170. 'And I will confess his name before the Father, and before His angels' signifies that they who are in Divine Good and in Divine truths from the Lord are to be received, thus those who have the life of heaven in themselves. That 'to confess a name' is to acknowledge the quality of anyone, or that he is such, is established from the signification of 'name', which is treated of above (n. 81, 122). By 'the Father 'is understood Divine Good and by 'angels' are understood Divine truths, both out of the Lord. In the Word of the Evangelists 'the Father' is often mentioned by name, and wherever this occurs Jehovah is understood, from Whom and in Whom He was, and Who was in Himself, and any Divine separate from Himself is never understood. That this is the case has been frequently shown in THE DOCTRINE OF THE NEW JERUSALEM CONCERNING THE LORD; and also in ANGELIC WISDOM CONCERNING DIVINE PROVIDENCE (n. 262, 263). That the Lord Himself is 'the Father' may be seen (n. 21, 960 [of this work]). The Lord referred to 'the Father' because by 'Father' in the spiritual sense good is signified, and by 'God the Father' the Divine Good of the Divine Love. The angels never understand anything else by 'the Father' when it is read in the Word; nor are they able to understand anything else, because no one in heaven knows any Father, from Whom they are said to be born, and Whose sons and heirs they are called, except the Lord. This is understood by the Lord's words, Matt. xxiii 9. It is plain from these considerations that by 'confess his name before the Father' is signified that they are to be received among those who are in Divine Good from Himself. Because angels are the recipients of Divine Good in the Divine truths that are from the Lord with them, by 'angels' those who are in Divine truths from the Lord are understood, and abstractly Divine Truths.