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Genèse 8

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1 Or Dieu se souvint de Noé, et de toutes les bêtes, et de tout le bétail qui était avec lui dans l'arche; et Dieu fit passer un vent sur la terre, et les eaux s'arrêtèrent.

2 Car les sources de l'abîme, et les bondes des cieux avaient été refermées, et la pluie des cieux avait été retenue.

3 Et au bout de cent cinquante jours les eaux se retirèrent sans interruption de dessus la terre, et diminuèrent.

4 Et le dix-septième jour du septième mois l'arche s'arrêta sur les montagnes d'Ararat.

5 Et les eaux allèrent en diminuant de plus en plus jusqu'au dixième mois; et au premier jour du dixième mois les sommets des montagnes se montrèrent.

6 Et il arriva qu'au bout de quarante jours Noé ouvrit la fenêtre de l'arche qu'il avait faite.

7 Et il lâcha le corbeau, qui sortit allant et revenant, jusqu'à ce que les eaux se fussent desséchées sur la terre.

8 Il lâcha aussi d'avec soi un pigeon, pour voir si les eaux étaient allégées sur la terre.

9 Mais le pigeon ne trouvant pas sur quoi poser la plante de son pied, retourna à lui dans l'arche; car les eaux étaient sur toute la terre; [et Noé] avançant sa main le reprit, et le retira à soi dans l'arche.

10 Et quand il eut attendu encore sept autres jours, il lâcha encore le pigeon hors de l'arche.

11 Et sur le soir le pigeon revint à lui; et voici il avait dans son bec une feuille d'olivier qu'il avait arrachée; et Noé connut que les eaux étaient diminuées de dessus la terre.

12 Et il attendit encore sept autres jours, puis il lâcha le pigeon, qui ne retourna plus à lui.

13 Et il arriva qu'en l'an six cent et un [de l'âge de Noé], au premier jour du premier mois les eaux se furent desséchées de dessus la terre; et Noé ôtant la couverture de l'arche, regarda, et voici, la surface de la terre se séchait.

14 Et au vingt-septième jour du second mois la terre fut sèche.

15 Puis Dieu parla à Noé, en disant :

16 Sors de l'arche, toi et ta femme, tes fils, et les femmes de tes fils avec toi.

17 Fais sortir avec toi toutes les bêtes qui sont avec toi, de toute chair, tant des oiseaux que des bêtes à quatre pieds, et tous les reptiles qui rampent sur la terre; qu'ils peuplent en abondance la terre, et qu'ils foisonnent et multiplient sur la terre.

18 Noé donc sortit, [et] avec lui ses fils, sa femme, et les femmes de ses fils.

19 Toutes les bêtes à quatre pieds, tous les reptiles, tous les oiseaux, tout ce qui se meut sur la terre, selon leurs espèces, sortirent de l'arche.

20 Et Noé bâtit un autel à l'Eternel, et prit de toute bête nette, et de tout oiseau net, et il en offrit des holocaustes sur l'autel.

21 Et l'Eternel flaira une odeur d'apaisement, et dit en son cœur; je ne maudirai plus la terre à l'occasion des hommes, quoique l'imagination du cœur des hommes soit mauvaise dès leur jeunesse; et je ne frapperai plus toute chose vivante, comme j'ai fait.

22 [Mais] tant que la terre sera, les semailles et les moissons, le froid et le chaud, l'été et l'hiver, le jour et la nuit ne cesseront point.

   

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Apocalypse Explained # 639

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639. Standing before the God of the earth, signifies which are the Divine things proceeding from the Lord, and are His in heaven and in the church. This is evident from the signification of "the God of the earth," as being the Lord, who is the God of heaven and earth, and particularly the God of the church in heaven and in the world; for in the Word "the earth" signifies the church, and the church is both in heaven and in the world. "The earth" means heaven and also the church there, because there are lands in the spiritual world, like as in the natural world, and in external appearance they are altogether similar in that world as in this; this is why "the God of the earth" means the God of heaven and earth, and particularly the God of the church in heaven and in the world. That the Lord is the God of heaven and earth He Himself teaches in Matthew:

Jesus said, All power hath been given unto Me in heaven and on earth (Matthew 28:18).

The above is evident also from the signification of "standing before Him," as meaning the being [esse] from Him, and thus what is His in heaven and in the church.

[2] In the Word it is here and there said of angels and of the men of the church that "they stand before God," also that "they walk before Him," and in the spiritual sense "to stand before God" signifies being from Him, and "to walk before God" signifies to live according to being [esse] from Him; for all the being [esse] of heaven and the world proceeds from the Lord; for it is the Divine proceeding that has created and formed all things of heaven and the world; this Divine proceeding is called "the Word" in John 1:1-3; and "the Word" there is the Divine proceeding, which is called Divine truth, from which all things were made and created. Because this extends itself in every direction about the Lord as a sun, it is properly said "to stand before Him," for it looks to the Lord as its common center, from every quarter and from every boundary. This is, in its essence, the Lord in heaven, for it is the Divine proceeding, and that which proceeds is of Him from whom it proceeds, and indeed is Himself; just as the heat and light that proceed from the sun are of the sun. For this reason all angels, who are recipients of this Divine proceeding, which is called Divine truth, turn themselves to the Lord, and thus are continually in His presence; for, as was said, the Divine proceeding looks to the Lord as its center from which it is and to which it looks; so also do the angels, who are the recipients of Divine truths, and are as it were Divine truths in form. This is why angels are said "to stand before the Lord," for "to stand" is properly predicated of Divine truth, because this stands about the Lord as a sun.

