New Church Life May/Jun 2014 | Page 13

 contemplating it, in turn gives rise to thoughts of how to achieve it; these make up the instrumental “cause” that will bring it about. The result is the “effect,” which in turn becomes a new end, a new vision for further development; and so the cycle begins again. This is the pattern human thought follows (as that same number about hope, Divine Providence 178, explains). The “end” we envision (hope) enters into everything that follows: the “cause” (our thoughts and plans for realizing our dreams) and the “effect,” to whatever degree it is attained. Every work of life – the Church, the country, the home – is inaugurated, sustained and continually renewed by hope. It is what we have instead of knowledge of the future; for if we had that, the life of the mind “would be diminished and pass away.” (Ibid.) There’d be nothing to hope for. “Hope springs eternal,” as the poet said. Each new goal attained is like a mountain peak from which we see other peaks beckoning in the distance. New hopes, new goals, new challenges, are always presenting themselves. The supreme “end” of all, heaven, is always ahead of us, drawing us onward, and yet, in a sense, we are already there, and see it even now, in our hopes. (WEO) our new church vocabulary In 1961 the Rev. W. Cairns Henderson, as editor of New Church Life, launched a memorable and significant series, Our New Church Vocabulary. This continued through 1966, offering distinctive New Church definitions for 126 familiar words and terms. This alphabetical listing was collected into a pamphlet that still is treasured throughout the Church. In this issue we start reprinting the series, beginning with “Affection,” and will continue through “Worship.” In launching this series Mr. Henderson wrote: “The New Church has a vocabulary that is entirely its own. Every subject field has its particular terminology; and as the Writings were given to convey new truth, ideas never before unfolded to the human mind, and as the communication of ideas requires appropriate language, the Writings contain many distinctive terms. These terms were selected by the Lord with the precision of wisdom. Each one has a very exact meaning, or group of related meanings, and was chosen by the Lord because it, and no other, expressed adequately the idea or ideas to be transmitted. “Evidently, then, it is of great importance that we should understand correctly what is meant by these terms as they are employed in the Writings, and that we should be able to use them accurately in our own thinking, speaking and writing. Some are theological terms which occur frequently, and here a facile familiarity may blind us to their profundity. A few are peculiar to 221