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Exode 26

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1 Tu feras le tabernacle de dix tapis de fin lin retors, et d'étoffes teintes en bleu, en pourpre et en cramoisi; tu y représenteras des chérubins artistement travaillés.

2 La longueur d'un tapis sera de vingt-huit coudées, et la largeur d'un tapis sera de quatre coudées; la mesure sera la même pour tous les tapis.

3 Cinq de ces tapis seront joints ensemble; les cinq autres seront aussi joints ensemble.

4 Tu feras des lacets bleus au bord du tapis terminant le premier assemblage; et tu feras de même au bord du tapis terminant le second assemblage.

5 Tu mettras cinquante lacets au premier tapis, et tu mettras cinquante lacets au bord du tapis terminant le second assemblage; ces lacets se correspondront les uns aux autres.

6 Tu feras cinquante agrafes d'or, et tu joindras les tapis l'un à l'autre avec les agrafes. Et le tabernacle formera un tout.

7 Tu feras des tapis de poil de chèvre, pour servir de tente sur le tabernacle; tu feras onze de ces tapis.

8 La longueur d'un tapis sera de trente coudées, et la largeur d'un tapis sera de quatre coudées; la mesure sera la même pour les onze tapis.

9 Tu joindras séparément cinq de ces tapis, et les six autres séparément, et tu redoubleras le sixième tapis sur le devant de la tente.

10 Tu mettras cinquante lacets au bord du tapis terminant le premier assemblage, et cinquante lacets au bord du tapis du second assemblage.

11 Tu feras cinquante agrafes d'airain, et tu feras entrer les agrafes dans les lacets. Tu assembleras ainsi la tente, qui fera un tout.

12 Comme il y aura du surplus dans les tapis de la tente, la moitié du tapis de reste retombera sur le derrière du tabernacle;

13 la coudée d'une part, et la coudée d'autre part, qui seront de reste sur la longueur des tapis de la tente, retomberont sur les deux côtés du tabernacle, pour le couvrir.

14 Tu feras pour la tente une couverture de peaux de béliers teintes en rouge, et une couverture de peaux de dauphins par-dessus.

15 Tu feras des planches pour le tabernacle; elles seront de bois d'acacia, placées debout.

16 La longueur d'une planche sera de dix coudées, et la largeur d'une planche sera d'une coudée et demie.

17 Il y aura à chaque planche deux tenons joints l'un à l'autre; tu feras de même pour toutes les planches du tabernacle.

18 Tu feras vingt planches pour le tabernacle, du côté du midi.

19 Tu mettras quarante bases d'argent sous les vingt planches, deux bases sous chaque planche pour ses deux tenons.

20 Tu feras vingt planches pour le second côté du tabernacle, le côté du nord,

21 et leurs quarante bases d'argent, deux bases sous chaque planche.

22 Tu feras six planches pour le fond du tabernacle, du côté de l'occident.

23 Tu feras deux planches pour les angles du tabernacle, dans le fond;

24 elles seront doubles depuis le bas, et bien liées à leur sommet par un anneau; il en sera de même pour toutes les deux, placées aux deux angles.

25 Il y aura ainsi huit planches, avec leurs bases d'argent, soit seize bases, deux bases sous chaque planche.

26 Tu feras cinq barres de bois d'acacia pour les planches de l'un des côtés du tabernacle,

27 cinq barres pour les planches du second côté du tabernacle, et cinq barres pour les planches du côté du tabernacle formant le fond vers l'occident.

28 La barre du milieu traversera les planches d'une extrémité à l'autre.

29 Tu couvriras d'or les planches, et tu feras d'or leurs anneaux qui recevront les barres, et tu couvriras d'or les barres.

30 Tu dresseras le tabernacle d'après le modèle qui t'est montré sur la montagne.

31 Tu feras un voile bleu, pourpre et cramoisi, et de fin lin retors; il sera artistement travaillé, et l'on y représentera des chérubins.

32 Tu le mettras sur quatre colonnes d'acacia, couvertes d'or; ces colonnes auront des crochets d'or, et poseront sur quatre bases d'argent.

33 Tu mettras le voile au-dessous des agrafes, et c'est là, en dedans du voile, que tu feras entrer l'arche du témoignage; le voile vous servira de séparation entre le lieu saint et le lieu très saint.

34 Tu mettras le propitiatoire sur l'arche du témoignage dans le lieu très saint.

35 Tu mettras la table en dehors du voile, et le chandelier en face de la table, au côté méridional du tabernacle; et tu mettras la table au côté septentrional.

36 Tu feras pour l'entrée de la tente un rideau bleu, pourpre et cramoisi, et de fin lin retors; ce sera un ouvrage de broderie.

37 Tu feras pour le rideau cinq colonnes d'acacia, et tu les couvriras d'or; elles auront des crochets d'or, et tu fondras pour elles cinq bases d'airain.

