Bible

 

Izaijas 22:12

Studie

       

12 Kareivijų Viešpats ragino tą dieną verkti ir raudoti, skustis galvos plaukus ir apsirengti ašutine.

Komentář

 

Explanation of Isaiah 22

Napsal(a) Rev. John H. Smithson

THE EXPLANATION of Isaiah Chapter 22

(Note: Rev. Smithson's translation of the Isaiah text is appended below the explanation)

1. THE burden of the valley of vision. What ails you now, that you art gone up to the house-tops?

VERSE 1: The "valley of vision" denotes phantasies and reasonings whereby worship is falsified and at length profaned. In Hebrew, or in the original tongue, different terms are used to express a "valley", which are significative in the spiritual sense of what is more or less profane in worship, as in Isaiah:

"For it is a day of trouble, and of treading down, and of perplexity, from the Lord Jehovih of Hosts, in the valley of vision"; (Isaiah 22:1, 5) where the "valley of vision", as said above, denotes phantasies and reasonings by which worship is falsified and at length profaned. So in Jeremiah:

"How canst you say, I am not polluted, I have not walked after Baalim? see your way in the valley"; (Jeremiah 2:23) where the "valley" denotes unclean worship.

Again, in the same prophet:

"They have built the high places of Tophet, which is in the valley of the son of Hinnom. Therefore, behold, the days come, that it shall no more be called Tophet, nor the valley of the son of Hinnom, but the valley of slaughter." (Jeremiah 7:31, 32; 19:6)

The "valley of Hinnom" denotes hell, and also the profanation of Truth and Goodness. (See also Ezekiel 6:3; 39:11, 15)

The term for "valley" in the above places is (gai). But when worship is not as yet become so profane, the term for a "valley" is (bikoh), as in Isaiah, "I will open rivers in high places, and fountains in the midst of the valleys; I will make the wilderness a pool of water, and the dry land springs of water"; (Isaiah 41:18) speaking of those who are in ignorance, or who are not instructed in the knowledges of faith and charity, but who nevertheless are principled in charity. Arcana Coelestia 1292.

Verses 1-6. The valley of vision, etc. - The external man and his phantasies are here treated of. The "valley of vision" is phantasy, for the external man [separate from the internal] is in such a valley; concerning whom, when they are said to "ascend upon the roofs or house-tops", is signified the thought thence arising. Their houses had [flat] roofs, which represented lofty things [exceIsaiah. It is called "a city of tumults", or a noisy city, for they are tumultuous, or make a noise like people insane, when the thoughts are not governed by heavenly influences. It is said to be ''joyous, '' because such persons 'have only a sensation of external or bodily pleasures. They are said to be "slain, or stabbed, but not by the sword", when there is no truth, wherefore they are spiritually slain; "nor slain in battle", because they have no [spiritual] temptation in which they can fall; for he who falls in temptation is said to be "slain in battle." "Your rulers have fled together"; "rulers" are truths which should rule. All truths have relation to faith, and by faith to the Lord, thus to His kingdom. "All these rulers-flee together", because there is no truth in such minds. The angels of the Lord are said, to be "bound and flee away", when they cannot operate in such minds; not that angels are bound or flee away, but the minds of of men are in such a state as to prevent their operation. "I will weep bitterly", etc.; it is the Truth which here laments, and, in the inmost sense, the Lord is represented, who wept over Jerusalem; for "the daughter of My people" is the representative church which was with the Jews, but in a state of vastation. "A day of trouble", etc.; the day of judgment is hereby indicated; "a day of treading down, that is, a day of devastation and of "perplexity"; because in the "valley of vision" they have no counsel, for the entire mind is absorbed by phantasy. "Breaking down the walls"; for the "city" is the intelIectual mind, and, in the internal sense, faith; the "wall" is then destroyed when the "city" is laid waste, for the "wall" is the truth of the literal sense of the Word, which is destroyed , when faith does not exist. (Arcana Coelestia 1306) "Crying to the mountains", is, that they may be heard by the Lord. "Elam bears the quiver, with chariots, etc.:, see above; Chap, Isaiah 21:2, respecting " Elam"; and in verse 5, what is meant by the "shield." (Swedenborg' s Notes on Isaiah, p. 54.)

2. O you that wast full of commotions, the noisy city, the joyous city! your slain were not slain by the sword, neither did they die in battle.

3. All your rulers have fled together; by reason of the bow they are bound: all that were found in you are bound together, they have fled far away.

4. Wherefore I said, Look away from me; I will weep bitterly: strive not to comfort me for the desolation of the daughter of my people;

5. For it is a day of trouble, and of treading down, and of perplexity, from the Lord Jehovih of Hosts in the valley of vision: breaking down the wall, and crying to the mountain.

6. And Elam bears the quiver; with chariots of men, and with horsemen; and Kir uncovers the shield.

Verses 2, 3. The noisy city, the joyous city; your slain were not slain by the sword, neither did they die in battle, etc. - Speaking of the fallacies from sensual things [the valley of visions, by which the truths of the church cannot be seen. Those who are in these fallacies, and thus in negative doubts, are said to be "stabbed, or slain, but not by the sword." Arcana Coelestia 4503. See also above, Chapter 14:9, the Exposition.

7. And the choice of your valleys shall be filled with chariots; and the horsemen have set themselves in array towards the gate.

Verses 7, 8. The choice of your valleys shall be filled with chariots, and the horsemen have set themselves in array, etc. - In this passage also the destruction of the church is treated of; and by "gates are here signified introductory truths, which are destroyed. Those truths are called the "covering of Judah", because by "Judah" is signified celestial love; as may be seen above, n. 119; and those truths cover and protect that love. Apocalypse Explained 208.

8. And he shall uncover the covering of Judah: and you [O Judah] shalt look in that day towards the arsenal of the house of the forest.

