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Leviticus 21

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1 And the Lord said to Moses, Say to the priests, the sons of Aaron, Let no man make himself unclean for the dead among his people;

2 But only for his near relations, for his mother or his father, his son or his daughter, and his brother;

3 And for his sister, a virgin, for she is his near relation and has had no husband, he may make himself unclean.

4 But let him, being a chief among his people, not make himself unclean in such a way as to put shame on himself.

5 They are not to have their hair cut off for the dead, or the hair on their chins cut short, or make cuts in their flesh.

6 Let them be holy to their God and not make the name of their God common; for the fire offerings of the Lord and the bread of their God are offered by them, and they are to be holy.

7 They may not take as wife a loose or common woman, or one who has been put away by her husband: for the priest is holy to his God.

8 And he is to be holy in your eyes, for by him the bread of your God is offered; he is to be holy in your eyes, for I the Lord, who make you holy, am holy.

9 And if the daughter of a priest makes herself common and by her loose behaviour puts shame on her father, let her be burned with fire.

10 And he who is the chief priest among his brothers, on whose head the holy oil has been put, who is marked out to put on the holy robes, may not let his hair go loose or have his clothing out of order as a sign of sorrow.

11 He may not go near any dead body or make himself unclean for his father or his mother;

12 He may not go out of the holy place or make the holy place of his God common; for the crown of the holy oil of his God is on him: I am the Lord.

13 And let him take as his wife one who has not had relations with a man.

14 A widow, or one whose husband has put her away, or a common woman of loose behaviour, may not be the wife of a priest; but let him take a virgin from among his people.

15 And he may not make his seed unclean among his people, for I the Lord have made him holy.

16 And the Lord said to Moses,

17 Say to Aaron, If a man of your family, in any generation, is damaged in body, let him not come near to make the offering of the bread of his God.

18 For any man whose body is damaged may not come near: one who is blind, or has not the use of his legs, or one who has a broken nose or any unnatural growth,

19 Or a man with broken feet or hands,

20 Or one whose back is bent, or one who is unnaturally small, or one who has a damaged eye, or whose skin is diseased, or whose sex parts are damaged;

21 No man of the offspring of Aaron whose body is damaged in any way may come near to give the fire offerings of the Lord: he is damaged, he may not come near to make the offerings.

22 He may take of the bread of God, the holy and the most holy;

23 But he may not go inside the veil or come near the altar, because he is damaged; and he may not make my holy places common; for I the Lord have made them holy.

24 These are the words which Moses said to Aaron and to his sons and to all the children of Israel.

   

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Apocalypse Explained # 616

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616. And I went unto the angel, and said unto him, Give me the little book.- That this signifies the power of perceiving from the Lord the quality of the Word, is evident from the signification of going to the angel and saying, Give me the book, as denoting, in the proximate sense, obedience to the command, because he was commanded to go and take it; but, in a more remote sense, which is also the interior sense, those words mean the power of perceiving from the Lord the quality of the Word. The Lord gives to every man [the faculty] of perceiving this, yet no one does perceive, unless he desire as it were of himself to perceive it. This reciprocal action is necessary on man's part in order that he may receive the power of perceiving the Word, and unless a man desire and set himself to do this as of himself, no power is appropriated to him. For an active and reactive are necessary in order that there may be appropriation. The active is from the Lord, and also the reactive, but the latter appears to be from man; for the Lord Himself imparts this power of reaction, and therefore it is from the Lord and not from man. But because man does not know otherwise than that he lives from himself, consequently that he thinks and wills from himself, therefore he ought to make use of this [reactive power] as though it were from what is proper to his own life, and when he so uses it, then first it is implanted in him, and conjoined and appropriated to him.

[2] He who believes that Divine truths and goodnesses (bonitates) inflow, without such a reactive or reciprocal [power], is much deceived, for this would be to hang down the hands, and wait for immediate influx, as those think who altogether separate faith from charity, and say that the goods of charity, which are the goods of life, inflow without any co-operation on the part of man's will, although the Lord teaches that He continually stands at the door and knocks, and that man must open the door, and that He enters in to him who opens (Apoc. 3:20).

In a word, action and reaction are the cause of all conjunction, while action and mere passiveness do not produce any conjunction; for an agent or active power, when it inflows into what is merely passive, passes through and is dissipated, for the passive yields and recedes. But when an agent or active power flows into a passive which is also a reactive, then there is application and both remain conjoined. Thus it is with the influx of Divine Good and Divine Truth into the will or into the love of man. When therefore the Divine flows into the understanding alone, it then passes through and is dissipated, but when it flows into the will, where the proprium of man resides, it then remains conjoined. From these things it is clear what interior fact is involved in its being said first, "Go, take the little book, which is open in the hand of the angel who standeth upon the sea and upon the earth," and then in its being said that he "went unto the angel, and said, Give me the little book," and that upon this the angel said unto him, "Take it, and eat it up," for this is a description of the reactive and reciprocal power. For this reason those words signify the power of receiving and perceiving from the Lord the quality of the Word. The reception of the Divine influx is also described in like manner in other passages of the Word.

  
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Translation by Isaiah Tansley. Many thanks to the Swedenborg Society for the permission to use this translation.

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Ezekiel 39:18

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18 You shall eat the flesh of the mighty, and drink the blood of the princes of the earth, of rams, of lambs, and of goats, of bulls, all of them fatlings of Bashan.