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2 Mose 12

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1 Und Jehova redete zu Mose und Aaron im Lande Ägypten und sprach:

2 Dieser Monat soll euch der Anfang der Monate sein, er soll euch der erste sein von den Monaten des Jahres.

3 Redet zu der ganzen Gemeinde Israel und sprechet: Am Zehnten dieses Monats, da nehme sich ein jeder ein Lamm für ein Vaterhaus, ein Lamm für ein Haus.

4 Und wenn das Haus nicht zahlreich genug ist für ein Lamm, so nehme er es und sein Nachbar, der nächste an seinem Hause, nach der Zahl der Seelen; einen jeden sollt ihr nach dem Maße seines Essens rechnen auf das Lamm.

5 Ein Lamm ohne Fehl sollt ihr haben, ein männliches, einjährig; von den Schafen oder von den Ziegen sollt ihr es nehmen.

6 Und ihr sollt es in Verwahrung haben bis auf den vierzehnten Tag dieses Monats; und die ganze Versammlung der Gemeinde Israel soll es schlachten zwischen den zwei Abenden.

7 Und sie sollen von dem Blute nehmen und es an die beiden Pfosten und an die Oberschwelle tun, an den Häusern, in welchen sie es essen.

8 Und sie sollen in selbiger Nacht das Fleisch essen, gebraten am Feuer, und ungesäuertes Brot; mit bitteren Kräutern sollen sie es essen.

9 Ihr sollt nichts roh davon essen und keineswegs im Wasser gesotten, sondern am Feuer gebraten: seinen Kopf samt seinen Schenkeln und samt seinem Eingeweide.

10 Und ihr sollt nichts davon übriglassen bis an den Morgen; und was davon bis an den Morgen übrigbleibt, sollt ihr mit Feuer verbrennen.

11 Und also sollt ihr es essen: Eure Lenden gegürtet, eure Schuhe an euren Füßen und euren Stab in eurer Hand; und ihr sollt es essen in Eile. Es ist das Passah Jehovas.

12 Und ich werde in dieser Nacht durch das Land Ägypten gehen und alle Erstgeburt im Lande Ägypten schlagen vom Menschen bis zum Vieh, und ich werde Gericht üben an allen Göttern Ägyptens, ich, Jehova.

13 Und das Blut soll euch zum Zeichen sein an den Häusern, worin ihr seid; und sehe ich das Blut, so werde ich an euch vorübergehen; und es wird keine Plage zum Verderben unter euch sein, wenn ich das Land Ägypten schlage.

14 Und dieser Tag soll euch zum Gedächtnis sein, und ihr sollt ihn feiern als Fest dem Jehova; als ewige Satzung bei euren Geschlechtern sollt ihr ihn feiern.

15 Sieben Tage sollt ihr Ungesäuertes essen; ja, am ersten Tage sollt ihr den Sauerteig aus euren Häusern wegtun; denn jeder, der Gesäuertes isset, von dem ersten Tage bis zu dem siebten Tage, selbige Seele soll ausgerottet werden aus Israel.

16 Und am ersten Tage soll euch eine heilige Versammlung und am siebten Tage eine heilige Versammlung sein; keinerlei Arbeit soll an ihnen getan werden; nur was von jeder Seele gegessen wird, das allein soll von euch bereitet werden.

17 Und so beobachtet das Fest der ungesäuerten Brote; denn an diesem selbigen Tage habe ich eure Heere aus dem Lande Ägypten herausgeführt. Und ihr sollt diesen Tag beobachten bei euren Geschlechtern als ewige Satzung.

18 Im ersten Monat, am vierzehnten Tage des Monats, am Abend, sollt ihr Ungesäuertes essen bis zu dem einundzwanzigsten Tage des Monats, am Abend.

19 Sieben Tage soll kein Sauerteig in euren Häusern gefunden werden; denn jeder, der Gesäuertes isset, selbige Seele soll aus der Gemeinde Israel ausgerottet werden, er sei Fremdling oder Eingeborener des Landes.

