New Church Life Sep/Oct 2014 | Page 59

   :    .   .  the nascent New Church groups in Cuba, and seeing their enthusiasm for the Heavenly Doctrines after hearing them for the first time, has really helped to reinvigorate my own affection for these life-changing teachings that we tend to take for granted.” Brad and Cathy have six children: three girls (Linnea, Denali and Reyana) and three boys (Deacon, Calvin and Joram). They love to travel on long road trips through the United States and Canada. His personal interests include hiking, canoeing, backpacking, and photographing landscapes and wildlife. Here is his favorite passage from the Writings: There are therefore two principles; one of which leads to all folly and insanity, and the other to all intelligence and wisdom. The former principle is to deny all things, or to say in the heart that we cannot believe them until we are convinced by what we can apprehend, or perceive by the senses; this is the principle that leads to all folly and insanity, and is to be called the negative principle. The other principle is to affirm the things which are of doctrine from the Word, or to think and believe within ourselves that they are true because the Lord has said them: this is the principle that leads to all intelligence and wisdom, and is to be called the affirmative principle. (Arcana Coelestia 2568:4) Contact: [email protected] O U R N E W C H U RC H V O C A B U L A R Y Part of a continuing series developed by the Rev. W. Cairns Henderson, 1961-1966. CHASTITY This term is included as one which has in the Writings a meaning different from that assigned to it in common usage. In that usage, chastity means continence, virginity, or celibacy, and is therefore a quality that is lost by marriage. This definition is unacceptable, both because it implies that the body is depraved and marriage impure and because it refers only to the body, whereas the Writings teach that chastity is essentially a state of the spirit. As the terms are used in the Writings, chastity and unchastity are predicated of marriages and the things that belong to them. Conjugial love is said to be chastity itself, and the term describes the union of one man with one wife when both acknowledge the Lord and each confines their love to the other. Such a union is chaste because inmostly within it there is an aversion to adultery. The distinction between chastity and unchastity is therefore much deeper than one as to bodily acts. Before marriage, chastity is a proper attitude toward marriage which influences the imagination as well as the conduct – one which looks earnestly to a chaste and eternal union and spurns what is opposed to it. (See Conjugial Love 139ff, 49e) 445