New Church Life Jan/Feb 2015 | Page 73

       it spreads; and the more internal it is, the greater distance it spreads.” (Arcana Coelestia 6612) This teaching gives new meaning to the idea of being narrow minded. How broadly does your thinking extend? We can see this obviously with anyone we’d call an expert. Would you consider someone who listens only to Beethoven a truly musical person? Probably you’d say that she has very limited musical tastes and ability and would likely not go to her for advice about music – perhaps not even for advice about Beethoven. How about someone who listens only to classical music, and cannot see any good in any other music? Probably not a musical expert. There is much good in jazz, folk, contemporary, religious and ethnic music. A true expert would have specific music that she enjoyed most – her musical home – but would also be able to understand and appreciate lots of kinds of music. We would likely trust such a person’s musical opinion more, and we should. Hopefully all of us want to become spiritual experts. The reason is very simple: The more truth you see and the more you love it, the more you can help others and the more you can protect yourself from any dangers that might come up. This is far more the case spiritually because your spiritual spread, as it were, comes from your heart as much as your head. The journeys people take to Gerar and Egypt depict this spiritual need. Several people, including Isaac, travel to Gerar, and many, including Abraham, Joseph, the Israelites, and the Lord, travel to Egypt. Each trip involves struggle and conflict, because real learning involves effort and putting our heart into it. Each of these journeys represents our willingness to go back to the Word to learn more about what the Lord says. Egypt was the source of ancient learning, and it represents our going to the one true source of learning – the Word. We don’t go to church as children, then stop going and simply get on with living the simple rules. We learn and learn again. We wrestle and ponder, trying to bring more ideas into our lives, just like people kept on going back to these places that mean learning from the Word. And in each of these stories the people who go to Gerar and to Egypt come away enriched. Ongoing learning in the Word is so important because that spread of understanding is what the world needs. Consider this analogy. A baby is born with about 100 billion neurons in his brain, which is about the same as what an adult has. What’s the difference between an adult and infant brain? It’s the connection between the parts. A baby has relatively few connecting links between these neurons. But as the child grows the brain forms trillions of connections. If you continue using those connections, they stay. If you stop using them they disappear, which is why you can’t remember the French you learned in school if you have not used it. 69