letter H being inserted from Jehovah, so as
to r. the Divine of the Lord, 2010. Abraham knew not Jehovah, 7194; worshipped other gods, 3667:2; in the first state, worshipped other gods, 2559. Abraham d. the Lord in that state, 2501; also
the Lord's Divine Human; when, 2833, 2836; r. the Lord, and more besides, 3245; rd. the Divine of the Lord, which is the Father, and the Divine Human, which is the Son, but the Divine Human from eternity,
3251. Jehovah the God of Abraham d. the Divine of the Lord, which Abraham r., 3439. Jehovah the God of Abraham thy father d. the Lord, that from Him is good, 3703. Abraham r. the Lord's Human as
to Good; Sarah r. the Lord's Human as to Truth, 2172, 2198. Abraham and Keturah r. the Lord's Divine Spiritual, 3236. The sons of Abraham by Keturah r. the Lord's Spiritual Kingdom with derivations, 3239-3242. The
fathers of the Jews, as Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, worshipped each his own god, 5998. See JEW. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob worshipped the god Shaddai, 3667:2. If the historicals were the
Word, apart from the internal sense, many, such as Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, would be esteemed as saints and as gods, when yet there is nothing more in them than in others, in the other life, 3229.
When Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob are named in the Word, the Lord is understood, in heaven, and as to the Divine Itself and the Divine Human: shown, 6804. What is rd. by Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in the
supreme sense, or in the Lord; and what in the representative sense with man, 6098. Abraham s. the Lord's Internal Man, and what Isaac and Jacob s., 1893. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob d. the Lord, and
the Lord as to the Human not yet made Divine, 7193; the Divine Life together, thus the Divine Itself, the Divine Rational, and the Divine Natural, 4615; in the supreme sense, the Lord; and, in the relative
sense, internal and external good, 6276; heaven and the Church: illustrated, 10445; r. three things in the Lord, which are one, and three things in the Church, 6185. The God of Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob d. the Lord as to the Divine Itself and the Divine Human, 6847. A covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob d. conjunction by means of the Divine Human of the Lord, 6804. The seed of Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob d. the goods and truths of heaven and the Church, 10445. What to swear by Abraham, Isaac, and. Jacob s., 6589. To sit down with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob d. to be with the Lord; and to
come to Abraham's bosom d. to be in the Lord, 3305:7. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob buried in the land of Canaan s. regeneration and resurrection, because the Church was there, 6516. [Abrech (Abrech).
Abrech d. adoration, 5323. See KNEE.] Abscesses (apostemata). Abscesses in the cavity of the breast; who c. to them, 5188. See WOUND. Abstract (abstractum). In heaven they think and speak by abstract
things; why, 4380e, 8343, 8985, 9007. See PERSON. Abyss (abyssus). Abyss d. those who are in lusts and falsities, 18; temptations, also hell, 756, 845. Abysses, in that they are waters in plenty,
d. truths of faith in abundance, also falsities from lusts; thence the hells: shown, 8278; temptations: shown, 8278:3; the hells as to falsities; and depths d. the hells as to evils, 8279. See also
DEPTH. The abyss lying beneath d. scientifics which are in the natural, 6431. Accident, By (fortuitu). See FORTUNE. Accurse, To (devovere). To accurse d. casting out from the Church, and an extirpation
of falsities from evil, 9193. Acknowledge, To (agnoscere). It is one thing to know (scire), another to acknowledge, and another to have faith, 896. [See also under SCIENCE.] Acquainted with,
To be (nosse). See To KNOW and To COGNIZE. Acquisition (acquisitio). What acquisition s., 1435, 1717, 1851. Acquisition d. those things which are acquired; thus scientifics, truths, and goods, 1435,
1851, 4105, 4391, 4487, 6017; the scientific from which a man thinks, 1435; good and truth in general, 4391; truths acquired, 6017. Acquisition d. truth, and substance d. good, 4105. Acquisition d.
