New Church Life September/October 2017 | Page 9

 flood, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell: but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.” (BMH) religious feelings: conjugial love If we think of conjugial love just in terms of romance it must seem strange to call it a “religious” feeling. But when we reflect on the Divine source and spiritual essence of that love, as revealed in the Heavenly Doctrine, then we see that it is indeed a religious feeling. This is speaking of conjugial love in its purest form, of course. Although it originates in the Divine, this love manifests itself on many levels and in many ways. The sphere that goes forth from it is a universal sphere that affects all creatures, “from angels to worms.” Its holiness is not apparent to our lower, animal nature, but our spiritual, distinctly human nature senses the Divine and heavenly essence of conjugial love. This does not mean we have to wait until we are angels to experience this love. A wonderful thing about it is that, more than any other love, it serves to awaken the angel within us, and gives us the most beautiful and powerful awareness of heaven’s reality that we can experience in this world. Swedenborg did not learn about heaven just by instruction, but from experience. The fullness of his experience, for the special purpose of preparing him to receive a new revelation, was unique, but we, also, learn about heaven from experience – especially the experience of conjugial love. This does not apply just to people who are fortunate enough to be happily married in this world, but to everyone. Swedenborg never married during his life on earth, but his knowledge of conjugial love was not just intellectual or theoretical; clearly, he felt the joy of it in his spirit. That feeling is something everyone can experience, married or not. In fact, the yearning people have for “connubial bliss” that leads them to seek marriage in the first place shows that they know what that bliss is--and not just from hearing about it but from feeling the influence of it, from heaven, within themselves. Consider what is said regarding the states of this love. They are: “innocence, peace, tranquility, inmost friendship, full confidence, and a mutual desire of mind and heart to do each other every good. And from all these come blessedness, happiness, joy, pleasure, and from their eternal fruition, heavenly felicity.” (Conjugial Love 180) Like the dew on the early morning grass as the sun moves higher in the sky, the first exquisite feeling of being in love wanes as the love of self reasserts itself and worldly concerns reoccupy the mind. But in the Lord’s providence, the impression it has made upon our soul is preserved, like a 363