learn to add the exercise of rationality, and we use that rationality to
enhance the morality of our life.
The moral life in youths up to early adulthood is earthly. After that it
becomes increasingly rational. People who reflect on the question can see
that a moral life is the same thing as a life of goodwill, which is behaving
well to our neighbor and regulating our life to keep it from being con-
taminated with evils (as follows from the points made above in §§ 435 –
438 ). Nevertheless, in the first phase of our lives, our moral life is a life of
goodwill on the outermost level, that is, only in the outward, most super-
ficial part of our life, but not deeper within it.
[ 2 ] There are four phases to our lives. We pass through them as we
go from infancy to old age. The first phase is when our behavior follows
other people’s instructions. The second is when our behavior is our own,
and our intellect restrains us. The third is when our will pushes our
intellect and our intellect restrains our will. The fourth is when our
behavior is deliberate and purposeful.
These phases of our lives are phases of the life of our spirit, however;
they do not necessarily relate to our body. Our body can behave morally
and speak rationally, and yet our spirit can intend and think things that
are the opposite of morality and rationality. It is clear from pretenders,
flatterers, liars, and hypocrites that this is the nature of our earthly self.
Clearly, people like this have a dual mind—their mind can be divided
into two parts that do not agree.
It is different for people who have benevolent intentions and think
rational thoughts, and as a result do good things and speak rationally.
These are the type of people meant by “the simple in spirit” in the Word.
They are called simple because they are not dual.
[ 3 ] These statements clarify the proper meaning of the outer self and
the inner self; they show that we cannot conclude from other people’s
morality in their outer self that they have morality in their inner self.
Their inner self could be turned in the opposite direction. It could be
hiding the way a turtle hides its head in its shell or the way a snake hides
its head in its coils. In that case their supposedly moral self is like a rob-
ber who spends time both in the city and in the woods; in the city the
robber behaves like a moral person, but in the woods, like a thief.
It is completely different for people who are inwardly moral, whose
spirit is moral, and who attained that nature by being regenerated by
the Lord. Such people constitute the type meant by the phrase “spiritu-
ally moral.”
§443 goodwill & good actions 529