the good of truth, and purchase d. truth, 4487. Act, To (agere). Reagency is from agency, 6262. The conjunction of good and truth illustrated by agency and reagency, 10729:2. See REGENERATION. Action
(actio). See To ACT. [Active. See To ACT.] Adam (Adam). See MAN (homo). That the history of creation in the first chapters of Genesis is made-up history is illustrated from various things therein,
8891:2. Adam's nakedness is explained, 9960:19. See NAKEDNESS. Add, To (addere). 'God hath gathered my reproach, and Jehovah will add another son,' from which words Joseph was named, d., in the
supreme sense, the Lord as to the Divine Spiritual; in the internal sense, the Spiritual Kingdom, or the good of faith; in the external sense, salvation, also fructification and multiplication, 3969:4. [Adhere,
To. See To CLEAVE. Adjure, To. See To SWEAR. Admah and Zeboim (Adma et Zeboim). What Admah and Zeboim s., 1212.] Adoration (adoratio). Adoration is described, 1153:2. There is no
adoration unless there is charity, 1150. To fall upon the face was a mode of adoring with the ancients; why, 1999. [See also WORSHIP.] Adornment (ornatus). Adornment d. holy truth, also the Divine in
externals: illustrated, 10536; shown, 10540. Adullam (Adulla). Adullamite d. truth which is from good; in the opposite sense, falsity which is from evil, 4816, 4854. Adultery (adulterium). See also
HARLOT. Everyone can know how impious adultery is, if he would think about it as a case of his own wife being thus deceived, 2733:3. The mercilessness and religious condition of adulterers, 2747. Adulterers
wish to obsess men, 2752; are cruel, 824; excite pain in the loins and genital members, 5059, 5060. The greatest adulterers, when they apply themselves, induce pain in the periostea everywhere
and heaviness in the stomach, 5714. Adulterers do not fear Divine and human laws, but they fear blows, 2748. How filthy their ideas are, 2747, 2748. Adulteries are also destructive of society, since
all adulterers are in the love of self, 2045:2. Marriages are most holy, but adulteries are most profane, 9961:4; they are profane and from hell, 10174. They who take delight in adulteries do not believe
those things which relate to heaven and the Church, because it is from the marriage of evil and falsity, which is infernal, 10175. When anyone commits adultery on earth, heaven is closed against
him; his character hereafter, 2750. Adulterers cannot come into heaven, 2747, 2748. It is impossible for them to enter into heaven, 827; they cannot approach to heaven, and adulteries are contrary
to conjugial love, the laws of both kingdoms, and order, 2733:2. An adulterer approaching towards heaven rejected, 539. By accustomed blandishments adulterers insinuated themselves into societies, but
were rejected, beaten, and at length associated with their like in the hells, 2753. Angelic bliss and felicity communicated to adulterers become nauseous, painful, and stinking, on which account they
cast themselves together into hell, 2749. Concerning the hells of those who have lived in adulteries and lasciviousness, see HELL. In their hells they love dirt and excrements, 2755. Concerning those
who are most filthy; their filthiness is unmentionable; their character and hell, 5722. Adulterers are in the excrementitious hells, 5394. The most deceitful adulterers beyond others, are above the
head: they ensnare by means of innocence and mercy; their hell is the most grievous, 2754. The hell of cruel adulterers is under the right foot, where those are who are of the Jewish nation; from experience,
5057. A body of adulterers which sends out investigators who report that they are against conjugial love, good and truth, and the Lord, 2751. Adulterers who are in contraries are they who ensnare
in conjugial love, by means of love, friendship, and kindnesses; concerning whom from experience, 5060. The very grievous punishment of those who have communion of wives, 2756. One who by adulteries
and whoredoms extinguished the desire for marriage and the procreation of offspring; his punishment, 2746. With the lascivious who have not extinguished the desire of procreating offspring there is
heat, 2757. The hell of those from the Church who have lived in faith separated from charity, and in a life of evil, is under that of adulterers; the reason, 8137:2. Adulteries d. the perversions
of truth and good, 3399; adulterations of good, and whoredoms d. falsifications of truth; this is from representative things, 2466, 2729. To commit adultery (adulterari), whoredom (moechari), and fornication
(scortari), d. to pervert those things which relate to faith; thus to apply the Word to the confirmation of evils and falsities; in the internal, representative sense, to worship idols: shown,
8904. Prohibited degrees s. profanations of various kinds, 6348:2. The dog Cerebus d. a guard lest anyone pass over from the heavenly delight of conjugial love to the opposite, 2743, 5051:2. See DOG. [Adversary.
See ENEMY.] Afar (longinquum). To see from afar d. to perceive remotely, 4723. To stand afar off d. remoteness from internals, thus from good and truth: shown, 8918. To bow oneself from
afar off d. humiliation, also adoration from the heart, and then the influx of the Lord, 9377. See also NEAR. Affection (affectio). See also LOVE, CHARITY. Affection is that which is continuous of
love, 3339:8. What the delight of affection is, 3933e. See DELIGHTFULNESS. Celestial affections are altogether incomprehensible and inexpressible, 3339:2, 3857:3. Every affection contains in itself
things innumerable; concerning which things; and the affection is the whole man, 3078, 3189. To one affection there are many subordinate affections, and these in an incomprehensible form, 3189. The quality
of the love and affection of a man is known from the end; concerning which subject see 3796:2. There is an affection of good and an affection of truth; what the distinction between them is, 1904,
1997. The quality of those who are in the affection of good, and that of those in the affection of truth; the distinction, 2425:2, 2429:2. There is an affection of rational truth, and that of scientific
truth, 2503. The first affection in the natural man is not that of genuine truth, but the affection of this truth comes afterwards, 3040. What the genuine affection of truth is, and its nature;
and what the affection of truth, not genuine, is, and its nature; the distinction, 8993:3. Affections, when they ascend or are elevated towards the interiors, become gentler, and other spiritual affections
are substituted, 3909. The affection of truth appears to be from truth, but it is from good, 4373. All affections are bonds, and they are external and internal, 3835. Those who are in truths without
affection, [who are man-servants,] and those who are in truths from affection, who are maid-servants; the distinction between them, 8994:3. Affections are what excite truths and falsities, 2480e.
