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Klagelieder 4

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1 Wie ward verdunkelt das Gold, verändert das gute, feine Gold! Wie wurden verschüttet die Steine des Heiligtums an allen Straßenecken!

2 Die Kinder Zions, die kostbaren, die mit gediegenem Golde aufgewogenen, wie sind sie irdenen Krügen gleichgeachtet, dem Werke von Töpferhänden!

3 Selbst Schakale reichen die Brust, säugen ihre Jungen; die Tochter meines Volkes ist grausam geworden wie die Strauße in der Wüste.

4 Die Zunge des Säuglings klebt vor Durst an seinem Gaumen; die Kinder fordern Brot, niemand bricht es ihnen.

5 Die von Leckerbissen aßen, verschmachten auf den Straßen; die auf Karmesin getragen wurden, liegen auf Misthaufen.

6 Und die Schuld der Tochter meines Volkes ist größer geworden als die Sünde Sodoms, welches plötzlich umgekehrt wurde, ohne daß Hände dabei tätig waren.

7 Ihre Fürsten waren reiner als Schnee, weißer als Milch; röter waren sie am Leibe als Korallen, wie Saphir ihre Gestalt.

8 Dunkler als Schwärze ist ihr Aussehen, man erkennt sie nicht auf den Straßen; ihre Haut klebt an ihrem Gebein, ist dürr geworden wie Holz.

9 Die vom Schwert Erschlagenen sind glücklicher als die vom Hunger Getöteten, welche hinschmachten, durchbohrt vom Mangel an Früchten des Feldes.

10 Die Hände barmherziger Weiber haben ihre Kinder gekocht; sie wurden ihnen zur Speise bei der Zertrümmerung der Tochter meines Volkes.

11 Jehova hat seinen Grimm vollendet, seine Zornglut ausgegossen; und er hat in Zion ein Feuer angezündet, das seine Grundfesten verzehrt hat.

12 Die Könige der Erde hätten es nicht geglaubt, noch alle Bewohner des Erdkreises, daß Bedränger und Feind in die Tore Jerusalems kommen würden.

13 Es ist wegen der Sünden seiner Propheten, der Missetaten seiner Priester, welche in seiner Mitte das Blut der Gerechten vergossen haben.

14 Sie irrten blind auf den Straßen umher; sie waren mit Blut befleckt, so daß man ihre Kleider nicht anrühren mochte.

15 "Weichet! Unrein!" rief man ihnen zu; "Weichet, weichet, rühret nicht an!" Wenn sie flüchteten, so irrten sie umher; man sagte unter den Nationen: Sie sollen nicht länger bei uns weilen!

16 Jehovas Angesicht hat sie zerstreut, er schaut sie nicht mehr an. Auf die Priester hat man keine Rücksicht genommen, an Greisen nicht Gnade geübt.

17 Noch schmachten unsere Augen nach unserer nichtigen Hilfe; in unserem Warten warten wir auf ein Volk, das nicht retten wird.

18 Sie stellen unseren Schritten nach, daß wir auf unseren Straßen nicht gehen können. Unser Ende ist nahe, voll sind unsere Tage; ja, unser Ende ist gekommen.

19 Unsere Verfolger waren schneller als die Adler des Himmels; sie jagten uns nach auf den Bergen, in der Wüste lauerten sie auf uns.

20 Unser Lebensodem, der Gesalbte Jehovas, wurde in ihren Gruben gefangen, von welchem wir sagten: In seinem Schatten werden wir leben unter den Nationen.

21 Sei fröhlich und freue dich, Tochter Edom, Bewohnerin des Landes Uz! Auch an dich wird der Becher kommen; du wirst trunken werden und dich entblößen.

22 Zu Ende ist deine Schuld, Tochter Zion! Er wird dich nicht mehr wegführen. er wird deine Missetat heimsuchen, Tochter Edom, er wird deine Sünden aufdecken.

   

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Skin

  

'Skins' or 'hides' signify external things, because the hide is the outermost organ of an animal where its interiors extend, the same as with a person's dermis or skin. 'Skin' corresponds to truth or to falsity in the extremes. See Arcana Coelestia 1835, 10036, and Apocalypse Explained 386. 'Skin,' as in Job 19:26, means the natural degree a person has with him after death.

In Exodus 22:27, this signifies things that are relatively external. (Arcana Coelestia 9215)

In Exodus 34:29, this signifies the internal of the Word shining from the external. (Arcana Coelestia 10691)

In Job 19:20, this signifies being not entirely in falsities. (Apocalypse Explained 556[11])

In Jeremiah 13:23, this signifies that evil cannot change its nature. (Apocalypse Explained 780[5])

In Genesis 3:21, this signifies that the Lord instructed them in spiritual and natural good. (Arcana Coelestia 292)

In Genesis 27:16, this signifies the external truths of domestic good. (Arcana Coelestia 3540)

