6960. 'Put your hand into your bosom' means making truth their own. This is clear from the meaning of 'hand' as power, dealt with above in 6947; and from the meaning of 'bosom' as love, for the parts of the chest correspond to love since the chest holds within it the heart, which corresponds to celestial love, and the lungs, which correspond to spiritual love, 3635, 3883-3896, 4112, 4113, 4133. And as 'the bosom' therefore corresponds to love it also means that which is one's own, because what constitutes a person's love is that which is his own. For this reason 'putting a hand into one's bosom' here means making something one's own. The fact that making truth one's own is what is meant is evident from the things that follow in the narrative and also from the consideration that truth is what spiritual power consists in, 6948.
[2] The fact that 'the bosom' means that which is a person's true self, and so that which is his own, and from this means making something one's own and joining to oneself through love, is clear from the following places: In Micah,
Do not trust in a companion, put no confidence in a leader; from her who is lying in your bosom guard the doors of your mouth. Micah 7:5.
'Her lying in the bosom' stands for one who has been joined to another through love. So it is also that a wife is called the wife of her husband's bosom, Deut 28:54; 2 Sam 12:8, and a husband is called the husband of his wife's bosom, Deut 28:56; and this is because one belongs to the other. In David,
My prayer falls back onto my bosom. Ps 35:13.
This stands for its return to himself. In the same author,
Remember, O Lord, the reproach of Your servants - [how] I bear in my bosom all the great peoples. Ps 89:50.
This stands for what is present with himself, as that which is his own. In Isaiah,
He pastures His flock like a shepherd, He gathers the lambs into His arm, and He carries them in His bosom. Isa 40:11.
Here the meaning is similar.
[3] In Luke,
Give, and it will be given to you; good measure, pressed down, shaken together, and running over will be given into your bosom. Luke 6:38.
'Being given into the bosom' stands for imparting them as their own. In the same gospel,
After that it happened that Lazarus died and was taken away by the angels into Abraham's bosom. Luke 16.22.
'Being taken away into Abraham's bosom' stands for being taken to the Lord - whom 'Abraham' is used to mean - by virtue of being joined to Him through love.
[4] In John,
There was reclining on Jesus' bosom one of the disciples, whom Jesus loved. Falling towards Jesus' breast he said to Him, Lord, who is it? John 13:23, 25.
'Reclining on the bosom' plainly stands for being loved and being joined through love. In the same gospel,
Nobody has ever seen God; the only begotten Son who is in the bosom of the Father, He has made Him known. John 1:18.
'In the bosom of the Father' stands for being one.
[5] 'The bosom' stands for that which is a person's true self, and for making something one's own but not through love, in the following places: In Isaiah,
I will repay, I will repay into their bosom your iniquities, and the iniquities of your fathers together. I will measure the value of their work first into their bosom. Isa 65:6, 7.
In Jeremiah,
Jehovah shows mercy to thousands and He repays the iniquity of the fathers into the bosom of their sons after them. Jer 31:18.
In David,
Repay our neighbours sevenfold into their bosom, their reproach to which they have subjected You, O Lord. Ps 79:12.
'Repaying into their bosom' stands for imparting to their true selves.