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Joshua 6

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1 Ja Jeriho oli suljettu ja visusti varustettu Israelin lasten edestä, niin ettei yksikään taitanut tulla ulos eli sisälle.

2 Mutta Herra sanoi Josualle: katso, minä olen antanut Jerihon, ja hänen kuninkaansa, väkevät sotajoukot, sinun kätees.

3 Käykäät ympäri kaupunkia kaikki sotamiehet, ja piirittäkäät kaupunki kerta ympäri; ja tee niin kuusi päivää.

4 Ja seitsemän pappia ottakaan seitsemän riemuvuoden basunaa arkin eteen, ja seitsemäntenä päivänä käykäät seitsemän kertaa kaupungin ympäri, ja papit soittakaan basunilla.

5 Ja kuin he soittavat riemuvuoden basunaa pitkään, ja te kuulette basunan äänen, niin nostakaan kaikki kansa suuren äänen ja huutakaan; ja niin kaupungin muuri hajoo itsestänsä, ja kansa astuu sinne sisälle itsekukin kohdastansa.

6 Niin kutsui Josua Nunin poika papit ja sanoi heille: kantakaat liitonarkki, ja seitsemän pappia kantakaan seitsemän riemuvuoden basunaa Herran arkin edellä.

7 Mutta kansalle sanoi hän: menkäät matkaan ja käykäät kaupungin ympäri, ja se, joka sota-aseilla varustettu on, käykään Herran arkin edellä.

8 Ja kuin Josua nämät kansalle sanonut oli, niin ottivat ne seitsemän pappia seitsemän riemuvuoden basunaa, ja kävivät Herran arkin edellä, ja soittivat basunilla, ja Herran liitonarkki seurasi heitä heidän jälissänsä.

9 Ja ne, jotka sota-aseilla hankitut olivat, kävivät pappein edellä ja soittivat basunilla; vaan yhteinen kansa seurasi arkkia, ja soitettiin basunilla.

10 Mutta Josua käski kansaa ja sanoi: ei teidän pidä huutaman eikä antaman teidän ääntänne kuulla eli sanaa lausuman suustanne, siihen päivään asti kuin minä sanon teille: huutakaat, niin antakaat kuulla sodan ääni.

11 Niin kävi Herran arkki kaupungin ympäri, piirittäen sen yhden kerran; ja he tulivat leiriin ja pitivät yötä leirissä,

12 Ja Josua nousi huomeneltain varhain, ja papit kantoivat Herran arkkia,

13 ne seitsemän pappia kantoivat ne seitsemän riemuvuoden basunaa Herran arkin edellä, ja käyden alati soittivat basunaa; ja jokainen, joka sota-aseilla hankittu oli, kävi heidän edellänsä, vaan yhteinen kansa kävi Herran arkin jälissä, basunain soidessa.

14 Kävivät he myös toisena päivänä kerran kaupungin ympäri ja tulivat leiriin jälleen; ja sitä he tekivät kuusi päivää.

15 Ja tapahtui seitsemäntenä päivänä, kuin huome rusko kävi ylös, nousivat he varhain ja kävivät entisellä tavalla seitsemän kertaa kaupungin ympäri; ja sinä päivänä ainoastaan kävivät he seitsemän kertaa kaupungin ympäri.

16 Ja seitsemännellä kerralla, kuin papit soittivat basunaa, sanoi Josua kansalle: huutakaat, sillä Herra antoi teille kaupungin.

17 Mutta kaupunki ja kaikki mitä siinä on, pitää oleman kirottu Herralle; ainoastaan portto Rahab pitää elämään jäämän, hän ja kaikki, jotka hänen kanssansa huoneessa ovat; sillä hän kätki sanansaattajat, jotka me lähetimme.

18 Ainostaan karttakaat kirottua, ettette itsiänne saattaisi kiroukseen, jos jotakin kirotusta otatte, te saatatte Israelin leirin kirouksen ja onnettomuuden alle.