The celestial angels form to themselves lights of affections, and then of ideas, from the affection of good and truth in the Word, 2157, 2275. Conjunction is made by means of affections, 3939. The
conjunction of truth with good is made by means of affection, 3024. By means of affections the implantation and conjunction of the love of good and truth are effected: illustrated, 4018. Truths are nothing
without affections: illustrated, 3849. The affection of good is adjoined to truth in the natural man by the Lord, with man, and, through the affection of good, truths are produced, and so falsities
and evils are removed, 3336:3. Affection is insinuated by means of refusal, 4366, 4368. Truth without affection does not enter, still less inhere, 3066. Affection always adjoins itself to the subjects
which are implanted in the memory, and is, together with them, reproduced, 3336:2. Heavenly freedom is from the affection of truth and good, and infernal freedom, from the affection of falsity and
evil, 2873. See FREEDOM. To imitate affections, as if they were heavenly, from the proprium, is infernal, 10309. All affections have gestures corresponding to them, 2153. Affections are sd. by little
children, girls, young women, and daughters, but with a difference, 3067. Affinity (affinitas). There are affinities of love and faith, 917. There are consanguinities and affinities relating to
heavenly loves, 2739. With all things in man there are consanguinities and affinities, 2508, 2524, 2556. If men recognised and perceived what good is, they would then first know innumerable things: namely,
the proximities of good and truth, such as they are in heaven, 3612. Societies in heaven are situated like consanguinities and affinities on earth, 685. All consanguinity in heaven is from good,
and proceeds therefrom, 3815. Consanguinities and affinities in the other life take place according to good, 4121. To contract affinities d. union, 4450. Affirmative (affirmativum). The affirmative
of good and truth must be the first thing of man's regeneration, 3923. There must be the affirmative of truth before the influx of good from the Lord can be received, 3913e. They who consult scientifics
concerning Divine things, if they are in an affirmative state, are confirmed; if in a negative state, they are weakened, and at length believe nothing, 4760. The learned more than the simple do this;
and they believe less, because they consult scientifics from a negative state, and so deprive themselves of interior sight, 4760:4. Affliction (afflictio). Affliction is predicated respecting truth,
4060; d. temptation, 1846, 5356; the means of arriving at good, 3864; infestation, 6663, 6851. To afflict d. to infest by falsities of doctrine; to oppress d. to infest by evils of life, 9196. By
to afflict the soul is sd to compel to do good, 1947. After (post). See also BACKWARDS. After d. near to, 5216. After thee, what it s., 2019. To go after them, when spoken of the Divine, d. to protect
lest evils should flow into the voluntary, 8194. See also BACK. To be, go, walk after, d. to follow and consociate with them: shown, 9251. Agate, Ligure, Amethyst (achates, cyanus, amethystus).
Agate, ligure, amethyst, d. the spiritual love of good, or the internal good of the Spiritual Kingdom, 9870. Age (aetas). Concerning the successive states of a man according to ages; the first is from
birth to the fifth year, then there are ignorance and innocence; the second is from that age to the twentieth year, which is the state of instruction and knowledge; the third is from that age to the
sixtieth year, which is the state of intelligence; and the fourth is the state of innocence in wisdom, 10225. Times, as times of a man's age, d. states; concerning which, 3254. Age (saeculum). An
age, when mentioned with respect to the Church, d. duration to the end; when spoken of heaven and the Lord, what is eternal; it is predicated in general of every Church, in particular of the celestial
Church; it also d. the world and the life there, likewise the life after it: shown, 10248. See also GENERATION. [Aged, See OLD. Agency. See To Act. Agreement. See CONSENT.] Aholiab (Aholiabus).
Aholiab, who did the works, d. those who are in the good and truth of faith, 10329:4; with whom the Church was to be established, 10335. Ai (Aja). What Bethel and Ai s., 1453, 1557. Aid. See HELP. [Alien.
See STRANGERS. Alive. See under LIFE. Almighty. See OMNIPOTENCE and SHADDAI.] Almonds (amygdaloe). Almonds d. the goods of life corresponding to the truths of interior natural good,
5622. Almond-shaped bowls d. scientifics from good, 9557. Alone (solus). What to be alone or to dwell alone s., 139, 471. Altar (altare). [See also under To ANOINT.] In ancient times heaps were
made, and the altars were therefrom, 4192. The altar and the tent were polluted by the sins of the people: shown and illustrated, 10208:3. The altar and the temple were the principal representatives
of the Lord, 921, 2777, 2811; and altars primarily sd. the Lord's Divine Human, as does the Holy Supper, 2811. Altar d. what is holy of worship, 4541; also what is built in witness and memory: shown,
8623; a representative of the Lord, and the worship of Him, as to good: shown, 9714; the principal representative of the Lord, and the worship of Him: references, 10642; heaven and the Church as to
the reception of good from the Lord: illustrated and shown, 10123, 10151; the representative of the Lord as to the Divine Good; statues d. the same as to the Divine Truth, 9388, 9389. The altar of Jehovah
d. the principal thing of the worship of the Lord, 8935, 8940, 9014; they who acted from deceit or hypocrisy were to be taken from the altar and die: shown, 9014:4. All things of the altar represented
and signified; concerning which see 4489:2 To build an altar d., in the highest sense, sanctification, 4558. An altar from the ground d. the principal representative of the worship of the Lord
from good; but an altar from stone d. the same from truth, 8935, 8940. Ashes of the altar d. those things which are to be removed after uses; concerning which, 9723. The grate, the network, which was
around the altar, d. the sensual: illustrated, 9726. The vessels of the altar d. scientific truths serving good, 9724, 9725, 10344. The foundation of the altar d. the sensual, 10028. The altar of incense,
see INCENSE. The altar of the nations d. the representative of idolatrous worship, 10642:2. To enter into the tent of meeting d. to represent all things of worship from spiritual good; to come near
to the altar d. to represent all things of worship from celestial good, 10242, 10245. To enter into the tent of meeting d. to represent the Lord as to worship from Divine Truth, 9963; and to come
near to the altar d. to represent the Lord as to Divine Good, also as to worship, 9964. [Alternations. See CHANGES. Always (semper). See under To-DAY. Amalek. See AMALEKITEl Amalekite (Amalckita).
