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Genesi 13

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1 Abramo adunque salì di Egitto, con la sua moglie, e con tutto ciò ch’era suo, e con Lot, traendo verso il Mezzodì.

2 Or Abramo era grandemente possente in bestiame, in argento ed in oro.

3 Ed egli, seguendo il suo viaggio, andò dal Mezzodì fino a Betel, fino al luogo dove prima erano stati i suoi padiglioni, fra Betel ed Ai,

4 nel luogo ove era l’altare che egli aveva prima fatto quivi; ed Abramo invocò quivi il nome del Signore.

5 OR Lot ancora, che andava con Abramo, avea pecore, e buoi, e padiglioni.

6 E il paese non li poteva portare, abitando amendue insieme; perciocchè le lor facoltà erano grandi, e non potevano dimorare insieme.

7 E nacque contesa fra i pastori del bestiame di Abramo, ed i pastori del bestiame di Lot. Or i Cananei ed i Ferezei abitavano allora nel paese.

8 Ed Abramo disse a Lot: Deh! non siavi contesa fra me e te, nè fra i miei pastori ed i tuoi; conciossiachè noi siamo fratelli.

9 Tutto il paese non è egli davanti a te? deh! separati d’appresso a me; se tu vai a sinistra, io andrò a destra; e se tu vai a destra, io andrò a sinistra.

10 E Lot, alzati gli occhi, riguardò tutta la pianura del Giordano, ch’era tutta adacquata; avanti che il Signore avesse distrutto Sodoma e Gomorra, quella era come il giardino del Signore, come il paese di Egitto, fino a Soar.

11 E Lot elesse per sè tutta la pianura del Giordano; ed egli si partì, traendo verso l’Oriente; e così si separarono l’uno dall’altro.

12 Abramo dimorò nel paese di Canaan, e Lot dimorò nelle terre della pianura, e andò tendendo i suoi padiglioni fin che venne a Sodoma.

13 Ora gli uomini di Sodoma erano grandemente scellerati e peccatori contro al Signore.

14 E il Signore disse ad Abramo, dopo che Lot si fu separato d’appresso a lui: Alza ora gli occhi tuoi, e riguarda, dal luogo ove tu sei, verso il Settentrione, verso il Mezzodì, verso l’Oriente, e verso l’Occidente.

15 Perciocchè io darò a te ed alla tua progenie, in perpetuo, il paese che tu vedi.

16 E farò che la tua progenie sarà come la polvere della terra; che se alcuno può annoverar la polvere della terra, anche potrassi annoverar la tua progenie.

17 Levati, va’ attorno per lo paese, per largo e per lungo; perciocchè io tel darò.

18 Abramo adunque andò tendendo i suoi padiglioni; e, giunto alle pianure di Mamre, che sono in Hebron, dimorò quivi, e vi edificò un altare al Signore.

   


To many Protestant and Evangelical Italians, the Bibles translated by Giovanni Diodati are an important part of their history. Diodati’s first Italian Bible edition was printed in 1607, and his second in 1641. He died in 1649. Throughout the 1800s two editions of Diodati’s text were printed by the British Foreign Bible Society. This is the more recent 1894 edition, translated by Claudiana.

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Arcana Coelestia # 1472

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1472. And it shall come to pass, when the Egyptians shall see thee. That this signifies the memory-knowledge of knowledges, which is described as to what it is when they see celestial knowledges, is evident from the signification of “Egypt,” which is the memory-knowledge of knowledges, as before shown; and from this it is evident what is signified by the words “when the Egyptians see,” namely, that this memory-knowledge is such as is described in this verse. The memory-knowledge of knowledges is attended with this, and it is something natural in it, as is manifested in children when they first begin to learn, namely, that the higher things are, the more they desire them; and still more when they hear that they are celestial and Divine. But this delight is natural, and arises from a desire that is of the external man. With other men this desire causes them to feel delight in the mere memory-knowledge of knowledges, without any further end; when yet the memory-knowledge of knowledges is nothing but an instrumental agency having for its end a use, namely, that the knowledges may serve celestial and spiritual things as vessels; and when they are thus serving, they are then for the first time in their use, and receive from the use their delight. Anyone can see, if he pays attention, that in itself the memory-knowledge of knowledges is nothing but a means whereby a man may become rational, and thence spiritual, and at last celestial; and that by means of the knowledges his external man may be adjoined to his internal; and when this is done, he is in the use itself.

The internal man regards nothing but the use. For the sake of this end also, the Lord insinuates the delight that childhood and youth perceives in memory-knowledges. But when a man begins to make his delight consist in memory-knowledge alone, it is a bodily cupidity which carries him away, and in proportion as he is thus carried away (that is, makes his delight consist in mere memory-knowledge), in the same proportion he removes himself from what is celestial, and in the same proportion do the memory-knowledges close themselves toward the Lord, and become material. But in proportion as the memory-knowledges are learned with the end of use,—as for the sake of human society, for the sake of the Lord’s church on earth, for the sake of the Lord’s kingdom in the heavens, and still more for the Lord’s own sake,—the more are they opened toward Him. On this account also the angels, who are in the memory-knowledge of all knowledges, and indeed to such a degree that scarcely one part in ten thousand can be presented to the full apprehension of man, yet esteem such knowledge as nothing in comparison with use.

From what has been said it may be seen what is signified by the words, “When the Egyptians shall see thee, they will say, This is his wife; and they will kill me, and will make thee to live.” These things were said because the Lord when a child knew this and thought in this way, namely, that if He should be carried away by a mere desire for the memory-knowledge of knowledges, this memory-knowledge is of such a character that it would care no more for celestial things, but only for the knowledges [cognitiones] which the desire for memory-knowledge would carry away. On these subjects more follows.

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