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Genezo 2:19

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19 Kaj Dio la Eternulo kreis el la tero cxiujn bestojn de la kampo kaj cxiujn birdojn de la cxielo, kaj venigis ilin al la homo, por vidi, kiel li nomos ilin; kaj kiel la homo nomis cxiun vivan estajxon, tiel restis gxia nomo.

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Explanation of Genesis 2:19

Napsal(a) Brian David

This wall-painting, in the Sucevita Monastery in Romania, shows God creating Adam and Adam being alone, which led to the naming of the animals.

The people of the Most Ancient Church had begun wanting to lead themselves and think from themselves instead of from the Lord. The Lord knew it would be their downfall, and sought to fulfill them through the spiritual gifts they already had in their celestial state.

Here we see the Lord showing them the presence in themselves (the ground) of all the beautiful things of their state: affections springing from love to the Lord (the beasts of the field), thoughts inspired by mutual love (fowl of the air) and all other spiritual activity filled with life from the Lord (living creatures). And theses things were gifts; the fact that the people were invited to name the animals means they were shown the nature of all those wonderful things.

(Odkazy: Arcana Coelestia 142, 143, 144, 145)

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Arcana Coelestia # 2663

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2663. 'God said to Abraham' means the Lord's perception from the Divine. This is clear from the meaning of 'saying' in historical parts of the Word as perceiving, often dealt with already. And since the perception came from the Divine the words 'God said to Abraham' occur here. Both of these - God and Abraham - are used to mean the Lord. The fact that historical descriptions which belong to the sense of the letter divide things into separate ideas, whereas the internal sense makes them one, is evident from the following considerations: In the historical sense of the letter two are described as talking to each other, namely God and Abraham; but in the internal sense there is only one, namely the Lord in respect to the Divine. From this it is also evident that those who are three in the sense of the letter are one in the internal sense, as it is with Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, who are not three Gods, but one God; and that the whole Trinity exists complete within the Lord, that is to say, the Father is within Him, as He Himself says, and that the Holy Spirit proceeds from Him, as again He Himself says.

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