Bible

 

Jeremiáše 38

Studie

   

1 Slyšel pak Sefatiáš syn Matanův, a Gedaliáš syn Paschurův, a Juchal syn Selemiášův, a Paschur syn Malkiášův slova, kteráž Jeremiáš mluvil ke všemu lidu, řka:

2 Takto praví Hospodin: Kdo by zůstal v městě tomto, zahyne mečem, hladem aneb morem, ale kdož by vyšel k Kaldejským, že bude živ, a že bude míti život svůj místo kořisti, a živ zůstane.

3 Takto praví Hospodin: Jistotně vydáno bude město toto v ruku vojska krále Babylonského, a vezme je.

4 Protož řekla ta knížata králi: Nechť jest usmrcen muž ten, poněvadž zemdlívá ruce mužů bojovných, pozůstalých v městě tomto, i ruce všeho lidu, mluvě jim slova taková; nebo muž ten nikoli neobmýšlí pokoje lidu tomuto, ale zlé.

5 Tedy řekl král Sedechiáš: Aj, v ruce vaší jest, neboť král zhola nic nemůže proti vám.

6 I vzali Jeremiáše, kterýž byl v síni stráže, a uvrhli jej do jámy Malkiášovy, syna králova, a spustili Jeremiáše po provazích. V té pak jámě nebylo nic vody, ale bláto, tak že Jeremiáš tonul v tom blátě.

7 Ale jakž uslyšel Ebedmelech Mouřenín, dvořan, kterýž byl v domě královském, že dali Jeremiáše do té jámy, (král pak seděl v bráně Beniaminské),

8 Hned vyšel Ebedmelech z domu královského, a mluvil s králem, řka:

9 Pane můj, králi, zle učinili muži tito všecko, což učinili Jeremiášovi proroku, že jej uvrhli do té jámy; neboť by byl umřel i na prvním místě hladem, poněvadž již není žádného chleba v městě.

10 Protož poručil král Ebedmelechovi Mouřenínu, řka: Vezmi s sebou odsud třidceti mužů, a vytáhni Jeremiáše proroka z té jámy, prvé než by umřel.

11 Tedy vzal Ebedmelech ty muže s sebou, a všel do domu královského pod pokladnici, a nabral starých hadrů strhaných, hadrů, pravím, zkažených, kteréž spustil k Jeremiášovi do té jámy po provazích.

12 A řekl Ebedmelech Mouřenín Jeremiášovi: Nu, podlož ty staré, strhané hadry a zkažené pod paže rukou svých s provazy. I učinil tak Jeremiáš.

13 Takž vytáhli Jeremiáše po provazích, a dobyli jej z té jámy. I seděl Jeremiáš v síni stráže.

14 Potom poslav král Sedechiáš, vzal Jeremiáše proroka k sobě do třetího průchodu, kterýž byl při domu Hospodinovu, a řekl král Jeremiášovi: Zeptám se tebe na něco, netaj přede mnou ničehož.

15 I řekl Jeremiáš Sedechiášovi: Oznámím-liť, zdaliž mne konečně neusmrtíš? A poradím-liť, neuposlechneš mne.

16 Tedy přisáhl král Sedechiáš Jeremiášovi tajně, řka: Živť jest Hospodin, kterýž učinil nám život tento, že tě neusmrtím, aniž tě vydám v ruku mužů těch, kteříž hledají bezživotí tvého.

17 I řekl Jeremiáš Sedechiášovi: Takto praví Hospodin Bůh zástupů, Bůh Izraelský: Jestliže dobrovolně vyjdeš k knížatům krále Babylonského, i duše tvá živa bude, i město toto nebude vypáleno ohněm, a tak živ zůstaneš ty i dům tvůj.

18 Jestliže pak nevyjdeš k knížatům krále Babylonského, jistě že vydáno bude město toto v ruku Kaldejských, a vypálí je ohněm, ano i ty neznikneš ruky jejich.

19 Tedy řekl král Sedechiáš Jeremiášovi: Velmi se bojím Židů, kteříž ustoupili k Kaldejským, aby mne snad nevydali v ruku jejich, i učinili by sobě ze mne posměch.

20 Ale Jeremiáš řekl: Nevydadí. Uposlechni, prosím, hlasu Hospodinova, o kterémž já mluvím tobě, a bude dobře tobě, i duše tvá živa bude.

21 Jestliže pak nebudeš chtíti vyjíti, toto jest slovo to, kteréž mi ukázal Hospodin,

22 Že aj, všecky ženy, kteréž pozůstaly v domě krále Judského, přivedeny budou knížatům krále Babylonského, a samyť říkati budou: Nabádaliť jsou tě, a obdrželi na tobě ti, kteříž tě troštovali pokojem; uvázlyť v bahně nohy tvé, a nazpět obráceny.

