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Lévitique 26

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1 Vous ne vous ferez point d'idoles, et vous ne vous dresserez point d'image taillée, ni de statue, et vous ne mettrez point de pierre peinte dans votre pays pour vous prosterner devant elles; car je suis l'Eternel votre Dieu.

2 Vous garderez mes Sabbats, et vous révérerez mon Sanctuaire; je suis l'Eternel.

3 Si vous marchez dans mes ordonnances, et si vous gardez mes commandements et les faites;

4 Je vous donnerai les pluies qu'il vous faut en leur temps, la terre donnera son fruit, et les arbres des champs donneront leur fruit.

5 La foulure des grains atteindra la vendange chez vous, et la vendange atteindra les semailles; vous mangerez votre pain, vous en serez rassasiés, et vous habiterez sûrement en votre pays.

6 Je donnerai la paix au pays, vous dormirez sans qu'aucun vous épouvante; je ferai qu'il n'y aura plus de mauvaises bêtes au pays; et l'épée ne passera point par votre pays.

7 Mais vous poursuivrez vos ennemis, et ils tomberont par l'épée devant vous.

8 Cinq d'entre vous en poursuivront cent, et cent en poursuivront dix mille; et vos ennemis tomberont par l'épée devant vous.

9 Et je me tournerai vers vous, je vous ferai croître et multiplier, et j'établirai mon alliance avec vous.

10 Vous mangerez aussi des provisions fort vieilles, et vous tirerez dehors le vieux pour y loger le nouveau.

11 Même je mettrai mon Tabernacle au milieu de vous, et mon âme ne vous aura point à contrecœur.

12 Mais je marcherai au milieu de vous, je vous serai Dieu, et vous serez mon peuple.

13 Je [suis] l'Eternel votre Dieu qui vous ai retirés du pays d'Egypte, afin que vous ne fussiez point leurs esclaves; j'ai rompu les bois de votre joug, et vous ai fait marcher la tête levée.

14 Mais si vous ne m'écoutez point, et que vous ne fassiez pas tous ces commandements;

15 Et que vous rejetiez mes ordonnances, et que votre âme ait mes jugements à contrecœur, pour ne point faire tous mes commandements, et pour enfreindre mon alliance;

16 Aussi je vous ferai ceci; je répandrai sur vous la frayeur, la langueur, et l'ardeur, qui [vous] consumeront les yeux, et vous tourmenteront l'âme; et vous sèmerez en vain votre semence; car vos ennemis la mangeront.

17 Et je mettrai ma face contre vous; vous serez battus devant vos ennemis; ceux qui vous haïssent domineront sur vous; et vous fuirez, sans qu'aucun vous poursuive.

18 Que si encore après ces choses vous ne m'écoutez point, j'en ajouterai sept fois autant pour vous châtier, à cause de vos péchés.

19 Et j'abattrai l'orgueil de votre force, et je ferai que le ciel sera pour vous comme de fer, et votre terre comme d'airain.

20 Votre force se consumera inutilement, car votre terre ne donnera point son rapport, et les arbres de la terre ne donneront point leur fruit.

21 Que si vous marchez de front contre moi, et que vous refusiez de m'écouter, j'ajouterai sur vous sept fois autant de plaies, selon vos péchés.

22 J'enverrai contre vous les bêtes des champs, qui vous priveront de vos enfants, qui tueront votre bétail, et vous réduiront à un petit nombre, et vos chemins seront déserts.

23 Que si vous ne vous corrigez pas après ces choses [pour vous convertir] à moi, mais que vous marchiez de front contre moi;

24 Je marcherai aussi de front contre vous, et je vous frapperai encore sept fois autant, selon vos péchés.

25 Et je ferai venir sur vous l'épée qui fera la vengeance de mon alliance; et quand vous vous retirerez dans vos villes j'enverrai la mortalité parmi vous, et vous serez livrés entre les mains de l'ennemi.

26 Lorsque je vous aurai rompu le bâton du pain, dix femmes cuiront votre pain dans un four, et vous rendront votre pain au poids; vous en mangerez, et vous n'en serez point rassasiés.

27 Que si avec cela vous ne m'écoutez point, mais que vous marchiez de front contre moi,

28 Je marcherai de front contre vous en ma fureur, et je vous châtierai aussi sept fois autant selon vos péchés;

29 Et vous mangerez la chair de vos fils, et vous mangerez aussi la chair de vos filles.

30 Je détruirai vos hauts lieux; je ruinerai vos Tabernacles; je mettrai vos charognes sur les charognes de vos dieux de fiente, et mon âme vous aura en haine.

