Bible

 

約書亞記 9

Studie

   

1 約但河西,住地、高原,並對著利巴嫩沿一帶的諸,就是赫人、亞摩利人、迦南人、比利洗人、希未人、耶布斯人的諸見這事,

2 就都聚集,同心合意的要與約書亞和以色列人爭戰。

3 基遍居民見約書亞向耶利哥和艾城所行的事,

4 就設詭計,假充使者,拿舊口袋和破裂縫補的舊皮酒袋馱在上,

5 將補過的舊鞋穿在上,把舊衣服穿在身上;他們所帶的餅都是乾的,長了霉了。

6 他們到吉甲中見約書亞,對他和以色列人我們是從遠方的,現在求你與我們立約。

7 以色列人對這些希未:只怕你們是我們中間的;若是這樣,怎能和你們立約呢?

8 他們對約書亞:我們是你的僕人。約書亞問他們:你們是甚麼人?是從那裡的?

9 他們回答僕人從極遠之,是因耶和華─你的名聲和他在埃及所行的一切事,

10 並他向約但河東的兩個亞摩利,就是希實本西宏和在亞斯他錄的巴珊噩一切所行的事。

11 我們長老我們的一切居民我們:你們裡要帶著上用的食物去迎接以色列人,對他們我們是你們的僕人;現在求你們與我們立約。

12 我們出來要往你們這裡來的日子,從家裡帶出來的這餅還是熱的;看哪,現在都乾了,長了霉了。

13 這皮酒袋,我們盛酒的時候還是新的;看哪,現在已經破裂。我們這衣服和鞋,因為道路甚遠,也都穿舊了。

14 以色列人受了他們些食物,並沒有求問耶和華

15 於是約書亞與他們講和,與他們立約,容他們活著;會眾的首領也向他們起誓。

16 以色列人與他們立約之,過了見他們是近鄰,在以色列人中間的。

17 以色列人起行,第三到了他們的城邑,就是基遍、基非拉、比錄、基列耶琳。

18 因為會眾的首領已經指著耶和華以色列的向他們起誓,所以以色列人不擊殺他們;全會眾就向首領發怨言。

19 眾首領對全會眾:我們已經指著耶和華以色列的向他們起誓,現在我們不能害他們。

20 我們要如此待他們,容他們活著,免得有忿怒因我們所起的誓臨到我們身上。

21 首領又對會眾:要容他們活著。於是他們為全會眾作了劈柴挑的人,正如首領對他們所的話。

22 約書亞召了他們來,對他們:為甚麼欺哄我們我們離你們甚遠呢?其實你們是我們中間。

23 現在你們是被咒詛的!你們中間的人必斷不了作奴僕,為我的殿作劈柴挑的人。

24 他們回答約書亞:因為有人實在告訴你的僕人耶和華─你的曾吩咐他的僕人摩西,把這全你們,並在你們面前滅絕這的一切居民,所以我們為你們的緣故甚喪命,就行了這事。

25 現在我們在你中,你以怎樣待我們為善為正,就怎樣做罷!

26 於是約書亞這樣待他們,救他們脫離以色列人以色列人就沒有殺他們。

27 當日約書亞使他們在耶和華所要選擇的地方,為會眾和耶和華的作劈柴挑的人,直到今日。

   

Komentář

 

Exploring the Meaning of Joshua 9

Napsal(a) New Christian Bible Study Staff, Julian Duckworth

Joshua 9: The Gibeonites deceive Israel.

After Israel conquered Jericho and then Ai, the news about the strength of the Children of Israel - and their mighty God, Jehovah - spread quickly among the people of Canaan. In this chapter, the people of Gibeon came up with a plan to trick Joshua and the Israelites into granting them safety.

To preserve themselves, the Gibeonites cooked up a story that they had come from far away. They dressed in old clothing and worn-out sandals, and brought shabby wine-skins and moldy bread as proof of their long journey. After questioning these travelers, Joshua agreed to guarantee their safety, and the Israelites made a covenant to let them live. Note that the Israelites did not consult the Lord.

In the end, the Gibeonites admitted that they lived close by and were neighbors of Israel, just as the Hivites (the Gibeonites' ancestors) had been with Abraham. Joshua, unable to revoke his promise to them, made them wood-cutters and water-carriers for the altars of the Lord.

This chapter offers us several spiritual lessons. The main one is that there is a place for simple, well-intentioned goodness in our spiritual life, along with our love of God and our love for other people (See Swedenborg's exegetical work, Arcana Caelestia 3436, for details). This is what the Gibeonites stand for; they were not warlike but peaceful, content to live usefully day after day. This is an illustration of natural good, which is an important part of life in this world and in heaven (Arcana Caelestia 3167).

On a spiritual level, their story about living in a country far-away means that when we live good, well-intentioned lives, we are ‘far away’ from the evils of the Canaanites. Although the Gibeonites lived among the Canaanites, their higher values were entirely different. So while the Gibeonites deceived Israel to save themselves, they spoke truthfully when they said: “we come from a place a very long way away” (See Swedenborg's work, Heaven and Hell 481).

