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5 Mose 23

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1 Es soll keiner, dem die Hoden zerstoßen sind oder der Harnstrang abgeschnitten ist, in die Versammlung Jehovas kommen.

2 Es soll kein Bastard in die Versammlung Jehovas kommen; auch das zehnte Geschlecht von ihm soll nicht in die Versammlung Jehovas kommen. -

3 Es soll kein Ammoniter noch Moabiter in die Versammlung Jehovas kommen; auch das zehnte Geschlecht von ihnen soll nicht in die Versammlung Jehovas kommen ewiglich:

4 deshalb weil sie euch nicht mit Brot und mit Wasser entgegengekommen sind auf dem Wege, als ihr aus Ägypten zoget; und weil sie Bileam, den Sohn Beors, aus Pethor in Mesopotamien, wider dich gedungen haben, um dich zu verfluchen.

5 Aber Jehova, dein Gott, wollte nicht auf Bileam hören, und Jehova, dein Gott, wandelte dir den Fluch in Segen; denn Jehova, dein Gott, hatte dich lieb.

6 Du sollst ihren Frieden und ihr Wohl nicht suchen alle deine Tage, ewiglich.

7 Den Edomiter sollst du nicht verabscheuen, denn er ist dein Bruder. Den Ägypter sollst du nicht verabscheuen, denn du bist ein Fremdling in seinem Lande gewesen.

8 Kinder, die ihnen im dritten Geschlecht geboren werden, mögen von ihnen in die Versammlung Jehovas kommen.

9 Wenn du wider deine Feinde ins Lager ausziehst, so sollst du dich vor allem Bösen hüten:

10 Wenn ein Mann unter dir ist, der nicht rein ist durch ein Begegnis der Nacht, so soll er aus dem Lager hinausgehen; er soll nicht in das Lager hineinkommen;

11 und es soll geschehen, wenn der Abend sich neigt, soll er sich im Wasser baden; und beim Untergang der Sonne darf er in das Lager zurückkommen.

12 Und du sollst einen Platz außerhalb des Lagers haben, daß du dahin hinausgehest.

13 Und du sollst eine Schaufel unter deinem Geräte haben; und es soll geschehen, wenn du dich draußen hinsetzest, so sollst du damit graben, und sollst dich umwenden und deine Ausleerung bedecken.

14 Denn Jehova, dein Gott, wandelt inmitten deines Lagers, um dich zu erretten und deine Feinde vor dir dahinzugeben; und dein Lager soll heilig sein, daß er nichts Schamwürdiges unter dir sehe und sich von dir abwende.

15 Einen Knecht, der sich vor seinem Herrn zu dir rettet, sollst du seinem Herrn nicht ausliefern.

16 Er soll bei dir wohnen, in deiner Mitte, an dem Orte, den er in einem deiner Tore erwählen wird, wo es ihm gut dünkt: du sollst ihn nicht bedrücken.

17 Es soll keine Buhlerin (Eig. Geweihte… Geweihter, d. h. dem Dienste der Astarte geweiht (vergl. 1. Mose 38,21). Der Lohn der Hurerei war für den Tempel jener heidnischen Gottheit bestimmt) sein unter den Töchtern Israels, und es soll kein Buhler (Eig. Geweihte… Geweihter, d. h. dem Dienste der Astarte geweiht (vergl. 1. Mose 38,21). Der Lohn der Hurerei war für den Tempel jener heidnischen Gottheit bestimmt) sein unter den Söhnen Israels.

18 Du sollst nicht den Lohn einer Hure, noch den Preis eines Hundes in das Haus Jehovas, deines Gottes, bringen zu irgend einem Gelübde; denn auch diese beiden sind ein Greuel für Jehova, deinen Gott.

19 Du sollst deinem Bruder keinen Zins auflegen, Zins von (O. an) Geld, Zins von (O. an) Speise, Zins von (O. an) irgend einer Sache, die verzinst wird.

20 Dem Fremden magst du Zins auflegen, aber deinem Bruder sollst du keinen Zins auflegen; damit Jehova, dein Gott, dich segne in allem Geschäft deiner Hand in dem Lande, wohin du kommst, um es in Besitz zu nehmen.

21 Wenn du Jehova, deinem Gott, ein Gelübde tust, so sollst du nicht zögern, es zu bezahlen; denn Jehova, dein Gott, wird es gewißlich von dir fordern, und es wird Sünde an dir sein.

22 Wenn du aber unterlässest zu geloben, so wird keine Sünde an dir sein.

23 Was über deine Lippen gegangen ist, sollst du halten und tun, so wie du Jehova, deinem Gott, freiwillig gelobt, was du mit deinem Munde geredet hast.

24 Wenn du in den Weinberg deines Nächsten kommst, so magst du Trauben essen nach deiner Lust, bis du satt bist; aber in dein Gefäß sollst du nichts tun.