31 Je réduirai aussi vos villes en désert, je ruinerai vos Sanctuaires, et je ne flairerai point votre odeur agréable.

32 Et je désolerai le pays, tellement que vos ennemis qui s'y habitueront, en seront étonnés.

33 Et je vous disperserai parmi les nations, et je tirerai l'épée après vous, et votre pays sera en désolation, et vos villes en désert.

34 Alors la terre prendra plaisir à ses Sabbats, tout le temps qu'elle sera désolée,; et lorsque vous serez au pays de vos ennemis la terre se reposera, et prendra plaisir à ses Sabbats.

35 Tout le temps qu'elle demeurera désolée, elle se reposera; au lieu qu'elle ne s'était point reposée en vos Sabbats, lorsque vous y habitiez.

36 Et quant à ceux qui demeureront de reste d'entre vous, je rendrai leur cœur lâche lorsqu'ils seront au pays de leurs ennemis, de sorte que le bruit d'une feuille émue les poursuivra, et ils fuiront comme s'ils fuyaient de devant l'épée, et ils tomberont sans qu'aucun les poursuive.

37 Et ils s'entreheurteront l'un l'autre comme s'ils fuyaient de devant l'épée, sans que personne les poursuive; et vous ne pourrez point subsister devant vos ennemis.

38 Et vous périrez entre les nations, et la terre de vos ennemis vous consumera.

39 Et ceux qui demeureront de reste d'entre vous se fondront à cause de leurs iniquités, au pays de vos ennemis; et ils se fondront aussi à cause des iniquités de leurs pères, avec eux.

40 Alors ils confesseront leur iniquité, et l'iniquité de leurs pères, selon les péchés qu'ils auront commis contre moi; et même selon qu'ils auront marché de front contre moi.

41 J'aurai aussi marché de front contre eux, et je les aurai amenés au pays de leurs ennemis; et alors leur cœur incirconcis s'humiliera, et ils recevront alors avec soumission, [la punition de] leur iniquité.

42 Et alors je me souviendrai de mon alliance avec Jacob, et de mon alliance avec Isaac, et je me souviendrai aussi de mon alliance avec Abraham, et je me souviendrai de la terre.

43 Quand [donc] la terre aura été abandonnée par eux, et qu'elle aura pris plaisir à ses Sabbats, ayant demeure désolée à cause d'eux; lors donc qu'ils auront reçu avec soumission [la punition de] leur iniquité, à cause qu'ils ont rejeté mes jugements, et que leur âme a dédaigné mes ordonnances.

44 [Je m'en souviendrai, dis-je], lorsqu'ils seront au pays de leurs ennemis; parce que je ne les ai point rejetés, ni eus en haine pour les consumer entièrement, et pour rompre l'alliance que j'ai faite avec eux; car je [suis] l'Eternel leur Dieu.

45 Et je me souviendrai pour leur bien de l'alliance faite avec leurs ancêtres, lesquels j'ai retirés du pays d'Egypte, à la vue des nations, pour être leur Dieu; je [suis] l'Eternel.

46 Ce sont là les ordonnances, les jugements, et les lois que l'Eternel établit entre lui et les enfants d'Israël sur la montagne de Sinaï, par le moyen de Moïse.

   

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Apocalypse Explained # 785

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785. (Verse 3) And I saw one of his heads as it were wounded unto death. That this signifies the discordance of their doctrinals with the Word, in which love, life, and works are so often mentioned, which do not at all agree with that religious persuasion, is evident from the signification of the heads of that beast, as denoting the knowledge of the holy things of the Word, which are falsified and adulterated (concerning which see above, n. 775). By head, in the Word, where the church is treated of, and those who belong to the church, is signified intelligence and wisdom; and, in the universal sense, the understanding of truth and the willing of good. But because those treated of here are unwilling that the understanding should enter into the mysteries of faith, but desire it to be held captive in subservience to their mysteries; and as these are they who are described by the dragon and by this his beast, it follows, that by the head of this beast is signified knowledge; for where the understanding does not see, there intelligence does not exist, but in the place of it knowledge. And, moreover, of those who are in falsities we cannot use the term intelligence, but knowledge (concerning which see the Doctrine of the New Jerusalem 33); and from the signification of being wounded unto death, as denoting to disagree with the Word. For the doctrine which disagrees with the Word is dead; and this is what is signified by being wounded unto death.