Verse 8. The arsenal of the house of the forest. - A "forest signifies the sensual man who is in mere fallacies and thence in falsities; hence a "forest" [in a bad sense] signifies what is merely natural, also the external natural man as to all things there. Apocalypse Explained 388, 403, 405.

9. And the breaches of the city of David, you shall see that they are many; and you shall collect the waters of the lower fish-pool.

Verse 9. "Breaches", or ruptures, signify the. infraction and perversion of Truth by separating it from Good, as is evident from many passages in the Word, as in Isaiah. Isaiah 22:9. "The breaches of the city of David signify falsities of doctrIne. "The waters of the lower fish-pool which they gathered together, signify the traditions by which they made breaches or infractions upon the truths of the Word and thus perverted them. Arcana Coelestia 4926. See also 9163.

Verses 9, 10. And the breaches of the city of David, you shall see that they are many; and you shall collect the waters of the lower pool. And the houses of Jerusalem you shall number, that you might break down the houses to fortify the wall. - Bu the "City of David" is understood the church as to truths of doctrine; and by the breaches thereof are signified falsities breaking in. By "collecting the waters of the lower fish-pool", is signified to collect many things from the literal sense of the Word, and from the natural man; the "fish-pools" in Jerusalem signified truths, such as are in the exterior and interior senses of the Word; the "waters of the higher fish-pool" such truths as are in the interior sense of the Word, and the "waters of the lower fish-pool" such as are in the exterior sense of the Word, which is the sense of the letter; for "waters" denote truths, and the "fishpools" in Jerusalem signify the same as the "lakes" and the "seas" without Jerusalem, that is, the collection of them. By "numbering the houses of Jerusalem" is signified to falsify the goods of truth; for the "houses of Jerusalem" signify the goods of truth appertaining to the church, and to "number" here signifies to apprehend them from a sinister view and evil arrangement, which is to interpret falsely, or to falsify them. "That you might break down the houses to fortify the wall", signifies to destroy those goods, in order to build up a doctrine consisting of mere falsities; a "wall" denoting the truth of doctrine defending, - in the present case, falsified, because destitute of good. From these observations it may appear what is signified by numbering "days", "steps", and "hairs" in the following passages, as, in David:

"So teach us to number our days." (Psalm 90:1)

In Job:

"Are not our steps numbered! " (Job 14:16),

and again,

"Doth He not see my ways, and number all my steps?" (Job 31:4)

In Luke:

"The hairs of your head are all numhered" (Luke 12:7),

where, to "number", signifies to know the quality from the least to the greatest, and according there to to arrange and dispose, that is, to provide. What is signified in particular by "days", "steps", and "hairs", has been shown elsewhere. Apocalypse Explained 453.

10. And the houses of Jerusalem you have numbered, that you might break down the houses to fortify the wall.

Verse 10. You have numbered the houses of Jerusalem, etc. - [To "number the houses of Jerusalem" has a similar signification here to that involved in David's "numbering the people of Israel and Judah." (2 Samuel 24:1, and following verses.) Not that the numberinq itself was a sin, but because the "numbering of the sons of Israel" by David signified the ordination and arrangement of all things of faith and of love from self, and not from the Lord. This great sin, which is to take all power out of the Lord's hands, as the Babylonians do, and consequently to assume the authority of opening and shutting heaven, was represented by this act of David; hence the severe punishment which followed. See Arcana Coelestia 10218.]

11. And you shall make a reservoir between the two walls to [receive] the waters of the old fish-pool: but you have not looked to Him that has made this; and Him that formed it of old you regard not.

Verse 11. But you have not looked to Him that has made this; and Him that formed it of old you regard not. - This is not to acknowledge, still less to have faith [in the Lord]. Arcana Coelestia 897.

12. And the Lord Jehovih of Hosts shall call in that day to weeping, and to lamentation, and to baldness, and to girding with sackcloth:

13. And, behold, joy and gladness, slaying of oxen, and killing of sheep : eating of flesh, and drinking of wine: [saying] Let us eat and drink; for to-morrow we die.

Verses 12, 13. The devastation of the church, and lamentation over it, is signified by being "called in that day to weeping, wailing, and putting on of sackcloth"; lamentation for the destruction of truth is signified by "weeping"; of good, by'" wailing"; of all the affection of good and all the affection of truth, by "sackcloth." By "slaying oxen and killing sheep" is signified to extinguish natural good and spiritual good; by "eating flesh and drinking wine" is signified to appropriate what is evil and false; "flesh", in this place, denoting evil, and "wine" the false of evil; and to "eat and drink" thereof signifies to appropriate them. Apocalypse Explained 617.

14. And the [voice] of Jehovah of Hosts was revealed to mine ears: Surely, this your iniquity shall not be expiated till you die, says the Lord Jehovih of Hosts.

15. Thus says the Lord Jehovih of Hosts, Go, enter in to this treasurer, unto Shebna, who is over the household [and, say unto him],

Verses 14, 15. Jehovih of Hosts. - See above, Chapter 13:15, the Exposition; also note.

16. What have you here? and whom have you here, that you have hewn out here a sepulchre for yourself, O you that hews out your sepulchre on high, that engraves in the rock a habitation for yourself?

Verse 16. You that hews out your sepulchre on high, that engraves in the rock a habitation for yourself. - The subject treated of in this chapter is concerning "the valley of vision", by which is signified the false of doctrine confirmed by the sense of the letter of the Word. The love of the false is signified by "the sepulchre on high", and the faith of the false by "dwelling in the rock"; their making such things for themselves is signified by "hewing out and graving them for themselves." Apocalypse Explained 411.

As to what is signified by a "rock", in a good sense, see above, Chapter 1, the Exposition.

17. Behold, Jehovah will cast you out, O man, violently; and will surely cover you [with shame].

18. He will whirl you round and round, and. cast you away, like a ball, into a wide country: there shalt you die; and there shall the chariots of your glory become the shame of your Lord's house.