25 Wenn du in das Getreidefeld deines Nächsten kommst, so magst du Ähren mit deiner Hand abpflücken; aber die Sichel sollst du nicht über das Getreide deines Nächsten schwingen.

   

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Arcana Coelestia # 4236

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4236. And Jacob said when he saw them, This is the camp of God. That this signifies heaven, is because the “camp of God” signifies heaven, for the reason that an “army” signifies truths and goods (n. 3448), and truths and goods are marshaled by the Lord in heavenly order; hence an “encamping” denotes a marshalling by armies; and the heavenly order itself which is heaven, is the “camp.” This “camp” or order is of such a nature that hell cannot possibly break in upon it, although it is in the constant endeavor to do so. Hence also this order, or heaven, is called a “camp,” and the truths and goods (that is, the angels) who are marshaled in this order, are called “armies.” This shows whence it is that the “camp of God” signifies heaven. It is this very order, and thus heaven itself, which was represented by the encampments of the sons of Israel in the wilderness; and their dwelling together in the wilderness according to their tribes was called the “camp.” The tabernacle in the midst, and around which they encamped, represented the Lord Himself. That the sons of Israel encamped in this manner, may be seen in Numbers 1:1-54 33:2-56; as also that they encamped around the tabernacle by their tribes-toward the east Judah, Issachar, and Zebulun; toward the south Reuben, Simeon, and Gad; toward the west Ephraim, Manasseh, and Benjamin; toward the north Dan, Asher, and Naphtali; and the Levites in the middle near the tabernacle (2:2-34).

[2] The tribes signified all goods and truths in the complex (see n. 3858, 3862, 3926, 3939, 4060). It was for this reason that when Balaam saw Israel dwelling according to their tribes, and the spirit of God came upon him, he uttered his enunciation, saying:

How good are thy tabernacles, O Jacob, thy dwelling places, O Israel, as the valleys are they planted, as gardens by the river (Numbers 24:5-6).

That by this prophecy was not meant the people named Jacob and Israel, but that it was the heaven of the Lord that was represented, is very manifest. For the same reason their marshallings in the wilderness, that is, their encampings by tribes, are called “camps” in other passages of the Word; and by a “camp” is there signified in the internal sense heavenly order; and by “encamping” a marshalling in accordance with this order, namely, the order in which goods and truths are disposed in heaven (as in Leviticus 4:12; 8:17; 13:46; 14:8; 16:26, 28; 24:14, 23; Numbers 2; 4:5-33; 5:2-4; 9:17 to the end; 10:1-10, 28; 11:31-32; 12:14-15; 31:19-24; Deuteronomy 23:10-14).

[3] That the “camp of God” denotes heaven may also be seen in Joel:

The earth quaked before Him, the heavens trembled, the sun and the moon were blackened, and the stars withdrew their brightness, and Jehovah uttered His voice before His army, for His camp is exceeding many, for numerous is he that doeth His word (Joel 2:10-11).

In Zechariah:

I will encamp at my house from the army, on account of him who passeth by, and on account of him who goeth away, lest the extortioner should pass over them (Zech. 9:8).

In John:

Gog and Magog went up over the plain of the earth, and compassed the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city; but fire came up from God and consumed them (Revelation 20:9);

“Gog and Magog” denote those who are in external worship that is separated from internal and made idolatrous (n. 1151); the “plain of the earth” denotes the truth of the church (that a “plain” is the truth which is of doctrine may be seen above, n. 2450; and that the “earth” is the church, n. 556, 662, 1066, 1067, 1850, 2117, 2118, 3355); the “camp of the saints” denotes the heaven or kingdom of the Lord on the earth, which is the church.

[4] As most things in the Word have also an opposite sense, so likewise has a “camp,” which then signifies evils and falsities, consequently hell; as in David:

Though the evil should encamp against me, my heart shall not fear (Psalms 27:3).

In the same:

God hath scattered the bones of them that encamp against me; thou hast put them to shame, because God hath rejected them (Psalms 53:5).

By the camp of Assyria, in which the angel of Jehovah smote a hundred and eighty-five thousand (Isaiah 37:36), nothing else is meant; and the same by the camp of the Egyptians (Exodus 14:20).

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

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Arcana Coelestia # 1066

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1066. And from these was the whole earth overspread. That this signifies that from them were derived all doctrines, both true and false, is evident from the signification of “earth.” “Earth” or “land” in the Word, is used with various meanings. In the universal sense it denotes the place or region where the church is, or where it has been, as the land of Canaan, the land of Judah, the land of Israel. Thus it denotes universally everyone that belongs to the church, since the land is predicated of the man who is in it, as we know in common speech. In ancient times therefore when men spoke of the “whole earth” they did not mean the whole globe, but only the land where the church was, and thus the church itself; as is evident from the following passages in the Word.

