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Ezekielis 7

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1 Viešpats kalbėjo:

2 “Žmogaus sūnau, taip sako Viešpats Dievas Izraelio žemei: ‘Atėjo galas visiems keturiems žemės pakraščiams.

3 Dabar atėjo galas ir tau! Aš siųsiu prieš tave savo rūstybę, teisiu tave pagal tavo kelius, atlyginsiu už bjaurius darbus.

4 Aš nepasigailėsiu tavęs, bet bausiu tave už tavo kelius ir užleisiu ant tavęs tavo bjaurystes. Tada jūs žinosite, kad Aš esu Viešpats’.

5 Viešpats Dievas sako: ‘Nelaimė ir tik nelaimė ateina!

6 Atėjo galas, jis ieško tavęs. Štai jis Atėjo.

7 Tavo eilė būti sunaikintam atėjo! Tu, kuris gyveni krašte, ne džiaugsmo, bet sunaikinimo diena atėjo.

8 Tuojau išliesiu savo rūstybę ant tavęs, teisiu tave pagal tavo kelius ir bausiu už visas tavo bjaurystes.

9 Aš nepasigailėsiu tavęs, bet bausiu tave už tavo kelius ir tavo bjaurystes užvesiu ant tavęs. Tada žinosite, kad Aš­Viešpats, kuris baudžia.

10 Štai diena atėjo, pražūtis prisiartino. Neteisybė žydi, išdidumas žaliuoja!

11 Smurtas išaugo į nedorybės lazdą, nieko neliks nei iš jų turto, nei iš garbės, nei iš didybės.

12 Metas priartėjo, diena atėjo. Tenesidžiaugia pirkėjas ir teneliūdi pardavėjas, nes ateina bausmė visiems nusikaltusiems.

13 Pardavėjas nebeatgaus parduoto daikto, nors ir gyvas tebebūtų, nes sunaikinimas laukia visų; nė vienas nusikaltęs neišliks gyvas.

14 Pūskite trimitą, pasirenkite kovai! Bet nė vienas neina į kovą, nes mano rūstybė prieš visą jų daugybę.

15 Lauke kardas! Viduje maras ir badas! Kas lauke, žus nuo kardo, kas mieste, mirs nuo bado ir maro.

16 Jei kas išsigelbės, bus kaip slėnių balandis kalnuose; jie visi dejuos dėl savo nuodėmių.

17 Visų rankos nusilps ir keliai links.

18 Jie apsisiaus ašutinėmis ir juos apims baimė. Gėda bus jų veiduose ir plikė ant galvų.

19 Jie išmes savo auksą ir sidabrą, nes auksas ir sidabras neišgelbės jų Viešpaties rūstybės dieną. Jie nepatenkins savo sielų ir nepasisotins, nes tai tapo jų suklupimo akmeniu.

20 Iš savo papuošalų, kuriais didžiavosi, jie pasidarė bjaurius atvaizdus. Todėl jų brangenybes padariau beverčiais daiktais.

21 Aš atiduosiu juos svetimšaliams kaip grobį, žemės nedorėliai išplėš juos ir suterš.

22 Aš nusigręšiu nuo jų, leisiu išniekinti savo šventyklą. Plėšikai įsilauš, išnaikins ir apiplėš ją.

23 Kraštas ir miestas yra pilni nekalto kraujo, nusikaltimų ir smurto.

24 Aš atvesiu blogiausias tautas, ir jie paveldės jų namus. Padarysiu galą stipriojo pasipūtimui, ir jų šventos vietos bus išniekintos.

25 Ateina sunaikinimas; jie ieško taikos, bet jos nebus.

26 Nelaimė seks nelaimę, gąsdinantys pranešimai bus vienas po kito. Jie veltui ieško pranašų regėjimų. Įstatymo nebebus pas kunigus ir patarimo pas vyresniuosius.

27 Karalius gedės, kunigaikščiai bus apimti siaubo, tauta palūš. Aš padarysiu jiems taip, kaip jie darė, teisiu juos taip, kaip jie teisė. Tada jie žinos, kad Aš esu Viešpats’ ”.

   

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Arcana Coelestia # 6524

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6524. 'The elders of his house' means the things that would accord with good. This is clear from the meaning of 'the elders' as the chief characteristics of wisdom, thus things that accord with good, dealt with below; and from the meaning of 'house' as good, dealt with in 2559, 3652, 3720, 4982. The reason why 'elders' means the chief characteristics of wisdom is that in the Word 'old people' means those who are wise, and - in a sense detached from persons - wisdom. Since 'the twelve tribes of Israel' meant all truths and forms of good in their entirety, they had princes and also elders set over them. 'Princes' meant the leading truths constituting intelligence, and 'elders' the chief characteristics of wisdom, thus those of good.

