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DOCTRINE FOR THE YOUNG
WHAT IS NEW ABOUT THE NEW CHURCH?
by the Rev. Daniel W. Goodenough
What's in a name? The New Church, for example. Why do we call it "new"? Partly, we call it new because John saw the New Jerusalem descending from God out of heaven, and this new city represents or stands for a New Church which the Lord promised to build after the end of the first Christian Church. But that still doesn't explain how it is new.
A wise man once said that New Church people are distinct from other people in not telling jokes that ridicule marriage or the Word, and in not using dirty language, especially not taking the name of the Lord in vain. These things certainly are of great importance, but a church whose name is New has to be new in more ways than these. How is it new?
What really is new about the New Church? The true answer is, everything. Everything is new about the New Church primarily because now we can understand clearly the Lord and His ways, and what He wants for us and from us. It is not that New Church people act completely different from everyone else. In fact, we worship in more or less similar ways as other people; we go to work and school; we enjoy sports; we vote and take part in the life of community, society, and church. We should live useful and productive lives, in outward ways not too different from the lives of many other people.
The New Church is not new because its members' lives are outwardly very different from the lives of various people you run into. What is new is how our lives can become inwardly new - new in the way we think and feel, new in the way we do things, new in what and how we love. For love is our very life. We are not what we do; we are what we love and take delight in. This is what the Heavenly Doctrine for the New Church tells us about.
The newness of the New Church may seem to be from ourselves, but really it is from the Lord, because He has now revealed things that people have not known before. (These things are not new to Him, but they are now newly revealed on earth.) The Heavenly Doctrine teaches us plainly and directly many things that people have wondered about, but have not understood for hundreds, even thousands of years. Who really is God, and what is He like? Is He even a Man? What does He want from us, and what kinds of things should we do to serve Him? Will He raise us up when we die? How? When? How can people live after death? What does being saved really mean? And how can all this have any connection with our daily life? Does God care about the little things we do from day to day? Does He even care about the big things we do? How can our own individual lives have any meaning to God? Countless numbers of people have wondered about God and His ways for so long, and many people are wondering the same things today. Many have wondered so long that they have even given up hope of finding satisfactory answers to such questions.
But these answers are just what the Heavenly Doctrine gives us, in a beautifully full outpouring of love and wisdom from the Lord through heaven. In the Heavenly Doctrine the Lord teaches us plainly and directly about Himself, explaining clearly who He is, so that we may know. And He tells us about His ways - not only why He wants us to be happy, but also what we can do so that He can make us happy. He tells us about the life after death, in great detail, and He explains precisely how the spirit - the real person - is drawn out of the body, not after waiting for many years in a rotting grave, but immediately after we die. He tells us what life in heaven is like, so that we can use our lives on earth to get ready for true happiness - not by worshiping, or praying, or singing all the time, but by loving our neighbor in all the ways we can find to do good to him. And He shows us how to understand the beautiful hidden truths in the Old and New Testaments. And - one of the most wonderful things of all - He tells us how we can work for true marriage love - not just the temporary romantic love described in movies and books, but the permanent conjugial love between two people who will grow to love each other more and more in marriage forever. And who does not want that?
Of course, these blessings cannot be given to us unless we learn to receive them, so the Lord teaches us also what evil is, and exactly what we must do to get rid of evils in ourselves so that we will want His blessings. The Heavenly Doctrine says a lot about evil, not to nag us, but so that we will be sure to know enough about evil to be able to recognize it in life.
The Lord gives us these and many more answers. The basic answers are really pretty simple, yet, the more we learn about the Lord's wisdom, the more we find there is to know, especially about the Lord Himself. We can never know it all (we wouldn't be very happy if we could), but the Lord shows us how we can enter ever more fully into His wisdom forever. That is the reason the New Church puts so much emphasis on reading the Lord's Word - the Old and New Testaments and the Heavenly Doctrine. It is easy to forget the Lord's wisdom unless we continue to read His Word and learn to find enjoyment from gradually learning more and more about Him and His ways.
It is not that the Word tells us outright every little thing we should do. That would not leave us free, and we wouldn't like it at all. The Lord does not want to treat us like babies. He wants us to follow Him by using our heads to decide what we should do. So we should study the Word, not because it will tell us in so many words exactly what we should do tomorrow, but because it will give us an overall picture of the Lord and His kingdom. Then when we have questions about how to act, we will find that when we look to the Lord, the answer that we need will become clear to us. It may not come immediately, but the answer will soon be there, and we will know what the Lord wants us to do.
It is easy to lose sight of how new this wisdom is on earth when we are in doubts, temptations and uncertainties. When things are going well, we may take the Lord's wisdom for granted and forget how new and important it is. But when we question or doubt, or are tempted toward some evil, then we are able - if we will be honest with ourselves - to see that the Lord really does give us new and beautiful answers to guide us. The experience of doubt and temptation is no fun, but it can help us to appreciate just how much we need the wisdom newly revealed by the Lord.
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