Amalekites d. the falsities by which truths are assaulted, 1679. Amalek d. falsity from interior evil: shown, 8593; concerning those who are represented by the Amalekites further; their character,
8622:2, 8625:2. Amazement, To be Amazed (stupor, stupescere). To be astonished (obstupescere) d. a sudden change of state, 5705. Ambush (insidiae). See DECEIT. Amethyst (amethystus). Ligure, agate,
and amethyst d. the spiritual love of good, or the internal good of the Spiritual Kingdom, 9870. Ammon (Ammon). The sons of Ammon d. those with whom truths are falsified; Moab, those with whom
goods are adulterated, who nevertheless have been in natural good, 2468:15. Amorite (Emmoraeus). Amorite d. evil in general; and the inhabitants of the land of Canaan were called Amorites, 6306:4;
evil and falsity; whence, 1857. Amorite [and Perizzite] d. evil and falsity therefrom, 6859. Anakim (Anakim, Enakim). See NEPHILIM [and PERSUASION. Ancients. See under ANGEL.] And (et). 'And' was
used in the place of punctuation, as was also' it came to pass,' 5578. Angel (angelus). See also HEAVEN, [ARMY, and BEAUTY]. All spirits and angels have been men, 1880; they appear as men; whence,
3633. Angels are forms of love and charity, 3804:2, 9879; they are images of love and charity under the human form, 4735:2; they are of ineffable beauty, and are as loves and charities in form, 4985;
they are of ineffable, beauty, because they are in the form of heaven, 5199. Those who are in hell appear to themselves, in their own light, as men, but looked into by angels, as devils and monsters;
whence this is, 4533. The deceitful, looked into by angels, appear as serpents and vipers, 4533. Concerning the spirits and angels with man, 5846-5866, and 5976-5993. See MAN (homo). With every man
there are evil spirits and angels, 2887, 2888. According to the doctrine of the churches, in some measure, there are spirits from hell and angels from heaven with man, 5979:2. Angels and spirits are always
present with man, 968. There are two angels with man, because there are two kinds of them: celestial and spiritual, 5978. That man may live, angels from heaven and spirits from hell must be adjoined
to him, 5993. Angels are successively with infants and children, 2303. A man is governed by means of spirits and angels, from the Lord, 50,697. All changes of state with motion, as to voluntary things
as well as to intellectual things, are regulated by the Lord through spirits and angels, 2796. Angels protect a man in various ways, they inspire goods, and this from love which is from the Lord,
5992; they rule over evil spirits, 1755. Angels with men do not attend, except to ends, 1645e; they bend evils toward goods, 5980. Spirits and angels perceive the interior things of man's thought, 1931
- Angels from certain societies see from causes what is with man, 4073e. Angels flow into the truths of faith with man: illustrated, 5893. See REGENERATION. Angels dwell in everyone's affection, 3464;
they dwell with those who are in the good of faith, 2268; they feel exquisitely what enters with a man, 228. In spirits and angels every sense, except taste, is more exquisite than in man, 1880,
1381. Angels regard man as a brother, but evil spirits regard him as a vile slave, 2890. With what charity and joy those who are let in are received; they are received by angels into the heavens, and
how they come into agreeable societies, 2131. Celestial angels occupy the province of the heart, and two sit at the head, when a man is resuscitated from the dead, 168-181; spiritual angels succeed
them, 132-189. Angels do not forsake the resuscitated man, but he desires to depart from them, 182. Because angels love everyone, they do not relinquish a soul, but it desires to depart from them, and
dissociates itself, 314-316; they are very indignant when compelled to retire, 4077. A man, an angel, or a spirit is according to his love: illustrated, 10177. A man is in the society of such spirits
or angels as he himself is; concerning which, 4067:3, 4073:2, 4077:2. Angels who are in similar good know each other as if they had been acquainted from infancy, and it is from this that truths with
man acknowledge and conjoin themselves, 9079:2. There are three heavens; those of spirits, of angelic spirits, and of angels; in each of which there are both celestial and spiritual angels, 459. The
angels of the three heavens are subordinate to each other, 1752; but the subordination is not that of command, 1802. Concerning the heavenly freedom in which angels are, see FREEDOM. The whole of an
angels power is from the Lord, 1752. There are angels who are nearer to the Lord and those who are remoter, or, who are interior and exterior, 1802:2. The Lord appears to celestial angels as the Sun,
to spiritual angels as the Moon, 1529-1531. Angels are continually being purified, and can never come to perfection, 4803. Evil is not separated from a man or an angel, but he is withheld from evil,
and so held in good, 1581. Those who are in evil associate themselves with societies, those who are in good are adjoined by the Lord to them, 4073:2. The changes of angels' states appear in their faces
according to the societies into which they come, 4797; which things were seen, 4797. Angels appear in the heavens clad in garments 165; those who are likenesses of the Lord appear in radiance and
white, after the likeness of the Lord in the transfiguration, 5530:2. Angels are veiled by a thin and suitable cloud lest they should be hurt by the Divine influx, 6849. See also FIRE. What angels
introduce beautiful dreams, 1977. The influx of angels is like streams of flaming light, 6209; it is into conscience, 6207, 6213. Conscience is from the combat of spirits and angels, 227. In temptations
there are indignations and many affections, 1917. Angels were with the Lord when He fought, 1705, 1752; He had societies of spirits and angels with Him, yet He took nothing from them, but through them
from the Divine, 4075. He admitted into Himself temptations from angels, 4295:3. Angels have no name, but are named from their quality as to good, 1705; and are distinguished by goods and truths,
1754. The base and filthy things of infernal spirits are turned into milder things with angels, 5981. See also SUBJECTS. Angels moderate penalties in the other life, but cannot take them away, 967. The
angelic life consists in use and the goods of charity, 454. They who are in love to the Lord and charity have angelic wisdom in them, but obscurely; they come into it after death, 2494. The wisdom
of angels continually increases in the other life, yet they cannot advance far beyond the first degree, 6648. Nothing of an angel's intelligence and wisdom is from himself, but from the Lord, 4295:2.