Their tattered and torn appearance is meant to illustrate the hard work of doing good. It can be quite wearing to continue doing good things, especially when we feel it is all up to us. Acknowledging that all good is from the Lord renews us, and keeps us from the burden of merit.

In the same vein, their worn-out appearance is also about our relationship with the Word. Little children love and delight in the stories of the Word, but as they grow up, this love dwindles (Arcana Caelestia 3690). But as adults, we have the choice to find those guiding principles from the Word, helping us to keep leading good lives.

The fact that Joshua commanded the Gibeonites to cut wood and draw water also holds spiritual significance. The beauty of wood is that it comes from living trees, and can be turned into many, many useful things. It stands for the steady, humble wish to do good each day (See Swedenborg's work, True Christian Religion 374). This must be present in our worship at the altars of the Lord.

Drawing water provides essential, life-giving refreshment for others. Water stands for truth, and our better actions draw the water of life for the sake of others. Truly, acknowledging the goodness in other people is part of our faith in God. This story shows us that we must allow others to live and to serve everything of God, just as Joshua showed mercy toward the Gibeonites.

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 3690

Prostudujte si tuto pasáž

  
/ 10837  
  

3690. 'Jacob went out from Beersheba' means life more remote from matters of doctrine that are Divine. This is clear from the meaning of 'going' as living, dealt with in 3335, 3685, and so of 'going away' as living more remotely; and from the meaning of 'Beersheba' as doctrine that is Divine, dealt with in 2723, 2858, 2859, 3466. From this it is evident that 'Jacob went out from Beersheba' means life more remote from matters of doctrine that are Divine. Life is said to be more remote when it consists in external truths and is governed by these, as was the case in the early and later childhood of those who are being regenerated, dealt with just above in 3688.

[2] To demonstrate more fully what that life is, and what it is like, let a further brief statement be made about it. All the details of the historical tales contained in the Word are truths more remote from the actual matters of doctrine that are Divine. Nevertheless they are of service to young and older children in that by means of those tales they are led gradually into more interior matters of doctrine concerning what is true and good, and at length into Divine ones; for inmostly those tales hold what is Divine within them. When young children read them and in innocence are filled with affection for them, the angels present with them experience a delightful heavenly state, for the Lord fills those angels with affection for the internal sense and so for the things which the events of the historical tales represent and mean. It is that heavenly delight experienced by angels which flows in and causes the young children to take delight in those tales. In order that this first state may exist, that is, the state in early and later childhood of those who are to be regenerated, the historical tales in the Word have therefore been provided and written in such a way that every single detail there contains that which is Divine within them.

[3] How remote they are from matters of doctrine that are Divine may be seen from an example taken from those historical tales. When at first someone knows merely that God came down on Mount Sinai and gave Moses the tablets on which the Ten Commandments were written, and that Moses smashed them and God wrote similar commandments on another set of tablets, and this historical description in itself delights him, his life is governed by external truth and is remote from matters of doctrine that are Divine. Later on however when he starts to take delight in and have an affection for the commands or precepts there, and lives according to them, his life is now governed by actual truth; yet his life is still remote from matters of doctrine that are Divine. For the life he leads in keeping with those commands is no more than a morally correct life, the precepts of which are well known to everyone living in human society from the life of the community and from the laws existing there, such as worship of the Supreme Being, honouring parents, not committing murder, not committing adultery, and not stealing.

[4] But a person who is being regenerated is gradually led away from this more remote or morally correct life to life that comes closer to matters of doctrine that are Divine, that is, closer to spiritual life. When this happens he starts to wonder why such commands or precepts were sent down from heaven in so miraculous a fashion and why they were written on tablets with the finger of God, when they are in fact known to all peoples and are also written in the laws of those who have never heard anything from the Word. When he enters into this state of thinking he is then led by the Lord, if he belongs among those who are able to be regenerated, into a state more interior still, that is to say, into a state when he thinks that deeper things lie within which he does not as yet know. And when he reads the Word in this state he discovers in various places in the Prophets, and especially in the Gospels, that every one of those precepts contains within it things more heavenly still.

[5] In the commandment about honouring parents, for example, he discovers that when people are born anew, that is, are being regenerated, they receive another Father, and in that case become His sons, and that He is the one who is to be honoured, thus that this is the meaning which lies more interiorly in that commandment. He also gradually learns who that new Father is, namely the Lord, and at length how He is to be honoured, that is to say, worshipped, and that He is worshipped when He is loved. When a person who is being regenerated possesses this truth and lives according to it, a matter of doctrine that is Divine exists with him. His state at that time is an angelic state, and from this he now sees the things he had known previously as things which follow in order one after another and which flow from the Divine, like the steps of a stairway, at the top of which is Jehovah or the Lord, and on the steps themselves His angels going up and coming down. So he sees things that had previously delighted him as steps more remote from himself. The same may be said of the rest of the Ten Commandments, see 2609. From this one may now see what the life more remote from matters of doctrine that are Divine is, meant by the statement that Jacob went out from Beersheba.

  
/ 10837  
  

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