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Hesekiel 27

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1 Ja Herran sana tapahtui minulle ja sanoi:

2 Sinä ihmisen poika, tee valitusitku Tyrosta,

3 Ja sano Tyrolle, joka asuu meren tykönä ja tekee kauppaa monen luodon kansan kanssa: näin sanoo Herra, Herra: o Tyro, sinä olet sanonut: minä olen kaikkein kaunein.

4 Sinun rajas ovat keskellä merta; ja sinun rakentajas ovat valmistaneet sinun kaikkein kauneimmaksi.

5 Kaikki sinun lautas on hongasta Seniristä, ja olet antanut tuoda sedripuita Libanonista tehdäkses sinulles haahden pielen.

6 Sinun airos olivat tehdyt Basanin tammesta, sinun piittas elephantin luista, Kittimin luodoista:

7 Sinun purjees oli Egyptin kalliista liinasta neulottu, sinulle merkiksi; sinun peittees oli sinivilloista ja Elisan luotoin purpurasta.

8 Zidonista ja Arvadista olivat sinun haaksimiehes; ja sinulla olivat toimelliset miehet Tyrosta, haahden haltiat.

9 Vanhimmat ja taitavat Gebalista paransivat sinun laivas. Kaikki laivat meressä ja haaksimiehet löyttiin sinun tykönäs; he tekivät kauppaa sinussa.

10 Persiasta, Lydiasta ja Lybiasta olivat urhoolliset miehet sinun sotajoukossas; jotka kilpensä ja otansa sinussa ripustivat, ne sinun kaunistivat.

11 Arvadin lapset olivat sinun sotajoukossas, kaikki ympäri sinun muurias, ja vartiat sinun tornissas. He ripustivat kilpensä sinun muuris päälle kaikki ympäri; ne tekivät niin sinun ihanaksi.

12 Tarsis teki kauppaa sinun kanssas kaikkinaisen kalun paljoudella: hopialla, raudalla, tinalla ja lyijyllä, joita he toivat sinun markkinoilles.

13 Javan, Tubal ja Mesek teki kauppaa sinun kanssas, ja toivat ihmisiä ja vaskiastioita sinun kaupalles.

14 Togarmasta toivat he hevosia ja vaunuja ja muuleja sinun markkinoilles.

15 Dedanin lapset olivat sinun kauppamiehes, ja sinä teit kauppaa joka paikassa luotokunnissa; he antoivat sinulle elephantin luita ja Hebenpuita hinnaksi.

16 Syrialaiset noutivat sinun töitäs, joitas teit, toivat rubiinia, purppuraa, tapeteja, silkkiä ja samettia, ja kristallia sinun markkinoilles.

17 Juuda ja Israelin maa teki myös kauppaa sinun kanssas, ja toi sinun markkinoilles nisuja Minnitistä, ja balsamia ja hunajaa, ja öljyä ja mastiksia.

18 Nouti myös Damasku sinun töitäs sinusta paljoudessa, ja paljon kaikkinaisia kaluja, väkevän viinan ja kalliin villan edestä.

19 Dan ja Javanmehusal toivat myös sinun markkinoilles rautakalua, kassia- ja kalmus-yrttejä sinun kauppaa tehdäkses.

20 Dedan osti sinulta kalliita vaatteita, joiden päällä ajoissa istutaan.

21 Atabia ja kaikki Kebarin ruhtinaat kaupitsivat sinulle lampaita, oinaita ja kauriita; niillä he tekivät sinun kanssas kauppaa.

22 Saban ja Ragman kauppamiehet tekivät sinun kanssas kauppaa, ja toivat sinun markkinoilles kaikkinaisia kalliita yrttejä, kalliita kiviä ja kultaa.

23 Haran ja Kanne, ja Eden ynnä Seban kauppamiesten kanssa, Assur ja Kilmad olivat myös sinun kauppamiehes.

24 Kaikki nämät kaupitsivat sinulle kalliita vaatteita, silkkiä ja neulotuita hameita, jotka he kalliissa seder-arkuissa hyvin tallella pantuna toivat sinun markkinoilles.

25 Mutta Tarsiksen laivat olivat ylimmäiset sinun kaupassas; niin sinä olet peräti rikkaaksi ja jaloksi tullut keskellä merta.

