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Genesi 35

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1 E IDDIO disse a Giacobbe: Levati, vattene in Betel, e dimora quivi, e fa’ un altare all’IDDIO che ti apparve quando tu fuggivi per tema di Esaù, tuo fratello.

2 E Giacobbe disse alla sua famiglia, ed a tutti coloro ch’erano con lui: Togliete via gl’iddii stranieri che son fra voi, e purificatevi, e cambiatevi i vestimenti.

3 E noi ci leveremo, ed andremo in Betel; ed io farò quivi un altare all’Iddio che mi ha risposto al giorno della mia angoscia, ed è stato meco per lo viaggio che io ho fatto.

4 Ed essi diedero a Giacobbe tutti gl’iddii degli stranieri, ch’erano nelle lor mani, e i monili che aveano agli orecchi; e Giacobbe il nascose sotto la quercia, ch’è vicina a Sichem.

5 Poi si partirono. E il terror di Dio fu sopra le città ch’erano d’intorno a loro; laonde non perseguirono i figliuoli di Giacobbe.

6 E Giacobbe, con tutta la gente ch’era con lui, giunse a Luz, ch’è nel paese di Canaan, la quale è Betel.

7 Ed edificò quivi un altare, e nominò quel luogo: L’Iddio di Betel; perciocchè quivi gli apparve Iddio, quando egli si fuggiva per tema del suo fratello.

8 E Debora, balia di Rebecca, morì, e fu seppellita al disotto di Betel, sotto una quercia, la quale Giacobbe nominò: Quercia di pianto.

9 E Iddio apparve ancora a Giacobbe, quando egli veniva di Paddan-aram, e lo benedisse.

10 E Iddio gli disse: Il tuo nome è Giacobbe: tu non sarai più nominato Giacobbe, anzi il tuo nome sarà Israele; e gli pose nome Israele.

11 Oltre a ciò Iddio gli disse: Io son l’Iddio Onnipotente; cresci e moltiplica; una nazione, anzi una raunanza di nazioni, verrà da te, e re usciranno da’ tuoi lombi.

12 Ed io donerò a te, ed alla tua progenie dopo te, il paese che io diedi ad Abrahamo e ad Isacco.

13 Poi Iddio risalì d’appresso a lui, nel luogo stesso dove egli avea parlato con lui.

14 E Giacobbe rizzò un piliere di pietra nel luogo ove Iddio avea parlato con lui; e versò sopra esso una offerta da spandere, e vi sparse su dell’olio.

15 Giacobbe adunque pose nome Betel a quel luogo, dove Iddio avea parlato con lui.

16 Poi Giacobbe, co’ suoi, partì di Betel; e, restandovi ancora alquanto spazio di paese per arrivare in Efrata, Rachele partorì, ed ebbe un duro parto.

17 E, mentre penava a partorire, la levatrice le disse: Non temere; perciocchè eccoti ancora un figliuolo.

18 E, come l’anima sua si partiva perciocchè ella morì, ella pose nome a quel figliuolo: Ben-oni; ma suo padre lo nominò Beniamino.

19 E Rachele morì, e fu seppellita nella via d’Efrata, ch’è Bet-lehem.

20 E Giacobbe rizzò una pila sopra la sepoltura di essa. Quest’è la pila della sepoltura di Rachele, che dura infino al dì d’oggi.

21 E Israele si partì, e tese i suoi padiglioni di là da Migdal-eder.

22 Ed avvenne, mentre Israele abitava in quel paese, che Ruben andò, e si giacque con Bilha, concubina di suo padre; e Israele lo intese.

23 Or i figliuoli di Giacobbe furono dodici.

24 I figliuoli di Lea furono Ruben, primogenito di Giacobbe, e Simeone e Levi, e Giuda, ed Issacar, e Zabulon.

25 E i figliuoli di Rachele furono Giuseppe e Beniamino.

26 E i figliuoli di Bilha, serva di Rachele, furono Dan e Neftali.

27 E i figliuoli di Zilpa, serva di Lea, furono Gad ed Aser. Questi sono i figliuoli di Giacobbe, i quali gli nacquero in Paddan-aram.