19 Mutta kaikki hopia ja kulta, vaski- ja rautakalu olkaan Herralle pyhitetyt ja tulkaan Herran tavarahuoneeseen.

20 Ja kansa huusi ja soitettiin basunaa; sillä kaikki kansa, jotka kuulivat basunan äänen, huusivat suurella äänellä, ja muuri hajosi itsestänsä; ja kaikki kansa itsekukin kohdastansa astui kaupunkiin, ja he voittivat kaupungin.

21 Ja hukuttivat kaikki jotka kaupungissa olivat miekan terällä, sekä miehet että vaimot, nuoret ja vanhat, karjan, ja lampaat ja aasit.

22 Ja Josua sanoi niille kahdelle miehelle, jotka maata vaonneet olivat: menkäät porton huoneeseen ja johdattakaat vaimo sieltä ulos, ja kaikki mitä hänellä on, niinkuin te olette hänelle vannoneet.

23 Niin nuoret miehet, jotka maata vaonneet olivat, menivät sinne ja toivat Rahabin ulos, ja hänen isänsä, ja äitinsä, ja veljensä, ja kaikki mitä hänellä oli; niin myös kaiken hänen sukunsa toivat he ulos ja sioittivat heidät ulkoiselle puolelle Israelin leiriä.

24 Mutta kaupungin he polttivat tulella ja kaikki mitä siellä oli; ainoastaan hopian, kullan, vasken ja rautakalun panivat he tavaraksi Herran huoneeseen.

25 Mutta porton Rahabin, ja hänen isänsä huoneen ja kaikki mitä hänellä oli, antoi Josua elää; ja hän asui Israelin seassa tähän päivään asti, että hän kätki sanansaattajat, jotka Josua Jerihoa vakoomaan lähetti.

26 Silloin vannoi Josua ja sanoi: kirottu olkoon se mies Herran edessä, joka nousee ja rakentaa tämän Jerihon kaupungin; koska hän laskee siihen perustuksen, niin kadottakoon esikoisensa, ja koska hän rakentaa sen portit, niin kadottakoon nuorimman poikansa.

27 Ja Herra oli Josuan kanssa, ja hän tuli kuuluisaksi kaikissa maakunnissa.

   


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

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Exploring the Meaning of Joshua 6

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

Joshua 6: The Fall of Jericho

Here, the first conflict for Israel in Canaan presents itself: the taking of the city of Jericho, which stands directly and obstinately in the path of the Israelites, preventing them from moving forward. This conflict embodies the whole essence and scope of all the rest of the conquests in the Joshua story, which in the inner meaning is to overcome and rule the things in our lives which oppose what God wants for us.

Jericho is to be taken with a siege, and God gives Joshua a procedure to follow: You shall march round the city once a day for six days in absolute silence. Seven priests shall carry seven rams’ horns before the ark. On the seventh day you shall march round the city seven times, and then the priests shall blow their trumpets. All the people are to shout with a huge shout, and then the walls of the city will fall down flat. And all the people are to go up and take the city.

This is quite unlike any other siege, where walls have to be scaled and fire catapulted in to burn things, but... this is a spiritual siege. The siege of Jericho represents how we are to lay siege to, or deal effectively with, our own evils and tendencies. It is the description blueprint for the battle between good and evil, which is our battle too. (See Doctrine of Faith 50).

In the Bible, Jericho is sometimes called the ‘city of palm trees’, giving a lovely idea of it. Its name means “a place of fragrance”, or, “his (the Lord’s) sweet breath”. It sounds perfect, but this has been usurped by invaders and takers who are now in complete possession of this sweet city and who will hold on for all they're worth (Apocalypse Explained 502[11]). This is really an account of the influence of hell in human life, and especially our unregenerate lives, when we are open to whatever feels self-gratifying.

Jericho, we hear, is shut up tight. It is not going to be an easy matter – because the work of regeneration never is – but this also describes hell’s fear; it is shut up tight because of the Israelites (Heaven and Hell 543). In us, when we become aware of a better way to live and we want to follow the Lord - whose yoke is easy and whose burden is light - hell will soon hit back in some devious imperceptible way to hold on to what it has got. It is scared of losing us.

