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约拿书 4

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1 这事约拿不悦,且甚发怒,

2 就祷告耶和华耶和华啊,我在本国的时候,岂不是这样吗?我知道你是有恩典、有怜悯的神,不轻易发怒,有丰盛的慈爱,并且後悔不降所的灾,所以我急速逃往他施去。

3 耶和华啊,现在求你取我的命吧!因为我死了比活着还好。

4 耶和华:你这样发怒合乎理吗?

5 於是约拿出城,在城的东边,在那里为自己搭了一座棚,在棚的荫,要那城究竟如何。

6 耶和华安排一棵蓖麻,使其发生高过约拿,影儿遮盖他的,救他脱离苦楚;约拿因这棵蓖麻喜乐。

7 次日黎明,却安排一条子咬这蓖麻,以致枯槁。

8 出来的时候,安排炎热的东,日曝晒约拿的,使他发昏,他就为自己求:我死了比活着还好!

9 约拿:你因这棵蓖麻发怒合乎理吗?他:我发怒以至於死,都合乎理!

10 耶和华:这蓖麻,不是你栽种的,也不是你培养的;一夜发生,一夜乾死,你尚且爱惜;

11 何况这尼尼微城,其中不能分辨左手右手的有十二万多人,并有许多牲畜,我岂能不爱惜呢?

   

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Exploring the Meaning of Jonah 4

Napsal(a) New Christian Bible Study Staff

In this fourth chapter of the Book of Jonah, (Jonah 4), the prophet Jonah has a strange reaction to his success. He's angry, and sulky. He thinks he knows better than God does. What is this story about?

Rev. George McCurdy, in his exegesis of this chapter, offers a summary in his Study Guide for the Book of Jonah, which is available for free as a .pdf, for your use. Below, we've excerpted part of his summary, and edited it for use in this context.

The people of the Jewish church in Jonah's time didn't want to reconsider their belief in their "most-favored-nation status." They challenged the Lord. They couldn't understand why He wanted to save their enemies in Nineveh.

Despite the hard lessons in chapters 1 and 2, and his success as described in chapter 3, Jonah still thought he knew better than the Lord. He thought that God was being too soft and loving -- too forgiving -- and that He needed to come around to Jonah’s tougher view.

Jonah got so angry and vengeful that he preferred to die rather than approve of the Lord’s way to save the Ninevites. His self-love wanted shade -- protection for its concepts. The Lord needed to bring such thinking to an end; the worm brought about death to the gourd from within. The Lord then sent a vehement east wind, that represents a blowing away of the stagnant thinking of the church.

The Lord's heavenly sun shone upon Jonah, but he felt faint. Here, Jonah's insistence on his own troubling view of things made him uncomfortable with the Lord’s view. The Divine guidance offered him a way to learn to enjoy the success of his neighbors as his own, but he wouldn't take it.

For us, then -- what? This story is telling us that we can't just keep the truths of the Word for ourselves; we have to go to Nineveh and share them. And then, if people start to hear them, and use them to turn their lives around, we can't allow ourselves to get resentful that the Lord accepts their repentance and forgives them. It's a very human reaction; think of the disciples vying to be first in the Lord's command structure (Luke 9:46), or the brother of the prodigal son (Luke 15:28-29), or the workers in the vineyard who had worked all day for a denarius (Matthew 20:10-12). But... it's not a good reaction. The Lord doesn't admire it in Jonah, and doesn't admire it when it crops up in our minds, either.

Rev. Martin Pennington recommends several explanatory passages from Swedenborg's theological writings:

"Shade or shadow means the perception of good and truth lies in obscurity." (Arcana Coelestia 2367)

"A vine is spiritual good (the spiritual church)". (Arcana Coelestia 217)

"A worm represents falsity gnawing away and tormenting one." (Arcana Coelestia 8481)

"'And the sun grew hot' in the contrary sense means self-love and love of the world." (Arcana Coelestia 8487)

And... here's a link to an interesting (audio) sermon on this chapter, by Rev. Todd Beiswenger.

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 2367

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2367. The implications of 'the shadow of the roof' meaning within a general obscure [perception of that good] are that with man, even one who is regenerate, the perception of good and truth lies in obscurity, the more so with him whose worship is external, who is represented here by Lot. When a person is engrossed in bodily things, that is, during his lifetime, his affections, like his perceptions, are very general and therefore very obscure, however much he imagines that they are not so. There are myriads upon myriads of parts to each tiny affection, as there are to each idea comprising his perception, which to him appears to be a simple entity. This in the Lord's Divine mercy will be shown when the subject of affections and ideas is reached. Man is sometimes able, when he reflects, to examine and describe a few of the things within him; but countless, indeed limitless, things lie unseen which neither do nor can enter his awareness as long as he is living in the body but which do become visible once bodily and worldly things have been put away.

[2] This becomes quite clear from the fact that a person with whom the good that flows from love and charity exists, on crossing over into the next life, passes from an obscure into a clearer life, as if from a kind of night into day. And to the extent he has entered the Lord's heaven the clearer is the light until he reaches the light in which angels live, whose light of intelligence and wisdom lies beyond description. The inferior light in which man lives is in comparison like darkness. This is why it is said here that they came under the shadow of his roof, the meaning of which is that those represented by Lot dwell in their general [perception]. That is to say, they know very little about the Lord's Divinity and His Holiness but they nevertheless acknowledge and believe that His Divinity and His Holiness do exist and that they reside within the good of charity, that is, among those in whom that good is present.

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