20 Nichts Gesäuertes sollt ihr essen; in allen euren Wohnungen sollt ihr Ungesäuertes essen.

21 Und Mose rief alle Ältesten Israels und sprach zu ihnen: Greifet und nehmet euch Kleinvieh nach euren Familien und schlachtet das Passah;

22 und nehmet einen Büschel Ysop und tauchet ihn in das Blut, das in dem Becken ist, und streichet von dem Blute, das in dem Becken ist, an die Oberschwelle und an die beiden Pfosten; ihr aber, keiner von euch soll zur Türe seines Hauses hinausgehen bis an den Morgen.

23 Und Jehova wird hindurchgehen, die Ägypter zu schlagen; und sieht er das Blut an der Oberschwelle und an den beiden Pfosten, so wird Jehova an der Tür vorübergehen und wird dem Verderber nicht erlauben, in eure Häuser zu kommen, um zu schlagen.

24 Und ihr sollt dieses beobachten als eine Satzung für dich und deine Kinder ewiglich.

25 Und es soll geschehen, wenn ihr in das Land kommet, das Jehova euch geben wird, so wie er geredet hat, so sollt ihr diesen Dienst beobachten.

26 Und es soll geschehen, wenn eure Kinder zu euch sagen werden: Was soll euch dieser Dienst?

27 so sollt ihr sagen: Es ist ein Passahopfer dem Jehova, der an den Häusern der Kinder Israel in Ägypten vorüberging, als er die Ägypter schlug und unsere Häuser rettete. Und das Volk neigte sich und betete an.

28 Und die Kinder Israel gingen hin und taten es; so wie Jehova Mose und Aaron geboten hatte, also taten sie.

29 Und es geschah um Mitternacht, da schlug Jehova alle Erstgeburt im Lande Ägypten, von dem Erstgeborenen des Pharao, der auf seinem Throne saß, bis zum Erstgeborenen des Gefangenen, der im Kerker war, und alle Erstgeburt des Viehs.

30 Und der Pharao stand in der Nacht auf, er und alle seine Knechte und alle Ägypter, und es entstand ein großes Geschrei in Ägypten; denn es war kein Haus, worin nicht ein Toter war.

31 Und er rief Mose und Aaron in der Nacht und sprach: Machet euch auf, ziehet weg aus der Mitte meines Volkes, sowohl ihr als auch die Kinder Israel, und gehet hin, dienet Jehova, wie ihr geredet habt;

32 auch euer Kleinvieh und eure Rinder nehmet mit, so wie ihr geredet habt, und gehet hin und segnet mich auch!

33 Und die Ägypter drängten das Volk, sie eilends aus dem Lande ziehen zu lassen; denn sie sagten: Wir alle sind des Todes!

34 Und das Volk trug seinen Teig, ehe er gesäuert war, ihre Backschüsseln in ihre Kleider gebunden, auf ihren Schultern.

35 Und die Kinder Israel taten nach dem Worte Moses und forderten von den Ägyptern silberne Geräte und goldene Geräte und Kleider.

36 Und Jehova gab dem Volke Gnade in den Augen der Ägypter, und sie gaben ihnen das Geforderte; und sie beraubten die Ägypter.

37 Und die Kinder Israel brachen auf von Raemses nach Sukkoth, bei sechshunderttausend Mann zu Fuß, die Männer ohne die Kinder.

38 Und auch viel Mischvolk zog mit ihnen herauf, und Kleinvieh und Rinder, sehr viel Vieh.

39 Und sie backten den Teig, den sie aus Ägypten gebracht hatten, zu ungesäuerten Kuchen; denn er war nicht gesäuert, weil sie aus Ägypten getrieben worden waren und nicht hatten verziehen können; und sie hatten auch keine Zehrung für sich bereitet.

