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Ezekiel 45

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1 And when you shall allot the land over inheritance, you shall lift·​·up an uplifting to Jehovah, a holy portion of the land; the length shall be the length of five and twenty thousand reeds, and the breadth shall be ten thousand. It shall be holy in all her borders all around.

2 Of this there shall be for the sanctuary five hundred by five hundred, foursquare all around; and fifty cubits all around for its suburbs*.

3 And of this measure shalt thou measure the length of five and twenty thousand, and the breadth of ten thousand; and in it shall be the sanctuary and the holy of holies.

4 The holy of the land, it shall be for the priests, the ministers of the sanctuary, which shall draw·​·near to minister unto Jehovah; and it shall be a place for their houses, and a sanctuary for the sanctuary.

5 And the five and twenty thousand in length, and the ten thousand in breadth, shall also be for the Levites, the ministers of the house, for themselves, for a possession for twenty rooms.

6 And you shall give for the possession of the city five thousand in breadth, and the length shall be five and twenty thousand, alongside the uplifting of the holy portion; it shall be for all the house of Israel.

7 And a portion shall be for the chief on this side and on this side of the uplifting of the holy portion, and of the possession of the city, to the face of the uplifting of the holy portion, and to the face of the possession of the city, from the west quarter westward, and from the eastern quarter eastward; and the length shall be alongside one of the parts, from the border of the west to the border eastward.

8 As for the land, it shall be his possession in Israel; and My chiefs shall not exploit My people any·​·more; and the land shall they give to the house of Israel according·​·to their tribes.

9 Thus says the Lord Jehovih*; Let it be much for you, O chiefs of Israel; put·​·aside violence and devastation, and do judgment and justice, lift·​·up your driving·​·out from on My people, says the Lord Jehovih.

10 There shall be for you just balances, and a just ephah, and a just bath*.

11 The ephah and the bath shall be of one fixed·​·measure, that the bath may carry the tenth of an homer, and the ephah the tenth of an homer; its fixed·​·measure shall be according to the homer.

12 And the shekel shall be twenty gerahs; twenty shekels, five and twenty shekels, ten and five shekels, shall be the maneh* for you.

13 This is the uplifting that you shall lift·​·up; the sixth of an ephah of an homer of wheat, and you shall give the sixth of an ephah of an homer of barley;

14 and the statute of oil, the bath of oil, you shall offer the tenth of a bath out·​·of the cor*; ten baths an homer, for ten baths is an homer;

15 and one lamb from the flock, from the two·​·hundred, from the watered flocks of Israel; for a gift·​·offering, and for a burnt·​·offering, and for peace·​·offerings, to make·​·atonement for them, says the Lord Jehovih.

16 All the people of the land shall give this uplifting for the chief in Israel.

17 And it shall be for the chief to give burnt·​·offerings, and gift·​·offerings, and poured·​·offerings, in the festivals, and in the new·​·moons, and in the Sabbaths, in all solemnities of the house of Israel; he shall make the sin offering, and the gift·​·offering, and the burnt·​·offering, and the peace·​·offerings, to make·​·atonement for the house of Israel.

18 Thus says the Lord Jehovih; In the first month, in the first day of the month, thou shalt take a son of the herd, a perfect bullock, and purge the sanctuary;

19 and the priest shall take of the blood of the sin offering, and put it onto the posts of the house, and onto the four corners of the ledge of the altar, and upon the posts of the gate of the inner court.

20 And so thou shalt do in the seventh day in the month for a man who errs, and for him who is simple; and you shall atone·​·for the house.

21 In the first month, in the fourteenth day of the month, to you shall be the Passover, a festival of a week of days in which unleavened bread shall be eaten.

22 And in that day shall the chief make for himself and for all the people of the land a bullock for a sin offering.

23 And seven days of the festival he shall make a burnt·​·offering to Jehovah, seven bullocks and seven perfect rams for the day seven days; and a male goat of the goats for the day for a sin offering.

24 And he shall make a gift·​·offering of an ephah for a bullock, and an ephah for a ram, and a hin of oil for an ephah.

25 In the seventh month, in the fifteenth day of the month, shall he do as these in the festival of the seven days, as the sin offering, as the burnt·​·offering, and as the gift·​·offering, and as to the oil.

   


Thanks to the Kempton Project for the permission to use this New Church translation of the Word.

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Arcana Coelestia # 10252

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10252. 'The best myrrh' means the perception of truth on the level of the senses. This is clear from the meaning of 'odour-bearing myrrh' as the perception of truth on the level of the senses; for its 'odour' means perception, as immediately above, and 'myrrh' truth on the level of the senses. The subject in the verses that come now is the anointing oil, by which celestial good, which is the Divine Good of the Lord's Divine Love in the inmost heaven, is meant. The nature of that good is described by the fragrant substances from which it was made. These were the best myrrh, sweet-smelling cinnamon, sweet-smelling calamus, cassia, and olive oil, which mean celestial truths and forms of good in their proper order, that is to say, ranging from those which are last and lowest in order to those which are first, or from those which are outermost to those which are inmost, the last or outermost being meant by 'myrrh'. The reason why celestial good, or the good of the inmost heaven, is described in this manner is that the truths meant by those spices are the means by which such good comes into being and is also kept in being.

