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エレミヤ書 49

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1 アンモンびとについて、はこう言われる、「イスラエルにはがないのか、世継ぎがないのか。どうしてミルコムがガドを追い出して、その民がその々に住んでいるのか。

2 は言われる、それゆえ、見よ、アンモンびとのラバを攻める戦いの叫びを、わたしが聞えさせる来る。ラバは荒塚となり、その村々はで焼かれる。そのときイスラエルは自分を追い出した者どもを追い出すとは言われる。

3 ヘシボンよ嘆け、アイは滅ぼされた。ラバの娘たちよ呼ばわれ。荒布を身にまとい、悲しんで、まがきのうちを走りまわれ。ミルコムとその祭司およびつかさが共に捕え移されるからだ。

4 不信の娘よ、あなたはなぜ自分のの事を誇るのか。あなたは自分のに寄り頼んで、『だれがわたしに攻めてくるものか』と言う

5 なる万の神は言われる、見よ、わたしはあなたの上に恐れを臨ませる、それはあなたの周囲の者から来る。あなたは追われて、おのおの直ちに他人に続き、逃げる者を集める人もない。

6 しかし、のちになって、わたしはアンモンびとを再び栄えさせると、は言われる」。

7 エドムの事について、万はこう言われる、「テマンには、もはや知恵がないのか。さとい者には計りごとがなくなったのか。その知恵は消えうせたのか。

8 デダン住む者よ、逃げよ、のがれよ、深い所に隠れよ。わたしがエサウの災難を彼の上に臨ませ、彼をする時をこさせるからだ。

9 ぶどうを集める者があなたの所に来たならば、すこしの実をも残さないであろうか。、盗びとが来たならば、自分たちの満足するだけ滅ぼさないであろうか。

10 しかしわたしはエサウにし、その隠れる所を現したので、彼はその身を隠すことができない。その子どもたちも、兄弟も、隣り人も滅ぼされる。そして彼は、いなくなる。

11 あなたのみなしごを残せ、わたしがそれを生きながらえさせる。あなたのやもめには、わたしに寄り頼ませよ」。

12 はこう言われる、「もし、杯を飲むべきでない者もそれを飲まなければならなかったとすれば、あなたはを免れることができようか。あなたはを免れない。それを飲まなければならない。

13 は言われる、わたしは自分をさして誓ったボズラは驚きとなり、ののしりとなり、荒れ地となり、のろいとなる。その々は長く荒れ地となる」。

14 わたしはからのおとずれを聞いた。ひとりの使者がつかわされて万に行き、そして言った、「あなたがたは集まり、行って彼を攻め、立って戦え。

15 見よ、わたしはあなたを万のうちに小さい者とし、人々のうちに卑しめられる者とする。

16 の割れ目に住み、山の高みを占める者よ、あなたの恐ろしい事と、あなたのの高ぶりが、あなたを欺いた。あなたは、わたしのように巣を高い所に作っているが、わたしはその所からあなたを取りおろすとは言われる。

17 エドムは恐れとなる。そのかたわらを通り過ぎる者はみな恐れ、その災のために、舌打ちする。

18 は言われる、ソドムとゴモラとその隣の町々がくつがえされた時のように、そこに住む人はなく、そこに宿る人もなくなる。

19 見よ、ししがヨルダンの密林から上ってきて、じょうぶな羊のおりを襲うように、わたしは、たちまち彼らをそこから逃げ走らせ、わたしの選ぶ者をその上に立てる。だれかわたしのような者があるであろうか。だれがわたしを呼びつけることができようか。どの牧者がわたしのに立つことができようか。

20 それゆえ、エドムに対してが立てた計りごとと、テマンに住む者に対してしようとする事を聞くがよい。彼らの群れのうちの小さいものまでも皆、引かれて行く。彼らのおりのものもその終りを見て恐れる。