26 Ja sinun haaksimiehes toivat sinun suurilla vesillä; mutta itätuulen pitää sinun musertaman rikki keskellä merta:

27 Niin että sinun tavaras, kauppakalus, ostajas, haaksimiehes, laivain haltias, laivain rakentajas ja sinun kaupitsias, ja kaikki sinun sotamiehes, ja kaikki kanssa sinussa pitää hukkuman keskellä merta, sinun lankeemises päivänä;

28 Niin että satamatkin pitää vapiseman sinun haahteis haltiain huudosta.

29 Ja kaikki, jotka soutavat haaksimiesten ja haahtein haltiain kanssa, pitää laivoista menemän maalle seisomaan,

30 Ja pitää kovin huutaman sinun tähtes, ja vaikiasti valittaman, ja heittämän tomua päänsä päälle, ja tuhkaan itsensä tahraaman.

31 Heidän pitää ajeleman hiukset päästänsä, ja pukeman säkit yllensä, ja sydämestänsä itkemän sinua, ja haikiasti murehtiman.

32 Heidän pitää valituksessansa sinua itkemän ja surkutteleman: voi! kuka on ikänä niin pois tullut merellä kuin Tyro!

33 Kuin sinä kauppaa teit merellä, ravitsit sinä monta kansaa; ja sinun monella tavarallas ja kaupallas teit sinä maan kuninkaat äveriäiksi.

34 Mutta nyt sinä olet mereltä sysätty, juuri syvään veteen, niin että sinun kauppas ja kaikki sinun kansas sinussa on hukkunut.

35 Kaikki, jotka luodoissa asuvat, hämmästyvät sinua, ja heidän kuninkaansa tyhmistyvät ja katsovat murheellisesti.

36 Kansain kauppamiehet viheltävät sinua, että sinä niin äkisti hävinnyt olet, ja et silleen enään taida tulla ylös ijankaikkisesti.

   


SWORD version by Tero Favorin (tero at favorin dot com)

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 10199

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10199. 'Incense of spices' means a hearing and receiving with pleasure. This is clear from the meaning of 'incense' as the Lord's hearing and receiving with pleasure everything of worship that springs from love and charity, dealt with in 10177; and from the meaning of 'spices' as things that bring pleasure. Things bringing pleasure are meant by 'spices' on account of their odour; for 'odour' means perception, and therefore a sweet odour means a perception of that which brings pleasure, while an offensive odour means that which brings no pleasure. All things perceived by a person with the sensory organs of smell, taste, sight, hearing, and touch mean spiritual realities connected with the good of love and the truths of faith. Consequently smell means the perception of interior truth springing from the good of love; taste means perception and the desire to know and become wise; sight means an understanding of the truths of faith; hearing means perception resulting from the good of faith and from obedience; and touch in general means imparting, conveying, and being received.

[2] The reason why they have these meanings is that every reception of impressions by the outward senses begins in reception by the inward senses, which belong to the understanding and will, and so begins within the person, in the truths of faith and the good of love since these constitute the understanding and will within the human mind. Yet inward sensations, which belong properly to a person's understanding and will, do not feel the same as the outward ones, though they are turned into outward sensations when they flow in. For all the perceptions that a person receives by means of his outward sensory organs flow from inward powers of mind. The path all influx takes is from inward things to outward ones, not from outward to inward, since there is no such thing as physical influx - that is, influx from the natural world into the spiritual world - only influx from the spiritual world into the natural. A person's inner powers, which belong properly to understanding and will, exist in the spiritual world, and his outward ones, which belong properly to the bodily senses, exist in the natural world. From all this too it becomes clear what correspondence is and what the nature of it is.

[3] In general, smell corresponds to perception of some reality, as determined by the essential nature of the matter that is being perceived, see 1514, 1517-1519, 3577, 4624-4634, 10054.

Taste corresponds to perception and the desire to know and become wise, 3502, 4791-4805.

Sight corresponds to an understanding of the truths of faith, 3863, 4403-4421, 4567, 5114, 5400, 6805.

Hearing corresponds to perception of the good of faith and to obedience, 3869, 4652-4660, 7216, 8361, 9311, 9926.

Touch means imparting, conveying, and being received, 10130.

[4] 1 The fact that such things as are perceived with pleasure are meant by 'spices' - the kinds that spring from love and charity, in particular interior truths since they spring from these - is clear from the following places in the Word: In Isaiah,

Instead of spice 2 there will be rottenness, and instead of a girdle, a falling apart, and instead of well-set hair 3 , baldness. Isaiah 3:24.