This takes us to the siege and its tactics. The march once a day around the city for six days, carrying the ark, is to see every part of our situation from every angle, and it is also to parade our worship and adoration of the Lord (by parading the ark). The time period, six days, is always to do with the work involved in our regeneration as we see evil and shun it, pray to God, stand back and determine. (Arcana Caelestia 10373)

The seventh day involves seven marches round the city, then the trumpets and the shouts. This is the culmination, the Sabbath. For us, it is the avowal that we know the Lord is now ruling our will and our life and there will be no turning back or weakness of giving in. Jericho is now taken! The command is that every living thing in the city is to be completely destroyed because we must be unrelenting against all the things in our lives that go against God.

The gold, the silver, and the vessels of brass and iron, were put into the treasury of the house of Jehovah. The "gold and silver" represent the knowledges of spiritual truth and good, and "the vessels of brass and iron" represent knowledges of natural truth and good. In the profane hands of the idolaters of Jericho, those knowledges could be tools to serve dire falsities and evils. In the house of Jehovah, they could be serviceable knowledges, applied to good ends - hence their being salvaged. (See Heaven and Hell 487)

The prostitute Rahab (who had hidden Israel’s spies and confessed the Lord’s power) and all her family are brought out and given safekeeping. For us, this is the acknowledgement of the truth that we are sinful (as she was) and that if it were not for the Lord we would plunge into who knows what. But now we know and confess the power and truth of God. And then, the Israelites burn the city with fire and Joshua pronounces a curse on anyone who ever rebuilds this city. We are to abhor evil for what it is and be faithful to the Lord our God.

The story of the destruction of Jericho is then the pattern for all our resistance and resolve in seeing and overcoming evil, while confessing, as we do this, that the battle is the Lord’s. (Charity 166)

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Apocalypse Explained # 502

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502. Verse 7 (Revelation 8:7). And the first angel sounded, signifies influx out of heaven, and in consequence the first change. This is evident from the signification of "sounding a trumpet," as being the influx of Divine truth out of heaven; and as the first change resulting therefrom is now described, this also is what is signified. "To sound a trumpet" signifies the influx of Divine truth out of heaven, because when Divine truth flows down out of heaven it is sometimes heard in the spiritual world as the sound of a horn or as the blast of a trumpet, and also to those who stand below there appear as it were angels having trumpets; but these are representations and appearances, such as exist below the heavens, for it is Divine truth descending or flowing down out of heaven towards the lower parts that is thus represented. This is why "to sound a trumpet" signifies the flowing down of Divine truth out of heaven.

[2] When this flowing down is strong it produces one effect with the good and another with the evil. With the good it illustrates the understanding, joins them more closely with heaven, and thence gladdens and vivifies their minds; but with the evil it disturbs the understanding, separates them from heaven, joins them more closely with hell, induces terror in their minds, and finally brings spiritual death. This makes clear that "sounding a trumpet" signifies, in its effect, the revelation and manifestation of Divine truth (See above, n. 55, 262); and in the contrary sense the deprivation of truth and desolation. Since it is here said that the angels sounded seven times, it is necessary to show from the Word what "to sound" signifies, and thence why it is said "the angel sounded."

[3] That "to sound trumpets" and "horns" signifies revelation and manifestation of Divine truth, is evident from the sound of a trumpet that was heard when Jehovah descended upon Mount Sinai and promulgated the Law, which is thus described in Moses:

And it came to pass on the third day when it was becoming morning, that there were voices and lightnings, and a heavy cloud upon the mount (Sinai), and the voice of a horn exceeding strong; and all the people that were in the camp trembled; when Jehovah descended upon it in fire. And the voice of the horn went on and became exceeding strong. And Jehovah said unto Moses, Go down, testify to the people lest they break through unto Jehovah to see, and many of them fall (Exodus 19:16-25).

The "Law" that was then promulgated signifies Divine truth; the "voice of a horn" represented its flowing down out of heaven and its manifestation; "the voice of the horn going on and becoming exceeding strong" represented the increase of this influx in approaching the lower parts, for it is said that "the people stood in the lower parts of the mount;" that "the people trembled exceedingly," and were admonished "not to approach nearer to the mountain lest they perish," signifies the effect of the flowing down of Divine truth with such as the sons of Jacob were. That interiorly they were utterly evil is evident from their worship of the calf after a month of days; moreover, if they had not stood afar off they would have perished, consequently they were in terror of death.

