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Genesi 40

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1 Or, dopo queste cose, avvenne che il coppiere e il panettiere del re d’Egitto offesero il loro signore, il re d’Egitto.

2 E Faraone s’indignò contro i suoi due ufficiali, contro il capo de’ coppieri e il capo de’ panettieri,

3 e li fece mettere in carcere, nella casa del capo delle guardie; nella prigione stessa dove Giuseppe stava rinchiuso.

4 E il capitano delle guardie li affidò alla sorveglianza di Giuseppe, il quale li serviva. Ed essi rimasero in prigione per un certo tempo.

5 E durante una medesima notte, il coppiere e il panettiere del re d’Egitto, ch’erano rinchiusi nella prigione, ebbero ambedue un sogno, un sogno per uno, e ciascun sogno aveva il suo significato particolare.

6 Giuseppe, venuto la mattina da loro, li guardò, ed ecco, erano conturbati.

7 E interrogò gli ufficiali di Faraone ch’eran con lui in prigione nella casa del suo signore, e disse: "Perché avete oggi il viso così mesto?"

8 E quelli gli risposero: "Abbiam fatto un sogno e non v’è alcuno che ce lo interpreti". E Giuseppe disse loro: "Le interpretazioni non appartengono a Dio? Raccontatemi i sogni, vi prego".

9 E il capo de’ coppieri raccontò il suo sogno a Giuseppe, e gli disse: "Nei mio sogno, ecco, mi stava davanti una vite;

10 e in quella vite c’eran tre tralci; e mi pareva ch’essa germogliasse, poi fiorisse, e desse in fine dei grappoli d’uva matura.

11 E io avevo in mano la coppa di Faraone; presi l’uva, la spremei nella coppa di Faraone, e diedi la coppa in mano a Faraone".

12 Giuseppe gli disse: "Questa è l’interpretazione del sogno: i tre tralci sono tre giorni;

13 ancora tre giorni, e Faraone ti farà rialzare il capo, ti ristabilirà nel tuo ufficio, e tu darai in mano a Faraone la sua coppa, nel modo che facevi prima, quand’eri suo coppiere.

14 Ma ricordati di me, quando sarai felice, e siimi benigno, ti prego; parla di me a Faraone, e fammi uscire da questa casa;

15 perché io fui portato via furtivamente dal paese degli Ebrei, e anche qui non ho fatto nulla da esser messo in questa fossa".

16 Il capo de’ panettieri, vedendo che la interpretazione di Giuseppe era favorevole, gli disse: "Anch’io, nel mio sogno, ecco, avevo tre canestri di pan bianco, sul capo;

17 e nel canestro più alto c’era per Faraone ogni sorta di vivande cotte al forno; e gli uccelli le mangiavano dentro al canestro sul mio capo".

18 Giuseppe rispose e disse: "Questa è l’interpretazione del sogno: i tre canestri sono tre giorni;

19 ancora tre giorni, e Faraone ti porterà via la testa di sulle spalle, ti farà impiccare a un albero, e gli uccelli ti mangeranno le carni addosso".

20 E avvenne, il terzo giorno, ch’era il natalizio di Faraone, che questi dette un convito a tutti i suoi servitori, e fece alzare il capo al gran coppiere, e alzare il capo al gran panettiere in mezzo ai suoi servitori:

21 ristabilì il gran coppiere nel suo ufficio di coppiere, perché mettesse la coppa in man di Faraone,

22 ma fece appiccare il gran panettiere, secondo la interpretazione che Giuseppe avea loro data.

23 Il gran coppiere però non si ricordò di Giuseppe, ma lo dimenticò.

   

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Arcana Coelestia # 5114

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5114. And in the vine were three shoots. That this signifies the derivations thence even to the last, is evident from the signification of the “vine,” as being the intellectual part (of which just above, n. 5113); and from the signification of “three,” as being what is complete and continuous even to the end (n. 2788, 4495); and from the signification of “shoots,” as being derivations. For as the “vine” is the intellectual part, the “shoots” are nothing else than derivations thence; and as “three” signifies what is continuous even to the end, or from the first even to the last, by “three shoots” are signified the derivations from the intellectual part down to the last, which is the sensuous; for the first in order is the intellectual part, and the last is the sensuous. The intellectual part in general is the sight of the internal man, which sees from the light of heaven, which is from the Lord, and all that it sees is spiritual and celestial. But the sensuous in general is of the external man, here the sensuous of the sight, because this corresponds and is subordinate to the intellectual; this sensuous sees from the light of the world, which is from the sun, and all that it sees is worldly, bodily, and earthly.

[2] There are in man derivations from the intellectual part, which is in the light of heaven, down to the sensuous, which is in the light of the world; unless this were so, the sensuous could not have any human life. The sensuous of man has no life in consequence of seeing from the light of the world, for the light of the world has no life in it; but in consequence of seeing from the light of heaven, for this light has life in it. When this light falls with man into those things which are from the light of the world, it vivifies them and causes him to see objects intellectually, thus as a man; and from this, by knowledges born from things he has seen and heard in the world, thus from things that have entered through the senses, man has intelligence and wisdom, and from these has civil, moral, and spiritual life.

[3] As regards the derivations specially, in man they are of such a nature that they cannot be briefly set forth. They are steps or degrees as of a ladder between the intellectual part and the sensuous, but no one can apprehend these degrees unless he knows that they are most distinct from one another, so distinct that the interior can exist and subsist without the exterior, but not the exterior without the interior. For example: the spirit of man can subsist without the material body, and also actually does so subsist when by death it is separated from the body. The spirit of man is in an interior degree, and the body is in an exterior degree. It is similar with the spirit of man after death: if he is among the blessed, he is in the last degree among them when in the first heaven, in an interior degree when in the second, and in the inmost when in the third; and when he is in this, he is indeed at the same time in the rest, but these are quiescent in him, almost as the bodily part in man is quiescent in sleep, but with this difference, that with the angels the interiors are then in the highest wakefulness. Therefore there are as many distinct degrees in man as there are heavens, besides the last, which is the body with its sensuous things.

[4] From this it may in some measure appear how the case is with the derivations from first to last, or from the intellectual part down to the sensuous. The life of man, which is from the Lord’s Divine, passes through these degrees from the inmost down to the last or ultimate degree, and in each degree it is derived from what is prior, becoming more and more general, and in the ultimate degree most general. The derivations in the lower degrees are merely compositions, or rather combinations [conformationes], of the singulars and particulars of the higher degrees in succession, together with an addition from purer nature, and then from grosser nature, of such things as may serve for containing vessels; and if these vessels are decomposed, the singulars and particulars of the interior degrees, which had been combined therein, return to the degree next higher. And as with man there is a connection with the Divine, and his inmost is of such a nature that he can receive the Divine, and not only receive it, but also make it his own by acknowledgment and affection, thus by reciprocation, he therefore can never die, because he has thus been implanted in the Divine, and is therefore in what is eternal and infinite, not merely through the influx thence, but also through the reception of it.

[5] From this it may be seen how unlearnedly and inanely those think about man who compare him to the brute animals, and believe that he will not live after death any more than they-not considering that with the brute animals there is no reception, nor through acknowledgment and affection any reciprocal appropriation, of the Divine, and consequent conjunction with it; and not considering that in consequence of the state of animals being of this nature, the recipient forms of their life cannot but be dissipated; for with them the influx passes through their organic forms down into the world, and there terminates and vanishes, and never returns.

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