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Levitico 26

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1 Non vi farete idoli, non vi eleverete immagini scolpite né statue, e non collocherete nel vostro paese alcuna pietra ornata di figure, per prostrarvi davanti ad essa; poiché io sono l’Eterno, l’Iddio vostro.

2 Osserverete i miei sabati, e porterete rispetto al mio santuario. Io sono l’Eterno.

3 Se vi conducete secondo le mie leggi, se osservate i miei comandamenti e li mettete in pratica,

4 io vi darò le piogge nella loro stagione, la terra darà i suoi prodotti, e gli alberi della campagna daranno i loro frutti.

5 La trebbiatura vi durerà fino alla vendemmia, e la vendemmia vi durerà fino alla sementa; mangerete a sazietà il vostro pane, e abiterete in sicurtà il vostro paese.

6 Io farò che la pace regni nel paese; voi vi coricherete, e non ci sarà chi vi spaventi; farò sparire dal paese le bestie nocive, e la spada non passerà per il vostro paese.

7 Voi inseguirete i vostri nemici, ed essi cadranno dinanzi a voi per la spada.

8 Cinque di voi ne inseguiranno cento, cento di voi ne inseguiranno diecimila, e i vostri nemici cadranno dinanzi a voi per la spada.

9 E io mi volgerò verso voi, vi renderò fecondi e vi moltiplicherò, e raffermerò il mio patto con voi.

10 E voi mangerete delle raccolte vecchie, serbate a lungo, e trarrete fuori la raccolta vecchia per far posto alla nuova.

11 Io stabilirò la mia dimora in mezzo a voi, e l’anima mia non vi aborrirà.

12 Camminerò tra voi, sarò vostro Dio, e voi sarete mio popolo.

13 Io sono l’Eterno, l’Iddio vostro, che vi ho tratto dal paese d’Egitto affinché non vi foste più schiavi; ho spezzato il vostro giogo, e v’ho fatto camminare a test’alta.

14 Ma se non mi date ascolto e se non mettete in pratica tutti questi comandamenti,

15 se disprezzate le mie leggi e l’anima vostra disdegna le mie prescrizioni in guisa che non mettiate in pratica tutti i miei comandamenti e rompiate il mio patto,

16 ecco quel che vi farò a mia volta: manderò contro voi il terrore, la consunzione e la febbre, che vi faranno venir meno gli occhi e languir l’anima, e seminerete invano la vostra sementa: la mangeranno i vostri nemici.

17 Volgerò la mia faccia contro di voi, e voi sarete sconfitti dai vostri nemici; quelli che vi odiano vi domineranno, e vi darete alla fuga senza che alcuno v’insegua.

18 E se nemmeno dopo questo vorrete darmi ascolto, io vi castigherò sette volte di più per i vostri peccati.

19 Spezzerò la superbia della vostra forza, farò che il vostro cielo sia come di ferro, e la vostra terra come di rame.

20 La vostra forza si consumerà invano, poiché la vostra terra non darà i suoi prodotti, e gli alberi della campagna non daranno i loro frutti.

21 E se mi resistete con la vostra condotta e non volete darmi ascolto, io vi colpirò sette volte di più, secondo i vostri peccati.

22 Manderò contro di voi le fiere della campagna, che vi rapiranno i figliuoli, stermineranno il vostro bestiame, vi ridurranno a un piccol numero, e le vostre strade diverranno deserte.

23 E se, nonostante questi castighi, non volete correggervi per tornare a me, ma con la vostra condotta mi resistete, anch’io vi resisterò,

24 e vi colpirò sette volte di più per i vostri peccati.

25 E farò venir contro di voi la spada, vindice del mio patto; voi vi raccoglierete nelle vostre città, ma io manderò in mezzo a voi la peste, e sarete dati in man del nemico.

26 Quando vi toglierò il pane che sostiene, dieci donne coceranno il vostro pane in uno stesso forno, vi distribuiranno il vostro pane a peso, e mangerete, ma non vi sazierete.

27 E se, nonostante tutto questo, non volete darmi ascolto ma con la vostra condotta mi resistete,

28 anch’io vi resisterò con furore, e vi castigherò sette volte di più per i vostri peccati.

29 Mangerete la carne dei vostri figliuoli, e mangerete la carne delle vostre figliuole.

30 Io devasterò i vostri alti luoghi, distruggerò le vostre statue consacrate al sole, metterò i vostri cadaveri sui cadaveri dei vostri idoli, e l’anima mia vi aborrirà.

31 E ridurrò le vostre città in deserti, desolerò i vostri santuari, e non aspirerò più il soave odore dei vostri profumi.