21 その倒れる音を聞いて、地は震い、彼らの叫び声は紅にも聞える。

22 見よ、敵はわしのように上り、すみやかに飛びかけり、そのボズラの上に張り広げる。そのエドムの勇士のは子を産む女ののようになる」。

23 ダマスコの事について、「ハマテとアルパデは、うろたえている、彼らは悪いおとずれを聞いたからだ。彼らは勇気を失い、穏やかになることのできないのように悩む。

24 ダマスコは弱り、身をめぐらして逃げた、恐怖に襲われている。子を産む女に臨むように痛みと悲しみと彼に臨む。

25 ああ、名ある、楽しいは捨てられる。

26 それゆえ、そのに、若い者は、広場に倒れ、兵士はことごとく滅ぼされると万は言われる。

27 わたしはダマスコの城壁の上にを燃やし、ベネハダデの宮殿を焼き尽す」。

28 バビロンの王ネブカデレザルが攻め撃ったケダルとハゾルの諸国の事について、はこう言われる、「立って、ケダルに向かって進み、東の人々を滅ぼせ。

29 彼らの天幕と、その群れとは取られ、その垂幕とそのもろもろの器と、らくだとは彼らの所から運び去られ、人々は彼らに向かって叫ぶ、『恐ろしいことが四方にある』と。

30 は言われる、ハゾルに住む者よ、逃げよ、遠くさまよい行き、深い所に隠れよ。バビロンの王ネブカデレザルがあなたがたを攻める計りごとをめぐらし、あなたがたを攻める、てだてを設けたからだ。

31 は言われる、立って進み、安全な所に住むきらくな民を攻めよ、彼らは門もなく、貫の木もなく、ひとり離れて住む

32 彼らのらくだは、ぶんどり物となり、家畜群れは奪われる。わたしは、かの髪の毛のすみずみを切る者を四方に散らし、その災難を八方からこさせるとは言われる。

33 ハゾルは山犬のすまいとなり、いつまでも荒れ地となっている。だれもそこに住む人はなく、そこに宿る人もない」。

34 ユダの王ゼデキヤの治世の初めのころに、エラムの事について預言者エレミヤに臨んだ主の言葉

35 はこう言われる、「見よ、わたしはエラムが力として頼んでいるを折る。

36 わたしは天の方から、方の風をエラムにこさせ、彼らを方の風に散らす。エラムから追い出される者の行かないはない。

37 は言われる、わたしはエラムをしてその、またその命を求める者のに恐れさせる。わたしは災をくだし、激しい怒りをその上にくだす。彼らのうしろに、つるぎを送って滅ぼし尽す。

38 そしてわたしの位をエラムにすえ、王とつかさたちとを滅ぼすとは言われる。

39 しかし末のに、わたしはエラムを再び栄えさせると、は言われる」。

   

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Doctrine of the Lord # 14

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14. The Lord came into the world to reduce to order everything in heaven and so on earth, and He accomplished this by combats against the hells. The hells at that time were infesting every person coming into the world and departing from the world. By combats against them the Lord became the embodiment of righteousness and saved mankind, without which people could not have been saved. This is foretold in many passages in the Prophets, only some of which will be cited.

[2] In Isaiah:

Who is this who comes from Edom, with red dyed garments from Bozrah? This one honorable in His apparel, traveling in the greatness of His strength?

“I who speak in righteousness, great to save.”

“Why is Your apparel red, and Your garment like one who treads in the winepress?”

“I have trodden the winepress alone, and of the people not a man was with Me. Therefore I have trodden them in My anger, and trampled them in My wrath. Thus their conquest is sprayed upon My garments.... For the day of vengeance is in My heart, and the year of My redeemed has come.... ...My own arm brought salvation for Me.... I have...brought down their conquest to the earth.”

...He said, “Lo, they are My people, children....”

