New Church Life January/February 2017 | Page 9

 Kant and other writers have referred to the “numinous,” but as far as I know, Swedenborg does not use the term; and in the Writings the word “phenomena” applies to things in both worlds, the spiritual as well as the natural. But terminology isn’t the important thing. Whatever it is called, most people have experienced a sense of holiness at one time or another. Not a vision, or a voice, or an out-of-body experience, but just a strange sensation, however vague, that there is some higher reality – uncanny, otherworldly and powerful – that transcends but also touches and affects this world. Why some people are more prone to religious feelings than others, I do not know. Perhaps some need them more than others for their regeneration. Strong, ecstatic religious feelings are rare, and appropriately so, because during our life in the world we need to concentrate on our work here. The risk of profanation, or mental unbalance, are also reasons why spiritual experiences are relatively rare in modernity. In any case, they should not be sought as an end in themselves. On the other hand, total and unrelieved immersion in the natural stifles the spirit, and we do need to see, and feel, the sun of heaven breaking through the clouds occasionally. We need to have enough awareness of spiritual reality to bolster the belief that God is present and working in the world. The “Moses” in us needs an occasional “burning bush” experience to inspire us to leave the “Egypt” of merely natural life. All people are capable of religious feelings, because of the life that flows into every human mind from the Lord. It is because of His presence within us that we are able to sense His presence in the world outside us. Even those who deny God, or at least a personal God, may have an intuitive sense that there is a mysterious force of some kind behind the order and beauty of nature that we can see. “The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious,” Einstein wrote. “It is the source of all true art and all science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer pause to wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead: his eyes are closed.”

 Religion did not arise out of lame attempts by scientifically ignorant people of ancient times to explain natural phenomena, as our skeptical, supercilious age supposes. Religion is a response to a reality that people even today are able to detect and are affected by. Religious ideas are so maddeningly (to the materialists) persistent because they are inspired by religious feelings, which are intrinsic to human nature. (WEO) 5