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Genesis 7

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1 Ja Issand ütles Noale: 'Mine sina ja kogu su pere laeva, sest ma olen näinud, et sa selle rahvapõlve seas minu ees õige oled.

2 Võta enesele kõigist puhtaist loomadest seitse paari, isane ja emane; ja loomadest, kes puhtad ei ole, kaks - isane ja emane.

3 Nõndasamuti lindudest taeva all seitse paari, isane ja emane, et nende sugu jääks elama kogu maa peale.

4 Sest juba seitsme päeva pärast ma lasen vihma sadada maa peale nelikümmend päeva ja nelikümmend ööd, ja ma kaotan maapinnalt kõik olendid, keda ma olen teinud!'

5 Ja Noa tegi kõik nõnda, nagu Issand teda käskis.

6 Ja Noa oli kuussada aastat vana, kui uputusvesi maa peale tuli.

7 Ja Noa läks laeva, ja ta pojad ja ta naine ja ta poegade naised temaga, veeuputuse eest.

8 Puhtaist loomadest ja loomadest, kes puhtad ei ole, ja lindudest ja kõigist, kes maa peal roomavad,

9 tulid kahekesi Noa juurde laeva isane ja emane, nõnda nagu Jumal Noale oli käsu andnud.

10 Ja seitsme päeva pärast tuli veeuputus maa peale.

11 Sel aastal, mil Noa kuussada aastat vanaks sai, teise kuu seitsmeteistkümnendal päeval, otse selsamal päeval puhkesid kõik suure sügavuse allikad ja taevaluugid tehti lahti.

12 Ja sadu tuli maa peale nelikümmend päeva ja nelikümmend ööd.

13 Otse selsamal päeval läksid Noa ja Noa pojad Seem ja Haam ja Jaafet ning Noa naine ja kolm ta poegade naist üheskoos laeva,

14 nemad ja kõik metsloomad oma liikide järgi, ja kõiksugu kariloomad oma liikide järgi, ja kõiksugu roomajad, kes maa peal roomavad, oma liikide järgi, ja kõiksugu lendajad oma liikide järgi, kõik linnud, kõik tiivulised.

15 Ja need tulid Noa juurde laeva kahekaupa kõigest lihast, kus eluvaim sees on.

16 Ja need, kes sisse läksid, olid isane ja emane kõigest lihast, nõnda nagu Jumal temale oli käsu andnud. Ja Issand sulges ukse tema tagant.

17 Siis tuli nelikümmend päeva veeuputust maa peale; vesi tõusis ja tõstis laeva, nõnda et see kerkis maast kõrgele.

18 Ja vesi võttis võimust ning seda sai maa peal väga palju, ja laev liikus veepinnal.

19 Ja vesi võttis maa peal väga võimust ja kõik kõrged mäed kogu taeva all kaeti.

20 Vesi tõusis neist viisteist küünart kõrgemale, nõnda et mäed olid kaetud.

21 Siis heitis hinge kõik liha, mis maa peal liikus, niihästi linnud kui kariloomad ja metsloomad ja kõik roomajad, kes maa peal roomasid, ja kõik inimesed ka.

22 Kõik, kellel eluvaimu hingus ninas oli, kõik, kes olid kuival maal, need surid.

23 Nõnda hävitati kõik olendid, kes maa peal olid; niihästi inimesed kui loomad ja roomajad, ja linnud taeva all hävitati maa pealt, järele jäid ainult Noa ja need, kes temaga laevas olid.

24 Ja vesi võimutses maa peal sada viiskümmend päeva.

   

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Mountain

  

The Lord's love is the sun of heaven, and it is natural for us to look above ourselves to the sun of this world in thinking about the Lord. It follows, then, that to be closer to the Lord we would climb into the highest places -- and indeed, people have been worshiping on mountains for ages. In fact, even steeples on modern churches are symbolic mountains. It makes sense, then, that a mountain in the Bible represents love to the Lord, the highest, purest love we human beings can experience. Mountains can also represent the desire for good that comes from the love of the Lord. Hills, meanwhile, represent a love of other people and a caring for them, and when "mountains" is used in the plural it generally represents both loves.

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 1936

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1936. 'Return to your mistress' means that the reply indicated the first rational ought not to place trust in itself but in interior truth and the affection for it. This is clear from the meaning of 'mistress' as the affection for interior truth. As for the specific meanings of 'Sarai', 'wife Sarai', and 'mistress Sarai', these cannot be described as no ideas exist to make them intelligible. They are things that lie, as stated already, beyond the understanding even of angels. Here a mere intimation is given of the manner in which the Lord thought regarding the appearances which held the attention of His first rational - namely that no trust ought to be placed in such appearances but in Divine truths themselves, no matter how hard to believe these truths might appear to be to that rational. This is so with all Divine truths; that is, if the rational is consulted regarding those truths they cannot possibly be believed, for they transcend its whole range of understanding. Take for example the truth that no man, spirit, or angel, only the Lord, lives of himself, and that the life a man, spirit, or angel has is but an outward appearance of life with him. To the rational, which judges from illusions, this is repugnant; nevertheless it ought to be believed because it is the truth.

[2] It is a Divine truth that in the Word every expression, which to man seems to be utterly simple and unwrought, possesses an incalculable number of facets, more in fact than the whole of heaven. And the arcana contained there can be displayed by the Lord to angels in unending variety continuing for ever. To the rational this is so hard to believe that it is never willing to give any credence to it. Nevertheless it is the truth.

[3] It is a Divine truth that nobody is ever rewarded in the next life for good deeds if he has set merit by them, and if he has done them for the sake of his own gain, position, and reputation. Nor is anyone ever punished for bad deeds if he has acted with a truly good end in view; for in the next life it is the ends that are regarded, and deeds in the light of those ends. This too the rational is not able to believe, but because this which it does not believe is the truth, no trust should be placed in a rational which does not base its conclusions on internal things but on external.

[4] It is a Divine truth that the one who seeks the least joy in the next life receives the greatest from the Lord, and the one who seeks the greatest has the least; also that within heavenly joy there is never any element of being pre-eminent over another, for insofar as such pre-eminence occurs hell is present; also that within heavenly glory there is not the least trace of worldly glory. These considerations too are repugnant to the rational; but they ought nevertheless to be believed because they are true.

[5] It is also a Divine truth that the more someone believes that none of his wisdom originates in himself the wiser he is, and the more he believes it does originate there, and so attributes sound judgement to himself, the more stupid he is. This too the rational denies, for it supposes that what does not originate in itself is nothing. Countless Divine truths exist such as these few given as examples, which show that no trust should be placed in the rational, since the rational is immersed in illusions and appearances. It therefore rejects truths when these are stripped of illusions and appearances, all the more rejecting them the more that self-love and its desires are present, as well as reasonings, and false assumptions regarding faith. See also the examples presented above in 1911.

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