So He became their Savior.... Owing to His love and owing to His mercy He redeemed them.... (Isaiah 63:1-9)

This describes the Lord’s combats against the hells. The apparel in which he appeared honorable and which was red means the Word, to which the Jewish people did violence. The battle itself against the hells and victory over them is described by His having trodden them in His anger and trampled them in His wrath. His battling alone and by His own power is described by His having of the people not a man with Him, by His own arm’s bringing salvation for Him, and by His bringing down their conquest to the earth. His saving and redeeming is described by His becoming the people’s Savior, and by His redeeming them owing to His love and mercy. And that this was the reason for His advent is described by the day of vengeance being in His heart, and the year of His redeemed having come.

[3] Again in Isaiah:

He saw that there was no one, and was dumbfounded that there was no intercessor; therefore His own arm brought Him salvation, and His righteousness sustained Him. Therefore He put on righteousness as a breastplate, and a helmet of salvation on His head, and He put on the garments of vengeance..., and wrapped Himself in zeal as a cloak.... Then the Redeemer came to Zion.... (Isaiah 59:16-17, 20)

This, too, describes the Lord’s combats against the hells when He was in the world. His battling alone against them by His own power is meant by His seeing that there was no one, so that His own right arm brought Him salvation. His becoming righteousness on that account is meant by His righteousness sustaining Him, so that He put on righteousness as a breastplate. And His becoming the Redeemer is meant by the statement that then the Redeemer came to Zion.

[4] In Jeremiah:

...(they are) dismayed..., their mighty ones are beaten down; they have fled..., and did not look back.... This is the day of the Lord Jehovih of Hosts, a day of vengeance, that He may take revenge on His enemies, and the sword shall devour and be satiated.... (Jeremiah 46:5, 10)

The Lord’s battle with the hells and victory over them is described by the people’s being dismayed, by their mighty ones’ being beaten down and fleeing and not looking back. Their mighty ones and the enemies are the hells, because the inhabitants there all hate the Lord. The Lord’s coming into the world is therefore meant by its being the day of the Lord Jehovih of Hosts, a day of vengeance, that He may take revenge on His enemies.

[5] Again in Jeremiah:

...(the) young men shall fall in (the) streets, and all the men of war shall be cut off in that day.... (Jeremiah 49:26)

In Joel:

Jehovah gave voice before His army.... ...the day of Jehovah is great and very terrible. Who then will endure it? (Joel 2:11)

In Zephaniah:

...in the day of Jehovah’s sacrifice, I will visit judgment upon the princes and the king’s children, upon all clothed with foreign apparel.... This day is a day of...distress..., a day of the trumpet and its sounding.... (Zephaniah 1:8-9, 15-16)

In Zechariah:

Jehovah will go forth and fight against (the) nations, as in the day of His fighting on the day of battle. In that day His feet will stand on the Mount of Olives, which faces Jerusalem.... Then you shall flee into the valley of My mountains.... ...in that day there will be no light or illumination.... And Jehovah shall be King over all the earth. In that day it shall be “Jehovah is one, and His name one.” (Zechariah 14:3-6, 9)

In these passages, too, the subject is the Lord’s combats. That day means His advent. The Mount of Olives, which faces Jerusalem, was where the Lord customarily tarried (see Mark 13:3-4, 14:26, Luke 21:37, 22:39, John 8:1, and elsewhere).

[6] In Psalms:

The cords of death surrounded me..., the cords of hell surrounded me; the snares of death came to meet me. He sent out His arrows (therefore) and many bolts of lightning, and threw them into confusion. I will pursue My enemies and capture them, nor will I turn back again till I have consumed them and smitten them so that they cannot rise again.... You shall gird me with strength for the battle..., You shall put My enemies to flight.... I will crush them as fine as dust in the wind, I will spread them like dirt in the streets. (Psalms 18:4-5, 14, 37-40, 42)

The cords and snares of death that surrounded Him and came to meet Him symbolize temptations or trials, which, because they originate from hell, are also called the cords of hell.

This and everything else in this whole Psalm portray the Lord’s battles and victories. Therefore it also says, “You put Me at the head of the nations; a people I have not known shall serve Me” (Psalms 18:43-44).