[2] For the meaning of 'princes' as the leading truths constituting intelligence, see 1482, 2089, 5044. But as regards the meaning of 'elders' as the chief characteristics of wisdom, and of 'old people' as wisdom, this is evident from the following places: In David,

They will extol Jehovah in the congregation of the people, and in the assembly of the old they will praise Him. Psalms 107:32.

'The congregation of the people' stands for those who are ruled by truths constituting intelligence, since 'congregation' is used with reference to truths, 6355, as also is 'people', 1259, 1260, 2928, 3295, 3581; 'the assembly of the old' stands for those who are ruled by good, which belongs to wisdom since wisdom is concerned with life, thus with what is good, whereas intelligence is concerned with knowing, thus with what is true, 1555. In the same author,

I am wiser than the old, because I have kept Your commands. Psalms 119:100.

'The old' plainly stands for one who is wise. Likewise in Job,

In the old there is wisdom, in length of days intelligence. Job 12:12.

In Moses,

You shall rise before grey hair and respect the face of an old person. Leviticus 19:32.

This command was given because 'old people' represented wisdom.

[3] In John,

On the thrones I saw twenty-four elders seated, clad in white garments, who had on their heads crowns of gold. Revelation 4:4.

'Elders' stands for aspects of wisdom, thus of good. That these are meant by the elders is evident from the description of the elders - they sat on thrones, were clad in white garments, and had crowns of gold on their heads. 'Thrones' are truths constituting intelligence which are derived from good belonging to wisdom, 5313. 'White garments' has a similar meaning, 'garments' being truths, 1073, 4545, 4763, 5248, 5954, and 'white' that which has reference to truth, 3301, 5319. 'Crowns of gold on their heads' are forms of the good of wisdom; for 'gold' is the good of love, 113, 1551, 1552, 5658, and 'head' is the celestial, the seat of wisdom, 4938, 4939, 5328, 6436. Those who are in the third or inmost heaven, thus who are nearest the Lord, are called the wise, whereas those in the middle or second heaven, thus who are not as near the Lord, are called intelligent.

[4] In the same book,

All the angels stood around the throne, and the elders, and the four living creatures. Revelation 7:11.

Again 'the elders' stands for aspects of wisdom, as it does in the following places: In Isaiah,

The boy will uplift himself against the old man, and the despised against the honourable. Isaiah 7:5.

In the same prophet,

Jehovah Zebaoth will reign on Mount Zion and in Jerusalem, and before His elders, glory. Isaiah 24:23.

In Jeremiah,

My priests and my elders breathed their last in the city, for they sought food for themselves, with which they would renew their soul. Lamentations 1:19.

In the same prophet,

Her king and her princes are among the nations; the law is no more. The elders of the daughter of Zion sit on the ground, they become silent. Lamentations 2:9-10.

In the same prophet,

They have ravished women in Zion, virgins in the cities of Judah. Princes have been hung up by their hands, the faces of the old men have not been honoured, the elders have ceased from the gate. Lamentations 5:11-12, 14.

In Ezekiel,

Misery will come upon misery, and rumour will be upon rumour. Therefore they will seek a vision from the prophet, but the law has perished from the priest, and counsel from the elders. The king will mourn, and the prince will be wrapped in stupidity. Ezekiel 7:26-27.

In Zechariah,

Old men and women will again dwell in the streets of Jerusalem, and each one with his staff in his hand because of great age. 1 Zechariah 8:4.

So that 'the elders' might represent things that constitute wisdom, some of Moses' spirit was taken and imparted to them, by which they prophesied, Numbers 11:16 and following verses.

In the contrary sense 'elders' stands for the things that are the opposites of the aspects of wisdom, Ezekiel 8:11-12.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. literally, for multitude of days

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

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Arcana Coelestia # 3652

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3652. The internal sense of these words is as follows:

When therefore you see the abomination of desolation means when the Church has undergone vastation, which is the situation when the Lord is acknowledged no longer, and therefore when there is no love of Him nor any belief in Him; also when there is no longer any charity towards the neighbour nor consequently any belief in what is good and true. When these conditions exist in the Church, or rather in the area where the Word is, that is to say, in the thoughts of the heart though not in the doctrine on the lips, it is a case of desolation, and the circumstances that have just been mentioned constitute 'the abomination of that desolation'. Consequently 'when you see the abomination of desolation' means when anyone witnesses such conditions. And what he is to do when he does witness them follows in verses 16-18.