40 Und die Wohnzeit der Kinder Israel, die sie in Ägypten zugebracht haben, ist vierhundertdreißig Jahre.

41 Und es geschah am Ende der vierhundertdreißig Jahre, und es geschah an diesem selbigen Tage, daß alle Heere Jehovas aus dem Lande Ägypten auszogen.

42 Dies ist eine Nacht, die dem Jehova zu beobachten ist, weil er sie aus dem Lande Ägypten herausführte; diese selbige Nacht gehört dem Jehova, sie ist zu beobachten von allen Kindern Israel bei ihren Geschlechtern.

43 Und Jehova redete zu Mose und Aaron: Dies ist die Satzung des Passah: Kein Fremdling soll davon essen;

44 jedes Mannes Knecht aber, ein für Geld Erkaufter, wenn du ihn beschneidest, dann darf er davon essen.

45 Ein Beisaß und ein Mietling soll nicht davon essen.

46 In einem Hause soll es gegessen werden; du sollst nichts von dem Fleische aus dem Hause hinausbringen, und ihr sollt kein Bein an ihm zerbrechen.

47 Die ganze Gemeinde Israel soll es feiern.

48 Und wenn ein Fremdling bei dir weilt und das Passah dem Jehova feiern will, so werde alles Männliche bei ihm beschnitten, und dann komme er herzu, es zu feiern; und er soll sein wie ein Eingeborener des Landes. Aber kein Unbeschnittener soll davon essen.

49 Ein Gesetz soll sein für den Eingeborenen und für den Fremdling, der in eurer Mitte weilt.

50 Und alle Kinder Israel taten, wie Jehova Mose und Aaron geboten hatte; also taten sie.

51 Und es geschah an diesem selbigen Tage, da führte Jehova die Kinder Israel aus dem Lande Ägypten heraus nach ihren Heeren.

   

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Apocalypse Explained # 193

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193.I will come on thee as a thief. That this signifies an unexpected time of death, when all knowledges procured from the Word which have not acquired spiritual life will be taken away, is evident from the signification of I will come as a thief, when it is said of those who are not wakeful, that is, who do not procure for themselves spiritual life, as being that all such knowledges will be taken away from them. The reason why an unexpected time of death is also signified by the same words is, that death comes unexpectedly, and yet man, after death, remains in that state of life to eternity which he had procured for himself in the world; therefore he must be wakeful. Because it is known but to few, that all knowledges (cognitiones) procured from the Word which have not acquired spiritual life are taken away, it is therefore expedient to say how this is effected. All the things that are in a man's spirit remain with him to eternity; but the things that are not there, after death, when he becomes a spirit, are dissipated. Those things remain in his spirit which he had thought from himself, consequently which, when he was alone, he had thought from his own love; for then his spirit thinks from itself, and not from the things in his bodily memory which do not make one with his love.

There are two states of man, one when he thinks from his spirit, and the other when he thinks from his bodily memory; if these two states do not make one, a man can think one thing with himself, and think and speak another thing with others.

[2] For example, a preacher who loves himself and the world above all things, and lightly esteems the Divine, so that he even denies it in heart, and consequently devises evils of every kind with the crafty and deceitful of the world, nevertheless, when he speaks with others, especially when he is preaching, can speak as it were from zeal for the Divine and for Divine truths, and indeed on such occasions he can think in like manner; but this is a state of his thought from the bodily memory, which is evidently separated from the state of his thought from the spirit; for when he is left alone he thinks against them. This is the state which remains with man after death, whereas the former does not remain, because it belongs to his body and not to his spirit. Wherefore, when he becomes a spirit, as is the case when he dies, all the knowledge, which he had acquired from the Word, and which do not agree with the life of the love of his spirit, he rejects; but the case is different with those who, when left to themselves, think justly concerning the Divine, concerning the Word and the truths of the church therefrom, and love them, so as to desire to live according to them. The thoughts in the spirit of such persons make one with their thoughts from the bodily memory, thus one with the knowledges of truth and good which they have obtained from the Word; and so far as they do so, so far those knowledges obtain spiritual life; for they are raised up by the Lord from the external or natural man into the internal or spiritual man, and constitute the life of the latter, that is, of the understanding and will. The truths in the internal man are those which live, because they are Divine, and hence man has life in his internal from them. That this is the case, I have known from much experience; if I were to adduce the whole of it, it would fill many pages (something concerning it may be seen in the work, Heaven and Hell 491-498, 499-511; and above, n. 114).