32 Desolerò il paese; e i vostri nemici che vi abiteranno, ne saranno stupefatti.

33 E, quanto a voi, io vi disperderò fra le nazioni, e vi darò dietro a spada tratta; il vostro paese sarà desolato, e le vostre città saranno deserte.

34 Allora la terra si godrà i suoi sabati per tutto il tempo che rimarrà desolata e che voi sarete nel paese dei vostri nemici; allora la terra si riposerà e si godrà i suoi sabati.

35 Per tutto il tempo che rimarrà desolata avrà il riposo che non ebbe nei vostri sabati, quando voi l’abitavate.

36 Quanto ai superstiti fra voi, io renderò pusillanime il loro cuore nel paese dei loro nemici: il rumore d’una foglia agitata li metterà in fuga; fuggiranno come si fugge dinanzi alla spada, e cadranno senza che alcuno l’insegua.

37 Precipiteranno l’uno sopra l’altro come davanti alla spada, senza che alcuno l’insegua, e voi non potrete resistere dinanzi ai vostri nemici.

38 E perirete fra le nazioni, e il paese de’ vostri nemici vi divorerà.

39 I superstiti fra voi si struggeranno nei paesi de’ loro nemici, a motivo delle proprie iniquità; e si struggeranno pure a motivo delle iniquità dei loro padri.

40 E confesseranno la loro iniquità e l’iniquità dei loro padri: l’iniquità delle trasgressioni commesse contro di me e della resistenza oppostami,

41 peccati per i quali anch’io avrò dovuto resister loro, e menarli nel paese de’ loro nemici. Ma se allora il cuor loro incirconciso si umilierà, e se accetteranno la punizione della loro iniquità,

42 io mi ricorderò del mio patto con Giacobbe, mi ricorderò del mio patto con Isacco e del mio patto con Abrahamo, e mi ricorderò del paese;

43 poiché il paese sarà abbandonato da loro, e si godrà i suoi sabati mentre rimarrà desolato, senza di loro, ed essi accetteranno la punizione della loro iniquità per aver disprezzato le mie prescrizioni e aver avuto in avversione le mie leggi.

44 E, nonostante tutto questo, quando saranno nel paese dei loro nemici, io non li disprezzerò e non li prenderò in avversione fino al punto d’annientarli del tutto e di rompere il mio patto con loro; poiché io sono l’Eterno, il loro Dio;

45 ma per amor d’essi mi ricorderò del patto stretto coi loro antenati, i quali trassi dal paese d’Egitto, nel cospetto delle nazioni, per essere il loro Dio. Io sono l’Eterno".

46 Tali sono gli statuti, le prescrizioni e le leggi che l’Eterno stabilì fra sé e i figliuoli d’Israele, sul monte Sinai, per mezzo di Mosè.

   

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Apocalypse Explained # 325

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325. Which are the prayers of the saints, signifies from which is worship. This is evident from the signification of the "prayers of the saints," as being worship from spiritual good; "prayers," in the internal sense, mean all things of worship; and "saints" things spiritual; for those who are in the Lord's spiritual kingdom are called in the Word "saints" [or "holy"], and those who are in His celestial kingdom are called "righteous" [or "just"] (See above, n. 204). But in the internal sense of the Word by "saints" are not meant saints [holy men], but things holy, for the term "saints" involves persons, and in the internal sense everything of person is put off, for things solely make that sense (See above, n. 270); and that the angels, because they are spiritual, think abstractly from persons (See also above, n. 99, 100). This is what distinguishes the internal sense of the Word from its external sense, which is the sense of the letter; and as "saints" thus mean things holy, and "holy" in the Word means the Divine truth proceeding from the Lord, and making His spiritual kingdom (as may be seen above, n. 204, so by "saints" things spiritual are meant, and by the "prayers of the saints" worship from spiritual good. That worship from that good is meant by the "prayers of the saints" is evident from this, that it is said "they had golden bowls full of incense, which are the prayers of the saints;" and "incense" signifies all things of worship that are from spiritual good (as was shown in the preceding paragraph); from which it follows that the "prayers of the saints" has a like signification.

[2] As also in David:

Give ear unto my voice when I call unto Thee. Let my prayers be received as incense before Thee; the lifting up of my hands as the evening meal-offering. Guard the door of my lips; let not my heart decline to evil, to do evil deeds in wickedness with the men who work iniquity; for still my prayers are in their evils (Psalms 141:1-5).