[2] Spoken of by the prophet Daniel means, in the internal sense, spoken of by the Prophets, for when any prophet is mentioned by name in the Word it is not simply that prophet who is meant but the whole prophetical part of the Word, the reason being that names do not ever come through into heaven, 1876, 1888. Even so, one prophet does not have the same meaning as another. For what Moses, Elijah and Elisha mean, see the Preface to Chapter 18, and 2762. By 'Daniel' however is meant every prophetical statement concerning the Lord's coming and the state of the Church, in this case its final state. Much reference is made in the Prophets to vastation, and by the reference to it here in Daniel is meant in the sense of the letter the vastation of the Jewish and Israelitish Church, but in the internal sense the vastation of the Church in general, and thus also the vastation of it which is now at hand.

[3] Standing in the holy place means a vastation involving everything that forms part of what is good and true. 'The holy place' is a state of love and faith, for by 'a place' in the internal sense is meant a state, see 2625, 2837, 3356, 3387. The 'holy' element of that state consists in the good of love and in the truth of faith grounded in this. Nothing else is meant in the Word by the expression 'holy', for goodness and truth originate in the Lord, who is Holiness itself or the Sanctuary.

Let him who is reading this take note means that these matters are to be thoroughly understood by those within the Church, especially by those who have love and faith, to whom the present words refer.

[4] Then let those who are in Judea flee into the mountains means that members of the Church are to fix their attention solely on the Lord and so on love to Him and on charity towards the neighbour. For 'Judea' means the Church, as will be shown below, while 'a mountain' means the Lord Himself but 'the mountains' love to Him and charity towards the neighbour, see 795, 796, 1430, 2722. According to the sense of the letter when Jerusalem was besieged, as was done by the Romans, they were not to resort to that city but to go onto the mountains, according to the following in Luke,

When you see Jerusalem surrounded by armies, then know that its devastation is near. Then let those who are in Judea flee onto the mountains, and let those who are in the midst of it 1 depart, but those who are out in the country let them not enter it. Luke 21:20-21.

[5] The same applies to this reference to Jerusalem; that is to say, in the sense of the letter it is the city of Jerusalem that is meant, but in the internal sense the Lord's Church, see 402, 2117. For every single thing mentioned in the Word concerning the Jewish and Israelitish people is representative of the Lord's kingdom in heaven and of the Lord's kingdom on earth, which is the Church, as has been shown often. Consequently nowhere in the internal sense is 'Jerusalem' used to mean Jerusalem, or 'Judea' to mean Judea. But every single thing so mentioned was such that by means of it the celestial and spiritual things of the Lord's kingdom were able to be represented. It was for the sake of what they represented that the events which have been recorded took place. Thus the Word was able to be written in such a way that it lay both within the mental grasp of people reading it, and within the understanding of angels who were present with them. This was also the reason why the Lord spoke in a similar way. Indeed if He had spoken in any other way it would not have come within the mental grasp of those reading it, especially at that time, nor simultaneously within the angels' power of understanding. Thus it would not have been accepted by man, nor understood by angels.

[6] Let him who is on the roof of the house not go down to take anything out of his house means that those in whom the good of charity is present should not therefore resort to matters of doctrine concerning faith. 'The roof of the house' in the Word means a person's higher state, and so his state as regards good, whereas what is below means a person's lower state, and so his state as regards truth. For what 'house' is, see 710, 1708, 2233, 2331, 3142, 3538. With regard to the state of a member of the Church, while he is undergoing regeneration he is at that time learning truth for the sake of good; for he possesses an affection for truth for the sake of that good. But once he has been regenerated truth and good are the basis of his actions. Once he has reached this state he ought not to go back to the previous state, for if he did he would then reason from truth about the good which is present with him and in so doing would pervert his present state. For all reasoning does and must come to an end when a person's state is one in which he wills what is true and good, for in that case the will and therefore conscience are the source of his thought and action, and not the understanding, as it had been previously. If he went back to the understanding as the source of his thought and action he would encounter temptations in which he would go under. These are the considerations meant by the statement 'let him who is on the roof of the house not go down to take anything out of his house'.

[7] And let him who is in the field not turn back to get his clothing (or tunic) means that neither should those in whom good that resides in truth is present forsake such good and resort to doctrine concerning truth. 'The field' in the Word means this state of man as regards good; for what 'field' means, see 368, 2971, 3196, 3310, 3317, 3500, 3508. And 'clothing' or tunic means that which clothes good, namely doctrine concerning truth, such being like clothing for good; for 'clothing' has that meaning, see 297, 1073, 2576, 3301. Anyone may see that deeper things lie concealed in these words than are visible in the letter; for the Lord Himself spoke them.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. i.e. Jerusalem

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