[3] From these considerations it is now evident what is meant in the spiritual sense by I will come on thee as a thief, namely, that after death all knowledges procured from the Word which have not acquired spiritual life will be taken away. The same is also meant in the Apocalypse, where it is said,

"Behold, I come as a thief. Blessed is he that watcheth and keepeth his garments, lest he walk naked" (16:15).

It is said as a thief, because evils and the falsities thence derived in the natural man take away and cast out the knowledges of truth and good which are therein from the Word; for the things which are not loved are cast out. There is in every man either the love of evil, and thence of falsity, or the love of good, and thence of truth; these two loves are opposed to each other, wherefore he who is in the one cannot be in the other;

"For no one can serve two masters," but will love the one and hate the other (Matthew 6:24).

[4] Because evils and falsities thence penetrate from the interior, and, as it were, break through the wall which is between the state of man's thought from the spirit and the state of his thought from the body, and cast out the knowledges of good and truth which have their abode outwardly in man, therefore those evils and falsities are what are meant by thieves. So also in the following passages. In Matthew:

"Lay not up treasures upon earth, but in heaven, where thieves do not break through nor steal" (6:19, 20).

Treasures are knowledges of truth and good; to lay them up in heaven is in the spiritual man, for the spiritual man is in heaven. (That treasures signify knowledges of truth and good, may be seen, Arcana Coelestia 1694, 4508, 10227; and that the internal spiritual man is in heaven, may be seen in The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem 36-50.)

[5] Again:

"Be wakeful, therefore, for ye know not what hour your Lord will come. Know this, that if the good man of the house had known in what hour the thief would come, he would have watched, and would not have suffered his house to be broken up" (24:42, 43).

By this is meant, that if a man knew the hour of his death, he would prepare himself, not indeed from the love of truth and good, but from the fear of hell; and whatever a man does from fear remains not with him, but what he does from love remains; therefore he must prepare himself continually (see The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem 143, 168).

[6] In Obadiah:

"If thieves come to thee, if destroyers by night, how wilt thou be cut off, will they not steal till they have enough?" (verse 5).

Here also falsities and evils are called thieves, and are said to steal; falsities are signified by thieves, and evils by destroyers by night; it is said by night, because night signifies a state in which there is neither love nor faith.

[7] In Joel:

"They shall run to and fro in the city; they shall run upon the wall, they shall climb up into the houses, they shall enter in at the windows like a thief" (2:9).

The subject here treated of is the vastation of the church by falsities from evil; a city and a wall signify things of doctrine; houses and windows, things of the mind that receives; houses, that part of the mind which is called the will, where good is, and windows that part of the mind which is called the understanding, where truth is. (That city in the Word signifies doctrine, may be seen, Arcana Coelestia 402, 2449, 2712, 2943, 3216, 4492, 4493; that wall denotes the truth of doctrine protecting, n. 6419; that house denotes that part of the mind which is called the will, where good is, n. 2231, 2233, 2559, 3128, 5023, 6690, 7353, 7910, 7929, 9150; and that windows denote that part of the mind which is called the understanding, where truth is, n. 655, 658, 3391.) Hence it is evident what is signified by running on the wall, climbing up into the houses, and entering in at the windows like a thief.

[8] In Hosea:

"I healed Israel; then the iniquity of Ephraim was discovered, and the evils of Samaria; for they commit falsehood, and the thief cometh in, and the troop spreadeth itself without" (7:1).