19. And I will drive you from your station, and from your place pull you down.

20. And in that day I will call My servant, Eliakim the son of Hilkiah:

Verses 17 20. Jehovah will cast you out, O man, etc. - [These words are said of "Shebna the treasurer", etc., who signifies the church in possession of the Word and the treasures of knowledge of what is Good and True, and likewise of every individual of the church who is in the same possession, but who applies these knowledges to the aggrandizement of himself, signified by "hewing out on high a sepulchre, and by graving a habitation in the rock for himself." The punishment of such a life and state is signified by being, at the time of judgment, "violently cast out, and whirled round and round like a ball, by a violent, tempest." (See above, p. 196, as to "winds and storms" in the spiritual world.)

In this case, "the chariots of glory"; which are the doctrinals in which such minds boast and glory, are turned eventually into shame and contempt. That to "hew' out a sepulchre for himself" is the Love of the false and of self-aggrandizement may be seen above, Chapter 14:19, 20, the Exposition.

"Eliakim", who was to succeed "Shebna", signifies those who make a proper use of the treasures of knowledge from the Word, by ackowledging the Lord in His Humanity as the nail or peg upon which everything in heaven and the church depends.]

21. And I will clothe him with your robe, and with your girdle will I strengthen him: and your government will I give into his hand; and he shall be a father to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and to the house of Judah.

22. And I will lay the key of the house of David upon his shoulder; and he shall open, and none shall shut; and he shall shut, and none shall open.

Verses 21, 22. Your government will I give into his hand; and he shall be a father to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, etc.; - By "the house of the king", over which he was to be, is signified the church which is in Truth grounded in Good from the Lord. By "opening and shutting, and by "binding and loosing", is understood in general to save, as may be seen above, n. 86. Apocalypse Explained 200.

Verse 22. And I will lay the Key of the house of David upon his shoulder; etc.

- By "David" is understood the Lord as to Divine Truth; by the "Key" is signified the Omnipotence of the Lord over heaven and by "opening that no one can shut, and shutting that no one can open", is signified to lead forth out of hell, and introduce into heaven, consequently to save, in like manner as above, Apocalypse Revealed 62, where it is explained.

That by "David" is meant the Lord as, to Divine Truth, may be seen in the Doctrine of the New Jerusalem concerning the Lord 43, 44. The same which is here signified by the "Key of David", is also signified by the "Keys of Peter"; (Matthew 16:15-19) which may be seen explained above, Chapter 16:1, the Exposition; as also by these words to all the disciples-

"Whatsoever you shall bind on earth, shall be bound in heaven; and whatsoever you shall loose on earth, shall be loosed In heaven"; (Matthew 18:18),

for the "twelve disciples" represented all things appertaining to the church with respect to its goods and truths, and "Peter" represented it as to truth; and Truths and Goods save man, consequently the Lord alone, from whom they are derived.

The same is also signified by the "Key of David" which was given to Eliakim, concerning which it is thus written:

"I will give the government into his hand; and he shall be a father to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and to the house of Judah. And I will lay the Key of the house of David upon his shoulder; and he shall open, and none shall shut; and he shall shut, and none shall open." (Isaiah 22:21, 22)

He was over the King's house, and by the "King's house is signified the church as to divine Truth. That in these passages a "Key" signifies power, is evident; and that this power belongs to the Lord alone. Hence it is evident what the quality of those is who are in the external sense of the Word separate from the internal, namely, that they can have no conjunction with heaven, thus no conjunction with the Lord; like those who explain the words of the Lord concerning the "keys" given to Peter, and to the disciples, according to the letter. By which explanation they arrogate to themselves the power of saving the human race, and make themselves the gods of heaven and earth; and tbis from the insane love of self and of the world. Whoever thinks from sound reason can see and understand that no man can absolve or remit a single sin, because sin is not remitted or absolved but by the formation of a new life, that is, by regeneration from the Lord. Apocalypse Revealed 174; also Arcana Coelestia 9410.

23. And I will fasten him as a nail in a firm place; and he shall become a throne of glory to his father's house.

Verses 23, 24. "Nails" and "pegs" denote the conjoining and securing; the reason is, because their use is to conjoin and secure, as may be seen from Isaiah 22:23, 24; 54:2.

Again - , "Look unto Zion: let thine eyes see Jerusalem, a quiet habitation; its nails shall not be removed for ever, and none of its ropes shall be plucked away; (Isaiah 32:20) where "walls" and "ropes" in like manner denote things conjoining and securing. By a "nail", upon which a thing is hanged, is signified affixion and adjunction as in Isaiah 22:23, 24; Ezekiel 15:3. Arcana Coelestia 9777.

Verse 23. A throne of glory to his father's house. - As by a kingdom is represented the divine Truth, wherefore the throne upon which kings were accustomed to sit, whilst they judged, was called "the throne of glory", as in Isaiah 22:23; Jeremiah 14:21; 17:12; and in Matthew:

"The Son of Man will sit upon the throne of His glory." (Matthew 19:28)

"Glory", in the supreme sense, is the Lord as to Divine Truth, thus it is the Divine Truth which proceeds from the Lord. But" glory", in the representative sense, is the good of love towards the neighbour, or charity, which is the external good of the celestial kingdom, and the internal of the spiritual kingdom of the Lord, for this good, in the genuine sense, is the Divine Truth in heaven.

The "glory of Jehovah" is so said in respect to the inmost heaven, and the "glory of the God of Israel" in respect to the middle spiritual heaven. That the Divine Truth appears in the heavens in glory, is because Truth itself in the spiritual heaven appears before the eyes as a white cloud, which it has also been given me sometimes to see; but Good in that Truth appears there as a fiery principle from which a cloud variegated by fire presents wonderful aspects, which glory in the external sense; but "glory", in the internal sense, is intelligence and wisdom, which are represented by those wonderful phenomena. Arcana Coelestia 5922.

