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Lamentations 4

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1 [Aleph.] Comment l’or est-il devenu obscur, et le fin or s’est-il changé? Comment les pierres du Sanctuaire sont-elles semées aux coins de toutes les rues?

2 [Beth.] Comment les chers enfants de Sion, qui étaient estimés comme le meilleur or, sont-ils réputés comme des vases de terre qui ne sont que l’ouvrage de la main d’un potier?

3 [Guimel.] Il y a même des monstres marins qui présentent leurs mammelles et qui allaitent leurs petits; mais la fille de mon peuple a à faire à des gens cruels, comme les chats-huants qui sont au désert.

4 [Daleth.] La langue de celui qui têtait s’est attachée à son palais dans sa soif; les petits enfants ont demandé du pain, et personne ne leur en a rompu.

5 [He.] Ceux qui mangeaient des viandes délicates sont demeurés désolés dans les rues; et ceux qui étaient nourris sur l’écarlate ont embrassé l’ordure.

6 [Vau.] Et [la peine de] l’iniquité de la fille de mon peuple est plus grande, que [la peine du] péché de Sodome, qui a été renversée comme en un moment, et à laquelle les mains ne sont point lassées.

7 [Zajin.] Ses hommes honorables étaient plus nets que la neige, plus blancs que le lait; leur teint était plus vermeil que les pierres précieuses , et ils étaient polis comme un saphir.

8 [Heth.] Leur visage est plus noir que les ténèbres, on ne les connaît point par les rues; leur peau tient à leurs os; elle est devenue sèche comme du bois.

9 [Teth.] Ceux qui ont été mis à mort par l’épée, ont été plus heureux que ceux qui sont morts par la famine; à cause que ceux-ci se sont consumés peu à peu, étant transpercés par le défaut du revenu des champs.

10 [Jod.] Les mains des femmes, [naturellement] tendres, ont cuit leurs enfants, et ils leur ont été pour viande dans le temps de la calamité de la fille de mon peuple.

11 [Caph.] L’Eternel a accompli sa fureur, il a répandu l’ardeur de sa colère, et a allumé dans Sion le feu qui a dévoré ses fondements.

12 [Lamed.] Les Rois de la terre, et tous les habitants de la terre habitable n’eussent jamais cru que l’adversaire et l’ennemi fût entré dans les portes de Jérusalem.

13 [Mem.] Cela est arrivé à cause des péchés de ses prophètes, et des iniquités de ses Sacrificateurs, qui répandaient le sang des justes au milieu d’elle.

14 [Nun.] Les aveugles ont erré ça et là par les rues, [et] on était tellement souillé de sang, qu’ils ne pouvaient trouver à qui ils touchassent la robe.

15 [Samech.] On leur criait : retirez-vous, souillé, retirez-vous, retirez-vous, n’[y] touchez point. Certes ils s’en sont envolés, et ils ont été transportés ça et là; on a dit parmi les nations, ils n’y retourneront plus pour y séjourner.

16 [Pe.] La face de l’Eternel les a écartés, il ne continuera plus de les regarder. Ils n’ont point eu de respect pour la personne des Sacrificateurs, ni pitié des vieillards.

17 [Hajin.] Jusqu’ici nos yeux se sont consumés après notre aide de néant; nous avons regardé de dessus nos lieux élevés vers une nation qui ne peut pas délivrer.

18 [Tsadi.] Ils ont épié nos pas, afin que nous ne marchassions point par nos places; notre fin est approchée, nos jours sont accomplis; notre fin, dis-je, est venue.

19 [Koph.] Nos persécuteurs ont été plus légers que les aigles des cieux; ils nous ont poursuivis sur les montagnes, ils ont mis des embûches contre nous au désert.

20 [Resch.] Le souffle de nos narines, l’Oint de l’Eternel, a été pris dans leurs fosses, [celui] duquel nous disions : nous vivrons parmi les nations sous son ombre.

21 [Scin.] Réjouis-toi, et sois dans l’allégresse, fille d’Edom, qui demeures au pays de Huts; la coupe passera aussi vers toi, tu en seras enivrée, et tu t’en découvriras.

22 [Thau.] Fille de Sion, [la peine de] ton iniquité est accomplie, il ne te transportera plus; [mais] il visitera ton iniquité, ô fille d’Edom! il découvrira tes péchés.

   

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Apocalypse Explained # 1042

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1042. Verse 4. And the woman was arrayed in purple and scarlet, signifies the appearance of that religious persuasion in externals, as if it were from celestial good and truth, and yet in internals it is from devilish evil and falsity. This is evident from the signification of the "woman," as being the religious persuasion of the Papists; also from the signification of "arrayed," as being what it is in externals, for "garments" are external things that clothe; therefore "to be arrayed" means the appearance in externals. Also from the signification of "purple," as being good from a celestial origin, and also the evil opposite thereto, which is called devilish evil (of which presently). Also from the signification of "scarlet," as being truth from a celestial origin, and also the falsity opposite thereto, which is called devilish falsity. That these goods and truths differ from goods and truths that are from a spiritual origin, and that the like is true of the evils and falsities opposite to them, which are called infernal evils and falsities, will be shown in the following article.

[2] This woman, who is a harlot, and is Babylon, is thus described, because those who are in evils and in falsities therefrom are described in the Word from their external appearance, thus such as they are in the eyes of the men who worship them. They are so described because the sense of the letter of the Word consists of appearances; while the spiritual sense puts off those appearances, and presents interior things naked, without clothing, and when these appear, they appear in a wholly different form; as here the woman seen in external appearance "arrayed in purple and scarlet," is called, as to her internal form, "the mother of the whoredoms and of the abominations of the earth;" and the like is said of:

The rich man clothed in purple and fine linen, who, nevertheless, was cast into hell (Luke 16:19);

also of the Assyrians, with whom Ohola and Oholibah, that is, Samaria and Jerusalem, committed whoredom, who are called:

Officers and leaders, horsemen clothed in blue riding upon horses (Ezekiel 23:6, 12).

