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Genesi 41

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1 ED avvenne, in capo di due anni intieri, che Faraone sognò, e gli pareva di essere presso al fiume.

2 Ed ecco, dal fiume salivano sette vacche di bella apparenza, e grasse, e carnose, e pasturavano nella giuncaia.

3 Poi ecco, dal fiume salivano sette altre vacche di brutta apparenza, e magre, e scarne; e si fermarono presso a quelle altre in su la riva del fiume.

4 E le vacche di brutta apparenza, e magre, e scarne, mangiarono le sette vacche di bella apparenza, e grasse. E Faraone si risvegliò.

5 Poi, raddormentatosi, sognò di nuovo: ed ecco, sette spighe prospere, e belle, salivano da un gambo.

6 Poi ecco, sette altre spighe minute, ed arse dal vento orientale, germogliavano dopo quelle.

7 E le spighe minute tranghiottirono le sette spighe prospere e piene. E Faraone si risvegliò; ed ecco un sogno.

8 E venuta la mattina, lo spirito suo fu conturbato; e mandò a chiamar tutti i Magi ed i Savi d’Egitto, e raccontò loro i suoi sogni; ma non vi fu alcuno che li potesse interpretare a Faraone.

9 Allora il coppier maggiore parlò a Faraone, dicendo: Io mi rammemoro oggi i miei falli.

10 Faraone si crucciò già gravemente contro a’ suoi servitori, e mise me e il panattier maggiore in prigione, in casa del Capitan delle guardie.

11 E sognammo egli ed io, in una stessa notte ciascuno un sogno; noi sognammo ciascuno il suo sogno, conveniente all’interpretazione che ne fu data.

12 Or quivi con noi era un giovane Ebreo, servitor del Capitan delle guardie, al quale noi raccontammo i nostri sogni, ed egli ce l’interpretò, dando la interpretazione a ciascuno secondo il suo sogno.

13 Ed avvenne che, secondo l’interpretazione ch’egli ci avea data, Faraone mi rimise nel mio stato, e fece appiccar quell’altro.

14 Allora Faraone mandò a chiamar Giuseppe, il quale prestamente fu tratto fuor della fossa; ed egli si tondè, e si cambiò i vestimenti, e venne a Faraone.

15 E Faraone disse a Giuseppe: Io ho sognato un sogno, e non vi è niuno che l’interpreti; or io ho udito dir di te, che tu intendi i sogni, per interpretarli.

16 E Giuseppe rispose a Faraone, dicendo: V’è altri che me; Iddio risponderà ciò che sarà per la prosperità di Faraone.

17 E Faraone disse a Giuseppe: E’ mi pareva nel mio sogno che io stava presso alla riva del fiume.

18 Ed ecco, dal fiume salivano sette vacche, grasse, e carnose, e di bella apparenza, e pasturavano nella giuncaia.

19 Poi ecco, sette altre vacche salivano dietro a quelle, magre, e di bruttissima apparenza, e scarne; io non ne vidi mai di così misere in tutto il paese di Egitto.

20 E le vacche magre, e misere, mangiarono le sette prime vacche grasse.

21 E quelle entrarono loro in corpo; ma pur non se ne riconobbe nulla; conciossiachè fossero di così brutto aspetto, come prima. Ed io mi risvegliai.

22 E’ mi parve ancora, sognando, veder sette spighe piene e belle, che salivano da un gambo.

23 Poi ecco, sette altre spighe aride, minute, arse dal vento orientale, germogliarono dopo quelle.

24 E le spighe minute tranghiottirono le sette spighe belle. Or io ho detti questi sogni a’ Magi; ma non vi è stato alcuno che me li abbia saputi dichiarare.

25 Allora Giuseppe disse a Faraone: Ciò che ha sognato Faraone è una stessa cosa. Iddio ha significato a Faraone ciò ch’egli è per fare.

26 Le sette vacche belle son sette anni; e le sette spighe belle sono altresì sette anni; l’uno e l’altro sogno sono una stessa cosa.

27 Parimente, le sette vacche magre e brutte, che salivano dopo quelle, son sette anni; e le sette spighe vote, arse dal vento orientale, saranno sette anni di fame.

28 Questo è quello che io ho detto a Faraone: Che Iddio ha mostrato a Faraone ciò ch’egli è per fare.

29 Ecco, vengono sette anni di grande abbondanza in tutto il paese di Egitto.

30 Poi, dopo quelli, verranno sette anni di fame; e tutta quella abbondanza sarà dimenticata nel paese di Egitto; e la fame consumerà il paese.