24. And they shall hang upon him all the glory of his father's house, the offspring and the issue; every small vessel, from every vessel of basons, to every vessel [or instrument] of viols.

Verse 24., Every small vessel, from every vessel, etc.

The subject now treated of, in the internal and representative sense, is concerning the Lord's Divine Human, and that by It and from It are are Truths and Goods from first to last. Scientific truths from a celestial stock are "vessels of basons", and scientific truths from a spiritual stock are "vessels of viols." The reason why scientifics denote "vessels", and in the Word are signified by "vessels" of every kind, as by goblets, cups, buckets, and the like, is, because every scientific is somewhat common [or general], which contains in it particulars and singulars agreeing with the common [or general] things; and such common [or general] things are arranged into series, and, as it were, into bundles; and those bundles and series are so arranged together as to resemble a celestial form, and this in order, in things the most singular to things the most common [or general]. An idea of such series may be formed from the muscular series and bundles in the human body; every bundle therein consists of several moving fibres, and every moving fibre of blood-vessels and nervous fibres; every muscular bundle also which by a general term is called a muscle, is encompassed with its coat by which it is distinguished from others, - in like manner the interior fascicles which are called moving fibres; nevertheless, all the muscles and. moving fibres in them which are in the body throughout, are so arranged as to concur in every action according to the pleasure of the will, and this in a manner incomprehensible. The case is similar with the scientifics of the memory, which also are exerted by the delight of man's love which is of his will, but by means of the intellectual part; the excitation is oocasioned by that which is made the life of man which is that which is made of his will or love; for the interior man has his view continually in those things, and is delighted with them so far as they agree with his loves; and those which absolutely enter into the loves and become spontaneous, and, as it were, natural, vanish out of the external memory but remain inscribed on the internal memory, whence they are never blotted out: thus scientifics become of the life. From these considerations it is also evident that scientifics are as the vessels of the interior life of man; and that hence it is that scientifics are signified by "vessels" of various kinds. Arcana Coelestia 9394.

25. In that day, says Jehovah of Hosts, the nail [once] fastened in a firm place shall be removed; and it shall be: hewn down, and it shall fall; and the burden which was upon it shall be cut off: for Jehovah has spoken it.

Verse 25. The nail fastened in a firm place shall be removed, etc. [As everything hanging upon a nail depends upon it for its security and protection, so everything in the church depends upon the Lord in His Divine Humanity. To deny the Lord, is to "remove the nail from its place", when everything that is Good and True falls to the ground.]

---

Isaiah Chapter 22

1. THE burden of the valley of vision. What ails you now, that you art gone up to the house-tops?

2. O you that wast full of commotions, the noisy city, the joyous city! your slain were not slain by the sword, neither did they die in battle.

3. All your rulers have fled together; by reason of the bow they are bound: all that were found in you are bound together, they have fled far away.

4. Wherefore I said, Look away from me; I will weep bitterly: strive not to comfort me for the desolation of the daughter of my people;

5. For it is a day of trouble, and of treading down, and of perplexity, from the Lord Jehovih of Hosts in the valley of vision: breaking down the wall, and crying to the mountain.

6. And Elam bears the quiver; with chariots of men, and with horsemen; and Kir uncovers the shield.

7. And the choice of your valleys shall be filled with chariots; and the horsemen have set themselves in array towards the gate.

8. And he shall uncover the covering of Judah: and you [O Judah] shalt look in that day towards the arsenal of the house of the forest.

9. And the breaches of the city of David, you shall see that they are many; and you shall collect the waters of the lower fish-pool.

10. And the houses of Jerusalem you have numbered, that you might break down the houses to fortify the wall.

11. And you shall make a reservoir between the two walls to [receive] the waters of the old fish-pool: but you have not looked to Him that has made this; and Him that formed it of old you regard not.

12. And the Lord Jehovih of Hosts shall call in that day to weeping, and to lamentation, and to baldness, and to girding with sackcloth:

13. And, behold, joy and gladness, slaying of oxen, and killing of sheep : eating of flesh, and drinking of wine: [saying] Let us eat and drink; for to-morrow we die.

14. And the [voice] of Jehovah of Hosts was revealed to mine ears: Surely, this your .iniquity shall not be expiated till you die, says the Lord Jehovih of Hosts.

15. Thus says the Lord Jehovih of Hosts, Go, enter in to this treasurer, unto Shebna, who is over the household [and, say unto him],

16. What have you here? and whom have you here, that you have hewn out here a sepulchre for yourself, O you that hews out your sepulchre on high, that engraves in the rock a habitation for yourself?

17. Behold, Jehovah will cast you out, O man, violently; and will surely cover you [with shame].

18. He will whirl you round and round, and. cast you away, like a ball, into a wide country: there shalt you die; and there shall the chariots of your glory become the shame of your Lord's house.

19. And I will drive you from your station, and from your place pull you down.

20. And in that day I will call My servant, Eliakim the son of Hilkiah:

21. And I will clothe him with your robe, and with your girdle will I strengthen him: and your government will I give into his hand; and he shall be a father to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and to the house of Judah.

22. And I will lay the key of the house of David upon his shoulder; and he shall open, and none shall shut; and he shall shut, and none shall open.

23. And I will fasten him as a nail in a firm place; and he shall become a throne of glory to his father's house.

24. And they shall hang upon him all the glory of his father's house, the offspring and the issue; every small vessel, from every vessel of basons, to every vessel [or instrument] of viols.

25. In that day, says Jehovah of Hosts, the nail [once] fastened in a firm place shall be removed; and it shall be: hewn down, and it shall fall; and the burden which was upon it shall be cut off: for Jehovah has spoken it.