So in other passages. Babylon is here described as a harlot appears in the world, splendidly clothed and yet abominable, because full of uncleanness.

[3] Before proving from the Word that "purple and scarlet" signify goods and truths from a celestial origin, something shall be said about such goods and truths. The Divine good that proceeds from the Lord is united with His Divine truth, as heat from the sun is with light in the time of spring. But the angels, who are recipients of the Divine good and Divine truth proceeding from the Lord, are distinguished into celestial and spiritual. Those who receive more of the Lord's Divine good than of His Divine truth are called celestial angels; because these constitute the kingdom of the Lord that is called the celestial kingdom. But the angels who receive more of the Lord's Divine truth than of His Divine good are called spiritual angels, because the Lord's spiritual kingdom consists of these. This makes clear that goods and truths have a twofold origin, namely, a celestial origin and a spiritual origin. Those goods and truths that are from a celestial origin are the goods and truths of love to the Lord; while those goods and truths that are from a spiritual origin are the goods and truths of love towards the neighbor. The difference is like that between higher and lower, or between interior and exterior; thus like that between things that are in a higher or interior degree, and those that are in a lower or exterior degree; and what this difference is can be seen from what has been said in the work on Heaven and Hell about the three degrees of the heavens, and thus of the angels, and of their wisdom and intelligence (n. 33, 34, 38-39, 208-209, 211, 435).

[4] That "purple" signifies in the Word that good, and "scarlet" that truth, can be seen from the passages in the Word where they are mentioned. As in Ezekiel:

Fine linen of embroidered work from Egypt was thy spreading forth, blue and purple from the isles of Elishah was thy covering (Ezekiel 27:7).

This is said of Tyre, which signifies the church as to the knowledges of truth and good, "blue and purple" standing for such knowledges from a celestial origin, and "covering and spreading forth" signifying the externals of that church. In Luke:

There was a certain rich man, who was clothed in purple and fine linen and indulged in delicacies every day (Luke 16:19).

The "rich man" means the Jewish nation and the church therein, which was called "rich" from the knowledges of good and truth from the Word that they had, "in purple" meaning the knowledges of good, and "in fine linen" the knowledges of truth, both from a celestial origin. In Lamentations:

They that did eat delicacies are laid waste in the streets; they that were brought up in scarlet have embraced a dunghill (Lamentations 4:5).

"To be brought up in scarlet" means to be instructed from infancy in truths from celestial good.

[5] As the Tent of meeting represented heaven, and the garments of Aaron represented the holy things of heaven, and purple and scarlet signify the goods and truths of heaven, so the curtains and veils of the Tent, as well as the garments of Aaron, were wrought with blue, purple, scarlet double-dyed, and fine linen woven together; as:

The curtains of the habitation (Exodus 26:1);

The veil before the ark (Exodus 26:31);

The covering for the door of the Tent (Exodus 26:36);

The covering at the gate of the court (Exodus 27:16);

The ephod (Exodus 28:6);

The belt (Exodus 28:8);

The breastplate of judgment (Exodus 28:15);

The fringes of the robe of the ephod (Exodus 28:33).

Because "scarlet double-dyed" signified the truth of celestial good, therefore:

A cloth of scarlet double-dyed was spread over the table upon which was the bread of faces, and afterwards it was covered with a covering of the skin of the badger (Numbers 4:8).

For the inmost things of the celestial kingdom were signified by the things that were upon the table, which were loaves; but the exterior things by the coverings, which have reference to truths from good.

[6] As truth from celestial good, which is the truth of the sense of the letter of the Word, is signified by "scarlet," it was used for remembrances, as that:

The sons of Israel should make for themselves a train on the borders of their garment, and should put upon the train of the border a cord of scarlet, that by it they might remember all the commandments of Jehovah and do them (Numbers 15:38-39).

And for the same reason it was a custom in ancient times, when significatives were in use, to tie a scarlet cord as a reminder or remembrance of a thing, as is said of Perez the son of Tamar, that:

The midwife tied scarlet upon his hand (Genesis 38:28, 30);

and of the harlot Rahab, that:

She tied in the window a scarlet cord, that the spies might remember their promise (Joshua 2:17, 21).

[7] As all purifications from evils are effected by truths from the Word, therefore:

Cedar wood, scarlet and hyssop were used in cleansings (Leviticus 14:4-7, 49-52).

And scarlet was used for the waters of separation and expiation from a red heifer (Numbers 19:6).

Purple and scarlet derive their signification from the nature of these colors. For there are colors in heaven far more brilliant than in the world, originating from the light there; and as red has its origin there from what is fiery or flame-like, and what is fiery and flame-like has its origin there from the good of love, so "purple" signifies good from a celestial origin. But scarlet derives its color from what is flame-like and at the same time glistening, and glistening from light signifies truth; consequently that color signifies the truth of celestial good.

[8] As most things in the Word have a contrary sense, so have purple and scarlet; and in that sense they signify the evils and falsities opposite to those goods and truths. As in Isaiah:

Although your sins have been as scarlet they shall become white like snow; although they have been red as purple they shall be as wool (Isaiah 1:18).

Since "scarlet," the same as "snow," signifies truth, and "purple," the same as "wool," signifies good, and since "scarlet and purple," signify in the contrary sense falsity and evil (falsity and truth, and evil and good corresponding by opposition), so it is said "Although your sins have been as scarlet they shall become white like snow, and although they have been red as purple they shall be as wool."

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