Here also "prayers" are called "incense," and "the lifting up of the hands" is called a "meal-offering;" and this because "prayers" and "incense" have a similar signification, also "lifting up of the hands" and "meal-offering." "Incense" signifies spiritual good, which is the good of charity towards the neighbor; and "meal-offering" signifies celestial good, which is the good of love to the Lord; thus both signifying worship. And as prayers are not from the mouth, but from the heart by the mouth, and all worship that is from the heart is from the good of love and charity, for the heart signifies that, so it is also said, "Guard the door of my lips; let not my heart decline to evil, to do evil deeds in wickedness." And because David is lamenting that evils still have power against him, he says, "for still my prayers are in their evils."

[3] That "prayers" have a similar meaning as "incense" is evident also from other passages in Revelation:

Another angel came and stood at the altar, having a golden censer; and there was given unto him much incense, that he might offer it with the prayers of all the saints, upon the golden altar. And the smoke of the incense with the prayers of the saints went up before God (Revelation 8:3-4

As "prayers" and "incense" have here similar significance, namely, worship from spiritual good, it is said, "there was given unto him much incense, that he might offer it with the prayers of the saints;" likewise that "the smoke of the incense went up with the prayers of the saints unto God." What is meant by worship from spiritual good shall first be explained, and afterwards that prayers signify such worship. Worship does not consist in prayers and in external devotion, but in a life of charity; prayers are only its externals, for they proceed from the man through his mouth, consequently men's prayers are such as they themselves are in respect to life. It matters not that a man bears himself humbly, that he kneels and sighs when he prays; for these are externals, and unless externals proceed from internals they are only gestures and sounds without life. In each thing that a man utters there is affection, and every man, spirit, and angel is his own affection, for their affection is their life; it is the affection itself that speaks, and not the man without it; therefore such as the affection is such is the praying. Spiritual affection is what is called charity towards the neighbor; to be in that affection is true worship; praying is what proceeds. From this it can be seen that the essential of worship is the life of charity, and that its instrumental is gesture and praying; or that the primary of worship is a life of charity, and its secondary is praying. From this it is clear that those who place all Divine worship in oral piety, and not in practical piety, err greatly.

[4] Practical piety is to act in every work and in every duty from sincerity and right, and from justice and equity, and this because it is commanded by the Lord in the Word; for thus man in his every work looks to heaven and to the Lord, and thus is conjoined with Him. But to act sincerely and rightly, justly and equitably, solely from fear of the law, of the loss of fame or of honor and gain, and to think nothing of the Divine law, of the commandments of the Word, and of the Lord, and yet to pray devoutly in the churches, is external piety; however holy this may appear, it is not piety, but it is either hypocrisy, or something put on derived from habit, or a kind of persuasion from a false belief that Divine worship consists merely in this; for such a man does not look to heaven and to the Lord with the heart, but only with the eyes; the heart looking to self and to the world, and the mouth speaking from the habit of the body only and its memory; by this man is conjoined to the world and not to heaven, and to self and not to the Lord. From this it can be seen what piety is, and what Divine worship is, and that practical piety is worship itself. On this see also what is said in the work on Heaven and Hell 222, 224, 358-360, 528-530); and in The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem 123-129), where also are these words:

Piety is to think and speak piously; to spend much time in prayer; to bear oneself humbly at such times; to frequent churches, and listen devoutly to discourses there; to observe the sacrament of the Supper frequently every year, and likewise the other services of worship according to the appointments of the church. But a life of charity is to will well and do well to the neighbor; to act in every work from justice and equity, from good and truth, and also in every duty; in a word, the life of charity consists in performing uses. Divine worship consists primarily in such a life, and secondarily in a life of piety; he, therefore, who separates the one from the other, that is, who lives a life of piety and not at the same time a life of charity, does not worship God. For a life of piety is valuable so far as a life of charity is joined with it; for the life of charity is the primary thing, and such as this is, such is the life of piety (n. 124, 128).

[5] That the Lord insinuates heaven into man's practical piety, but not into oral or external piety separate therefrom, has been testified to me by much experience. For I have seen many who placed all worship in oral and outward piety, while in their actual life they gave no thought to the Lord's commandments in the Word, believing that what is sincere and right, just and equitable, must be done not from regard to religion, thus from a spiritual motive, but merely from regard to civil law and also to moral law, that they might appear sincere and just for the sake of reputation, and this for the sake of honor and gain, believing that this would take them into heaven before others. According to their belief, therefore, they were raised up into heaven; but when the angels perceived that they worshiped God with the mouth only, and not with the heart, and that their external piety did not proceed from practical piety, which is of the life, they cast them down; afterwards these became associated with those who were in a life like their own, and were there deprived of their piety and sanctity, since these were interiorly defiled by evils of life. From this also it was made clear, that Divine worship consists primarily in a life of charity and secondarily in external piety.