31 E quell’abbondanza non si conoscerà nel paese, per cagion di quella fame che verrà appresso; perciocchè ella sarà molto aspra.

32 E quant’è a ciò che il sogno è stato reiterato per due volte a Faraone, ciò è avvenuto, perchè la cosa è determinata da Dio; e Iddio l’eseguirà tosto.

33 Ora dunque provveggasi Faraone di un uomo intendente e savio, il quale egli costituisca sopra il paese di Egitto.

34 Faraone faccia questo: Ordini de’ commissari nel paese; e facciasi dare il quinto della rendita del paese di Egitto, ne’ sette anni dell’abbondanza.

35 E adunino essi tutta la vittuaglia di questi sette buoni anni che vengono, e ammassino il grano sotto la mano di Faraone, per vittuaglia nella città; e lo conservino.

36 E quella vittuaglia sarà per provvisione del paese, ne’ sette anni della fame che saranno nel paese di Egitto; e il paese non sarà distrutto per la fame.

37 E la cosa piacque a Faraone e a tutti i suoi servitori.

38 E Faraone disse a’ suoi servitori: Potremmo noi trovare alcuno pari a costui, ch’è uomo in cui è lo Spirito di Dio?

39 E Faraone disse a Giuseppe: Poichè Iddio ti ha manifestato tutto questo, e’ non vi è alcuno intendente, nè savio, come sei tu.

40 Tu sarai sopra la mia casa, e tutto il mio popolo ti bacerà in bocca; io non sarò più grande di te, salvo che nel trono.

41 Oltre a ciò, Faraone disse a Giuseppe: Vedi, io ti costituisco sopra tutto il paese di Egitto.

42 E Faraone si trasse il suo anello di mano, e lo mise in mano a Giuseppe, e lo fece vestir di vestimenti di bisso, e gli mise una collana d’oro al collo.

43 E lo fece salir sopra il carro della seconda persona del suo regno; e si gridava davanti a lui: Ognuno s’inginocchi; e ch’egli lo costituiva sopra tutto il paese di Egitto.

44 Faraone disse ancora a Giuseppe: Io son Faraone; niuno leverà il piè, nè la mano, in tutto il paese di Egitto, senza te.

45 E Faraone pose nome a Giuseppe Safenatpaanea; e gli diede per moglie Asenat, figliuola di Potifera, Governatore di On. E Giuseppe andò attorno per lo paese di Egitto.

46 Or Giuseppe era d’età di trent’anni, quando egli si presentò davanti a Faraone, re di Egitto. Giuseppe adunque si partì dal cospetto di Faraone, e passò per tutto il paese di Egitto.

47 E la terra produsse a menate, ne’ sette anni dell’abbondanza.

48 E Giuseppe adunò tutta la vittuaglia di quei sette anni, che furono nel paese di Egitto, e la ripose nelle città; egli ripose in ciascuna tutta la vittuaglia del contado circonvicino.

49 Giuseppe adunque ammassò grano in grandissima quantità, come la rena del mare; tanto che si rimase di annoverarlo; perciocchè era innumerabile.

50 Ora, avanti che venisse il primo anno della fame, nacquero a Giuseppe due figliuoli; i quali Asenat, figliuola di Potifera, Governatore di On, gli partorì.

51 E Giuseppe pose nome al primogenito Manasse; perciocchè, disse egli, Iddio mi ha fatto dimenticare ogni affanno, e tutta la casa di mio padre.

52 E pose nome al secondo, Efraim; perciocchè, disse egli, Iddio mi ha fatto fruttare nel paese della mia afflizione.

53 Poi, finiti i sette anni dell’abbondanza che fu nel paese di Egitto;

54 cominciarono a venire i sette anni della fame, siccome Giuseppe avea detto; e vi fu fame per tutti i paesi; ma per tutto Egitto vi era del pane.

55 Alla fine tutto il paese di Egitto fu anch’esso affamato, e il popolo gridò a Faraone per del pane. E Faraone disse a tutti gli Egizj: Andate a Giuseppe, e fate ciò ch’egli vi dirà.

56 Ed essendo la fame per tutto il paese, Giuseppe aperse tutti i granai, e ne vendè agli Egizj. E la fame si aggravò nel paese di Egitto.

57 Da ogni paese eziandio si veniva in Egitto a Giuseppe, per comperar del grano; perciocchè la fame si era aggravata per tutta la terra.

