Episode
Regeneration from Our Perspective
Because we are born into merely natural life by our parents, we need to be born again into spiritual life by the Lord. The process of regeneration is the series of steps used by the Lord to recreate us as angels. This is accomplished by inverting the structure of our minds from hellish disarrangement to heavenly order. Since our spiritual inheritance is nothing but evil, we all start out with our external self dominating our internal self and with the loves of self and the world ruling over our life. The end of regeneration is to compel the external self to serve the internal self and to install love to the Lord and charity as ruling loves.
From our point of view, regeneration is about four steps: learning truth, thinking truth, willing truth, and living truth. But this is only how regeneration appears to proceed to people who have not yet been regenerated. In reality, the Lord regenerates people by means of good, not truth. Though truth appears to be necessarily prior to good because it acts as a container for good, truth can only be possessed when it is implanted into good in the first place. In this way, good is the first and last of regeneration.
Also from our point of view, the focus of regeneration is the external and natural self. This perspective come from the fact that we are conscious in the external self and rarely have the opportunity to notice spiritual things. And though in reality regeneration takes place from the top down, starting with the internal self and only regenerating the external self by means of the internal self, this perspective is useful because it allows us to freely choose to be regenerated by the Lord by choosing to do the work of repentance. This perspective was taught by the Lord when He washed the disciples feet, saying in John 13:9 “He who is bathed needs only to wash his feet, but is completely clean.”
How to Repent
Repentance is a core doctrine of the New Church. As we say, “All religion is about life, and the life of religion is to do good.” Repentance is the process of getting to doing good. It is a fundamental part of the life of religion.
We are all born with inherited tendencies to do evil of every kind, our will is totally corrupt because it is ruled by the love of self and the love of the world. Our life, as an expression of our will and our love, is not good, regardless of what it looks like. As long as we are ruled by selfishness and worldliness, we cannot live the life of religion.
Repentance, though, is the process by which the Lord leads us out of evil and into good. Repentance leads in towards good.
There is lots of information given to us about the process of repentance because it is the fundamental activity of religion. We are saved not all at once, but bit by bit as we work through the process of repentance over and over, removing evils one by one until we are reborn.
The process of repentance is really a process, a series of steps you take to remove evil. Just wanting to stop sin doesn’t work. And it isn’t a question of will power. If you learn nothing else, learn the steps of repentance, because it is only by doing these steps that the Lord can save you.
The Steps (LEADS IN)
- Learn
- Explore
- Acknowledge
- Damn
- Stop
- Implore
- New Life
Piety and Worship Consist of Serving the Neighbor


Many people think that the life of piety is the spiritual life, and that worship consists of ritual and piety. We learn in this section from The New Jerusalem and Its Heavenly Doctrine that the spiritual life and divine worship is the life of charity. True worship of the Lord is serving the neighbor because it is the Lord’s will.
Faith is the Expression of Charity
No one can know what faith is unless you first know what charity is. This is because charity and faith have the same relationship that good and truth have: faith is the form of or the expression of charity. As good belongs to charity, truth belongs to faith and like truth, faith is real only when it is part of life, that is, when it is enlivened by the good of charity.
When united with charity, faith is described as “the affection of truth from willing truth because it is truth.” In other words, real faith is confidence that the Lord will save you because He came into the world to save everyone, and does save everyone when they live according to His teaching.
Faith is erroneously but commonly described as belief in the things of the Word and the church, regardless of confidence in the Lord. But that sort of belief has nothing to do with salvation. Called “persuasive faith,” that sort of faith deals with the memory of truths and at best applied to the appeal to them from fear of hell or desperation, and at worse the use of them for the sake of reputation and worldly gain.
Genuine, saving faith, is a spiritual faith belonging to the internal self, which gains its faith through the union of will and understanding in life, which in turn are united when good is received into the will and truth is received into the understanding. In this way, a person’s faith takes its quality from his reception of good from the Lord.
Charity- Who is the Neighbor?
Charity is often considered to be things like giving to the poor or supporting hospitals. While these things can certainly be charitable, charity encompasses much more, eventually including everything you do. When your ruling love is the love of the neighbor , everything you do becomes charitable, from giving money to “charitable” organizations, to going to work and doing your job well, even to eating breakfast.
“Who is the Neighbor?” is the central question to understanding love of the neighbor and charity. First, charity is not charity without distinction. Giving support to evil people only promotes evil. Second, neighbors are distinguished according to the good with everyone. This means that the Lord is the highest and first neighbor. In the universal or abstract sense, good itself is the neighbor. Love is also the neighbor itself because all good comes from love. We could rephrase this as a person is a neighbor according to the quality of his love.
Because the neighbor does not have to be an individual person, there are successive degrees of the neighbor, like rungs on a ladder, the higher one to be preferred over all lower. Each degree’s height in the succession is according to how each degree regards the Lord, who is the highest and first neighbor standing at the very top of the ladder. the bottom rung is smaller and larger communities, themselves ranked according to the quality of good in each. Our country is more a neighbor because it acts as a parent, promoting civil and spiritual welfare. The church is even more the neighbor because it concerns the soul and eternal life. And the Lord’s kingdom is a still higher neighbor because it consists of all who are good on earth and in heaven, and thus contains good in all its complexity.