[2] The discordance here meant is, that they separate the life of love, which is good works, from faith, and make the latter alone justifying and saving, and consequently take away every thing of righteousness and salvation from the life of love or from good works. Now because to love and to do are mentioned in the Word in a thousand passages, and as man is to be judged according to his deeds and works, and these do not accord with the above religious persuasion, therefore these things are signified by the death stroke of the head of this beast. From these things it is now evident that by these words, "I saw one of the heads of the beast as it were wounded unto death," is signified discordance with the Word, in which love, life, and works are so often mentioned, which do not at all accord with that religious persuasion.

That they do not accord is manifestly evident from this fact, that it is the dogma of this religious persuasion that faith alone justifies and saves without the works of the law; indeed, that if anything of salvation be placed in works, it is injurious, because man's merit and proprium are in them. Consequently, many abstain from doing them, saying in their heart, "good works do not save me, and evil works do not condemn me, because I have faith." On this ground also they declare that those are saved, who, at the hour of death, can pronounce with a sort of confidence that they have faith, whatever their life may have been.

But because deeds and works, also doing and loving, are mentioned in the Word in a thousand passages, and these things are not in accord with their religious persuasion, therefore those who maintain that persuasion have found means of conjoining these statements with faith. These statements therefore are signified by seeing one of the heads of the beast as it were wounded unto death, and by his death stroke being healed, and by the whole earth wondering after the beast. But how that wound was healed, namely, by assumed modes of conjunction, shall be explained in the following article.

[3] First, however, some passages shall here be adduced from the Word, where deeds, works, doing, and working are mentioned, in order that every one may see the discordance which is here signified by one of the heads wounded unto death; also that this wound is incurable unless man lives according to and does the precepts of the Word.

In Matthew:

"He who heareth my words and doeth them," is like "a prudent man; but he who heareth my words and doeth them not, is like a foolish man" (7:24, 26).

In Luke:

"Why call ye me Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say? Every one who cometh to me, and heareth my words, and doeth them, is like a man who built his house upon a rock; but he who heareth and doeth not, is like a man who built his house upon the ground without a foundation" (6:46-49).

In Matthew

"He that was sown in good earth is he who heareth the Word and attendeth to it, and who thence beareth fruit and bringeth forth, some a hundred-fold, some sixty-fold, and some thirty-fold" (13:23).

Again:

"Whosoever shall break the least of these commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called least in the kingdom of the heavens" (5:19).

In John:

"Ye are my friends, if ye do whatsoever I command you" (15:14).

Again:

"If ye know these things, happy are ye if ye do them" (13:17).

Again:

"If ye love me, keep my commandments; he who hath my precepts and doeth them, he it is that loveth me, and I will love him, and will manifest myself unto him, and I will come unto him, and make my abode with him; but he who loveth me not, keepeth not my words" (14:15, 21-24).

In Luke:

Jesus said, "My mother and my brethren are they who hear the Word of God and do it" (8:21).

In Matthew:

"I was hungry and ye gave me to eat, I was thirsty and ye gave me to drink, I was a sojourner and ye took me in, I was naked and ye clothed me, I was sick and ye visited me, I was in prison and ye came unto me"; to whom the Lord said, "Come ye blessed, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world"; to those who have not done these things, "Depart from me, ye cursed, into eternal fire, prepared for the devil and his angels" (25:35 to the end).

In John:

"My Father is the vinedresser; every branch which beareth not fruit, he taketh away" (15:1, 2).

In Luke:

"Bring forth fruits worthy of repentance: every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit, shall be hewn down and cast into the fire; by their fruits ye shall know them" (3:8, 9).

In John:

"Herein is my Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit; so shall ye be my disciples" (15:7, 8).

In Matthew:

"The kingdom of God shall be taken away from them, and shall be given to a nation bringing forth the fruits thereof" (Matthew 21:40-43).

In John:

"He who doeth the truth, cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God" (3:21).

Again:

"We know that God heareth not sinners, but if any one worship God, and do his will, him he heareth" (9:31).

In Matthew:

"The Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his angels, and then shall he render to every one according to his deeds" (16:27).