   


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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True Christian Religion # 157

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157. Since a person's spirit means his mind, 'being in the spirit', a phrase which occurs a number of times in the Word, means the state in which the mind is separated from the body. That was the state the Prophets were in when they saw the kind of things which happen in the spiritual world, so it is called 'the vision of God.' They were then in the same state as that of the spirits and angels of that world. In that state a person's spirit, as the visual capacity of his mind, can be transported from place to place while his body remains in one place. This is the state in which I have been for the last twenty-six years, with the difference that I have been simultaneously in the spirit and in the body, and only at times outside the body. Ezekiel, Zechariah, Daniel and John the writer of Revelation were evident from the following passages.

Ezekiel says: 'A spirit lifted me up, and brought me back to Chaldaea to the captives in a vision, in the spirit of God; so the vision which I had seen went up from me' (Ezekiel 11:1, 24). A spirit lifted him up and he heard behind him an earthquake (Ezekiel 3:12, 14). A spirit lifted him up between earth and heaven, and carried him off to Jerusalem, and he saw abominations (Ezekiel 8:3ff). He saw four creatures, which were Cherubim, and various sights with them (Ezek. chapters 1, 10); also a new earth and a new temple, and an angel measuring them (Ezek. chapters 40-48). He was then in receipt of a vision and in the spirit (Ezekiel 40:2; 13:5).

[2] Similar things happened to Zechariah, when he was with an angel and saw a man riding a horse among myrtles (Zechariah 1:8ff); four horns [Zechariah 1:18] and a man with a measuring line in his hand (Zechariah 2:1, 5ff); Joshua the high priest (Zechariah 3:1ff); four chariots coming out between two mountains, and their horses (Zechariah 6:1ff). Daniel was in the same state when he saw four beasts coming up out of the sea and various other details about them (Daniel 7:1ff); the fights between a ram and a he-goat (Daniel 8:1ff). He saw these things in a vision (Daniel 7:1-2, 7, 13; 8:2; 10:1, 7-8); the angel Gabriel appeared to him in a vision and spoke with him (Daniel 9:21).

[3] It was the same with John when he wrote Revelation. He says that he was in the spirit on the Lord's day (Revelation 1:10); that he was carried in the spirit into the desert (Revelation 17:3); onto a high mountain in the spirit (Revelation 21:10); that he saw [horses] in a vision (Revelation 9:17). Elsewhere he says that he saw what he described, as for instance the Son of Man in the midst of the seven lampstands; a tabernacle, a temple, an ark and an altar in heaven; a book sealed with seven seals, and horses that came out of it; four creatures around the throne; twelve thousand chosen from each tribe; then the Lamb upon Mount Zion; locusts coming up from the abyss; the dragon and his battle with Michael; a woman bearing a son, and fleeing into the desert because of the dragon; two beasts, one coming up from the sea, the other from the earth; a woman sitting on a scarlet beast; the dragon cast out into a lake of fire and brimstone; a white horse and a great banquet; the Holy City of Jerusalem coming down, with a description of its gates, wall and the foundations of the wall; a river of living water, and trees of life which bear fruit in every month; and much else besides. Peter, James and John were in a similar state when they saw Jesus transfigured; and so was Paul when he heard from heaven things past telling.

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

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Psalms 78

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1 Hear my teaching, my people. Turn your ears to the words of my mouth.

2 I will open my mouth in a parable. I will utter dark sayings of old,

3 Which we have heard and known, and our fathers have told us.

4 We will not hide them from their children, telling to the generation to come the praises of Yahweh, his strength, and his wondrous works that he has done.

5 For he established a testimony in Jacob, and appointed a teaching in Israel, which he commanded our fathers, that they should make them known to their children;

6 that the generation to come might know, even the children who should be born; who should arise and tell their children,

7 that they might set their hope in God, and not forget the works of God, but keep his commandments,

8 and might not be as their fathers, a stubborn and rebellious generation, a generation that didn't make their hearts loyal, whose spirit was not steadfast with God.

9 The children of Ephraim, being armed and carrying bows, turned back in the day of battle.

10 They didn't keep God's covenant, and refused to walk in his law.

11 They forgot his doings, his wondrous works that he had shown them.

12 He did marvelous things in the sight of their fathers, in the land of Egypt, in the field of Zoan.

13 He split the sea, and caused them to pass through. He made the waters stand as a heap.

14 In the daytime he also led them with a cloud, and all night with a light of fire.

15 He split rocks in the wilderness, and gave them drink abundantly as out of the depths.

16 He brought streams also out of the rock, and caused waters to run down like rivers.

17 Yet they still went on to sin against him, to rebel against the Most High in the desert.

18 They tempted God in their heart by asking food according to their desire.

19 Yes, they spoke against God. They said, "Can God prepare a table in the wilderness?

20 Behold, he struck the rock, so that waters gushed out, and streams overflowed. Can he give bread also? Will he provide flesh for his people?"