[4] "To sound horns" and "trumpets" represented and thus signified Divine truth coming down and flowing in out of heaven, as can be seen from the institution and use of trumpets among the sons of Israel. For it was commanded:

That trumpets should be made of silver, and that the sons of Aaron should sound them for convocations, for journeyings, on days of gladness, on feast days, in the beginnings of months, over sacrifices, for a memorial, and for battle (Numbers 10:1-10).

They were made of silver, because "silver" signifies truth from good, thus Divine truth. (That "silver" has this signification, see Arcana Coelestia 1551, 1552, 2954, 5658.) The "sons of Aaron sounded them," because Aaron himself as chief priest represented the Lord in relation to Divine good, and his sons the Lord in relation to Divine truth (See Arcana Coelestia 9806, 9807, 9966, 10017). They were sounded for convocations and journeyings, because Divine truth is what calls together, gathers together, teaches the way, and leads. They were sounded on days of gladness, at feasts, in the beginnings of months, and over sacrifices, because Divine truth coming down out of heaven produces gladness and the holiness of worship. They were sounded for wars and for battle to signify that with the evil, who are the "enemies" in the Word, Divine truth flowing down out of heaven produces the terror of death, puts to flight, and disperses; in this sense, and because of this effect, it is here said that "the seven angels sounded" in their order.

[5] Because it was commanded that they should sound trumpets for convocations, it is said by the Lord in Malachi:

He shall send His angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together His elect from the four winds, from one end of the heavens to the other end (Matthew 24:31).

Here "angels with a great sound of a trumpet" signify the Divine truth that is to be revealed when the age is consummated, that is, when the church shall come to an end.

[6] In Isaiah:

In that day a great horn shall sound, and those perishing in the land of Assyria shall come, and the outcasts from the land of Egypt, and shall bow down to Jehovah in the mountain of holiness, at Jerusalem (Isaiah 27:13).

This is said of the Lord's coming; a convocation to the church and salvation by the Lord are signified by "In that day a great horn shall sound, and those perishing in the land of Assyria shall come, and the outcasts from the land of Egypt;" "to sound a horn" signifies Divine truth calling together and saving; "those perishing in the land of Assyria" mean those who are deceived by false reasonings, and "the outcasts from the land of Egypt" those who are deceived by knowledges (scientifica), thus the Gentiles that were in falsities from ignorance of the truth; that these shall worship the Lord from love and in truth is signified by "they shall bow down to Jehovah in the mountain of holiness, at Jerusalem;" "mountain of holiness" signifying the church in respect to the good of love, consequently also the good of love of the church, and "Jerusalem" signifying the church in respect to the truth of doctrine, consequently the truth of doctrine of the church. From this it is evident that "to sound with a horn" signifies Divine truth coming down out of heaven.

[7] Because Divine truth coming down from the Lord through the heavens makes the hearts glad and infuses the holiness of worship, and therefore trumpets were sounded on days of gladness and at the feasts, therefore it is said in David:

Sing unto Jehovah with the harp; with the harp and the voice of a psalm, with trumpets and the sound of a horn sound before the King Jehovah (Psalms 98:5, 6).

In Zephaniah:

Sing, O daughter of Zion; shout (sound), O Israel; be glad and exult with all the heart, O daughter of Jerusalem (Zephaniah 3:14).

This is said of the establishment of the church by the Lord; "trumpets," "sound of the horn," and "sounding," signify joy on account of Divine truth coming down out of heaven. In Job:

When the morning stars sang, and all the sons of God shouted [sounded] (Job 38:7).

This is said of the state of the church in its beginning; and "stars" signify the knowledges of truth and good, and "the sons of God" Divine truths; the joy of these, that is, of men because of these, is signified by their "singing and sounding."

[8] In David:

Praise God with the sound of the horn (Psalms 150:3).

In the same:

Blessed is that people who know the trumpet sound; they shall walk, O Jehovah, in the light of Thy face (Psalms 89:15).