[7] Again in Psalms:

Gird Your sword upon Your thigh, O Mighty One.... Your arrows are sharp — the peoples will fall under You — from the heart of the king’s enemies. Your throne...is forever and ever.... You love righteousness...; therefore God...has anointed You.... (Psalms 45:3, 5-7)

This, too, portrays combat with the hells and conquest of them, for the entire Psalm has the Lord as its subject, namely His battles, His glorification, and His salvation of the faithful.

Again:

A fire will go before Him, and burn His enemies round about...; the earth will see and be afraid. The mountains will melt like wax at the presence...of the Lord of the whole earth. The heavens will declare His righteousness, and all peoples will see His glory. (Psalms 97:3-6)

This Psalm as well has the Lord as its subject, with similar themes.

[8] Again:

Jehovah said to my Lord, “Sit at My right hand, till I have made Your enemies Your footstool.” ...Rule in the midst of Your enemies! ...The Lord is at Your right hand; He has smitten kings in the day of His wrath.... He has filled with dead bodies, He has smitten the head over a great land. (Psalms 110:1-7)

This is something the Lord said, as is clear from the Lord’s own words in Matthew 22:44, Mark 12:36, and Luke 20:42.

Sitting at the right hand symbolizes omnipotence. Enemies symbolize the hells. The kings there symbolize people caught up in the falsities attendant on evil. Making them a footstool, smiting in the day of wrath, and filling with dead bodies means, symbolically, the destruction of their power, and smiting the head over a great land means, symbolically, the destruction of the whole of it.

[9] Since the Lord overcame the hells and did so alone, without the aid of any angel, therefore in Isaiah 42:13 He is called a hero and a man of war ; in Psalms 24:8, 10 a king of glory, Jehovah the mighty, a hero in battle; in Psalms 132:2 the mighty one of Jacob; and in many other places Jehovah of Hosts, which means “Jehovah of hosts, ” that is, of armies.

His advent, moreover, is also called the day of Jehovah, described as a terrible and cruel one, one of indignation, wrath, anger, vengeance, destruction, and war, accompanied by the sounding of the trumpet, a day of tumult, as may be seen from the passages presented in no. 4 above.

[10] Since the Lord carried out a last judgment when He was in the world by battles with the hells and conquest of them, therefore many places have as their subject the judgment that He would carry out. So, for example, in Psalms:

...(Jehovah) is coming to judge the earth. He shall judge the world in righteousness, and the peoples with His truth. (Psalms 96:13)

And so also in many places elsewhere.

[11] This much comes from the prophetic books of the Word. In the historical books of the Word, too, similar events are represented by the wars of the children of Israel with the various nations. For everything written in the Word, whether prophetic or historical, was written about the Lord. That is what makes the Word Divine.

The rituals of the Israelite Church — for example, its burnt offerings and sacrifices, its sabbaths and feasts, and the priesthood of Aaron and the Levites — contain many arcane secrets of the Lord’s glorification. So likewise everything else in the books of Moses called laws, judgments and statutes. This also is meant by the Lord’s saying to His disciples that He must fulfill all things which were written in the Law of Moses concerning Him (Luke 24:44), and to the Jews that Moses wrote about Him (John 5:46).

[12] It can now be seen from this that the Lord came into the world to conquer the hells and glorify His humanity, and that the suffering of the cross was the final battle by which He fully overcame the hells and fully glorified His humanity.

But more on this subject will be seen in the next short work, The Sacred Scripture, where we will bring together in one place all the passages from the prophetic Word which depict the Lord’s battles with the hells and victories over them, or in other words, which depict the last judgment carried out by Him when He was in the world, and also the suffering of the cross and glorification of His humanity — passages which are so many that, if quoted, would fill pages.

  
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Published by the General Church of the New Jerusalem, 1100 Cathedral Road, Bryn Athyn, Pennsylvania 19009, U.S.A. A translation of Doctrina Novae Hierosolymae de Domino, by Emanuel Swedenborg, 1688-1772. Translated from the Original Latin by N. Bruce Rogers. ISBN 9780945003687, Library of Congress Control Number: 2013954074.