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Esodo 13

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1 L’Eterno parlò a Mosè, dicendo: "Consacrami ogni primogenito,

2 tutto ciò che nasce primo tra i figliuoli d’Israele, tanto degli uomini quanto degli animali: esso mi appartiene".

3 E Mosè disse al popolo: "Ricordatevi di questo giorno, nel quale siete usciti dall’Egitto, dalla casa di servitù; poiché l’Eterno vi ha tratti fuori di questo luogo, con mano potente; non si mangi pane lievitato.

4 Voi uscite oggi, nel mese di Abib.

5 Quando dunque l’Eterno ti avrà introdotto nel paese dei Cananei, degli Hittei, degli Amorei, degli Hivvei e dei Gebusei che giurò ai tuoi padri di darti, paese ove scorre il latte e il miele, osserva questo rito, in questo mese.

6 Per sette giorni mangia pane senza lievito; e il settimo giorno si faccia una festa all’Eterno.

7 Si mangi pane senza lievito per sette giorni; e non si vegga pan lievitato presso di te, né si vegga lievito presso di te, entro tutti i tuoi confini.

8 E in quel giorno tu spiegherai la cosa al tuo figliuolo, dicendo: Si fa così, a motivo di quello che l’Eterno fece per me quand’uscii dall’Egitto.

9 E ciò ti sarà come un segno sulla tua mano, come un ricordo fra i tuoi occhi, affinché la legge dell’Eterno sia nella tua bocca; poiché l’Eterno ti ha tratto fuori dall’Egitto con mano potente.

10 Osserva dunque questa istituzione, al tempo fissato, d’anno in anno".

11 "Quando l’Eterno t’avrà introdotto nel paese dei Cananei, come giurò a te e ai tuoi padri, e te lo avrà dato,

12 consacra all’Eterno ogni fanciullo primogenito e ogni primo parto del bestiame che t’appartiene: i maschi saranno dell’Eterno.

13 Ma riscatta ogni primo parto dell’asino con un agnello; e se non lo vuoi riscattare, fiaccagli il collo; riscatta anche ogni primogenito dell’uomo fra i tuoi figliuoli.

14 E quando, in avvenire, il tuo figliuolo t’interrogherà, dicendo: Che significa questo? gli risponderai: L’Eterno ci trasse fuori dall’Egitto, dalla casa di servitù, con mano potente;

15 e avvenne che, quando Faraone s’ostinò a non lasciarci andare, l’Eterno uccise tutti i primogeniti nel paese d’Egitto, tanto i primogeniti degli uomini quanto i primogeniti degli animali; perciò io sacrifico all’Eterno tutti i primi parti maschi, ma riscatto ogni primogenito dei miei figliuoli.

16 Ciò sarà come un segno sulla tua mano e come un frontale fra i tuoi occhi, poiché l’Eterno ci ha tratti dall’Egitto con mano potente".

17 Or quando Faraone ebbe lasciato andare il popolo, Iddio non lo condusse per la via del paese de’ Filistei, perché troppo vicina; poiché Iddio disse: "Bisogna evitare che il popolo, di fronte a una guerra, si penta e torni in Egitto";

18 ma Iddio fece fare al popolo un giro per la via del deserto, verso il mar Rosso. E i figliuoli d’Israele salirono armati dal paese d’Egitto.

19 E Mosè prese seco le ossa di Giuseppe; perché questi aveva espressamente fatto giurare i figliuoli d’Israele, dicendo: "Iddio, certo, vi visiterà; allora, trasportate di qui le mie ossa con voi".

20 E gl’Israeliti, partiti da Succoth, si accamparono a Etham, all’estremità del deserto.

21 E l’Eterno andava davanti a loro: di giorno, in una colonna di nuvola per guidarli per il loro cammino; e di notte, in una colonna di fuoco per illuminarli, onde potessero camminare giorno e notte.