"The sound of the horn" signifies Divine truth making the heart glad, therefore it is also said, "in the light of Thy face," which signifies Divine truth. That "the voices of the horn" and "sounds of trumpets" signify Divine truth coming down out of heaven, and terrifying the evil and dispersing them, as here in Revelation "the trumpets" with which the seven angels sounded, is evident in Isaiah:

Jehovah shall go forth as a hero, 1 He shall stir up zeal like a man of war, He shall shout [sound] and shall cry out, He shall prevail over His enemies (Isaiah 42:13);

"enemies" meaning the evil. In Joel:

Blow ye with the horn in Zion, and sound in the mountain of My holiness; let all the inhabitants of the land tremble; for the day of Jehovah cometh, a day of darkness and of thick darkness (Joel 2:1, 2).

"The day of Jehovah" is the coming of the Lord, when also the Last Judgment takes place on the evil.

[9] In Zechariah:

Jehovah shall be seen over them, and His arrow shall go forth as lightning; and the Lord Jehovih shall blow the horn, and shall go with the tempests of the south (Zechariah 9:14).

This, too, refers to the Lord's coming, when the evil are to perish; "to blow the horn" signifies to disperse by means of Divine truth; "the arrow shall go forth as lightning" signifies truth dispersing and destroying. "To blow the horn" has the same signification in Jeremiah 51:27; Hosea 5:8-9.

[10] Because the evil, where they are gathered together in the spiritual world, are deprived by the influx of Divine good and Divine truth of the truths and goods they have simulated in externals, and are let into their evils and falsities which they have inwardly cherished, and are thus separated from the good and cast down into the hells, and because when this takes place there are heard by those at a distance as it were horns and trumpets sounding, as has been said above repeatedly, so with the horns of Israel it was on this account commanded that they should sound with the trumpets for battle; and we read that this was done by Phinehas and by Gideon, in their combats against the Midianites and also at the taking of Jericho. It is said of Phinehas in Moses:

That Moses sent twelve thousand men armed, a thousand from each tribe, with the vessels of holiness and the trumpets, in the hand of Phinehas the son of Eleazar the priest, against Midian; and they slew all the males and their kings (Numbers 31:1-8).

[11] Of Gideon it is said in the book of Judges:

That he divided the three hundred men into three companies, and put a horn in the hand of everyone, and empty pitchers and torches in the midst of the pitchers; and he said, When I blow the horn, I and all that are with me, blow ye also the horn about the whole camp. And when they blew the horns Jehovah set the sword of a man against his companion and against the whole camp, and the Midianites fled (Judges 7:16-22).

And of Jericho when it was taken, in Joshua:

It was commanded that seven priests should bear seven jubilee horns before the ark, and should go round the city six days, once each day, and on the seventh day they should go round the city seven times, and blow the horns; and when the people in Jericho heard the voice of the horn and the shoutings of the people, the wall of the city fell down under itself, and the people went up into the city and took it (Joshua 6:1-20).

These things represented the overcoming of the evil in the spiritual world, which is effected by Divine truth out of heaven, which is heard there when it flows down as a horn sounding, as was said above. All the miracles related in the Word were representative and thence significative of things Divine in the heavens; therefore the effect of the sound of horns against enemies on earth was like the effect against the evil in the spiritual world; for in the Word "enemies" represented and thence signified the evil, "the Midianites" those who are in the falsities of evil, and the city "Jericho" here the falsification of the knowledges of truth.

[12] From this the signification can be seen of the following in Jeremiah:

Sound against Babylon round about; she hath given her hand; her foundations are fallen, her walls are torn down (Jeremiah 50:15).

And in Zephaniah:

A day of wasteness and desolation, a day of darkness and of thick darkness, a day of cloud and of gloominess, a day of the horn and of sounding upon the fenced cities, and upon the high corners (Zephaniah 1:15, 16).

From this it can now be seen what is signified by "the seven angels sounded the trumpets," and that such effects result therefrom as are here described; and thus that "to sound trumpets" signifies influx of Divine truth out of heaven, and the changes thence arising; for this and the following chapters of Revelation treat of the state of the church in the spiritual world before the judgment, and of the dispersion and casting into hell of the evil.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. The photolithograph has "lion," the Hebrew "hero;" so also AE 734;AC 1664, 5323, 8273, etc.

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Foundation for their permission to use this translation.