In John:

"Then shall they come forth, those who have done good unto the resurrection of life, but those who have done evil unto the resurrection of judgment" (5:29).

In the Apocalypse:

"I will give unto you every one according to his works; he who overcometh, and keepeth my works unto the end" (2:23, 26).

Again:

"Their works shall follow them" (14:13).

"The dead were judged according to the things which were written in the books, according to their works" (20:12, 13).

"Behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with me, to give unto every one according to his works" (22:12).

Again:

"Blessed are they who do his commandments" (22:14).

He said to the angel of the church of Ephesus, "I have against thee that thou hast left thy first love; remember whence thou art fallen, and do the first works, or else, etc." (2:4, 5).

It was said to the angel of the church of Smyrneans, "I know thy works"; to the angel of the church in Pergamos, "I know thy works"; to the angel of the church in Thyatira, "I know thy works"; to the angel of the church in Sardis, "I know thy works"; and to the angel of the church in Philadelphia, "I know thy works" (Apoc. 2:9, 13, 19; 3:1, 8).

The quality of the seven churches, as they are and as they will be, is examined and judged from their works, and according to their works, throughout those two chapters.

[4] The Lord also teaches good works, and their quality and the heavenly blessedness therefrom, in Matthew, chapters 5; 6; 7, from beginning to end; also in the parables of the labourers in the vineyard; the husbandman and his servants; and the traders, to whom were given pounds, and to whom were given talents; the fig-tree in the vineyard, which should be cut down, if it did not bear fruit; the man wounded by robbers, to whom the Samaritan showed mercy (concerning whom the Lord asked the lawyer, which of the three was neighbour to him that fell among thieves, and when he answered, "He that shewed mercy on him," Jesus said, "Go and do thou likewise"); the ten virgins, of whom five had oil in their lamps and five had none; where oil in the lamps signifies charity in faith; besides various other passages.

[5] The twelve disciples of the Lord also represented the church as to all things of faith and charity in the aggregate; and in particular, Peter, James, and John, represented faith, charity, and good works in their order - Peter faith, James charity, and John good works. This is why the Lord said to Peter, when Peter saw John following the Lord, "What is that to thee, Peter? Thou, John, follow me," for Peter said of John, "What shall this man do?" (John 21:21, 22); and the Lord's answer signified that they who do good works should follow the Lord. Because John represented the church as to good works, therefore he leaned upon the breast of the Lord. That the church is in those who do good works, is also signified by the Lord's words from the cross, in John:

Jesus saw his mother, and the disciple whom he loved, standing by, and he said to his mother, "Woman, behold thy son"; and he said to that disciple, "Behold thy mother"; and from that hour that disciple took her unto himself (John 19:26, 27).

This signified that where good works are, there the church will be. For woman, and also mother, signify the church.

The passages quoted are all from the New Testament. The number in the Old Testament to the same purpose is still greater. As where it is said:

"Blessed are all those who keep and do the statutes, the judgments, and the precepts; and cursed are those who do them not" (as in Leviticus 18:5; 19:37; 20:8; 22:31, 32, 33; 26:4, 14, 15; Numbers 15:39, 40; Deuteronomy 5:9, 10; 6:25; 15:5; 17:19; 27:26); and in a thousand other passages.

Besides the passages in the Word where deeds and doing are mentioned, there is also a great number where love and loving are mentioned; and by loving is meant the same as by doing. For he who loves also does. For to love is to will, because every one wills what he inwardly loves; and to will is to do, since every one does, that which he wills, when he is able. A deed, moreover, is nothing else but the will in act.

Love is taught by the Lord in many passages.

As in Matthew 5:43-48; 7:12; Luke 6:27-39; 43 to the end; 7:36 to the end; John 13:34, 35; 14:14-23; 15:9-19 17:22-26; 21:15-23; and in brief in these words: "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul; this is the first and great commandment. The second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself; on these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets" (Matthew 22:35-38; Luke 10:27, 28; Deuteronomy 6:5).

To love God above all things, and the neighbour as oneself, is to keep the commandments, or do His precepts. (See John 14:21-24.) Moreover, the law and the prophets signify the whole Word as to all and every part thereof.

From all these quotations it is now quite clear that it is not faith separate from good works that saves, but faith from them and with them. For he who does good works has faith; but he who does not, has not faith.

  
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Translation by Isaiah Tansley. Many thanks to the Swedenborg Society for the permission to use this translation.