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Juges 7

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1 Jérubbahal donc, qui [est] Gédeon, se levant dès le matin, et tout le peuple qui était avec lui, ils se campèrent près de la fontaine de Harod, et ils avaient le camp de Madian du côté du Septentrion, vers le coteau de Moreh dans la vallée.

2 Or l'Eternel dit à Gédeon : Le peuple qui est avec toi est en trop grand nombre, pour que je livre Madian en leur main, de peur qu'Israël ne se glorifie contre moi, en disant : Ma main m'a délivré.

3 Maintenant donc fais publier, le peuple l'entendant, et qu'on dise : Quiconque est timide et a peur, qu'il s'en retourne, et s'en aille dès le matin du côté de la montagne de Galaad; et vingt-deux mille du peuple s'en retournèrent; et il en resta dix mille.

4 Et l'Eternel dit à Gédeon : Il y a encore du peuple en trop grand nombre; fais-les descendre vers l'eau, et là je te les choisirai; et celui dont je te dirai, celui-ci ira avec toi, il ira avec toi; et celui duquel je te dirai, celui-ci n'ira point avec toi; il n'y ira point.

5 Il fit donc descendre le peuple vers l'eau; et l'Eternel dit à Gédeon : Quiconque lapera l'eau de sa langue, comme le chien lape, tu le mettras à part; et [tu mettras aussi à part] tous ceux qui se courberont sur leurs genoux pour boire.

6 Et le nombre de ceux qui lapaient l'eau dans leur main, [la] portant à leur bouche, fut de trois cents hommes; mais tout le reste du peuple se courba sur ses genoux, pour boire de l'eau.

7 Alors l'Eternel dit à Gédeon : Je vous délivrerai par le moyen de ces trois cents hommes qui ont lapé [l'eau], et je livrerai Madian en ta main. Que tout le peuple donc s'en aille, chacun en son lieu.

8 Ainsi le peuple prit en sa main des provisions, et leurs trompettes. Et Gédeon renvoya tous les hommes d'Israël chacun en sa tente, et retint les trois cents hommes. Or le camp de Madian était au-dessous, dans la vallée.

9 Et il arriva cette nuit-là, que l'Eternel lui dit : Lève-toi, descends au camp, car je l'ai livré en ta main.

10 Et si tu crains d'y descendre, descends vers le camp toi et Purah ton serviteur.

11 Et tu entendras ce qu'ils diront, et tes mains seront fortifiées, puis tu descendras au camp. Il descendit donc avec Purah son serviteur, jusqu'au premier corps de garde du camp.

12 Or Madian, et Hamalec, et tous les Orientaux, étaient répandus dans la vallée comme des sauterelles, tant il y en avait, et leurs chameaux étaient sans nombre, comme le sable qui est sur le bord de la mer, tant il y en avait.

13 Gédeon donc y étant arrivé, voilà, un homme récitait à son compagnon un songe, et lui disait : Voici, j'ai songé un songe; il me semblait qu'un gâteau de pain d'orge se roulait vers le camp de Madian, et qu'étant venu jusqu'aux tentes, il les a frappées, de sorte qu'elles en sont tombées, et il les a renversées, [en roulant] du haut [de la montagne], et elles sont tombées.

14 Alors son compagnon répondit, et dit : Cela n'est autre chose que l'épée de Gédeon, fils de Joas, homme d'Israël. Dieu a livré Madian et tout ce camp en sa main.

15 Et quand Gédeon eut entendu le récit du songe, et son interprétation, il se prosterna; et étant retourné au camp d'Israël, il dit : Levez-vous, car l'Eternel a livré le camp de Madian en vos mains.

16 Puis il divisa les trois cents hommes en trois bandes, et leur donna à chacun des trompettes à la main, et des cruches vides, et des flambeaux dans les cruches.

17 Et il leur dit : Prenez garde à moi et faites comme je ferai; lorsque je serai arrivé au bout du camp, vous ferez comme je ferai.