Angels are in wisdom above that of man, 3404, 3405. There are innumerable things which are apprehended by angels, but not by men, 2786, 2795, 2796, 2802; they apprehend innumerable things of which man
does not apprehend even the most general: exemplified, 3314; they comprehend and see innumerable things of which man knows not even that they are, still less what they are, 9176e. Angelic wisdom is
ineffable: illustrated, and from experience, 9094. Angels are in wisdom and intelligence, and in the principles of things, and they see all things which are beneath, because they are in celestial and
spiritual love, 2572:3. Thoughts and affections extend themselves far into angelic societies, 6598-6613. See To THINK. Angelic ideas are alive, because they refer natural things to spiritual, and to such
as relate to man, 7847. The state of angels as to those things which relate to the memory, 2493. Celestial angels form for themselves lights of ideas, from affection, 2802; they never wish to name
faith, but they perceive love, with a difference known to them, 202; with the spiritual angels it is otherwise, 203. The speech of spirits and angels, 1634-1650. See To SPEAK and LANGUAGE. The difference
of the speech of spirits, angelic spirits, and angels, 1642. The speech of angelic spirits described, 1643. The speech of angels in the world of spirits appears like the light of a flame, 1646.
The case of thoughts and speech of angels is as internal things in the body are with respect to external, 3347; for ideas they have ends and uses, 1645. The speech of celestial angels is distinct from
that of spiritual angels, and is also more copious, 1647; because they form for themselves lights of ideas from the affections in the Word, 2157; but the spiritual form significations of things, 2157,
2275. Because celestial angels derive all things from love, their speech is more incomprehensible than that of spiritual angels, 880e. What angels speak of among themselves, 5249e. When the wise ancients
thought about God, they thought of the Divine Human, as angels do, 6876:2. The state of angels when they speak, not from themselves, but from the Lord, 1745:2. How it is with angels, when the Lord
speaks by means of them, that they know not but that they are the Lord, 1925. The man of the Most Ancient Church spake with angels, but not those afterwards, they spake, but in another manner, 784.
I have spoken with spirits and angels; and man was so created that he might speak with them, 5, 67-69, 1880. See TO SPEAK. Angels see nothing that is in the solar world; they have seen through my eyes,
1880; when this first happened, it was regarded as a miracle, 1880:2. Heaven and earth were so united from their first creation, 1880:2. It is dangerous for man to have heaven opened to him, 784e. The
internal sense is for angels, and to them it is precious, though of slight account with man, 2540:2, 2541, 2545, 2551, 2574:3. Many things in the internal sense come within the angelic apprehension,
because angels are in the light of heaven, which do not come within man s apprehension, because he is in the light of the world, 2618, 2619, 2629e. Because the Word in the highest sense treats of
the Lord's glorification, and in the representative sense of man's regeneration, therefore, they who are in the Lord enter into angelic wisdom and happiness, 5688e. The Lord as to the Divine Human
is called the angel of Jehovah; the reason is that the Human Divine formerly appeared as an angel when Jehovah or the Divine Itself passed through heaven, 6831. The Lord is an angel, and is called an
angel as to the Divine Human: briefly shown, 9303. The man who receives the Divine is also called an angel: shown, 10528. Many are called an angel, and named an angel, as Michael, which d. the function,
8192:3. See GOD. An angel, in the supreme sense, d. the Lord as to the Divine Human, and also the Divine of the Lord with angels and men: briefly shown, 10528. The Lord is understood by angels in
the Word, but what with respect to the Lord is sd. appears from the series, 1925e. By angels are sd. the Lord, and why, 3039; and an angel d. the Divine Providence, 3039. An angel s. something of the
Lord, 2821; and the reason is that angels do not speak from themselves, and do not attribute good and truth to themselves, 4085. Angels d. Divine Truth: illustrated, 8192:2. Two angels s. the Divine Human
and the Holy which proceeds from the Lord, 2319. The redeeming angel is the Lord's Divine Human, and the Lord is called an angel: shown, 6280. The Sent, as the Lord called Himself, is the angel of
Jehovah: shown 6831. The angels of God met him, d. enlightenment, 4235. Anger (ira). Anger is described as being a flame in the understanding breaking forth from the fire, when love is assailed: illustrated,
9144. Anger and evil are from man, and not from the Lord, although they are attributed to Him: references, 9306:4. When anger is attributed to God, it is with man: shown, 5798; also to the
Lord, when yet it is with man, 8483; and to Jehovah; the reasons: shown, 6997:3. The love and mercy of the Lord appear to the evil as anger, when they are punished; thence it is called anger: shown,
8875. Zeal has good in it; anger, evil, 4164. Anger is predicated of evil, wrath of falsity, 6358, 6359. Anger s. departure from charity, 357e. Anger d. to be indignant, in which there is nothing of
anger, 3909; aversion; the reason, 5034; aversion and assault: shown, 5798: sadness of spirit or understanding, 5887, 5888; evil, because it is from evil, and not from good, thus not from the Lord, although
attributed to Him: illustrated, 10618:2. To burn with anger, when spoken of the Lord, d. aversion on the part of man: illustrated, 10431. Long-suffering as to angers, d. to endure evils long,
and the Divine clemency, 10618. The anger of Jehovah d. clemency and mercy, 6997; punishment and damnation: shown, 69976. The wrath of Jehovah d. the fury of lusts and the endeavour to offer violence,
on the part of the evil, 8284. Wrath and anger d. resistances and also punishments; wrath is predicated of truth and falsity; anger of good and evil, 3614. Fire d. anger: shown, 9143. Animal (animal).