23 Všecky také manželky tvé i syny tvé dovedou k Kaldejským, i ty sám neznikneš ruky jejich, ale rukou krále Babylonského jat budeš, a město toto vypálíš ohněm,

24 Tedy řekl Sedechiáš Jeremiášovi: Žádný ať neví o věcech těchto, abys neumřel.

25 Pakli uslyšíce knížata, že jsem mluvil s tebou, přišli by k tobě, a řekliť by: Oznam medle nám, cos mluvil s králem, netaj před námi, a neusmrtíme tě, a co mluvil s tebou král?

26 Tedy rci jim: Předkládal jsem poníženou a pokornou prosbu svou před krále, aby mne nedal zase voditi do domu Jonatanova, abych tam neumřel.

27 I sešla se všecka knížata k Jeremiášovi, aby se ho tázali. Kterýžto oznámil jim podlé toho všeho, jakž přikázal král. Takž mlčkem odešli od něho, když nebylo slyšeti o té věci.

28 Jeremiáš pak seděl v síni stráže až do toho dne, v němž dobyt jest Jeruzalém, kdežto byl, když dobýván byl Jeruzalém.

   

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 7102

Prostudujte si tuto pasáž

  
/ 10837  
  

7102. 'Lest perhaps He fall on us with pestilence and sword' means to avoid the damnation of evil and falsity. This is clear from the meaning of 'lest perhaps He fall on' as lest they run into - into damnation; from the meaning of 'pestilence' as the damnation of evil, dealt with below; and from the meaning of 'sword' as the vastation of truth, and also the punishment of falsity, dealt with in 2799, and so also as damnation, since the punishment of falsity, when truth has been devasted, is damnation.

[2] The Word mentions four kinds of vastation and punishment - sword, famine, evil wild animal, and pestilence. 'Sword' means the vastation of truth and the punishment of falsity; 'famine' the vastation of good and the punishment of evil; 'evil wild animal' the punishment of evil that arises out of falsity; and 'pestilence' the punishment of evil that does not arise out of falsity but out of evil. And since punishment is meant, damnation is meant also, since damnation is the punishment suffered by those who persist in evil. Those four kinds of punishment are referred to as follows in Ezekiel,

. . . when I shall send My four severe 1 judgements - sword, and famine, and evil wild animal, and pestilence - onto Jerusalem, to cut off man and beast from it. Ezekiel 14:21.

In the same prophet,

I will send famine and evil wild animals upon you, and I will make you bereft. And pestilence and blood will pass through you; in particular I will bring the sword upon you. Ezekiel 5:17.

[3] The meaning of 'pestilence' as the punishment of evil and its damnation is evident from the following places: In Ezekiel,

Those in waste places will die by the sword, and the one who is in the open field 2 I will give to the wild animals to devour him, and those who are in fortifications and caverns will die from pestilence. Ezekiel 33:27.

'In waste places dying by the sword' stands for suffering the vastation of truth and consequently the damnation of falsity. 'The one who is in the open field being given to the wild animals to devour him' stands for the damnation of those ruled by evil arising out of falsity. 'Those who are in fortifications and caverns, dying from pestilence' stands for the damnation of evil which uses falsity to fortify itself.

[4] In the same prophet,

The sword is without, and pestilence and famine within; he that is in the field will die by the sword, but him that is in the city famine and pestilence will devour. Ezekiel 7:15.

'The sword' stands for the vastation of truth and the damnation of falsity; 'famine' and 'pestilence' stand for the vastation of good and the damnation of evil. The sword is said to be 'without' and famine and pestilence 'within' because the vastation of truth takes place externally but the vastation of good internally. When however a person leads a life that rests on falsity, damnation is meant by the words 'he that is in the field will die by the sword'; and when a person leads a life ruled by evil which he defends by the use of falsity, damnation is meant by the words 'him that is in the city famine and pestilence will devour'.

[5] In Leviticus,

I will bring upon you a sword executing the vengeance of the covenant; wherever you are gathered into your cities, I will send pestilence into the midst of you, and you will be delivered 3 into the hand of the enemy. When I have cut off your supply of bread 4 ... Leviticus 26:25-26.

Here in a similar way 'a sword' stands for the vastation of truth and the damnation of falsity, 'pestilence' for the damnation of evil. The vastation of good, meant by 'famine', is described when [the Lord] speaks of cutting off their supply of bread. 'Cities' into which they would be gathered has the same meaning as 'the city' just above - falsities that are used to defend evils. For the meaning of 'cities' as truths, and so in the contrary sense as falsities, see 402, 2268, 2712, 2943, 3216, 4492, 4493.