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Arcana Coelestia # 3540

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3540. 'And she put the skins of the kids of the she-goats' means the external truths clothing homeborn good. This is clear from the meaning of 'skins' as external things, dealt with below, and from the meaning of 'the kids of the she-goats', coming as they did from the flock bred within the homestead, as the truths which clothe homeborn good, dealt with in 3518, 3519, where it is also evident what homeborn good is and what truths from that source are. Any good whatever has its own truths, and any truths whatever have their own good. And they must be joined together - good to truths - if anything at all is to exist. The reason why 'skins' means external things is that the skin is the outer covering of an animal to which its exterior parts extend, even as the skin or the cuticles is such with a human being. The latter receives its spiritual meaning from what is representative in the next life, where there are people who belong to the province of the skin. These will in the Lord's Divine mercy be described at the ends of chapters below where the Grand Man will be presented as a separate subject. They are people in whom none but external good and the truths which go with this are present. This is why the skin, human or animal, means things that are external. The same is also evident from the Word, as in Jeremiah,

On account of the greatness of your iniquity your skirts have been uncovered, your heels have suffered violence. Can the Ethiopian change his skin and the leopard its spots? Also are you able to do good, having been taught to do evil? Jeremiah 13:22-23.

Here 'skirts' means external truths, 'heels' the lowest goods - 'the heel' and 'shoes' being the lowest natural things, see 259, 1748. And because those truths and goods, as it is said, spring from evil, they are compared to an 'Ethiopian', who was black, and his 'skin', and also to 'a leopard and its spots'.

[2] In Moses,

If you take your neighbour's clothing as a pledge you shall restore it to him before the sun goes down; for this is his only covering; it is his clothing for his skin, in which he will lie down. Exodus 22:26-27.

Inasmuch as all the laws contained in the Word, including civil and judicial ones, have a correspondence with laws in heaven concerning what is good and true, and from this correspondence came to be laid down, so it was with the law just quoted. For why else would it have ever been laid down that they were to restore clothing that had been pledged before the sun went down, and why else is it said that 'it is his clothing for his skin, in which he lies down'? The correspondence is evident from the internal sense, which is that people were not to cheat their neighbour of external truths, which are the matters of doctrine by which they conduct their lives, and also religious observances - 'clothing' meaning such truths, see 297, 1073, 2576, and 'the sun' the good of love or of life that ensues from those truths, 1529, 1530, 2441, 2495. The prevention of that good from perishing is meant by the statement about the restoration of the pledge before the sun went down. And since the things laid down in those laws are the external coverings of interior things, or the outermost aspects of these, the words 'his clothing for his skin in which he lies down' are used.

[3] Because 'skins' meant external things it was commanded that there should be for the tent a covering made of red ram skins and over that a covering of badger skins, Exodus 26:14. For the tent was representative of the three heavens, and so of the celestial and spiritual things of the Lord's kingdom. The curtains enveloping it represented natural things, which are external, 3478; and these are the ram skins and the badger skins. And since external things are those which cover internal, or natural things are those which cover spiritual and celestial, in the way that the body does the soul, that command was therefore given. It was for a like reason commanded that when the camp was on the move Aaron and his sons were to cover the ark of the testimony with the veil and were to place a badger-skin covering over it. And over the table and what was on it they were to spread a twice-dyed scarlet cloth and then cover that with a badger-skin covering. They were likewise required to place the lampstand and all its vessels under a covering made of badger skin - also all the vessels for ministering they were to place under a violet cloth, and then cover them with a badger-skin covering, Numbers 4:5-6, 8, 10-12. Anyone who thinks about the Word in a devout way may see that Divine things were represented by all these objects, such as the ark, the table, the lampstand, and the vessels for ministering, also the coverings of twice-dyed scarlet and of violet, as well as the coverings of badger skin, and that these objects represented Divine things contained within external ones.

[4] Because the prophets represented those who teach, and therefore represented teaching from the Word concerning what is good and true, 2534; and because Elijah represented the Word itself, 2762, as also did John, who for that reason is called the Elijah who is to come, Matthew 17:10-13; and in order that these might represent the nature of the Word in its external form, that is, in the letter,

Elijah wore a skin girdle around his loins. 2 Kings 1:8. And John had a garment of camel hair and a skin girdle around his waist. Matthew 3:4.

Because animal 'skin' and human 'skin' means external things, which in relation to spiritual and celestial are natural things, and because it was customary in the Ancient Church to speak and to write by means of meaningful signs, reference is also made to both types of skin, and with the same meaning, in Job, a book of the Ancient Church. This becomes clear from a number of places in that book, including the following,

I know my Redeemer; He is alive; and at the last He will rise above the dust; and afterwards these things will be encompassed by my skin, and out of my flesh shall I see God. Job 19:25-26.

'Encompassed by skin' stands for the natural as it exists with someone after he has died, dealt with in 3539. 'Out of one's flesh seeing God' is doing so from a proprium made alive. For the proprium is meant by 'flesh', see 148, 149, 780; and the Book of Job is a book of the Ancient Church, a fact which is evident, as has been stated, from its style which draws on representatives and meaningful signs. It is not however one of the books called the Law and the Prophets, the reason being that it has no internal sense in which the one subject is the Lord and His kingdom. For it is this alone that determines whether any book is a Book of the true Word.

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