See BEAST [and BRUTES. Animal, Wild. See WILD BEAST.] Anoint, To, Anointing, Ointment (ungere, unctio, unguentum). See here what is said concerning OIL. They anointed stones, arms of war, the
altar, and similar things, priests, prophets, kings, and themselves: shown and explained, 9954. They anointed themselves with common oil, and not with the oil of holiness: shown, 9954:20. To anoint d.
to induce representation, 10268; inauguration for the purpose of representing the Lord as to the Divine Good, thus for the purpose of representing the good of love from Him: shown, 9954, 10285. To anoint
a pillar, 3728, 4090. See PILLAR. The Anointed, king, and Divine Truth are the same, 3009. See CHRIST. The Anointed of Jehovah d. the Lord as to the Divine Human: shown, 9954:11. Anointing d. inauguration
for the purpose of representing, 9474. See also OIL. Anointing upon the head represented upon the whole Human of the Lord: shown, 10011. By anointing was represented the Divine Good, and by
filling the hand, the Divine Truth and the power therefrom, 10019. Ointment of ointment, and a dealer in ointment, 10264, 10265. See SPICE. Answer, To (respondere). To answer, when assented to,
d. what is reciprocal, 2919, 4096; whence: showm, 8340; also reception, 2941, 2957; cognition, 5255; perception, 5472. To answer and say d. thought, 6943. To answer in a cause d. to declare an opinion,
and judge, 9252. A Divine answer d. the Divine Truth from which it is, 8824. Antediluvians (antediluniani). See FLOOD. Antipodes (antipodes). Navigation round the world cannot be comprehended by
many, nor how the antipodes stand on their feet, 1378. Anxiety (anxietas). See SAD. Apollyon (Apollyon). Apollyon d. the reasoning from falsities which appears as if from truths, and from philosophical
considerations wrongly applied, 7643. Apostles (apostoli). The apostles believed that they were to be great in heaven, 3417:2. What is sd. by the apostles sitting upon twelve thrones, judging
the twelve tribes of Israel, 2129:2; they cannot judge any single thing appertaining to man, 2129:2, 2553:2. The twelve apostles sd. all things of faith, both its good and its truth, 3488 See TWELVE.
Concerning the tribes and the apostles, it is said they are to judge, but this d. the truths which are sd. by them, 6397:2. The disciples at first held no other opinion concerning the Lord than that
which the Jews held concerning the Messiah, and, further, concerning the heavenly kingdom than that there would be sub-ordinations as in an earthly kingdom, 38576. The disciples of the Lord represented
all who are of the Church, 3354. The twelve disciples d. all things of love and faith, as the twelve tribes, 3858:16. See also TRIBES. [Apparel. See GARMENT.] Appear, To (apparere). Jehovah appearing
to him d. from the Divine, 3367, 3438. Appearance (apparentia). See also FALLACY, [TRUTH, and WORD.] In the Word of the Lord much is spoken according to appearances, 589, 735, 926, 1838, 1874.
Appearances of truth; what they are; adapted as if they were truths, 1832:2; examples, 3207:3. There are no pure truths with man, neither with angels, but in the Lord alone, 3207:3. The truths of man
are appearances, 2196:2, 2203, 2209, 2242:2. Appearances of truth with angels, and with men who are in good, are received by the Lord as truths, 3207. The doctrine of faith is invested with such appearances
as are from human conditions, 2719, 2723. Those appearances are listened to as truths which belong to doctrinals, 3364, 3365. See To APPEAR. Rational things are appearances of truth, 3368:2.