This refers to the daughters of Zion, by whom the celestial Church is meant, a Church in possession of interior truths springing from the good of love to the Lord. 'Spice' here means interior truth, 'rottenness' deprivation of it; 'a girdle' means a joining together, and 'a falling apart' the dissolution of connection and order; 'well-set hair' means factual knowledge of truth, which is exterior truth or truth as the external man knows it, and 'baldness' deprivation of that truth.

'A girdle' means a joining together and a bond to ensure that everything is held in connection and has the same end in view, see 9828.

'Well-set hair' means factual knowledge of truth, 2831 4 .

'Baldness' means deprivation of that truth, 9960.

[5] In Ezekiel,

A great eagle with [great] wings came on Lebanon, and from it took a twig of the cedar away into the land of Canaan 5 ; in the city of spicers he put the top of it 6 . Ezekiel 17:3-4.

This refers in the internal sense to the beginnings and growth of the spiritual Church, and then its corruption and end. 'A great eagle with [great] wings' means the interior truth which that Church possessed, 3901, 8764, 'wings' its exterior truths, 8764, 9514. 'Lebanon' is that Church, 'the cedar' there being the spiritual Church's truth. 'The city of spicers' is a place where teachings composed of interior truth are presented, 'cities' in the Word meaning religious teachings, see 402, 2449, 3216, 4492, 4493. It is called 'the city of spicers' by virtue of its interior truths.

[6] In the same prophet,

The traders of Sheba and Raamah with the best of [every] spice, and with every precious stone and gold, carried out 7 their dealings. Ezekiel 27:22.

This refers to Tyre, which means the Church in respect of cognitions or knowledge of goodness and truth. 'The traders' are those who possess these and pass them on; 'Sheba and Raamah' are those with whom cognitions of celestial and spiritual things exist; 'the best of spice' is that which by virtue of interior truths brings pleasure; 'precious stone' is those very truths; and 'gold' is the good that goes with them.

Tyre means the Church in respect of interior cognitions of goodness and truth, and in the abstract sense those cognitions themselves, see 1201.

'The traders' are those who possess these and pass them on, 2967, 4453.

'Sheba and Raamah' are those with whom cognitions of celestial and spiritual things exist, 1171, 3240.

'Precious stone' is interior truth, 9863, 9865, 9873, 9874.

'Gold' is the good that goes with it, see the places referred to in 9874, 9881.

[7] From all this one may see what was represented by the queen of Sheba's coming to Solomon in Jerusalem with camels carrying spices, gold, and precious stones, 1 Kings 10:1-2, and by the offering of gold, frankincense, and myrrh which the wise men from the east made to the new-born Jesus, Matthew 2:11. Because 'spices' meant interior truths, thus those which bring pleasure, the incense and also the anointing oil, dealt with further on in this chapter, were scented with spices.

[8] By interior truths those truths which have become part of a person's life and affection, thus those inwardly present in him, should be understood, but not truths which are present solely in the memory and have not become part of that person's life. These truths in relation to the others are called external ones, since they have not been inscribed on the person's life, only on his memory. They reside in the external man and not in the internal. Truths of faith which have been inscribed on a person's life are present in the will, and what is in the will is present in the internal man. For by means of the truths of faith the internal man is opened up and contact with heaven is brought about. From this it is evident that the interior truths present with a person are ones that spring from the good of love and charity. Whether you say will or love it amounts to the same thing, for what composes a person's will composes his love. Therefore the truths inscribed on the person's life, called interior truths, are ones that have been inscribed on his love, and so on the will, from which they afterwards go forth when they pass into speech and action.

[9] For heaven, in which the internal man that has been opened up is present, does not enter truths directly but indirectly, through the good of love. But heaven cannot come in when a person's internal man is closed, because there is no good of love there to receive it. In the case therefore of those with whom the internal man has not been opened by means of truths springing from the good of love and charity hell enters with falsities arising from evil, no matter how many truths of faith, even interior ones, are residing in the external man alone, that is, in the memory.

From all this one may now see what should be understood by interior truths that bring pleasure, which are meant by 'spices', namely those which spring from the good of love and charity.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. To judge both from the first Latin edition and his rough draft Swedenborg may have intended to add words that would have concluded what goes before and introduced what comes next.

2. i.e. fragrance

3. literally, instead of the work of plaited [hair]

4. The word rendered well-set, more literally plaited, may otherwise mean entangled.

5. Here the Hebrew may be taken to mean either the land of Canaan or the land of the merchant. See 3901:2, 8764:6, where Swedenborg adopts the latter meaning.

6. literally, its head i.e. the twig from the top of the cedar

7. literally, gave

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