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Apocalypse Explained # 403

Prostudujte si tuto pasáž

  
/ 1232  
  

403. As a fig tree casteth her unripe figs when shaken by a great wind, signifies which knowledges the natural man has laid waste by its reasonings. This is evident from the signification of "fig-tree," as being the natural man (of which presently); from the signification of "her unripe figs" as being the things that are in the natural man, which especially are the knowledges implanted in the natural man from infancy, and that are not yet mature, having been merely heard and thence accepted; also from the signification of "shaken by a great wind," as being, which the natural man has laid waste by reasonings. "To be shaken by a great wind" here signifies the reasonings from the falsities of evil, for "great" in the Word is predicated of good and of evil, "wind" of truth and of falsity, and "to be shaken thereby," of reasoning therefrom. Such is the signification of these words, although they are used comparatively, because in the Word all comparisons, like the rest, are significative, for they are equally correspondences. With respect to these things, the case is this: every man is born natural from his parents, but becomes spiritual from the Lord, which is called to be born anew or to be regenerated; and because he is born natural, therefore the knowledges that he imbibes from infancy, before he becomes spiritual, are implanted in his natural memory; but as he advances in years and begins to consider rationally the knowledges of good and truth that he has imbibed from the Word or from preaching, if he is then leading an evil life he eagerly adopts and is imbued with the falsities that are opposite and contrary to these knowledges, and then, because he is endowed with ability to reason, he reasons from falsities against the knowledges of his infancy and childhood, in consequence of which these are cast out, and falsities take their place; this, therefore, is what is signified by "the stars shall fall to the earth as a fig-tree casteth her unripe figs when shaken by a great wind."

[2] That "the fig-tree" signifies the natural man is from correspondence; for in heaven gardens and paradises are seen, where there are trees of every kind, and each tree signifies something of the Divine that is communicated to angels by the Lord. In general, "the olive" signifies the celestial, which is of the good of love; "the vine" the spiritual, which is of truth from that good; and "the fig-tree," the natural, which is derived from the spiritual or the celestial. And as these trees have this signification they also signify the angel or man in whom such things exist. But in a general sense they signify a whole society, because every society in the heavens is so formed as to present the image of a single man. In the spiritual sense, however, these trees signify the church, "the olive" the celestial church, "the vine" the spiritual church, and "the fig-tree" the natural church, which is the external church corresponding to the internal. From this it can be seen why "the fig-tree" is said to signify the natural man, that is, the natural with man.

[3] That "the fig tree" signifies this, and, in general, the external church is evident also from other passages in the Word, where it is mentioned, as from the following. In Isaiah:

All the host of the heavens shall waste away, and the heavens shall be rolled up as a book; and all their 1 host shall fall down as the leaf falleth off from the vine, and as that which falleth from the fig-tree (Isaiah 34:4).

This is said of the day of the Last Judgment, which was to come, and which also did come; for the Last Judgment foretold by the prophets of the Old Testament was accomplished by the Lord when He was in the world; and as the things then done were like those done in the Last Judgment that is foretold in Revelation, and has at this day been accomplished by the Lord, so nearly the same things are said; as in the prophet Isaiah, that "all the host of the heavens shall fall down, as the leaf falleth off from the vine, and as that which falleth from the fig-tree," likewise that "the heavens shall be rolled up as a scroll;" and in Revelation, that "the stars shall fall unto the earth, as a fig-tree casteth her unripe figs," and that "the heaven shall depart as a book rolled up." "All the host of the heavens shall waste away" signifies that all goods and truths that are of love and faith are corrupted, "the host of the heavens" meaning all goods and truths that are of love and faith; for the sun, moon, and stars, by which these are signified, are called "the host of the heavens." "The heavens shall be rolled up as a book" signifies their dispersion; "all the host shall fall down as the leaf from the vine, and as that which falleth from the fig tree" signifies a laying waste from the falsities of evil.

[4] In Jeremiah:

In consuming I will consume them; there shall be no grapes on the vine nor figs on the fig-tree, and the leaf shall wither (Jeremiah 8:13).

"No grapes on the vine" signifies that there is no spiritual good, for "the vine" signifies the spiritual man, and "the grape," as being its fruit, signifies the good of that man, which is called spiritual good; "nor figs on the fig-tree" signifies that there is no natural good, for "the fig-tree" signifies the natural man, and "the fruit of the fig tree" signifies the good of that man which is called natural good. Evidently "the vine" does not mean a vine, nor "the fig-tree" a fig-tree, for it is said, "In consuming I will consume them, there shall be no grapes on the vine nor figs on the fig-tree," for they would not be consumed on that account. Moreover, the vastation of the church is what is treated of, as is clearly evident from what there precedes and follows.

[5] In Hosea:

I will make all her joy to cease, her feast, her new moon, her sabbath. And I will lay waste her vine and her fig-tree, whereof she hath said, These are my meretricious hire; and I will make them a forest, and the wild beast of the field shall eat them (Hosea 2:11-12).

This treats of the churches and of the falsification of truth therein. That the church is treated of is evident from the second verse of this chapter, where it is said, "Plead with your mother; for she is not my wife, and I am not her husband," "mother" and "wife" meaning the church. Moreover, the holy things of the church, from which worship is performed, and the worship itself, are signified by "the feast, the new moon, and the sabbath," which shall cease; therefore "I will lay waste her vine and her fig-tree" signifies that both spiritual good and natural good are to perish. That "they will be made a forest, and the wild beast of the field shall eat them" signifies that both will be merely natural, and that the spiritual will be consumed by falsities and lusts; "forest" signifying the merely natural, and "wild beast of the field" falsities and lusts. And as falsities in the church are especially falsified truths, and these are treated of in this chapter, it is said, "whereof she hath said, These are my meretricious hire," "meretricious hire" signifying falsification.

[6] In Joel:

A nation shall come up upon My land, vigorous and without number; its teeth are the teeth of a lion, and it hath the cheek-teeth of an immense 2 lion. It hath made My vine a waste. and My fig-tree foam; [in stripping it hath stripped it, and cast it away;] the branches thereof are made white. The vine is dried up and the fig-tree languisheth; the pomegranate-tree, the palm-tree also, and the apple-tree, all the trees of the field are dried up (Joel 1:6-7, 12).

