Bible

 

創世記 28

Studie

   

1 イサクはヤコブを呼んで、これを祝福し、命じて言った、「あなたはカナンにめとってはならない。

2 立ってパダンアラムへ行き、あなたのの父ベトエルのに行って、そこであなたのラバンのにめとりなさい。

3 全能の神が、あなたを祝福し、多くの子を得させ、かつふえさせて、多くの国民とし、

4 またアブラハムの祝福をあなたと子孫とに与えて、アブラハムに授けられたあなたの寄留の地を継がせてくださるように」。

5 こうしてイサクはヤコブを送り出した。ヤコブはパダンアラムに向かい、アラムびとベトエルので、ヤコブとエサウとのリベカのラバンのもとへ行った。

6 さてエサウは、イサクがヤコブを祝福して、パダンアラムにつかわし、そこからをめとらせようとしたこと、彼を祝福し、命じて「あなたはカナンにめとってはならない」と言ったこと、

7 そしてヤコブが父の言葉に従って、パダンアラムへ行ったことを知ったとき、

8 彼はカナンが父イサクの心にかなわないのを見た

9 そこでエサウはイシマエルの所に行き、すでにあるたちのほかにアブラハムのイシマエルの娘で、ネバヨテの妹マハラテをにめとった。

10 さてヤコブはベエルシバを立って、ハランへ向かったが、

11 一つの所に着いた時、日が暮れたので、そこに一夜を過ごし、その所のを取ってまくらとし、そこに伏して寝た。

12 時に彼はをみた。一つのはしごが地の上に立っていて、その頂は天に達し、神の使たちがそれを上り下りしているのを見た。

13 そしては彼のそばに立って言われた、「わたしはあなたの父アブラハムの、イサクのである。あなたが伏している地を、あなたと子孫とに与えよう。

14 あなたの子孫は地のちりのように多くなって、西、東、にひろがり、地の諸族はあなたと子孫とによって祝福をうけるであろう。

15 わたしはあなたと共にいて、あなたがどこへ行くにもあなたを守り、あなたをこの地に連れ帰るであろう。わたしは決してあなたを捨てず、あなたに語った事を行うであろう」。

16 ヤコブは眠りからさめて言った、「まことにがこの所におられるのに、わたしは知らなかった」。

17 そして彼は恐れて言った、「これはなんという恐るべき所だろう。これは神のである。これは天のだ」。

18 ヤコブははやく起きて、まくらとしていたを取り、それを立てて柱とし、その頂にを注いで、

19 その所の名をベテルと名づけた。そのの名は初めはルズといった。

20 ヤコブは誓いを立てて言った、「がわたしと共にいまし、わたしの行くこの道でわたしを守り、食べるパンと着る着物を賜い、

21 安らかに父のに帰らせてくださるなら、をわたしのといたしましょう。

22 またわたしが柱に立てたこの神のといたしましょう。そしてあなたがくださるすべての物の十分の一を、わたしは必ずあなたにささげます」。

   

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 3660

Prostudujte si tuto pasáž

  
/ 10837  
  

3660. And blessed him. That this signifies that thus conjunction would be effected, is evident from the signification of being “blessed,” as being to be conjoined (see n. 3504, 3514, 3530, 3565, 3584). The reason why Isaac the father now blesses Jacob the son, although he had come with guile and taken the blessing from Esau, and Isaac had shuddered at that deed (as appears from the preceding chapter (Genesis 27:33), verses 33 and 35), is that Isaac now perceived that it was the posterity of Jacob, and not that of Esau, that was to possess the land of Canaan; and therefore the blessing was confirmed by Isaac. But the guile at which Isaac shuddered signified and foretold what was deceptive in the posterity of Jacob in regard to the representatives; that is to say, that they were very far from sincerely or at heart representing the Divine or celestial things of the Lord’s kingdom, and were thus utterly unlike the Ancient Church, being merely in externals separate from what is internal, and not even in these, inasmuch as they so often fell away into open idolatries.

[2] What is meant by being conjoined, or by conjunction, here signified in the internal sense by being “blessed,” was shown above, namely, that the natural as to good and as to truth should be adjoined to the rational, or what is the same thing, the external man to the internal; for in order that the Lord might make His natural Divine, He had to implant therein such good and truth as would correspond with the good and truth of the Divine rational. Without corresponding goods and truths no conjunction is possible. There are innumerable goods and truths of the natural, or such as are proper to the natural man; so innumerable that man can scarcely know their most general kinds, in spite of the fact that when mention is made of natural good and truth it appears to man as one simple thing; for the whole natural and all that is in it is nothing else than this good and truth. And this being the case, it is evident that there are goods and truths of the natural in which the goods and truths of the rational can be, and that there are goods and truths of the natural in which the goods and truths of the rational cannot be; consequently, that there are goods and truths of the natural which can be adjoined to the goods and truths of the rational by correspondence. Such goods and truths are treated of in this and the following chapters.

[3] To know these goods and truths, and to distinguish them from one another, and also to view their qualities, and thus how they are adapted for conjunction, does not so well appear to man so long as he does not think from what is interior, or from enlightenment by the light of heaven; for in this case such things appear to him to be both obscure and undelightful. But nevertheless they are suited to the apprehension and understanding of angels, and even to the apprehension of spirits; for the thoughts of angels and spirits are not distracted by cares for worldly, corporeal, and earthly things, as they had formerly been when they lived as men in the world. Angels and spirits are in the pleasantness of intelligence and the bliss of wisdom when such things are present with them from the internal sense of the Word; for then what is Divine shines upon them, because in the supreme sense the Lord is treated of, and in the representative sense the church and regeneration; and thereby they are in the Lord’s Divine sphere, and in that of His ends and uses.

  
/ 10837  
  

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