[3] "To stand before God" signifies to be in Divine truth, and thus with the Lord, also in the following passages. In Luke:

The angel said, I am Gabriel, that standeth before God (Luke 1:19).

In the first book of Kings:

I saw Jehovah sitting on His throne, and all the hosts of the heavens standing beside Him on His right hand and on His left (1 Kings 22:19).

In Jeremiah:

There shall not be cut off from Jonadab a man to stand before Me all the days (Jeremiah 35:19).

In David:

On my right hand standeth the queen in the best gold of Ophir (Psalms 45:9).

In Luke:

Be ye wakeful at every season, that ye may be accounted worthy to stand before the Son of man (Luke 21:36).

In Revelation:

The great day of His anger is come, and who is able to stand? (Revelation 6:17)

All the angels stood around the throne, and the elders and the four animals (Revelation 7:11).

I saw the seven angels who stood before God (Revelation 8:2).

In Zechariah:

The two olive trees and two berries of olives, which are the two sons of the olive tree standing beside the Lord of the whole earth (Zechariah 4:11, 12, 14).

And in other places. It is also said of the Lord Himself that "He stood to judge," because it is said of the Divine proceeding from the Lord, which is called the Divine truth, for judgment is from it. Thus it is said in Isaiah:

Jehovah hath stood up to plead, and standeth to judge (Isaiah 3:13).

And in David:

God stood in the congregation of God, in the midst of the gods He will judge (Psalms 82:1.)

"The congregation of God," and the "gods" in the midst of whom Jehovah stood, mean the angels, by whom in the spiritual sense Divine truths are signified; and because the Lord in heaven is the Divine truth He is here said "to stand." This makes clear that "to stand before the God of the earth" signifies the Divine proceeding from the Lord, which is His in heaven and in the church; that this, and those who are in this, are meant can be seen also from this, "to stand before the God of the earth" is predicated of "the two olive trees" and "the two lampstands," and these signify good and truth, and thus the Divine proceeding. (See also in the preceding article, n. 638)

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

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Arcana Coelestia # 10608

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10608. 'And also no one shall be seen on all the mountain' means that they are entirely remote from that Truth, and so stand outside it. This is clear from the meaning of 'the mountain', at this point Mount Horeb, as heaven in its entirety, thus also Divine Truth. It amounts to the same thing whether you say heaven or Divine Truth, since the angels, of whom heaven consists, are recipients of Divine Truth. The full extent of that mountain was called Horeb, but the higher part in the middle was called Mount Sinai; and this is why 'Horeb' means heaven, or what amounts to the same thing, Divine Truth in its entirety. The inward aspect of that Truth is meant by Mount Sinai, and the outward by the lower parts of the mountain surrounding it. So it is that 'Horeb', when used to include those surrounding parts, means that which is external, see 10543. The interest of the Israelite nation lay in what was external and closed off to anything internal and so in what was external separated from what was internal, or what amounts to the same thing, that nation stood outside anything that had an internal aspect; and this was why the command 'no one shall be seen on all the mountain' was given. The like is meant, in verses 8-10 of the previous chapter, by that nation's standing at the door of the tent in which Moses was and their bowing down to it, see 10545-10555.

[2] Something brief must be stated here to show why it is that Mounts Horeb and Sinai mean heaven and Divine Truth. The belief in the world is that angels live in the region above the sky, where they exist like puffs of wind and have no solid ground on which to stand. The reason why such a notion exists in the minds of very many people is that they have no idea that angels and spirits exist within a form similar to that in which people on earth do, that is, that they have faces, arms and hands, and feet, in short have actual bodies. Still less do people have any idea that they have abodes or dwelling-places, when in fact angels and spirits live among others in exactly the same way as people on a planet do, on land beneath their feet. Celestial angels live on mountains, spiritual angels on rocks, and those who have not yet become angels on plains between mountains or rocks; but hellish spirits live below mountains and rocks. These things have been stated in order that people may know why it is that in the Word mountains, especially Mount Horeb and Mount Sinai, mean heaven. Furthermore the more internal angels inhabit places higher up the mountains; and the higher they are, the more internal and perfect they are. From all this it is evident why Jehovah descended onto the peak of Mount Sinai when He proclaimed the Law, and why Moses was ordered to stand with Him on the top of the mountain. The mountains on earth do not constitute heaven; rather they represent the mountains on which angels in heaven live.

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