21 Therefore Yahweh heard, and was angry. A fire was kindled against Jacob, anger also went up against Israel,

22 because they didn't believe in God, and didn't trust in his salvation.

23 Yet he commanded the skies above, and opened the doors of heaven.

24 He rained down manna on them to eat, and gave them food from the sky.

25 Man ate the bread of angels. He sent them food to the full.

26 He caused the east wind to blow in the sky. By his power he guided the south wind.

27 He rained also flesh on them as the dust; winged birds as the sand of the seas.

28 He let them fall in the midst of their camp, around their habitations.

29 So they ate, and were well filled. He gave them their own desire.

30 They didn't turn from their cravings. Their food was yet in their mouths,

31 when the anger of God went up against them, killed some of the fattest of them, and struck down the young men of Israel.

32 For all this they still sinned, and didn't believe in his wondrous works.

33 Therefore he consumed their days in vanity, and their years in terror.

34 When he killed them, then they inquired after him. They returned and sought God earnestly.

35 They remembered that God was their rock, the Most High God, their redeemer.

36 But they flattered him with their mouth, and lied to him with their tongue.

37 For their heart was not right with him, neither were they faithful in his covenant.

38 But he, being merciful, forgave iniquity, and didn't destroy them. Yes, many times he turned his anger away, and didn't stir up all his wrath.

39 He remembered that they were but flesh, a wind that passes away, and doesn't come again.

40 How often they rebelled against him in the wilderness, and grieved him in the desert!

41 They turned again and tempted God, and provoked the Holy One of Israel.

42 They didn't remember his hand, nor the day when he redeemed them from the adversary;

43 how he set his signs in Egypt, his wonders in the field of Zoan,

44 he turned their rivers into blood, and their streams, so that they could not drink.

45 He sent among them swarms of flies, which devoured them; and frogs, which destroyed them.

46 He gave also their increase to the caterpillar, and their labor to the locust.

47 He destroyed their vines with hail, their sycamore fig trees with frost.

48 He gave over their livestock also to the hail, and their flocks to hot thunderbolts.

49 He threw on them the fierceness of his anger, wrath, indignation, and trouble, and a band of angels of evil.

50 He made a path for his anger. He didn't spare their soul from death, but gave their life over to the pestilence,

51 and struck all the firstborn in Egypt, the chief of their strength in the tents of Ham.

52 But he led forth his own people like sheep, and guided them in the wilderness like a flock.

53 He led them safely, so that they weren't afraid, but the sea overwhelmed their enemies.

54 He brought them to the border of his sanctuary, to this mountain, which his right hand had taken.

55 He also drove out the nations before them, allotted them for an inheritance by line, and made the tribes of Israel to dwell in their tents.

56 Yet they tempted and rebelled against the Most High God, and didn't keep his testimonies;

57 but turned back, and dealt treacherously like their fathers. They were turned aside like a deceitful bow.

58 For they provoked him to anger with their high places, and moved him to jealousy with their engraved images.

59 When God heard this, he was angry, and greatly abhorred Israel;

60 So that he forsook the tent of Shiloh, the tent which he placed among men;

61 and delivered his strength into captivity, his glory into the adversary's hand.

62 He also gave his people over to the sword, and was angry with his inheritance.

63 Fire devoured their young men. Their virgins had no wedding song.

64 Their priests fell by the sword, and their widows couldn't weep.

65 Then the Lord awakened as one out of sleep, like a mighty man who shouts by reason of wine.

66 He struck his adversaries backward. He put them to a perpetual reproach.

67 Moreover he rejected the tent of Joseph, and didn't choose the tribe of Ephraim,

68 But chose the tribe of Judah, Mount Zion which he loved.

69 He built his sanctuary like the heights, like the earth which he has established forever.

70 He also chose David his servant, and took him from the sheepfolds;

71 from following the ewes that have their young, he brought him to be the shepherd of Jacob, his people, and Israel, his inheritance.

72 So he was their shepherd according to the integrity of his heart, and guided them by the skillfulness of his hands. A Psalm by Asaph.