18 Quand donc je sonnerai de la trompette, et tous ceux aussi qui sont avec moi, alors vous sonnerez aussi des trompettes autour de tout le camp, et vous direz : L'EPEE DE L'ETERNEL, ET DE GEDEON.

19 Gédeon donc, et les cent hommes qui étaient avec lui, arrivèrent au bout du camp, comme on venait de poser la seconde garde; on ne faisait que poser les gardes lorsqu'ils sonnèrent des trompettes; et qu'ils cassèrent les cruches qu'ils avaient en leurs mains.

20 Ainsi les trois bandes sonnèrent des trompettes, et cassèrent les cruches, tenant en leur main gauche les flambeaux, et en leur main droite les trompettes pour sonner, et ils criaient : L'EPEE DE L'ETERNEL, ET DE GEDEON.

21 Et ils se tinrent chacun en sa place autour du camp; et toute l'armée courait ça et là, s'écriant et fuyant.

22 Car comme les trois cents hommes sonnaient des trompettes, l'Eternel tourna l'épée d'un chacun contre son compagnon, même par tout le camp. Et l'armée s'enfuit jusqu'à Beth-sittah, vers Tserera, jusqu'au bord d'Abelmeholah, vers Tabbat.

23 Et les hommes d'Israël, [savoir] de Nephthali et d'Aser, et de tout Manassé s'assemblèrent, et poursuivirent Madian.

24 Alors Gédeon envoya des messagers par toute la montagne d'Ephraïm, pour leur dire : Descendez pour aller à la rencontre de Madian, et saisissez-vous les premiers des eaux du Jourdain jusqu'à Beth-bara. Les hommes d'Ephraïm donc s'étant assemblés, se saisirent des eaux du Jourdain jusqu'à Beth-bara.

25 Et ils prirent deux des chefs de Madian, Horeb et Zééb, et ils tuèrent Horeb au rocher de Horeb; mais ils tuèrent Zééb au pressoir de Zééb; et ils poursuivirent Madian, et apportèrent les têtes de Horeb et de Zééb à Gédeon, au deçà du Jourdain.

   

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Exploring the Meaning of Judges 7

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

Judges 7: Gideon’s valiant three hundred men.

Gideon and all his men camped by the well of Harod, which can mean “eager”, and also “trembling.” The Lord told Gideon that his army was too large, which could lead Israel to boast that they won by their own efforts (rather than the Lord’s power). Gideon was instructed to send away anyone who was afraid; 22,000 went home, leaving 10,000.

Even still, the Lord said the army was too large, so Gideon tested the men by taking them down to the water to drink. The Lord directed Gideon to call out those who lapped water from out of their hands rather than kneeling down to drink with their mouths. Three hundred men were chosen by this method of selection.

The Lord then commanded Gideon to go down to the Midianite camp, and if he was afraid, to take his servant, Phurah. There, Gideon overheard one of the soldiers telling his companion that he’d had a dream, in which a loaf of bread came tumbling into the camp and struck one of the tents so that it collapsed. The other soldier said that this meant the Lord would give victory to Gideon.

Gideon gave each of his men a trumpet, and a pitcher containing a lit torch. They surrounded the Midianite camp, and at the command of Gideon, they blew their trumpets, broke their pitchers to show the torches, and shouted, “The sword of the Lord and of Gideon!” This caused panic in the camp, and every Midianite drew his sword against another, and many fled. Then Gideon ordered the capture and killing of the two Midianite princes, whose heads were brought to him.

*****

We must give glory to the Lord for successes that we seem to earn, as He alone does what is good. The Lord told Gideon to reduce the size of his army, to avoid the dangers of growing too proud. Since we live our lives as if we do everything ourselves, this is a constant threat. The fact that about two-thirds of Gideon’s army were afraid and went home shows the reality of our nature (see Swedenborg’s work, True Christian Religion 442).

Lapping water from the hand reflects our need to see and examine what we take into our minds. Water stands for truth, but it can also stand for false ideas. If we drink directly from the water, we accept indiscriminately and examine nothing. Cupping and holding the water in our hands means that we can see how to apply this truth through our attitudes and actions (see Swedenborg’s work, Arcana Caelestia 6047[2]).