[6] As Divine worship itself consists primarily in the life, and not in prayers, the Lord said, that in praying there should not be much speaking and repetition, in the following words:

In praying, use not vain repetitions, as the heathen do; for they think that they shall be heard for their much speaking. Do not make yourselves, therefore, like them (Matthew 6:7-8).

Now as Divine worship itself consists primarily in a life of charity, and secondarily in prayers, by "prayers," in the spiritual sense of the Word, worship from spiritual good, that is, from the life of charity, is meant, for that which is primary is what is meant in the spiritual sense, while the sense of the letter consists of things secondary, which are effects, and which correspond.

[7] Prayers are mentioned, moreover, in many passages of the Word; but as prayers proceed from the heart, and a man's heart is such as is his life of love and charity, so "prayers," in the spiritual sense, mean that life and worship from it, as in the following. In Luke:

Be ye wakeful at every season, praying that ye may be accounted worthy to escape the things that are to come, and so stand before the Son of man (Luke 21:36; Mark 13:33).

"To be wakeful at every season" signifies to procure to oneself spiritual life (See above, n. 187); therefore praying is also mentioned, because "praying" is an effect of that life, or its external, which is of avail so far as it proceeds from the life, for these two are one like soul and body, and like internal and external.

[8] In Mark:

Jesus said, All things that ye ask for, praying, believe that ye are to receive, and then it shall be done for you. But when ye stand praying, forgive, if ye have aught against any (Mark 11:24-25).

Here, also, in the spiritual sense, by "praying," "asking for," and "supplicating," a life of love and charity is meant; for to those who are in a life of love and charity it is given from the Lord what they are to ask; therefore they ask nothing but what is good, and that is done for them; and as faith also is from the Lord, it is said, "believe that ye are to receive;" and as prayers proceed from a life of charity, and are according to it, in order that it may be done according to the prayers, it is said, "When ye stand praying, forgive, if ye have aught against any."

[9] "When ye stand praying" signifies when in Divine worship, as is clear also from this, that the like as is here said of those who pray is said also of those who offer a gift upon the altar, in Matthew:

If thou offer a gift upon the altar, and rememberest that thy brother hath aught against thee, leave the gift before the altar, and first be reconciled to thy brother, and then coming offer the gift (Matthew 5:23-24).

"Offering a gift upon the altar" signifies all Divine worship, for the reason that Divine worship with that nation consisted chiefly in offering burnt-offerings and sacrifices, by which therefore all things of worship were signified (See The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem 214, 221). From this it can be seen that "praying," or "supplicating," and "offering a gift upon the altar," have a like meaning, namely, worship from the good of love and charity.

[10] In the same:

Jesus said, It is written, My house shall be called a house of prayer, but ye have made it a den of robbers (Matthew 21:13; Mark 11:17; Luke 19:46).

The Lord's "house" signifies the church, and "prayers" worship therein; and a "den of robbers" the profanation of the church and of worship; and from this contrary sense it is also evident that prayers signify worship from the good of love and charity.

[11] In David:

I cried unto God with my mouth. If I had regarded iniquity in my heart the Lord would not have heard; but God hath heard; He hath attended to the voice of my prayer (Psalms 66:17-19).

Since prayers are such as the man's heart is, and thus are not prayers of any worship when the heart is evil, it is said, "If I had regarded iniquity in my heart the Lord would not have heard," which signifies that He would not receive such worship. Man's "heart" is his love, and man's love is his very life, consequently a man's prayers are such as his love is, that is, such as his life is; from which it follows that "prayers" signify the life of his love and charity, or that this life is meant by "prayers" in the spiritual sense.

[12] Many more passages might be cited; but as man does not know that his life and his prayers make one, and therefore does not perceive otherwise than that "prayers" where they are mentioned in the Word mean merely prayers, these passages will be omitted here. Moreover, when man is in a life of charity he is constantly praying, if not with the mouth yet with the heart; for that which is of the love is constantly in the thought, even when man is unconscious of it (according to what is said in The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem, n. 55-57); from which also it is clear that "praying" in the spiritual sense is worship from love. But those who place piety in prayers and not in the life have no relish for this truth, in fact their thought is contrary to it; such do not even know what practical piety is.

