New Church Life November/December 2016 | Page 17

      Mountains, fields, forests and trees can’t actually rejoice, sing or repeat the sounding joy. But the truth is that every part of creation is connected together in a beautiful and miraculous way. The Incarnation is not just about us but about the whole world. His coming affects even the physical earth itself. Night.” Both the words and music were written in the 19th century by people who loved the Heavenly Doctrines, and understood this principle. The hymn describes how Palestine itself welcomed the Lord’s coming and responded to the near presence of heaven when He was born. “The answering hills of Palestine send back the glad reply, and greet from all their holy heights the Dayspring from on high.” In one sense the images of the ancient prophecies are nothing but ways of describing what really only happens spiritually in human hearts. We are told that the Word is about “such things as belong to heaven, to the church, and to religious belief.” (Arcana Coelestia 2) We read: “A field cannot rejoice and trees in the forest cannot sing; only something in us can do so, and that something is religious knowledge.” (Ibid. 368) At the same time all created things are means of fulfilling the Lord’s purposes, and there is actual intention and purpose behind everything that exists and what those things do: This vast system called the universe is a work connected as one thing from beginning to end because God had a single purpose in creating it: an angelic heaven populated by the human race. All the things that make up the world are means of fulfilling that purpose, because someone who intends an end result also intends the means to achieve it. (True Christianity 13) The fields and floods, rocks, hills and plains did not themselves have any intention of welcoming the Lord, nor did they feel any joy at His birth. But as instruments of the Lord’s intentions and purposes they are part of the joy of their fulfillment, and that joy is both real and tangible. They are affected and become better instruments by His coming. The best way to understand this may be to grasp what was holy about the Holy Land, since this is the land that is said to be rejoicing at the Lord’s birth. Although the truth is that there is no such thing as a holy land, because holiness does not truly pertain to any physical object, material things do correspond to heavenly things. This correspondential connection is more 527