This whole chapter treats of the devastated church; and "the nation that comes up upon the land, vigorous and without number, having the teeth of a lion, and the cheek-teeth of an immense lion," does not signify any such nation, but direful evil and falsity therefrom; "the land upon which it comes up" signifies the church; "the teeth of a lion" signify the falsities of such evil; and because these destroy all the goods and truths of the church, they are called "the teeth of the lion and the great cheek-teeth of a lion," "lion" signifying [falsity] which destroys. Therefore "it hath made My vine a waste, and My fig-tree foam," signifies that the church internal and external is thereby vastated, "vine" signifying the internal church, and "fig-tree" the external, "foam" signifying where there is inwardly no truth; "in stripping it hath stripped it, and cast it away" signifies that there is no longer any good or truth that is not destroyed, "to strip," that is, of fruits and leaves, means of goods and truths, and "to cast away" means to destroy entirely; "the branches thereof are made white" signifies that there is no longer anything spiritual; "the pomegranate, the palm, and the apple, and all the trees of the field, that are dried up" signify the kinds of goods and truths of the church, and its knowledges, which are consummated by evils and falsities, "the trees of the field" signifying in general the knowledges of good and truth.

[7] In the same:

Fear not, ye beasts of My fields; for the habitations of the wilderness are full of herbs, for the tree beareth her fruit, the fig-tree and the vine shall yield their strength (Joel 2:22).

This treats of the establishment of the church, therefore "the beasts of the field" do not mean beasts of the field, but the affections of good in the natural man, consequently those in whom are such affections. Who does not see that it cannot be beasts to whom it is said, "Fear not, ye beasts of my fields?" "The habitations of the desert are made full of herbs" signifies that with such there will be knowledges of truth where there were none before, "the habitations of the wilderness" meaning the interiors of the mind of those in whom these did not exist before, "full of herbs" signifying the increase and multiplication of these; "for the tree beareth her fruit, the fig tree and the vine shall yield their strength" signifies that they have natural good and spiritual good, "strength" here meaning the production of fruit.

[8] In Amos:

Your many gardens and your vineyards, and your fig-trees and your olive-trees, the palmer-worm hath devoured; yet have ye not returned unto me (Amos 4:9).

"Gardens" signify all things of the church that constitute intelligence and wisdom; "vineyards" spiritual goods and truths; "fig-trees" natural goods and truths; "olive-trees" celestial goods and truths; "the palmer-worm" means the falsity that destroys; "the fig-tree," "the vine," and "the olive" properly signify the church and the man of the church; but as the church is a church and man is a man from goods and truths, so these also are signified by those trees, goods by their fruits, and truths by their branches and leaves.

[9] In Haggai:

Set your heart from this day and onwards. Is not the seed yet in the barn, even to the vine and fig-tree, and the pomegranate and the olive-tree? (Haggai 2:18-19).

These words in the spiritual sense mean that there are goods and truths yet remaining; all goods and truths from first to last are meant by "the vine, the fig-tree, the pomegranate, and the olive-tree," "the vine" meaning spiritual good and truth; "the fig-tree" natural good and truth; "the pomegranate" in general that which belongs to knowing and perceiving, and in particular, the knowledges and perceptions of good and truth; and "the olive-tree" the perception of celestial good and truth; "the barn" signifies where all these are, either the church or the man in whom the church is, or the mind of the man which is the subject.

[10] In Habakkuk:

The fig-tree shall not blossom, neither shall there be produce on the vines; the labor of the olive shall dissemble, and the fields shall yield no food (Habakkuk 3:17).

"The fig-tree shall not blossom" signifies that there shall be no natural good; "neither shall there be produce on the vines" signifies that there shall be no spiritual good; "the labor of the olive shall dissemble" signifies that there shall be no celestial good; "the fields shall yield no food" signifies that there shall be no spiritual nourishment.

[11] In Moses:

Jehovah God bringeth thee to a good land, a land of brooks of water, of fountains and depths going forth in valley and mountain; a land of wheat and barley, and of vine and fig-tree and pomegranate; a land of oil-olive and honey (Deuteronomy 8:7-8).

"The good land" to which they shall be led means the land of Canaan, which signifies the church; here, therefore, "vine," "fig-tree," "pomegranate," and "olive," have a like signification as above. (The remainder may be seen explained before, n. 374)

Because "the land of Canaan" signifies the church, and "the vine," "the fig-tree," and "the pomegranate," signify the internal and external things of the church, so it came to pass that the explorers of that land brought away such things from it, respecting which it is thus written in Moses:

The explorers of the land of Canaan came to the brook Eshcol, and cut down from thence a branch with one cluster of grapes, which they bare upon a pole between two; and also of the pomegranates and of the figs (Numbers 13:23).

[12] Because "the vine" and "the fig-tree" signify such things, it is said in the Word of those who are in the goods and truths of the church, and thus in safety from evils and falsities, that "they shall sit securely under their own vine and under their own fig-tree, and none shall make afraid." Thus in the first book of Kings:

Judah and Israel dwelt in security, every man under his vine and under his fig-tree, from Dan even to Beersheba, all the days of Solomon (1 Kings 4:25).

In Zechariah:

I will remove the iniquity of this land in one day. In that day ye shall cry every man to his companion, to the vine and to the fig-tree (Zechariah 3:9-10).

And in Micah:

In the end of the days it shall be that the mountain of the house of Jehovah shall be established as the head of the mountains; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more; but they shall sit every man under his vine and under his fig-tree; and none shall make afraid (Micah 4:1, 4:3-4).