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

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Arcana Coelestia # 4748

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4748. 'And their camels carrying spices, and resin' and stacte' means interior natural truths. This is clear from the general meaning of 'camels' as things belonging to the natural man which serve the spiritual, and from their specific meaning as general facts within the natural man, dealt with in 3048, 3071, 3114, 3143, 3145, 4156; and from the meaning of 'spices, resin, and stacte' as interior natural truths joined to the good there, which are dealt with below. Among the ancients, sweet smelling and fragrant substances were used in their sacred worship; from these substances they obtained their frankincense and incense, similar substances being mixed with oil for their anointings. But no one today knows why those fragrances were used, for the reason that no knowledge at all exists of the fact that all aspects of the worship of the ancients had their origin in the spiritual and celestial things existing in heaven, or that those aspects of it corresponded to these. Mankind has been removing itself so far from spiritual and celestial things, immersing itself in natural, worldly, and bodily ones, that it lives in obscurity, many people having a negative attitude of mind to the existence of anything spiritual or celestial.

[2] The reason frankincense and incense were used among the ancients in sacred acts of worship is that 'odour' corresponds to perception, and 'a fragrant odour' - like that of the aromas which various kinds of spices have - to a pleasing and acceptable perception, as is the perception of truth derived from good, or of faith from charity. Indeed the correspondence of one to the other is such that, as often as it pleases the Lord, actual perceptions in the next life are converted into odours. Regarding these, see what has already been told from experience in 925, 1514, 1517-1519, 3577, 4624-4634. What specifically is meant here by 'spices, resin, and stacte' may be seen from other places where these three are mentioned. In general they mean interior truths within the natural, but those truths which are derived from the good there; for truths do not on their own constitute the natural, but good does by means of truths. Consequently variations exist, conditioned by what the truth joined to the good is like and therefore by what the good is like, since the particular nature of the good depends on what the truths are like.

[3] 'Gilead' means exterior good like that belonging to the senses, called pleasure, 4117, 4124, while 'Egypt' in the good sense means facts, which are the external truths of the natural man that correspond to, that is, are in accord with, that good, 1462. Therefore the reference to Ishmaelites from Gilead bringing down those aromatic commodities on camels to Egypt means bringing their own interior truths, based on their own facts, to the facts meant by 'Egypt', which matters are dealt with below. Interior truths are conclusions based on exterior truths, that is, on facts; for the facts belonging to the natural man are the means that enable conclusions to be drawn about interior truths and thereby to identify them, just as a person identifies another's state of mind in his facial expressions and in the twinkling of light in his eyes, as well as in his tone of voice and his gestures.

[4] Because such truths are the means by which a person's natural is made more perfect and also receives correction, healing is therefore associated with spices of this kind - with resin, for example, in Jeremiah,

Is there no balsamic resin in Gilead? Is there no physician there? Why has not the healing of the daughter of my people arisen? Jeremiah 8:22.

In the same prophet,

Go up to Gilead to take resin, O virgin daughter of Egypt! In vain you have multiplied medicaments; there is no healing for you. Jeremiah 46:11.

In the same prophet,

Suddenly Babel has fallen and been broken; wail over her! Take resin for her pain; perhaps she will be healed. Jeremiah 51:8.

[5] Wares similar to this mean spiritual things, as is quite evident in John,

The merchants of the earth will weep and will mourn over Babel, that nobody buys their wares any longer, wares of gold and silver, and precious stones, and pearls, and fine linen, and purple, and silk, and scarlet, and all thyine wood, and every vessel of ivory, and every vessel made of most precious wood, and bronze, and iron, and marble, and cinnamon, and incense, and ointment, and frankincense, and wine, and oil, and fine flour, and wheat, and draught-cattle, and sheep, and horses, and chariots, and the bodies and souls of people. Revelation 18:11-13.

These wares would never have been listed in this specific manner if each and all had not meant the kinds of things that exist in the Lord's kingdom and in His Church. Otherwise they would have been words that had no real meaning. It is well known that 'Babel' means those who turn all worship of the Lord into worship of themselves, so that profanity exists inwardly while outwardly they are doing what is holy. This being so, 'their wares' means the things which, for the sake of worship of themselves, they themselves have invented enthusiastically and skillfully, as well as doctrinal teachings and ideas of good and truth from the Word which they have twisted to suit themselves. Thus the individual wares mentioned in these verses mean specific features of their invention, 'cinnamon, incense, ointment, and frankincense' meaning truths that are derived from good, but with those people perverted truths and falsities that are the products of evil.

[6] Something similar may be seen in what is recorded in Ezekiel regarding the wares of Tyre,

Judah and the land of Israel, they were your traders. Wheat of minnith and pannag, and honey, and oil, and resin, they exchanged for your trading. Ezekiel 27:17.

Here also 'resin' means truth derived from good. To one who has no belief in the internal sense of the Word all these expressions will be mere words and so vessels with nothing in them, when in fact they hold Divine, celestial, and spiritual things within them.

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