28 E Giacobbe arrivò ad Isacco, suo padre, in Mamre, nella città di Arba, ch’è Hebron, ove Abrahamo ed Isacco erano dimorati.

29 Or il tempo della vita d’Isacco fu di centottant’anni. (H35-30) Poi Isacco trapassò, e morì, e fu raccolto a’ suoi popoli, vecchio e sazio di giorni. Ed Esaù e Giacobbe, suoi figliuoli, lo seppellirono.

   


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 # 4571

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4571. And God said to him. That this signifies perception from the Divine, is evident from the signification in the historicals of the Word of “to say” as being to perceive (see n. 1791, 1815, 1819, 1822, 1898, 1919, 2080, 2619, 2862, 3395, 3509). That it was from the Divine is signified by “God said;” for the Divine was in the Lord from conception. This was His being, for He was conceived from Jehovah, and therefore His perception was from the Divine, but it was according to the state of the reception by His Human, because He made the Human in Himself Divine by successive steps. Hence it is evident that as the Divine or God was in Him, by the words “God said to him” is signified perception from the Divine.

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

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Arcana Coelestia # 3509

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3509. And Rebekah said unto Jacob her son. That this signifies the Lord’s perception from Divine truth concerning natural truth, is evident from the representation of Rebekah, as being the Divine truth of the Lord’s Divine rational (see n. 3012, 3013, 3077); from the signification of “saying” as being to perceive (n. 1791, 1815, 1819, 1822, 1898, 1919, 2080, 2506, 2515, 2552, 2619); and from the representation of Jacob, as being the Lord’s natural as to truth (n. 3305); from all which it is manifest that by “Rebekah said unto Jacob her son,” is signified the Lord’s perception from Divine truth concerning natural truth. That the Lord from the Divine good of the Divine rational which is represented by Isaac, willed to procure truth for Himself through the good of the natural which is represented by Esau, whereby He might glorify or make Divine His natural; but that the Lord from the Divine truth of the Divine rational which is represented by Rebekah willed to procure for Himself through the truth of the natural which is represented by Jacob the truth by means of which the rational might be glorified or made Divine, cannot be apprehended unless it is illustrated by the things that come to pass in man while being regenerated or made new by the Lord; nor indeed even by this unless it is known how the case is with the rational as to the good and as to the truth therein-which must therefore be briefly stated.

[2] The rational mind is distinguished into two faculties, one faculty being called the will, and the other the understanding. During man’s regeneration, that which proceeds from the will is called good, and that which proceeds from the understanding is called truth. Before man has been regenerated the will does not act as one with the understanding; but the former wills good, while the latter wills truth; insomuch that an effort of the will is perceived as being quite distinct from one of the understanding. This however is perceived only by those who reflect, and who know what the will is and the things that belong thereto, and what the understanding is and the things that belong thereto; but it is not perceived by those who do not know these things and therefore who do not reflect, for the reason that the natural mind is regenerated through the rational mind (see n. 3493), and this according to an order such that the good of the rational does not flow immediately into the good of the natural and regenerate it, but through the truth which is of the understanding, thus in appearance from the truth of the rational. These are the things treated of in this chapter in the internal sense; for “Isaac” is the rational mind as to the good which is of the will, “Rebekah” being the same with respect to the truth which is of the understanding; “Esau” is the good of the natural that comes forth from the good of the rational; and “Jacob” is the truth of the natural that comes forth from the good of the rational through the truth therein.

[3] From these things it may be seen what arcana are contained in the internal sense of the Word; but still there are very few which can be described to human apprehension; while those which transcend it, and cannot be described, are without limit; for in proportion as the Word penetrates more deeply, that is, more interiorly, into heaven, the more innumerable and ineffable the arcana become, not only to man, but also to the angels of the lower heaven; and when it reaches the inmost heaven, the angels there perceive that the arcana are infinite, and are altogether incomprehensible to them, because they are Divine. Such is the Word.

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