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Išėjimas 20

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1 Dievas kalbėjo visus šiuos žodžius:

2 “Aš esu Viešpats, tavo Dievas, kuris tave išvedžiau iš Egipto žemės, iš vergijos namų.

3 Neturėk kitų dievų šalia manęs.

4 Nedaryk sau jokio drožinio nei jokio atvaizdo to, kas yra aukštai danguje, žemai žemėje ar po žeme vandenyje.

5 Nesilenk prieš juos ir netarnauk jiems! Nes Aš, Viešpats, tavo Dievas, esu pavydus Dievas, baudžiąs vaikus už tėvų kaltes iki trečios ir ketvirtos kartos tų, kurie manęs nekenčia,

6 bet rodąs gailestingumą iki tūkstantosios kartos tiems, kurie mane myli ir laikosi mano įsakymų.

7 Netark Viešpaties, savo Dievo, vardo be reikalo, nes Viešpats nepaliks be kaltės to, kuris be reikalo mini Jo vardą.

8 Atsimink sabato dieną, kad ją švęstum.

9 Šešias dienas dirbk ir atlik visus savo darbus,

10 o septintoji diena yra sabatas Viešpačiui, tavo Dievui. Joje nevalia dirbti jokio darbo nei tau, nei tavo sūnui ar dukteriai, nei tavo tarnui ar tarnaitei, nei tavo gyvuliui, nei ateiviui, kuris yra tavo namuose,

11 nes per šešias dienas Viešpats sukūrė dangų, žemę, jūrą ir visa, kas juose yra, o septintąją dieną ilsėjosi. Todėl Viešpats palaimino sabatą ir pašventino jį.

12 Gerbk savo tėvą ir motiną, kad ilgai gyventum žemėje, kurią Viešpats Dievas tau duoda.

13 Nežudyk.

14 Nesvetimauk.

15 Nevok.

16 Neliudyk neteisingai prieš savo artimą.

17 Negeisk savo artimo namų, negeisk savo artimo žmonos, nei jo tarno, nei tarnaitės, nei jaučio, nei asilo—nieko, kas yra tavo artimo”.

18 Visi žmonės girdėjo griaustinį ir trimito garsą, matė žaibus ir rūkstantį kalną. Matydami tai žmonės atsitraukė ir stovėjo atokiai.

19 Jie sakė Mozei: “Tu kalbėk su mumis! Mes klausysime. Tačiau tenekalba su mumis Dievas, kad nemirtume!”

20 Mozė atsakė žmonėms: “Nebijokite! Dievas atėjo tam, kad jus išmėgintų, ir kad Jo baimė būtų prieš jus ir jūs nenusidėtumėte”.

21 Žmonės stovėjo toli, o Mozė priartėjo prie tamsaus debesies, kur buvo Dievas.

22 Viešpats liepė Mozei pasakyti izraelitams: “Jūs patys girdėjote, kad Aš iš dangaus kalbėjau su jumis.

23 Nedarykite šalia manęs sau sidabrinių ar auksinių dievų.

24 Padaryk man iš žemės aukurą ir aukok ant jo deginamąsias ir padėkos aukas, savo avis ir galvijus. Kiekvienoje vietoje, kurioje bus minimas mano vardas, Aš ateisiu ir laiminsiu tave.

25 O jei man statysi akmeninį aukurą, nestatyk jo iš tašytų akmenų, nes, naudodamas įrankį, suterši jį.

26 Taip pat nelipk laiptais prie mano aukuro, kad nebūtų atidengtas tavo nuogumas”.

   

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Apocalypse Revealed # 601

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601. Telling those dwelling upon the earth to make an image of the beast that was injured by the sword and lived. This symbolically means that the clergy induce people in the church to accept as doctrine that faith is the only means of salvation, because no one can do good of himself without its being merit-seeking, and because no one can fulfill the law and in that way be saved.

Those dwelling upon the earth mean people in the Protestant Reformed Church, as in no. 600 above. The image symbolizes the doctrine of that church, as explained below. And the image of the beast that was injured by the sword and lived symbolizes this tenet of the doctrine, that faith is the only means of salvation, because no one can do good of himself without its being merit-seeking, and because no one can fulfill the law and in that way be saved (see nos. 576, 577ff. above).

[2] Every church appears to the Lord as a person. If it is governed by truths from the Word, it appears as an attractive person. But if it is caught up in truths falsified, it appears as a hideous person. The church appears as it does in keeping with its doctrine and in keeping with its life in accordance with that doctrine. It follows from this that a church's doctrine presents an image of the church.