In Isaiah:

Behold, Jehovah maketh the earth empty; the earth shall be utterly emptied; the earth shall mourn and be confounded; the earth also shall be polluted under the inhabitants thereof; therefore shall the curse devour the earth; therefore the inhabitants of the earth shall be burned, and man shall be left feeble. The cataracts from on high are opened, and the foundations of the earth do shake; the earth is utterly broken; the earth is clean dissolved; the earth is moved exceedingly; the earth reeling shall reel like a drunken man, and shall be moved to and fro like a hut, and the transgression thereof shall be heavy upon it, and it shall fall, and not rise again (Isaiah 24:1, 3-6, 18-20).

The “earth” here denotes the people who are in it, and in fact the people of the church, thus the church itself, and the vastated things of the church, of which when vastated it is said that they are “emptied” “moved exceedingly” “reel like a drunken man” “move to and fro” and “fall, not to rise again.”

[2] That by “earth” or “land” is signified man, consequently the church, which is of man, may be seen in Malachi:

All nations shall call you happy; for ye shall be a delightsome land (Malachi 3:12).

That “earth” denotes the church is seen in Isaiah:

Have ye not understood the foundations of the earth? (Isaiah 40:21), where the “foundations of the earth” denote the foundations of the church.

Again:

For, behold, I create new heavens and a new earth (Isaiah 65:17; 66:22; Revelation 21:1).

“New heavens and a new earth” denote the kingdom of the Lord and the church.

In Zechariah:

Jehovah, who stretcheth forth the heavens, and layeth the foundation of the earth, and formeth the spirit of man within him (Zechariah 12:1), meaning the church.

Also, as before, in Genesis:

In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth (Genesis 1:1).

And the heavens and the earth were finished (Genesis 2:1).

These are the nativities of the heavens and of the earth (Genesis 2:4), everywhere denoting the church created, formed, and made.

In Joel:

The earth quaked before Him, the heavens trembled, the sun and the moon were darkened (Joel 2:10), meaning the church and the things of the church; when these are vastated, “heaven and earth” are said to quake, and the “sun and moon” to grow dark, that is, love and faith.

[3] In Jeremiah:

I beheld the earth, and lo a void and emptiness; and the heavens, and they had no light (Jeremiah 4:23).

Here the “earth” plainly denotes the man in whom there is not anything of the church.

Again:

The whole earth shall be desolate; yet will I not make a full consummation; for this shall the earth mourn, and the heavens above be black (Jeremiah 4:27-28).

Here also the church is meant, whose exteriors are the “earth” and the interiors the “heavens” of which it is said that they shall be black, with no light in them, when there is no longer wisdom of good and intelligence of truth. Then the earth also is empty and void; and in like manner the man of the church who should be a church.

That by the “whole earth” is meant in other places also only the church, may be seen in Daniel:

The fourth beast shall be a fourth kingdom upon earth, which shall be diverse from all the kingdoms, and shall devour the whole earth, and shall tread it down, and break it in pieces (Daniel 7:23); the “whole earth” denotes the church and what is of the church; for the Word does not treat, like profane writings, of monarchial sovereignties, but of the holy things and states of the church, which are here signified by the “kingdoms of the earth.”

[4] In Jeremiah:

A great tempest shall be raised up from the uttermost parts of the earth; and the slain of Jehovah shall be at that day from one end of the earth even unto the other end of the earth (Jeremiah 25:32-33);

here “from one end of the earth even unto the other end of the earth” means the church and everything that is of the church.

In Isaiah:

The whole earth is at rest and is quiet; they break forth into singing (Isaiah 14:7),

where the “whole earth” denotes the church.

In Ezekiel:

When the whole earth rejoiceth (Ezekiel 35:14), where also the “whole earth” denotes the church.

In Isaiah:

I have sworn that the waters of Noah should no more go over the earth (Isaiah 54:9), where the “earth” denotes the church, because the church is there treated of.

[5] Because “land” or “earth” in the Word signifies the church, it signifies also what is not the church, for every such word has contrary or opposite meanings; as for example the various lands of the Gentiles; in general all lands outside the land of Canaan. “Land” is therefore taken also for the people and for the man outside the church, and hence for the external man, for his will, his Own, and so forth. The term is rarely used in the Word for the whole world, except when the whole human race is meant as regards their state, whether of the church or not of the church. And because the earth is the containant of the ground, which also signifies the church, and the ground is the containant of the field, the word “earth” signifies, because it involves, many things; and what it signifies is evident from the subject treated of, which is that of which the term is predicated. From all this it is evident that by the “whole earth” that was overspread by the sons of Noah, is not signified the whole world, or the whole human race, but all the doctrines both true and false that were of the churches.

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