   

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Arcana Coelestia # 9671

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9671. 'From violet and purple and twice-dyed scarlet and fine twined linen' means the forms of the good of love and faith that are joined together there. This is clear from the meaning of 'violet' as the celestial love of truth, dealt with in 9466; from the meaning of 'purple' as the celestial love of good, dealt with in 9467; from the meaning of 'twice-dyed scarlet' as spiritual good, dealt with in 4922, 9468; and from the meaning of 'fine twined linen' as truth from a celestial origin, dealt with in 9469. From all this it is evident that those four mean forms of the good of love and faith that are joined together within the uniting intermediary. The implications of this are that those in heaven who belong to the uniting intermediary represented by the veil have forms of the good of love and forms of the good of faith joined together within themselves. Through the forms of the good of love they are joined to celestial angels who are in the inmost heaven, and through the forms of the good of faith to the spiritual ones who are in the middle heaven. For the good of love to the Lord is called celestial good, and the good of faith in Him is called spiritual good.

[2] Those in heaven who belong to the uniting intermediary are called celestial-spiritual and spiritual-celestial, the former being represented in the Word by Joseph, the latter by Benjamin. For the meaning of Joseph in the representative sense as the celestial-spiritual, see 4286, 4592, 4963, 5249, 5307, 5331, 5332, 5417, 5869, 5877, 6224, 6526, and Benjamin as the spiritual-celestial, 3969, 4592. Joseph is accordingly the internal uniting intermediary and Benjamin the external uniting intermediary, 4585, 4592, 4594, 5411, 5413, 5443, 5639, 5686, 5688, 5689, 5822. What the celestial-spiritual and the spiritual-celestial are, see 1577, 1824, 2184, 4585, 4592, 4594.

[3] The difference between those in the heavens who are celestial and those who are spiritual may also be recognized from their opposites in the hells. Those in the hells who are the opposites of celestial angels are called genii, while those in them who are the contraries of spiritual angels are called spirits. The genii, the opposites of celestial angels, are at the back, whereas the spirits, the opposites of spiritual ones, are at the front; and those between genii and spirits are at the sides. Being the opposites of celestial angels the genii are steeped in evil more internal than that present with spirits. Regarding spirits and genii, see what has been said about them from experience in 5977, 8593, 8622, 8625. The hell of genii has been set completely apart from the hell of spirits, so completely that those in one cannot pass over into the other. For there are intermediate spirits there who link the two together; and these spirits are the opposites of the intermediate angels in the heavens.

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

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Arcana Coelestia # 5307

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5307. 'Shall we find a man like this, in whom is the spirit of God?' means regarding an influx of truth containing good received from within, and so containing the celestial of the spiritual. This is clear from the meaning of 'a man' as truth, dealt with in 3134, 3309, 3459, and from the meaning of 'the spirit of God' as good received from within, thus from the Divine. The spirit of God is that which goes forth from the Divine, and so from absolute good; for the Divine is absolute Good. That which goes forth from this is truth containing good, and it is this truth that is meant in the Word by 'the spirit of God'. Actually the spirit does not go forth, only truth containing good, which is holy truth. The spirit is the instrument by means of which it is brought forth. This truth containing good is the celestial of the spiritual, represented by 'Joseph'.

[2] Within the Church it is well known that in a spiritual sense 'Joseph' is the Lord, which also explains why the Lord is called the heavenly Joseph. But no one knows which aspect of the Lord is represented by 'Joseph'. For the Lord is represented by Abraham, also by Isaac, and by Jacob too. He is represented as well by Moses and Elijah, by Aaron, and also by David, in addition to many others in the Word. But each one nevertheless represents Him in a different way from any other. The aspect that Abraham represents is the Divine itself, 'Isaac' the Divine Rational, 'Jacob' the Divine Natural, 'Moses' the Law or historical part of the Word, 'Elijah' the prophetical part, 'Aaron' His priesthood, and 'David' His kingship. But what aspect is represented by 'Joseph' may be seen in 3969, 4286, 4585, 4592, 4594, 4669, 4723, 4727, 4963, 5249 - that aspect which 'Joseph' represents being the celestial of the spiritual deriving from the rational. No other description than this can be used, for the celestial is good received from the Divine, the spiritual is truth received from that good, making it the truth of good received from His Divine Human. This was what the Lord was when He lived in the world. But once He had glorified Himself, He rose up above it; even His Human was made absolute Divine Good, or Jehovah.

[3] Nothing more specific can be stated regarding this arcanum than the following: Joseph came to Egypt, where first of all he served in the house of Potiphar, the chief of the attendants, then was held in custody, and after that was made the governor over Egypt, so that the way might be represented in which the Lord by progressive stages made the Human within Himself Divine, and so that all this might be written about in a Word that would contain matters of a Divine nature in its internal sense. This sense was intended to serve angels primarily, whose wisdom - which is beyond understanding or description when compared with human wisdom - is concerned with such Divine matters. It was intended at the same time to serve men who prefer historical to any other descriptions, in which, as men turn such descriptions over in their minds, angels can perceive - through an influx from the Lord - the matters of a Divine nature.

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