[6] In Ezekiel,

Therefore because you have defiled My sanctuary with all your abominations, a third part of you will die from pestilence, and be annihilated [by famine] in your midst; then a third will fall by the sword around you; finally I will scatter a third to every wind, so that I will draw out a sword after them. Ezekiel 5:11-12.

'Famine' stands for the damnation of evil, 'sword' for the damnation of falsity. 'Scattering to every wind' and 'drawing out a sword after them' stand for getting rid of truths and seizing on falsities.

[7] In Jeremiah,

If they offer burnt offering or minchah, I am not accepting those things, but I will consume those people by sword, famine, and pestilence. Jeremiah 14:12.

In the same prophet,

I will smite the inhabitants of this city, both man and beast; they will die from a great pestilence. Afterwards I will deliver Zedekiah king of Judah, and his servants, and the people, and those in this city left from the pestilence, and from the sword, and from the famine, into the hand of Nebuchadnezzar. He who remains in this city will die by the sword, and by famine, and by pestilence; but he who goes out and defects to the Chaldeans besieging you will live, and his soul will become spoil to him. Jeremiah 21:6-7, 9.

In the same prophet,

I will send sword, famine, and pestilence upon them, till they are consumed from upon the earth. Jeremiah 24:10.

Here also 'sword' means the vastation of truth, 'famine' the vastation of good, and 'pestilence' damnation; and 'sword', 'famine', and 'pestilence' have the same meanings in the following places as well: Jeremiah 27:8; 29:17-18; 32:24, 36; 34:17; 38:2; 42:17, 22; 44:13; Ezekiel 12:16.

[8] Since those three scourges follow in their own particular order [of severity], David was presented by the prophet Gad with the three. He had to choose between the coming of seven years of famine, fleeing three months before his enemies, or three days of pestilence in the land, 2 Samuel 24:13. ('Fleeing before his enemies' implies 'the sword'.) In Amos,

I have sent the pestilence upon you in the way of Egypt, I have killed your young men with the sword, along with your captured horses. 5 Amos 4:10.

'The pestilence in the way of Egypt' stands for the vastation of good by means of falsities, which are 'the way of Egypt'. 'Killing young men with the sword, along with captured horses' stands for the vastation of truth, truths being meant by 'young men' and intellectual concepts by 'horses', 5 2761, 2762, 3217, 5321, 6534.

[9] In Ezekiel,

Pestilence and blood will pass through you. Ezekiel 5:17.

In the same prophet,

I will send upon her pestilence and blood in her streets. Ezekiel 28:23.

Here 'pestilence' stands for good that has been adulterated, and 'blood' for truth that has been falsified. For the meaning of 'blood' as falsified truth, see 4735, 6978.

[10] In David,

You will not be afraid of the terror of the night, of the arrow that flies by day, of the pestilence that creeps in thick darkness, of death that lays waste at noonday. Psalms 91:5-6.

'The terror of the night' stands for falsity which lies concealed; 'the arrow that flies by day' for falsity which is out in the open; 'the pestilence that creeps in thick darkness' for evil which lies concealed; 'death which lays waste at noonday' for evil which is out in the open. The fact that 'pestilence' means evil and the damnation of evil is evident from the use of the word 'death', which is distinguished here from pestilence solely by its being said of death that it 'lays waste at noonday' but of pestilence that it 'creeps in thick darkness'. In the same author,

He opened a way for His anger; He did not spare their soul from death, and He subjected their life to pestilence. Psalms 78:50.

This refers to the Egyptians, 'pestilence' standing for every kind of evil and its damnation.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. literally, evil

2. literally, upon the face of the field

3. The Latin means I will deliver you but the Hebrew means you will be delivered.

4. literally, While I am about to break the staff of bread for you

5. literally, the captivity of your horses

  
/ 10837  
  

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

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 2760

Prostudujte si tuto pasáž

  
/ 10837  
  

2760. PREFACE 1

How deluded those people are who confine themselves to the sense of the letter and do not look for the internal sense in other places where this is explained in the Word becomes quite clear from the great number of heresies there are, each one of which confirms its own doctrinal position from the literal sense of the Word. It is particularly clear from that great heresy which insane and hellish self-love and love of the world have made out of the Lord's words to Peter,

I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build My Church, and the gates of hell will not prevail against it. And I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; and whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven. Matthew 16:15-19.