These things are said respecting the Lord's kingdom, which is with those in the heavens and on the earth who are in love to Him. The Lord's kingdom is signified by "the mountain of Jehovah, which is established as the head of the mountains," for "the mountain of Jehovah" signifies the Lord's kingdom constituted of those who are in love to Him; and as these dwell above the others in the heavens, it is said that this mountain "shall be established as the head of the mountains" (See in the work on Heaven and Hell 188). And as such have truths inscribed on their hearts, and therefore do not dispute about them, it is said that "nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more," which signifies that in that kingdom there shall be no disputation about truths (See in the same work, n 25-26, 270, 271). That through the truths and goods in which they are, they shall be safe from evils and falsities is signified by "they shall sit under their own vine and under their own fig tree, and none shall make afraid."

[13] In Jeremiah:

Lo, I will bring upon you a nation from afar, which shall eat up thy harvest and thy bread; and it shall eat up thy sons and thy daughters; it shall eat up thy flock and thy herd; it shall eat up thy vine and thy fig tree (Jeremiah 5:15, 17).

"A nation from afar" signifies the evil opposed to celestial good, "from afar" signifying apart and remote from, also opposed to, goods and truths; "which shall eat up thy harvest and thy bread" signifies that it will destroy all truths and goods by which there is spiritual nourishment; "which shall eat up thy sons and thy daughters" signifies all the spiritual affections of truth and good; "which shall eat up thy flock and thy herd" signifies truths and goods internal and external; "which shall eat up thy vine and thy fig tree" signifies thus the internal and the external of the church.

[14] In Hosea:

I found 3 Israel like grapes in the wilderness; I saw your fathers as the first-ripe in the fig-tree in its first season (Hosea 9:10).

"Israel" and "the fathers" do not mean here the fathers of the tribes of the sons of Jacob, but those who were of the Ancient Church, because they were in good (See Arcana Coelestia 6050, 6075, 6846, 6876, 6884, 7649, 8055); because these were in good, but at the beginning in ignorance of truth, through which, however, good comes, it is said, "I found Israel like grapes in the wilderness; I saw your fathers as a fig-tree in its first season," "grapes" signifying spiritual good, "wilderness" signifying ignorance of truth, and "the first-ripe in the fig-tree" signifying natural good from spiritual good in infancy.

[15] In Luke:

When these things begin to come to pass, look up, and lift up your heads. And He spoke a parable: Behold the fig-tree and all the trees; when now they shall have shot forth ye see and shall know of your own selves that summer is now near. So ye also, when ye shall see these things coming to pass know that the kingdom of God is nigh (Luke 21:28-31; Matthew 24:32; Mark 13:28-29).

This treats of the consummation of the age, which is the Last Judgment, and the signs which precede are enumerated, which are meant by "when all these things begin to come to pass;" that a new church is then to begin, which in its beginning will be external, is signified by "Behold the fig-tree and all the trees, when they have shot forth." This parable or similitude was related because "the fig-tree" signifies the external church, and "trees" signify the knowledges of truth and good; "the kingdom of God," which then is near, signifies the new church of the Lord; for at the time of the Last Judgment the old church perishes and a new one begins.

[16] In Luke:

Every tree is known by its own fruit; for from thorns men do not gather figs, nor from a bramble bush gather they the grape (Luke 6:44; Matthew 7:16);

as "fruit" signifies the good of life, and the good of life is external good from internal, or natural good from spiritual, and as from this good man is known, so the Lord says, "Every tree is known by its own fruit; from thorns men do not gather figs, nor from a bramble-bush gather they the grape," "fig" here meaning the good of the external or natural man, and "the grape" the good of the internal or spiritual man; "thorns" and "bramble-bush" mean the evils opposed to these goods.

[17] Because the kings of Judah and Israel represented the Lord in relation to Divine truth, and Divine truth with man endures distress and labors as it were, when the life is not according to it and when it is not made the good of life, but when it is made the good of life it lives, so this was signified by the following:

By command of Jehovah they brought to Hezekiah king of Judah, when he was sick, a lump of figs, and placed it as a plaster upon his boil, and so he lived (2 Kings 20:7; Isaiah 38:21).

From this it can be seen that "the fig-tree" in the genuine sense, signifies the natural man in respect to good and truth, the fig itself as a tree the natural man, the fig as a fruit the good of the natural man, and its leaf the truth of that good.

[18] But that "the fig-tree" in the contrary sense signifies the natural man in respect to evil and falsity, the fig as a tree the natural man itself, the figs of it as fruit, the evil of that natural man, and its leaf the falsity of that evil, is evident from the following passages. In Jeremiah:

Jehovah showed me, and behold, two baskets of figs set before the temple of Jehovah, one basket of very good figs, as of fig-trees bearing the firstfruits; and the other basket of very bad figs, that could not be eaten for badness. Jehovah said, As the good figs, so will I recognize those carried away of Judah into the land of the Chaldeans for good; and I will set Mine eyes upon them for good, and I will bring them back upon this land; and I will build them, and I will plant them. And as the bad figs, so will I give them that are left in this land to commotion, and to evil to all nations; and I will send among them the sword, the famine, and the pestilence, that they may be consumed (Jeremiah 24:1-10);

"the captivity of the Jews in the land of the Chaldeans" means the like as the spiritual captivity or removal of the good from the evil in the spiritual world, according to what has been said above (n. 391, 392, 394, 397), namely that those who were inwardly evil, and yet were able to maintain a moral life externally like a spiritual life, remained upon the earth in the spiritual world, and made habitations for themselves there upon the higher places; while those who were inwardly good were removed from them, and concealed by the Lord in the lower earth; this was what was represented by the carrying away of the Jews into the land of the Chaldeans, and by the continuance of the rest of them in the land; therefore it is said concerning those who suffered themselves to be carried away into the land of the Chaldeans, "I recognize those carried away of Judah into the land of the Chaldeans for good; and I will set Mine eyes upon them for good, and I will bring them back upon this land; and I will build them, and I will plant them;" while of those that remained it is said "I will give them that are left in this land to commotion, and to evil to all nations; and I will send among them the sword, the famine, and the pestilence, that they may be consumed." That this is what was represented is evident also from this, that the temple of Solomon was destroyed before they were carried away, and a new one was built when they returned; "temple" signifying Divine worship, and "a new temple" worship restored.