The iniquity of Ephraim signifies the falsities of the understanding; and the wickedness of Samaria, the evils of the will; to commit falsehood, is to think and will falsity from evil; the thief signifies falsity taking away and dissipating truth; and the troop spreading itself without signifies evil casting out good. (That Ephraim is the understanding of such things as pertain to the church, may be seen, Arcana Coelestia 3969, 5354, 6222, 6234, 6238, 6267, 6296; that a lie denotes falsity from evil, n. 8908, 9248; that a troop denotes good casting out evil, and, in the opposite sense, evil casting out good, n. 3934, 3935, 6404, 6405.)

[9] These things are adduced, in order that it may be known that a thief in the Word signifies falsity laying waste, that is, taking away and destroying truth. It was shown above that after death all knowledges of truth and good from the Word, which have not been used to acquire spiritual life, are taken away, consequently from those who have not become spiritual by knowledges from the Word. The same thing is also signified by many passages in the historical parts of the Word; still no one can see this, unless he is acquainted with the spiritual sense of the Word. This is signified by the sons of Israel borrowing from the Egyptians vessels of gold, and vessels of silver, and garments, and thus taking them away as it were by theft; concerning which it is thus written in Moses:

They were commanded to borrow "of the Egyptians vessels of gold, and vessels of silver, and raiment. And Jehovah gave the people favour in the eyes of the Egyptians, so that they lent unto them; and thus they spoiled the Egyptians" (Exodus 12:35, 36).

By the Egyptians are represented those who are merely natural, although they possess many knowledges (cognitiones); by the sons of Israel those who are spiritual; by vessels of silver and of gold, and also by raiment, are signified the knowledges (cognitiones) of truth and good which those who are spiritual apply to good, but which the natural apply to evil and thus destroy.

Similar things are signified by the nations being given up to the curse, and at the same time all things pertaining to them being either burnt with fire or pulled down, which are frequently treated of in the book of Joshua, and in the books of Samuel and of the Kings; for the nations of the land of Canaan represented those who are in evils and falsities, and the sons of Israel those who are in truths and goods.

[10] That the knowledges of good and truth derived from the Word are to be taken away from those who have not procured for themselves spiritual life, is also meant in the Lord's parables concerning the talents and pounds, given to the servants, with which to trade and make gain, and concerning the servant who traded not and gained nothing; of this one it is thus said:

To him who hid his talent in the earth, the lord said, Thou wicked and slothful servant, thou oughtest therefore to have put my money to the exchangers, and then at my coming I should have received mine own with usury. Take therefore the talent from him, and give it unto him that hath ten talents. For unto every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance; but from him that hath not shall be taken away that which he hath, and cast the useless servant into outer darkness (Matthew 25:14-30).

And in another place:

He came who had received one pound saying, "Lord, behold, here is thy pound, which I have kept laid up in a napkin." The Lord said, "Wherefore then gavest thou not my money into the bank, that at my coming I might have required mine own with usury? And he said, Take from him the pound, and give it to him that hath ten pounds. I say unto you, That unto every one that hath shall be given; but from him that hath not, even that he hath shall be taken away from him" (Luke 19:13-26).

In these passages, talents, pounds, and money signify knowledges of truth and good from the Word. To trade with these, to gain by them, to give them to the exchangers, or into the bank, signifies, to procure to themselves spiritual life and intelligence by them; putting them away in the earth, and in a napkin, signifies that they are only in the memory of the natural man; of these it is therefore said that what they have shall be taken away from them, according to what has been explained in the beginning of this article.

[11] This is the case with all in the other life who have procured to themselves knowledges from the Word, and have not committed them to life, but only to memory. Those who have knowledges from the Word in the memory only, however numerous such knowledges may be, and have not committed them to life, remain still natural as before. To commit to life knowledges from the Word is to think from them when man, left to himself, thinks from his spirit, and to will them and do them; for this is to love truths because they are truths; and those who thus act, are those who become spiritual by means of knowledges from the Word.

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