[2] People who keep rigidly to the sense of the letter imagine that these words refer to the man Peter and that such great power was given to him. Although they know that Peter was just an ordinary simple human being who by no means exercised such power, and that the exercise of that power is contrary to the Divine, they nevertheless adopt and stoutly defend a literal interpretation of what the Lord said, because of the insane and hellish self-love and love of the world which fill them with the desire to arrogate such power to themselves on earth and in heaven and to make gods of themselves. But the internal sense of those words is that faith itself in the Lord, which exists solely with those in whom love to the Lord and charity towards the neighbour are present, possesses that power, yet not faith but the Lord, the Source of faith. In the words addressed to Peter 'rock' is used to mean that faith, as it is everywhere else in the Word. It is on this faith that the Church is built, and against this faith that the gates of hell do not prevail. It is that faith also which holds the keys of the kingdom of heaven, for that faith closes heaven to prevent evils and falsities entering in, and it opens heaven to goods and truths. This is the internal sense of these words.

[3] Like the twelve tribes of Israel the twelve apostles represented nothing else than all aspects of such faith, 577, 2089, 2129, 2130 (end). Peter represented faith itself, James charity, and John the good works that flow from charity - see the Preface to Genesis 18 - as in a similar way did Reuben, Simeon, and Levi, Jacob's three eldest sons, in the Jewish and

Israelitish representative Church, a point that is clear from a thousand places in the Word. And it was because Peter represented faith that those words were addressed to him. From all these considerations one may recognize what darkness it is into which people plunge themselves, and others with them, who explain everything literally, as they do who, taking literally the words addressed to Peter, use them to take the power of saving the human race away from the Lord and arrogate it to themselves.

2 2760. In John - in the Book of Revelation - the Word as to its internal sense is described as follows,

I saw heaven standing open, and, behold, a White Horse; and He who sat on it was called faithful and true, and in righteousness He judges and goes into battle. His eyes a flame of fire, and on His head many jewels, He has a name written which nobody knows but He Himself, and He is clothed in a garment dyed with blood, and His name is called the Word of God. And the armies that are in heaven were following Him on white horses and were clothed in linen, white and clean. And on His garment and on His thigh He has a name written, King of kings and Lord of lords. Revelation 19:11-14, 16.

What each individual part of this description embodies nobody can know except from the internal sense. Plainly, each one is representative and carries a spiritual meaning, such as 'heaven standing open'; 'the horse which was white'; 'He who sat on it was called faithful and true, and in righteousness He judges and goes into battle'; 'His eyes a flame of fire'; 'on His head many jewels'; 'He has a name which nobody knows but He Himself'; 'He is clothed in a garment dyed with blood'; 'the armies in heaven following Him on white horses'; 'clothed in linen, white and clean'; 'on His garment and on His thigh He has a name written'. It is stated openly that the One sitting on the White Horse is the Word, and that He is the Lord who is the Word, for it is said, 'His name is called the Word of God', and after that, 'on His garment and on His thigh He has a name written, King of kings and Lord of lords'.

[2] From the interpretation of each individual expression it is evident that the Word as to the internal sense is described here. 'Heaven standing open' represents and means that the internal sense of the Word is not seen except in heaven and by those to whom heaven stands open, that is, those in whom love to the Lord and faith in Him-derived from that love are present. 'The horse which was white' represents and means the understanding of the Word as regards its interior contents. The next paragraph shows that 'a white horse' has this representation and meaning. 'He who sat on it' is, it is clear, the Word and the Lord who is the Word. He is called 'faithful' and 'one who judges out of righteousness' by virtue of good, and 'true' and 'one who goes into battle out of righteousness' by virtue of truth; for the Lord Himself is righteousness. 'His eyes a flame of fire' means Divine Truth glowing from the Divine Good that issues from His Divine Love. 'On His head many jewels' means all things of faith. 'He has a name written which nobody knows but He Himself' means that nobody sees the essential nature of the Word in the internal sense except the Lord Himself and he to whom He reveals it. 'Clothed in a garment dyed with blood' means the Word in the letter. 'The armies in heaven that were following Him on white horses' means people who have an understanding of the Word as regards its interior contents. 'Clothed in linen, white and clean' means that in these same persons love and faith derived from love are present. 'On His garment and on His thigh a name written' means truth and good. From these verses in Revelation and from those which come before and after them it is evident that around the last period [of the Church] the internal sense of the Word will be opened. But what is going to happen in that last period is also described in verses 17-21 of that chapter.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. i.e. to Volume Three of the Latin

2. The preface to the third volume of the Latin edition has been included here in section 2760. The text of section 2760, as Swedenborg numbered it, starts where this footnote has been inserted.

  
/ 10837  
  

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