Gideon’s army of only three hundred men was all it took to defeat the Midianites. The number ‘three’ stands for something which is complete or full in itself. Some spiritual examples include mind, body and soul, as well as celestial, spiritual and natural (see Swedenborg’s Apocalypse Explained 435[3] and 532[2]).

The dream Gideon overheard stands for the power of good (the bread) to break down the apparent power of what is evil and false (the tent) (Arcana Caelestia 4247[3]). The name of Gideon’s servant, Phurah, means “fruitfulness”, or “a winepress”, which is where Gideon was first called by the angel of the Lord.

The trumpet and the torch both stand for the power of truth to overcome evil and false ideas, the trumpet by its penetrating sound, and the torch by its illuminating light. There is no mention of swords for the army of Israel.

Finally, the oppression by the Midianites represents knowing what is true, but living a life governed by our own desires. This leads us increasingly further away from obeying the Lord. Of course, this must be addressed. The Midianites destroyed each other in their panic, meaning what is disorderly and against the Lord holds no validity, and eventually destroys itself (Arcana Caelestia 9320).

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Arcana Coelestia # 4247

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4247. 'The messengers returned to Jacob, saying, We came to your brother, to Esau, and he also is coming to meet you' means that good flows in constantly so as to make them, that is to say, truths, its own. This is clear from the meaning of 'brother', who in this case is Esau, as good - that is to say, the good of the Lord's Divine Natural, dealt with above; and from the meaning of 'coming to meet' as flowing in, dealt with below. And because flowing in is meant, making its own is meant also.

[2] From what has been stated several times already on these matters one may see what the situation is with regard to good and truth, and with the influx of good into truth, and in this connection with good making truth its own. That is to say, one may see that good flows constantly into truth, and truth receives good, since truths are the vessels for good. The only vessels into which Divine Good can be placed are genuine truths, for good and truth match each other. When a person is moved by the affection for truth, as everyone is at first prior to being regenerated, good is constantly flowing in even then, but as yet it has no vessels, that is, no truths in which to place itself or make its own; for nobody at the outset of regeneration possesses any cognitions as yet. But because good at that time is flowing in constantly it produces the affection for truth, for there is no origin to the affection for truth other than the constant endeavour of Divine good to flow in. This shows that even at that time good occupies the first position and plays the leading role, although it seems as though truth did so. When a person is being regenerated however, which takes place in adult years when he possesses cognitions, good reveals itself, for he is then moved not so much by the affection for knowing truth as for doing it. For previously truth had been in the understanding, but now it is in his will, and when in his will it is in the person's true self, since the will constitutes the person's true self. With man the recurrent cycle of events exists in which every fact and every bit of knowledge is introduced through sight or hearing into his thought-process, and from there into his will, then passing from the will through thought into action. A similar cycle also exists starting from the memory which is so to speak an inner eye or inner sight. Starting from that inner sight it passes through the thought-process into the will, and from the will through thought into action; or else if some obstacle stands in the way it passes into the endeavour to act, that endeavour being actualized the moment the obstacle is removed.

[3] All of this shows the way in which good flows into truth and makes it its own. That is to say, it shows that first of all truths which belong to faith are introduced through hearing or sight and are then stored away in the memory, from where they are raised up one after another into the person's thought-process and at length introduced into his will. Once in the will they pass from there through thought into action, or if they are not able to pass into action they remain in the endeavour. The very endeavour is internal action, for as often as the opportunity exists it is made an external action. It should be realized however that although there is this cycle of events it is nevertheless good which produces the cycle. For the life which comes from the Lord flows solely into good, and thus through good, doing so from things that are inmost. It may be seen by anyone that the life flowing in through the things that are inmost produces the cycle, for without life nothing is produced. And since the life which comes from the Lord flows only into good and through good, good is consequently that which produces and that which flows into truths and makes them its own, to the extent that a person possesses cognitions of truth and at the same time is a willing recipient.

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