[2] But since this matter demands to be investigated more deeply, the whole nature of it must be explained more fully. In order that the birth of celestial good, which is inmost good, may take place in a person, which is accomplished through being regenerated by the Lord, truths must be acquired from the Word, or from the teachings of the Church which are drawn from the Word. These truths first find 1 their seat in the memory within the natural or external man. From there they are summoned by the Lord into the internal man, which happens when the person leads a life in keeping with them. And so far as the person has an affection for them, that is, loves them, they are raised by the Lord to an even higher or more internal level, where they are transformed into celestial good.

[3] Celestial good is the good of the love which desires to put truths from the Word into practice for the sake of good, thus for the Lord's sake since the Lord is the source of good and therefore is such good. This is how that good comes to be born, from which it is evident that such good is brought into being by means of truths from the Word, first by their presence on the most external level in a person, which is that of the senses, then by their being raised to an internal level, and finally to the inmost one itself, where those truths are transformed into celestial good. And since that good is brought into being in this way by means of truths in their own order, so subsequently is it kept in being in similar order by means of those very truths; for continuance in being is a perpetual coming into being. When good is kept in being in that manner, the same as it had been brought into being, it is complete. For now higher things descending in order have lower ones to depend on as an infrastructure for their continued existence, for a resting-place, and for a plane of support.

[4] And they have outermost or last and lowest ones, which are truths present within knowledge on the level of the senses, as a foundation. These truths are described in John, in the Book of Revelation, by the precious stones forming the foundations of the wall of the Holy Jerusalem coming down out of heaven, Revelation 21:19-20. By 'precious stones' God's truths received within good are meant, see 9476, 9863, 9873, 9905.

The fact that 'odour-bearing myrrh' means truth on the level of the senses is also clear in David,

You have loved righteousness; therefore God, Your God, has anointed You with the oil of gladness more than Your companions. With myrrh, aloes, and kessia 2 [He has anointed] all Your garments. Psalms 45:7-8.

These words refer to the Lord, who alone is Jehovah's Anointed, because the Divine Good of Divine Love, meant by 'anointing oil', was within Him, 9954. By 'His garments', which are said to have been anointed with myrrh, aloes, and kessia, Divine Truths springing from His Divine Good, present in the natural degree, are meant, 5954, 9212, 9216, 9814, so that 'myrrh' means Divine Truth on the level of the senses since it is mentioned first.

[5] In Matthew,

Opening their treasures the wise men from the east offered gifts to the new-born Lord - gold, frankincense, and myrrh. Matthew 2:11.

'Gold' here means good, 'frankincense' internal truth, and 'myrrh' external truth; both kinds of truth spring from good. In this instance 'gold' is the first to be mentioned because it means good, which is inmost; 'frankincense' is the second because it means internal truth springing from good; and 'myrrh' is the third or last to be mentioned because it means external truth springing from good. For the meaning of 'gold' as good, see in the places referred to in 9874, 9881; and for that of 'frankincense' as internal truth springing from good, see below at verse 34 of the present chapter.

[6] The wise men from the east offered those gifts to the Lord born at that time to indicate His Divinity within His Humanity; for having a knowledge of correspondences and representations they knew what gold, frankincense, and myrrh each served to mean. That knowledge was the chief kind that existed in those times among Arabs, Ethiopians, and others in the east, which also explains why in the Word those who possess cognitions or knowledge of heavenly things are meant in the internal sense by Arabia, Ethiopia, and 'the sons of the east', 1171, 3240, 3242, 3762. But such knowledge during that time perished, for when the good of life passed away the knowledge was turned into magic. First it was erased among the Israelite nation, and subsequently among all the rest. At the present day it has been erased to such an extent that people do not even know of its existence; indeed it is so completely absent from the Christian world that if anyone tells them that all things in the literal sense of the Word serve by virtue of their correspondence to mean heavenly realities, and that these constitute its internal sense, they do not know what to make of it.

[7] Because myrrh served to mean the most external truth, which is truth on the level of the senses, and perception of that truth, the bodies of those who had died were anointed in former times with myrrh and aloes. That anointing served to mean the preservation of all of a person's truths and forms of good, and also to mean resurrection. Therefore also such [spices] were used as served to mean the last and lowest level of a person's life, called the life of the senses. The Lord's body was anointed with such, and together with them was wrapped in a linen cloth; and this was the custom among the Jews, see John 19:39-40, and also Luke 23:55-56. But it should be remembered that things said in the Word about the Lord Himself are to be understood in a pre-eminent sense. Consequently the spices mentioned in those verses mean His Divine life on the level of the senses, which is the life proper to the body, and also the resurrection of this with Him. As is well known, unlike anyone else the Lord rose again with the whole body He had in the world, for He left nothing in the tomb. Therefore also, when the disciples beheld the Lord and thought that they were seeing a spirit, He said to them,

Why are you troubled? See My hands and My feet; handle Me, see; for a spirit does not have flesh and bones as you see Me have. Luke 24:38-39.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. Reading nanciscuntur (find) for nascuntur (are born)

2. The Hebrew word which appears in Psalms 45:8 is q'tsi-oth, the plural of q'tsi-ah, while that in Exodus 30:24 and Ezekiel 27:19 is qiddah. Nowadays both Hebrew words are taken to mean cassia; but the unusual spelling kessia is used to show the difference.

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