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何西阿书 4

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1 以色列人哪,你们当耶和华的耶和华与这居民争辩,因这上无诚实,无良善,无人认识

2 但起假誓,不践前言,杀害,盗,奸淫,行强暴,杀人流血,接连不断。

3 因此,这悲哀,其上的民、田野的兽、空中的必都衰微,中的鱼也必消灭。

4 然而,都不必争辩,也不必指责,因为这民与抗拒祭司的一样。

5 你这祭司必日间跌倒;先知也必夜间与你一同跌倒;我必灭绝你的母亲

6 我的民因无知识而灭亡。你弃掉知识,我也必弃掉你,使你不再给我作祭司。你既忘了的律法,我也必忘记你的儿女。

7 祭司越发增多,就越发得罪我;我必使他们的荣耀变为羞辱

8 他们我民的赎祭,满心愿意我民犯

9 将来民如何,祭司也必如何;我必因他们所行的惩罚他们,照他们所做的报应他们。

10 他们,却不得饱;行淫,而不得立後;因为他们离弃耶和华,不遵他的命。

11 奸淫和酒,并新酒,夺去人的

12 我的民求问偶,以为杖能指示他们;因为他们的淫心使他们失迷,他们就行淫离弃,不守约束,

13 在各顶,各冈的橡树、杨树、栗树之,献祭烧香,因为树影美。所以,你们的女儿淫乱,你们的新妇(或译:儿妇;同)行淫。

14 你们的女儿淫乱,你们的新妇行淫,我却不惩罚他们;因为你们自己离群与娼妓同居,与妓女一同献祭。这无知的民必致倾倒。

15 以色列啊,你虽然行淫,犹大却不可犯罪。不要往吉甲去,不要上到伯亚文,也不要指着永生的耶和华起誓。

16 以色列倔强,犹如倔强的母;现在耶和华要放他们,如同放羊羔在宽阔之地。

17 以法莲亲近偶像,任凭他罢!

18 他们所喝的已经发酸,他们时常行淫,他们的官长最羞耻的事。

19 把他们裹在翅膀里;他们因所献的祭必致蒙羞。

   

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Arcana Coelestia # 4013

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4013. 'Jacob took for himself fresh rods of poplar' means the power proper to natural good. This is clear from the meaning of 'a rod' as power, and from the meaning of 'poplar' as the good of the natural, dealt with below. 'A rod' is referred to in various places in the Word, and in every case it means power, for one reason because of its use by shepherds in the exercise of power over their flocks, and for another because it served to support the body, and existed so to speak for the sake of the right hand - for 'the hand' means power, 878, 3387. And because it had that meaning a rod was also used in ancient times by a king; and the royal emblem was a short rod and also a sceptre. And not only a king used a rod, but also a priest and a prophet did so, in order that he too might denote by means of his rod the power which he possessed, as Aaron and Moses did. This explains why Moses was commanded so many times to stretch out his rod, and on other occasions his hand, when miracles were performed, the reason being that 'a rod' and 'the hand' means Divine power. And it is because 'a rod' means power that the magicians of Egypt likewise used one when performing magical miracles. It is also the reason why at the present day a magician is represented with a rod in his hand.

[2] From all these considerations it may be seen that power is meant by 'rods'. But in the original language the word used for the rod that a shepherd, or else a king, or else a priest or a prophet possessed, is different from that used for the rods which Jacob took. The latter were used by wayfarers and so also by shepherds, as becomes clear from other places, such as Genesis 32:10; Exodus 12:11; 1 Samuel 17:40, 43; Zechariah 11:7, 10. In the present verse, it is true, the rod is not referred to as one supporting the hand but as a stick cut out from a tree, that is to say, from the poplar, hazel, or plane, to be placed in the troughs in front of the flock. Nevertheless the word has the same meaning, for in the internal sense it describes the power of natural good and from that the good that empowers natural truths.

[3] As regards 'the poplar' from which a rod was made, it should be recognized that trees in general mean perceptions and cognitions - perceptions when they have reference to the celestial man, but cognitions when they have reference to the spiritual man, see 103, 2163, 2682, 2722, 2972. This being so, trees specifically mean goods and truths, for it is these that are involved in perceptions and cognitions. Some kinds of trees mean the interior goods and truths which belong to the spiritual man, such as olives and vines, other kinds mean the exterior goods and truths which belong to the natural man, such as the poplar, the hazel, and the plane. And because in ancient times each tree meant some kind of good or truth, the worship which took place in groves accorded with the kinds of trees there, 2722. The poplar referred to here is the white poplar, so called from the whiteness from which it gets its name. Consequently 'poplar' means good which was a product of truth, or what amounts to the same, the good of truth, as also in Hosea 4:13, though in this instance the good has been falsified.

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Society for the permission to use this translation.