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創世記 6

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1 人が地のおもてにふえ始めて、娘たちが彼らに生れた時、

2 神のたちは人の娘たちの美しいのを見て、自分の好む者をにめとった。

3 そこでは言われた、「わたしの霊はながく人の中にとどまらない。彼はにすぎないのだ。しかし、彼の年は二十年であろう」。

4 そのころ、またそのにも、地にネピリムがいた。これは神のたちが人の娘たちのところにはいって、娘たちに産ませたものである。彼らは昔の勇士であり、有名な人々であった。

5 は人の悪が地にはびこり、すべてそのに思いはかることが、いつも悪い事ばかりであるのを見られた。

6 は地の上に人を造ったのを悔いて、を痛め、

7 「わたしが創造した人を地のおもてからぬぐい去ろう。人もも、這うものも、空のまでも。わたしは、これらを造ったことを悔いる」と言われた。

8 しかし、ノア主の前に恵みを得た。

9 ノアの系図は次のとおりである。ノアはその時代の人々の中で正しく、かつ全き人であった。ノアとともに歩んだ。

10 ノアセム、ハム、ヤペテの人の子を生んだ。

11 時に世は神のに乱れて、暴虐が地に満ちた。

12 が地を見られると、それは乱れていた。すべての人が地の上でその道を乱したからである。

13 そこでノアに言われた、「わたしは、すべての人を絶やそうと決心した。彼らは地を暴虐で満たしたから、わたしは彼らを地とともに滅ぼそう。

14 あなたは、いとすぎので箱舟を造り、箱舟の中にへやを設け、アスファルトでそのうちそとを塗りなさい。

15 その造り方は次のとおりである。すなわち箱舟の長さキュビト、幅は五十キュビト、高さ三十キュビトとし、

16 箱舟に屋根を造り、上へ一キュビトにそれを仕上げ、また箱舟の戸口をその横に設けて、一階と二階と階のある箱舟を造りなさい。

17 わたしは地の上に洪水を送って、命の息のあるなるものを、みな天のから滅ぼし去る。地にあるものは、みな死に絶えるであろう。

18 ただし、わたしはあなたと契約を結ぼう。あなたはらと、と、らのたちと共に箱舟にはいりなさい。

19 またすべての生き物、すべてのなるものの中から、それぞれつずつを箱舟に入れて、あなたと共にその命を保たせなさい。それらは雄と雌とでなければならない。

20 すなわち、はその種類にしたがいはその種類にしたがい、また地のすべての這うものも、その種類にしたがって、それぞれつずつ、あなたのところに入れて、命を保たせなさい。

21 また、すべての食物となるものをとって、あなたのところにたくわえ、あなたとこれらのものとの食物としなさい」。

22 ノアはすべて神の命じられたようにした。

   

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Coronis (An Appendix to True Christian Religion) # 33

  
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33. What person of sound mind is there who cannot see that, by those things which are related of Adam are not meant any states of the first-formed man, but states of the Church? As, for example, that God placed two trees in the midst of the garden, from the eating of one of which man had eternal life, and from the other of which he had eternal death; and that He made the latter "good for food, pleasant to the eyes, and to be desired for giving understanding" ([Gen.] 3:6), thus as if it were to bewitch their souls; also, that he admitted the serpent, and allowed it to speak deceitful words to the woman in the presence of her husband, who was the image and likeness of God, and suffered them to be ensnared by its flatteries and arts; as, moreover, why it was not provided,-since it was foreseen-that they, and the whole human race from them, should not fall into the damnation of His curse; for we read in the Christian books of orthodoxy: "That, in consequence of this original sin, 'in place of the lost image of God, there is in man a most inward, most wicked, most profound, inscrutable, unspeakable corruption of his whole nature, and of all his powers,' and that it is the root of all actual evils (Formula Concordiae, p. 640)"; and that God the Father turned away that universal damnation from His face, and sent His Son into the world, who might take it on Himself, and thus appease [Him]; besides many other things which are, as everyone may see, inconsistent with God.

[2] Who may not, from the particulars above-mentioned understood in their historical sense, reasonably conclude, to use comparisons, that it would be like a person who gives his dependent a most fruitful field, and in it digs a pit, which he covers over with boards that fall inwards at the touch of a hand or foot; and, in the midst, places upon a stand a harlot clothed in crimson and scarlet, holding in her hand a golden cup (like the woman in Rev. 17:4), who, by her blandishments, allures the man to herself, and so brings it to pass that he falls into the pit and is drowned? Would it not, indeed, be like one who makes a present to his friend of a luxuriant field of corn, and in the midst thereof conceals snares, and sends out a siren who, with the allurement of song and of a sweet voice, entices him to that place, and causes him to be entangled in the snare, from which he is unable to extricate his foot? Yea, to use a further comparison, it would be like a person who should introduce a noble guest into his house, in which there are two parlours, and tables in each of them, at one of which are seated angels, and at the other evil spirits, on the latter of which are cups full of sweet but poisoned wine, and dishes on which are viands containing aconite; and who should permit the evil spirits there to represent the orgies of Bacchus, and the follies of buffoons, and entice them to those foods and drinks.

[3] But, my friend, the things related of Adam, of the garden of God, and of the two trees therein, appear under quite a different aspect when spiritually comprehended, that is, unswathed by the spiritual sense. It is then clearly seen that, by Adam, as a type, is meant the Most Ancient Church; and the successive states of that Church are described by the vicissitudes of his life. For a Church, in the beginning, is like a man created anew, who has a natural and a spiritual mind, and by degrees from spiritual becomes natural, and at length sensual, and believes nothing but what the senses of the body dictate; and such a man appears in heaven like a person sitting on a beast, which bends its head backward, and with its teeth bites, tears and mangles the man sitting upon it; while the truly spiritual man appears in heaven also like a person sitting on a beast, but on a gentle one, which he controls with a slender rein, and even by a gesture.

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