This can also be seen from the fact that every person embodies his own goodness and truth or his own evil and falsity. It is this and nothing else that makes a person human. Consequently it is doctrine and a life in accordance with it which produces the image of a person in the church - the image of an attractive person if the doctrine and his life in accordance with it conform with the Word's genuine truths, but the image of a hideous person if they accord with the Word's truths falsified.

[3] In the spiritual world, moreover, a person appears as a kind of animal, but it is his affection that so appears at a distance. People impelled by truths and goods from the Lord look like lambs and doves, while those caught up in falsified truths and adulterated goods look like owls and bats. People possessing a faith divorced from charity look like dragons and goats. Those caught up in falsities springing from evil look like basilisks 1 and crocodiles. And those who are of this character and yet have affirmed the teachings of the church look like fiery flying serpents.

It can be seen from this that the church's doctrine and a life in accordance with it are meant by the image of the beast which the people made for those dwelling upon the earth.

[4] But what eventually became of those who worshiped the image of the beast may be seen in Revelation 14:9-11; 19:20, cf. 20:4.

Images have similar symbolic meanings in the spiritual sense in Exodus 20:4-5, Leviticus 26:1, Deuteronomy 4:16-18, Isaiah 2:16, Ezekiel 7:20; 16:17; 23:14-16.

Among the ancients, idols and carved images were symbols of their religious faith. Consequently they symbolize doctrinal falsities and evils (no. 459).

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. Legendary serpents or dragons, whose breath and glance were said to be lethal. Formerly identified in English translations of the Latin Vulgate with the cockatrice, and retained as such in the King James Bible.

  
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Many thanks to the General Church of the New Jerusalem, and to Rev. N.B. Rogers, translator, for the permission to use this translation.

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Apocalypse Revealed # 459

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459. And idols of gold, silver, brass, stone, and wood. This symbolically means that thus they engage in worship founded on nothing but falsities.

Idols in the Word symbolize falsities in worship, and therefore worshiping them symbolizes worship founded on falsities. Worshiping idols of gold, silver, brass, stone, and wood, then, symbolizes worship founded on falsities of every kind, and when taken in combination, worship founded on nothing but falsities. Moreover, the materials, figures, and garments of the idols among ancient peoples represented the falsities of religion on which they founded their worship. Idols of gold symbolized falsities regarding matters pertaining to God; idols of silver, falsities regarding matters pertaining to the spirit; idols of brass, falsities regarding charity; idols of stone, falsities regarding faith; and idols of wood, falsities regarding good works.

All of these falsities are held by people who do not repent, that is, who do not refrain from evils as being sins against God.

[2] Idols, which were carved and cast images, have this symbolic meaning in the spiritual sense in the following passages:

Everyone has been made stupid by knowledge; every metalsmith is has been put to shame by a carved image; for his cast image is a falsehood, and there is no breath in them. They are futile, a work of errors; in the time of their visitation they shall perish. (Jeremiah 10:14-15; 51:17-18)

(Carved images are) the work of the hands of the workman... They do not speak... They are both foolish and stupid; the wood is a worthless teacher... They are all the work of skillful men. (Jeremiah 10:3-5, 8-10)

What profit is the carved image, that its maker has carved it, ...and a teacher of lies, that the maker of the lie trusts in it...? ...in it there is no breath. (Habakkuk 2:18-19)

In that day a man will cast away to the moles and bats his idols of silver and his idols of gold, which they made for themselves to worship... (Isaiah 2:18, 20)

...they made for themselves cast images of their silver, idols according to their skill, all of it the work of craftsmen. (Hosea 13:2)

I will sprinkle clean water on you, that you may be cleansed... from all your uncleanness and from all your idols. (Ezekiel 36:25)

Clean waters are truths; idols are falsities in worship.

You shall judge unclean the covering of your graven images of silver, and the attire of your cast images of gold. You will throw them away as a menstrual cloth; you will call it excrement. (Isaiah 30:22)

[3] Falsities in religion and thus in worship are precisely what are symbolically meant by the gods of gold, silver, bronze, iron, wood, and stone that Belshazzar, king of Babylon, praised (i.e., worshiped) when with his great men, wives and concubines he drank wine from the vessels of gold and silver taken from the temple in Jerusalem, on which account he was driven from mankind and became as a beast (Daniel 5:1-5ff.).

And so also in many other places, as in Isaiah 10:10-11; 21:9; 31:7; 40:19-20; 41:29; 42:17; 48:5, Leviticus 26:30.

Properly speaking, idols symbolize falsities in worship springing from people's own intelligence. How a person fashions them and afterward adapts them so that they appear to be true is fully described in Isaiah 44:9-20.

  
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Many thanks to the General Church of the New Jerusalem, and to Rev. N.B. Rogers, translator, for the permission to use this translation.