Truths Divine flow in by means of appearances with angels and men, otherwise they could not at all be apprehended, 3362; they are in appearances with angels and men, because Divine things cannot otherwise
be apprehended, 3364e, 3356e. Appearances of truth are and exist by means of influx from the Divine of the Lord into rational things, and therefrom into natural things, where they are presented
as an image of many things in a mirror, so that those which are in heaven appertaining to the angels are presented in the world of spirits, from which are representations, 3368:3. Representations in the
other life are appearances, but living, thus real, which are from the light of heaven, which is wisdom and life from the Lord; but those which are in the light of the world are relatively not real,
except so far as they are conjoined with those which are of the light of heaven, 3485. Appearances of truth are of a threefold degree, 3357-3360, 3362. Appearances are the truths which belong to man;
exemplified from space or place, 3387e. On the appearances of a higher degree, which appertain to the angels; from the example of eternity, which to them is a state, 3404:2. Appearances of truth of a
higher degree far exceed in perfection and abundance those which are in men, 3405; those of a lower degree exemplified from the saying that some were to be great in heaven, 3417. The Lord was also in
appearances, but these He put off, 3405. [Apperception. See PERCEPTION.] Appetite (appetitus). Appetite c. to the desire to know (sciendi) and be wise, 4792. Approach, To (appropinquare). See NEAR,
[and To COME NEAR.] To approach d. influx, 8159; conjunction, 9997, 10001; when used of the beast for the sacrifice, d. application for the purpose of purification, 10021. To approach before Jehovah
d. a state of reception and application to that state; on which, 8439. To approach unto God d. to think from the faith of charity about the Divine, 6843. To approach and be near d. conjunction and
presence: illustrated and shown, 9378. [Appropriation. See under INFLUX.] Arabia (Arabia). See KEDAR. Aram (Aram). See SYRIA. [Aram Naharaim. See SYRIA.] Ararat (Ararath). Mount Ararat d. the
light (lumen) of one regenerated, 854, 855. [Arcanum. See WORD. Archer. See under BOW.] Architecture (architectura). How stupendous it is in the other life, 1627, 1628, 1629. Arise, To (surgere).
To arise s. some elevation, 2401, 2785, 2912, 2927, 4103; elevation, and man is said to be elevated by means of spiritual and celestial things, 3171, 4103. To arise d. elevation into a state of
light, 4881, 6010; elucidation, 6010. To arise in the morning d. to be elevated to heaven, and, in the opposite sense, to be depressed to hell, 10413. See MORNING. To arise in the morning, when spoken
of the evil, d. elevation to attention, 7435. To arise early in the morning d. a state of enlightenment, 3458, 3723. The interiors are elevated: see To BE ELEVATED and To ASCEND. Aristotle (Aristoteles).
On the scholastics and metaphysicians; several matters about Aristotle, 4658. Aristotle's thought about the Supreme Deity, the Lord, and the spirit of man, 4658:4. Concerning the woman seen by
Aristotle, 4658:5. Ark (arca). Noah's Ark. What is sd. by the ark, 639. Joseph's Ark. An ark, being that in which something is concealed, thus d. concealment; hence the Ark of the Testimony because
the law was therein, 6596. Moses' Ark. Moses, when an infant, was placed in a little ark, because he rd. the Divine Law and the Lord as to the Divine Law, 6723:3. A coffer of bulrush d. what is mean,
but still derived from truth, 6723, 6732. The Ark of the Testimony. [See also Joseph's Ark.] The Divine Law was in the ark, and the ark rd. the Lord as to the Divine Law, 6723:3. The ark d. the
inmost heaven, where the Lord is: shown, 9485. The tent and the ark rd. heaven, where the Lord is, 9457, 9481:2. [Arkites (Arki). What the Arkites s., 1205. Arm (brachium). See HAND and SHOULDER.
The body exercises its forces and powers by means of the arms and hands, 4933. A naked arm, in the other life, is of such great power, 878e. The naked arm was seen bent forward, 4934, 4935. Those in
the Grand Man who correspond to the hands, arms, and shoulders, are they who are in power by means of the faith of truth from good, 4932. Hands, arms, and shoulders are predicated respecting truth,
by which are sd. powers, in the internal sense, 3091. Arms, power, 574; strength: references, 10019:6. Arms s. strength, and hands, power, 4934. Hands s. power, and arm, still greater power, 1085. The
arm of Jehovah d. the Lord as to the Divine Human, 8099:3. To make flesh his arm d. to trust in himself and to what is his own, and not to the Divine, 10283:7. A stretched-out arm, when spoken of the
Lord, d. Divine Power, 7205. An arm not stretched out, but bent, s. power in the general sense, 7205. When it is said, respecting Jehovah, that He stretched out the hand or arm, it d. unlimited or infinite
power in action, 7673. The right hand of God, and the arm of His strength, s. the Lord as to the Divine Truth, 8281:5. Armlet. See BRACELETS. Arms. See WEAPONS.] Army (exercitus). The sons
of Israel were divided into armies that they might represent the Lord's kingdom as to goods and truths, 7236. Jehovah Zebaoth, or of Hosts, was so called from Divine truths, and because He fights for
man, 34486. Angels are called the hosts of Jehovah, also the sun, moon, and stars; and the Lord is, therefore, Jehovah of Hosts: shown, 7988:5. By armies are sd. truths, and, in the opposite sense,
falsities, because by these there is combat: shown, 3448:8. Armies d. the genera and species of good in truths, 7236. As to armies d. that they are distinct as to the quality of good from truth, 8019.