What about Yourself? It is common to say that everyone is his own neighbor, but what we learn here about love to the neighbor helps us understand this saying. Very simply, the end is first, meaning the purpose for doing something determines its quality. The order in which they are done does not determine quality. We build houses to live in them, for example, but we must first build the foundation of the house, which we cannot live in.
To love the neighbor is to do what is good, just, and right in every work and in every office. It extends to every single thing a person thinks, wills, and does. In short, charity is to live according to the Ten Commandments because the are the Lord’s.
Selfishness and Avarice
A person’s life is a person’s love. Or (to put it into the “good and truth” terms we’ve been using recently) love is the essence of your life and your life is the expression of your love. Each of us has one love that is our “ruling” love, the one that is at the very core of who we are and how we live, that animates us. There are four types of ruling loves:
1. love to the Lord
2. love towards the neighbor
3. love of the world
4. love of self.
Everything that is good and true has to do with the first two, and everything that is evil and false comes from the last two.
The love of self is willing well to yourself alone, and not to other except when it benefits ourselves. A person ruled by this love thinks of everyone and everything as his servant, to be used for his own benefit. To see what such a person is like without the external checks of law and punishment, look at some of the worst kings and popes.
The love of the world is wishing to gather the things of this world by any means, for the sake of having them. It is certainly possible to gather wealth for the sake of helping others, but gathering money and possessions just to have them means that you love the things of the world more than the people of the world, your neighbors. Such people are described in the Writings for the New Church as predators.
All evil comes from these two loves. Unfortunately, we inherit a will (part of our mind) that is based entirely on these evil loves, and so we inherit tendencies to do evils of every kind. Reformation and regeneration are all about not acting on these motivations, and acting on the new, good motivations that the Lord instills into your mind as you live a life that is compatible with those goods.
Will and Understanding are Everything in the Mind
As all things in creation relate to good and truth (see Part 1), so all things in a person relate to the will and the understanding. These two halves of the human mind are both the receivers of good and truth and the place where good and truth act on a person—good with the will and truth with the understanding. Together, will and understanding make the whole life of a person. Everything that was said about good and truth in part 1, can also be said about will and understanding, since these two faculties are where good and truth reside in a person. In the heavenly marriage, the will is the essence or substance of a person’s life and understanding is the expression or form of that life. Good in the will causes truth to form the understanding, and the will takes its quality from the form of the understanding. Finally, since the life of a person is essentially in the will, the quality of a person’s life is based wholly on fitting your life into the shape of genuine truth.
The Tower of Babel and the Corruption of Worship

The story of the Tower of Babel is the story of the end of the first Ancient Church. Looking at this example, we learn of five stages that a church goes through before the end.List of correspondences discussed:
Permissions of Evil Are Also Divine Providence
The Laws of Providence are sometimes called the laws of permission when relating to evil. They are called “permissions” because the Lord allows it to happen, not because He wants it to happen but because He cannot prevent it from happening while His goal remains our salvation and a heaven from the human race.
The so called “laws of of permission” are really just the other side of the coin. When talking about Providence in the past several weeks. I’ve talked mostly about all the things the Lord does for people who are trying to go to heaven, how someone who wants to cooperate with the Lord can know how to do that.
This week, we’ll look at those same laws, but apply them to circumstances where a person does not want to cooperate, does not think spiritual, believes only in the material world, and is choosing to remain selfish and worldly.
The laws of providence are like the laws of physics in that the tell us why things happen the way they do. Misunderstanding those laws, opens up questions that might convince people to reject the whole idea. Permission of providence are often pointed out by materialists in defense of their materialism and denial of the existence of providence.
We’ll use four examples of the many misunderstandings discussed in Divine Providence to illustrate how the Lord provides for the evil as well as for the good, all without breaking any of the Laws of Providence and continuing His efforts to create a heaven from the human race.
- If God were really in charge, He would punish people who behaved irreverently.
- If God were really in charge, religious people would be wealthy and powerful and the non-believer would be poor and disgraced.
- If God were really in charge, He would prevent war.
- If God were really in charge, there would only be one religion.
Listen Now: Permissions of Evil Are Also Divine Providence
The Lord Provides that we should be Led and Taught by the Lord by Means of the Word
Part Four of the series on the Laws of Divine Providence looks at the Lord’s leadership. How does the Lord lead us to heaven? How is the Word—the Old Testament, the New Testament, and the Writings for the New Church—the means by which the Lord leads us?
We are led by love, not intelligence. the Lord leads us by our affections by flowing into our love like a soul flows into a body. We are then taught by enlightenment because our spiritual eyes work the same way as our body’s eyes, though the spirit sees in spiritual light rather than natural light.