22 La colonna di nuvola non si ritirava mai di davanti al popolo di giorno, né la colonna di fuoco di notte.

   

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Arcana Coelestia # 8093

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8093. That God led them not by the way of the land of the Philistines. That this signifies that it was provided by the Divine that they should not pass to truth of faith which is not from good, is evident from the signification of “God led them not by the way,” as being that it was provided by the Divine that they should not pass, for by “leading,” when by God, is signified providence, and by “way” is signified truth (see n. 627, 2333), here to pass to the truth; and from the representation of the Philistines, as being those who are in the memory-knowledge of the knowledges of faith, and are not in a life of charity (n. 1197, 1198, 3412, 3413), thus those who are in truth of faith which is not from good. That this is signified by the “Philistines and their land” can be seen from the passages in the Word where they are mentioned, especially in Jeremiah 47, where they are described; and also in Joel 3:5-6; and likewise from the historicals of the Word where are described the wars between the sons of Israel and the Philistines, and their subjugation by the Philistines, and then of the Philistines by the sons of Israel. By the Philistines are there represented those who are in faith separate, or to whom the memory-knowledge of the knowledges of faith is the main thing, but not a life according thereto; consequently those who teach and believe that faith alone saves.

[2] The opinion concerning faith alone or separate is not new, or of this time only, but existed in the ancient churches, and came into use together with evil of life. It is also described in the Word throughout, but by names: first by “Cain,” in that he slew his brother Abel (see n. 337, 340, 1179); “Cain” there, in the internal representative sense, denotes such faith, and “Abel” denotes charity. It is also described by “Ham,” when he was cursed by his father (n. 1062, 1063); afterward by “Reuben,” in that he went up on his father’s bed (n. 3870, 4601); and by “Simeon and Levi,” in that they slew Hamor and the men of Shechem, and were therefore cursed by their father (n. 3870, 6352). This faith is also described by the “Egyptians,” and by their firstborn being slain (see n. 7766, 7778), and by the Egyptians being sunk in the sea Suph. It is also described by the “Philistines” (n. 3412, 3413), and likewise by “Tyre and Sidon” throughout the prophets, where by the “Philistines” is signified the memory-knowledge of the knowledges of faith, and by “Tyre and Sidon” the knowledges themselves, interior and exterior. Lastly it is also described by “Peter,” when he thrice denied the the Lord, (n. 6000, 6073). But see what has been already shown concerning this faith (n. 36, 379, 389, 916, 1017, 1076, 1077, 1162, 1176, 1798, 1799, 1834, 1844, 2049, 2116, 2228, 2231, 2261, 2343, 2349, 2364, 2383, 2385, 2401, 2435, 2982, 3146, 3242, 3325, 3412, 3413, 3416, 3427, 3773, 4663, 4672, 4673, 4683, 4721, 4730, 4766, 4783, 4925, 5351, 5820, 5826, 6269, 6272, 6273, 6348, 6353, 7039, 7097, 7127, 7317, 7502, 7545, 7623-7627, 7724, 7779, 7790, 7950).

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

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Arcana Coelestia # 4690

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4690. And his brethren said to him. That this signifies those who are of faith separate, is evident from the representation of Joseph’s brethren, as being the church which turns away from charity to faith, and at last separates faith from charity (n. 4665, 4671, 4679); but those who are interior in this church are signified by the “sheaves” in the dream (n. 4686, 4688). The reason why Joseph’s brethren represent this church is that in the proximate sense they signify the representative of a church, or the religiosity which was instituted among the posterity of Jacob, which posterity did not indeed know anything about faith as it is understood in the Christian Church, but only about truth. Truth was to them the same as faith is to Christians. Moreover, in the Hebrew language the same word is used for both. But the Jewish Church understood by truth the precepts of the Decalogue, and also the laws, judgments, testimonies, and statutes, which were handed down by Moses. They did not know the interiors of truth, nor did they wish to know them.

[2] The Christian Church however gives the name of faith to those doctrinal matters which they say are the interior things of the church and must be believed; for by faith the common people understand no other than the faith of creeds, or that which books of creeds teach; but those who think that the doctrinal things of faith or the knowledge of them cannot save anyone, and that few are in a life of faith, call confidence faith. These however are above the common people, and are more learned than others. From these things it is evident that the subject here treated of in the internal sense is not only the representative of a church which was instituted with the posterity of Jacob, but also the Christian Church which succeeded; for the Word of the Lord is universal, and comprehends in general every church. For it was equally foreseen by the Lord both how the case would be with the Christian Church, and how it would be with the Jewish Church, but proximately with the Jewish, wherefore this sense is called the proximate sense, or the internal historical sense, and the other the internal sense.

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