The armies of Jehovah d. goods and truths: shown, 7988. The armies of Pharaoh d. falsities from evils, thus those who are in faith separated, and in a life of evil, 8138. The horses of Pharaoh and
the Egyptians d. scientifics from a perverse understanding; horsemen, reasonings therefrom; chariots, the doctrinals of falsity; armies, the falsities themselves, 8146:3, 8148. War in general and weapons
of war s. spiritual combats; such armies are the truths and goods by which they are fought. See WAR, BOW, SWORD, SHIELD, and ENEMY. [Aromatics. See SPICE. Around. See ROUND ABOUT.] Arphaxad
(Arphachschad). What Arphaxad s., 1230, 1339, 1341. Arrogance (fastus). See LOVE OF SELF. Arrow (sagitta). See BOW. [Arrow-Snake. See under SERPENT. Arsenal (armamnentarium). Arsenals S. such
things as are of truths fighting against falsity, and, in the opposite sense, of falsity fighting against truths, 6661:2. See also STOREHOUSES.] Art (ars). The arts of magicians unknown in the world,
831. Artificer (artilex). Artificer d. one who is wise, intelligent, knowing, 424. Ascend, To (ascendere). [See also To ARISE.] What to ascend s., 1543. To ascend refers to what is external, and
d. from the exterior to the interior, 3084. To ascend is predicated respecting going towards interiors: shown, 4539, 4969; it d. elevation towards interiors, 5817, 6007; also to recede and depart; concerning
which signification, 5964; to conjoin, 8760; conjunction, 9373. God ascended from above him in that place d. the Divine in that state, 4578. To ascend d. going towards interiors; to descend d.
towards exteriors, 5406. Asher (Ascher). Asher was so called from blessedness; what Asher s., 3938, 3939. See BLESSEDNESS. Asher d. the blessing of the affections, 6408. Ashes (cinis). [See also
under ALTAR.] Ashes d. falsity from the evil of lusts, 7520. Ashes of the altar d. those things which are to be removed after use, lest they should oppose other uses: shown, 9723. Cinders of the furnace
d. falsities of lusts, 7519, 7520. Ashkenaz (Askenas). What Ashkenaz S., 1154. Ask, To, Asking (interrogare, interrogatio). Why men are asked by the Lord, when yet He knows all things, 2693; shown,
6132. To ask d. to examine, 3385; and to perceive the thought of another; the reason, 5597, 5800. Questions in the sense of the letter, in the supreme sense, d. acknowledgment, 4358; also cognition
from perception, 6250. To ask Jehovah, when it relates to the Lord, d. a state of communication, 3291; to he instructed in the truths and goods of the Church and worship, 10548. Ass, She-Ass (asinus,
asina). [See also OX.] A judge rode on a she-ass, the sons of a judge on young asses, a king on a she-mule, his sons on mules, 2871:6. How the Lord's riding on a she-ass is a sign of the highest
judgment and kingdom is explained, 92l2:5. What ass and she-ass s., 1486. Ass d. a scientific, 5492; the natural, 8078. Asses d. scientifics, 5958; also she-asses, 5959. Asses, when they served for riding,
d. rational truth, because this was a sign of the judicial office and kingship; but asses which served for carrying burdens d. scientifics, 5741:2. To ride upon an ass d. to serve the intelligence,
7024. A bony ass d. the lowest service, 6389. The firstborn of an ass d. the mind merely natural, 8078. The son of a she-ass d. rational truth, 2781:5. What is sd. by the Lord riding on a she-ass
and a foal, 2781:8. Ass d. natural truth, and mule d. rational truth: shown, 2781. What ploughing with an ox and an ass together s., 10669:5. Ass, Wild (onager). Wild ass d. rational truth; described,
1949-1951. Assembly (coetus). See CONGREGATION [and To MEET (convenire).] Asshur (Aschur). Asshur s. the rational mind, 119; reason and ratiocination, 1186. Assyria (Assyria). See ASSHUIi. [Astonished,
To be. See under AMAZEMENT.] Asylum (asylum). They who injure anyone as to spiritual life by means of falsities of religion which they believed to be truths, were rd. by those who fled
to an asylum: shown, 9011. Atmosphere (atmosphaera). Into all forms that subsist intrinsic and extrinsic forces act; inward forces are alive, outward forces are not alive, but they correspond to each
other, 3628?. They who are from the Most Ancient Church have delightful auras, 1116. The atmospheres in the other life, 1621. There are most beautiful atmospheres around infants, 2297. Attraction
(attractio). The life which is from the Lord appears attractive: shown, 8604:3. All love appears attractive, 8604:3. Aura (aura). See ATMOSPHERE. Authority (auctoritas). The sphere of authority belonging
to a certain one born into dignity, 1507. The sphere of authority is tempered by goodness, and honour is bestowed on those who are born into authority, 1508. Avarice (avaritia). Concerning
the Jews and the robbers in the desert, 940. Concerning the sordidly avaricious and their hells; they are infested by mice, 938, 954; they are where there are excoriated bogs, 939. Into what phantasies
avarice is turned, in the other life, 954. They who are in filthy avarice are in the love of self more than others, although it does not so appear outwardly, and thence they are against all good whatsoever,
4751:2. The avaricious who are in the higher part of the stomach infuse anxieties, 6202. Avert, To (avertere). See To TURN. Awake, To (expergisci). To awake d. to be enlightened, 3715, 5208.
5218. Axe (securis). What is sd. by an axe to cut wood in a forest, 9011:3. See WOOD. [Azure. See BLUE.]