Bible

 

Genesi 33

Studie

   

1 Giacobbe alzò gli occhi, guardò, ed ecco Esaù che veniva, avendo seco quattrocento uomini. Allora divise i figliuoli fra Lea, Rachele e le due serve.

2 E mise davanti le serve e i loro figliuoli, poi Lea e i suoi figliuoli, e da ultimo Rachele e Giuseppe.

3 Ed egli stesso passò dinanzi a loro, s’inchinò fino a terra sette volte, finché si fu avvicinato al suo fratello.

4 Ed Esaù gli corse incontro, l’abbracciò, gli si gettò al collo, e lo baciò: e piansero.

5 Poi Esaù, alzando gli occhi, vide le donne e i fanciulli, e disse: "Chi son questi qui che hai teco?" Giacobbe rispose: "Sono i figliuoli che Dio s’è compiaciuto di dare al tuo servo".

6 Allora le serve s’accostarono, esse e i loro figliuoli, e s’inchinarono.

7 S’accostarono anche Lea e i suoi figliuoli, e s’inchinarono. Poi s’accostarono Giuseppe e Rachele, e s’inchinarono.

8 Ed Esaù disse: "Che ne vuoi fare di tutta quella schiera che ho incontrata?" Giacobbe rispose: "E’ per trovar grazia agli occhi del mio signore".

9 Ed Esaù: "Io ne ho assai della roba, fratel mio; tienti per te ciò ch’è tuo".

10 Ma Giacobbe disse: "No, ti prego; se ho trovato grazia agli occhi tuoi, accetta il dono dalla mia mano, giacché io ho veduto la tua faccia, come uno vede la faccia di Dio, e tu m’hai fatto gradevole accoglienza.

11 Deh, accetta il mio dono che t’è stato recato; poiché Iddio m’ha usato grande bontà, e io ho di tutto". E insisté tanto, che Esaù l’accettò.

12 Poi Esaù disse: "Partiamo, incamminiamoci, e io andrò innanzi a te".

13 E Giacobbe rispose: "Il mio signore sa che i fanciulli son di tenera età, e che ho con me delle pecore e delle vacche che allattano; se si forzassero per un giorno solo a camminare, le bestie morrebbero tutte.

14 Deh, passi il mio signore innanzi al suo servo; e io me ne verrò pian piano, al passo del bestiame che mi precederà, e al passo de’ fanciulli, finché arrivi presso al mio signore, a Seir".

15 Ed Esaù disse: "Permetti almeno ch’io lasci con te un po’ della gente che ho meco". Ma Giacobbe rispose: "E perché questo? Basta ch’io trovi grazia agli occhi del mio signore".

16 Così Esaù, in quel giorno stesso, rifece il cammino verso Seir.

17 Giacobbe partì alla volta di Succoth e edificò una casa per sé, e fece delle capanne per il suo bestiame; e per questo quel luogo fu chiamato Succoth.

18 Poi Giacobbe, tornando da Paddan-Aram, arrivò sano e salvo alla città di Sichem, nel paese di Canaan, e piantò le tende dirimpetto alla città.

19 E comprò dai figliuoli di Hemor, padre di Sichem, per cento pezzi di danaro, la parte del campo dove avea piantato le sue tende.

20 Ed eresse quivi un altare, e lo chiamò El-Elohè-Israel.

   

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 4249

Prostudujte si tuto pasáž

  
/ 10837  
  

4249. 'And Jacob was exceedingly afraid, and was distressed' means the state when it is being changed. This is clear from the fact that fear and distress are the first stage in temptations, and that they are precursors to the turning round or the change taking place within a state. The arcana which lie deeper still within these details - that is to say, Esau's coming to meet Jacob with four hundred men, and Jacob's consequent fear and distress - cannot be explained easily and intelligibly since they are rather more internal ones. Let just this one be brought forward here. When good takes up the first position and subordinates truths to itself, as happens when a person undergoes spiritual temptations, the good which flows in from the interior is accompanied by very many truths which have been stored away in the person's interior man. Those truths cannot come into focus and be seen by him until good is playing the leading role, for when this happens the natural starts to receive light from good, and it is apparent to him which things in the natural agree and which ones do not. And this is what gives rise to the fear and distress that are the precursors to spiritual temptation. For spiritual temptation acts upon the conscience, which is an attribute of the interior man, and therefore when entering such temptation a person does not know the origin of his fear and distress. But the angels present with him know it full well. Indeed temptation has its origin in angels' maintenance of the person in goods and truths, while evil spirits maintain him in evils and falsities.

[2] The things that occur among the spirits and angels present with a person are perceived by him purely as things going on within himself. For while he lives in the body and does not believe that everything within him flows in from somewhere other than himself, he imagines that the causes of the things that go on within him do not lie outside himself but that all causes lie within him and are his own - which is not in fact the case. For whatever a person thinks and what he wills, that is, all his thought and all his affection, originate either in hell or in heaven. When he thinks and wills anything evil and as a consequence takes delight in falsities, let him realize that his thoughts and affections originate in hell; but when he thinks and wills anything good and as a consequence takes delight in truths, let him realize that these originate in heaven, that is, in the Lord by way of heaven. But the person's thoughts and affections more often than not take on a different outward appearance. A conflict between evil spirits and angels, for example, arising from the things in one who is to be regenerated, takes on the different outward appearance of fear and distress, and of temptation.

[3] These matters are bound to seem paradoxes to man, for almost every member of the Church at the present day believes that all the truth he thinks, and the good he wills and does, originate in himself, even though he says something other than that when speaking from doctrine taught by faith. Indeed his nature is such that if anyone told him that spirits from hell exist who flow into his thought and will when he thinks and wills anything evil, and angels from heaven when he thinks and wills anything good, he would be dumbfounded at anyone putting forward such an idea, for he would say that he can feel the life within himself and that he thinks from himself and wills from himself. His belief is based on that feeling and not on what doctrine teaches. Yet that doctrine is true and such feeling deceptive. This I have been allowed to know from almost uninterrupted experience lasting several years now, and to know it in such a way as to leave me in no doubt whatsoever.

  
/ 10837  
  

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