[19] From this it can be seen what is signified by "the two baskets of figs set before the temple of Jehovah, in one of which were very good figs, as of fig-trees bearing the firstfruits, and in the other very bad figs, that could not be eaten for badness," namely, that those who are inwardly good, of whom a new heaven is to be formed, are meant by "the basket of good figs;" and those who are inwardly evil, who are to be cast down into hell, are meant by "the basket of bad figs;" wherefore it is said of the latter that "they could not be eaten for badness," signifying that such are inwardly evil, while of the former it is said that they were "as fig-trees bearing the firstfruits," signifying that such are inwardly good, so that a new heaven may be formed out of them; for "the fig," as a fruit, signifies the good of life both in its internal and its external form, and in the contrary sense it signifies the good of life merely in its external form, which is the evil of life, because inwardly it is evil, every external deriving all its quality from its internal, as it is an effect of it. With such, evil appears in externals as good, because they feign good for the sake of the evil that is within, in order to obtain some end, to which the seeming good serves as a means. The like is said of those who remained in the land of Canaan elsewhere in the same prophet:

Thus said Jehovah concerning the king, and all the people that dwell in this city that are not gone forth with you into captivity: Behold, I will send against them the sword, the famine, and the pestilence, and I will make them like vile figs, that cannot be eaten for badness (Jeremiah 29:16-17).

[20] That "the fig," as a tree, in the contrary sense signifies a merely natural man, and a church constituted of such, or those with whom there is no natural good because there is no good within is evident in Luke:

Jesus spoke this parable: A certain man had a fig-tree planted in his vineyard; he therefore came seeking fruit thereon, but found none. He said unto the vine dresser, Behold, three years I come seeking fruit on this fig-tree, but find none; cut it down, why also doth it make the land unfruitful? But he answering said, Lord, let it alone this year also, till I shall dig about it and dung it, if indeed it will bear fruit; but if not, after that thou shalt cut it down (Luke 13:6-9).

"The vineyard in which was the fig-tree" signifies the church, which contains also such as are in externals; for in the Lord's church there is both an internal and an external; the internal of the church is charity and the faith therefrom, while the external of the church is the good of life. The works of charity and faith, which are the good of life, belong to the natural man, while charity itself and faith therefrom belong to the spiritual man, therefore "a vineyard" signifies the internal of the church, and "a fig-tree" its external. With the Jewish nation there was only the external of the church, since it was in external representative worship; therefore "a fig tree" means the church with that nation; but because they were in external worship and in no internal, being inwardly evil, and external worship without internal is no worship, and with the evil is evil worship, therefore with them there was nothing of natural good. It is therefore said that "for three years he found no fruit on the fig-tree, and that he told the vine dresser to cut it down," which signifies that from beginning to end there was no natural good with that nation, "three years" signifying a whole period, or the time from beginning to end, and "the fruit of the fig tree" signifying natural good; by natural good is meant spiritual-natural good, or good in the natural from the spiritual. And because a church composed of such as are not in natural good, as was the Jewish nation, is not a church, it is also said "why also doth it make the land unfruitful?" "land" meaning the church; "the vine dresser saying that it should still be left, and he would dig about it" signifies that they would remain, and that they would hereafter be instructed by the Christians, in the midst of whom they would be; but no answer being made to this means that the fig tree would still produce no fruit, that is, that no good proceeding from anything spiritual would be done by the Jewish nation.

[21] This is the signification of "the fig-tree that withered away" when the Lord found no fruit on it, in Matthew:

In the morning Jesus returning into the city, hungered. And seeing a fig-tree by the way, He came to it, but found nothing thereon but leaves, therefore He said unto it, Let nothing grow on thee henceforward forever; therefore from that time the fig-tree withered away (Matthew 21:18, 19; Mark 11:12-14).

Here, too, "the fig-tree" means the church with the Jewish nation. That with that nation there was no natural good, but only truth falsified, which in itself is falsity, is signified by "the Lord came to the fig-tree, but found nothing thereon but leaves," "the fruit" which He did not find signifying natural good such as was described above, and "the leaf" signifying truth falsified, which in itself is falsity, for in the Word "leaf" signifies truth, but the leaf of a tree that is without fruit signifies falsity, and with that nation truth falsified, because they had the Word in which truths are, but which they falsified by application to themselves, which was the source of their traditions. That no natural good from a spiritual origin, which is called spiritual-natural good, would be done by that nation is signified by the words that the Lord spoke respecting it, "Let nothing grow on thee henceforward forever; therefore from that time it withered away;" "to wither away" signifying that there was no longer any good or any truth. The Lord saw the fig-tree and said this when He was returning into the city, and hungered, because "the city of Jerusalem" signifies the church, and "hungering," in reference to the Lord, signifies to desire good in the church (as may be seen above, n. 386. One who does not know the signification of "fig-tree," and that this fig-tree meant the church with that nation, thinks no otherwise than the Lord did this from indignation because He was hungry; but it was not done for that reason, but that it might be signified that such was the quality of the Jewish nation; for all the Lord's miracles involve and signify such things as belong to heaven and the church, whence those miracles were Divine (See Arcana Coelestia 7337, 8364, 9051 at the end).

[22] A perverted church, or the man of the church perverted in respect to his natural or external man is also signified by the fig-tree in David:

He gave them hail for their rain, a fire of flames in their land; and He smote their vine and their fig-tree; He brake the tree of their border (Psalms 105:32-33).

This was said of Egypt, which signifies the natural man that is in falsities and evils; and "vine," "fig tree," and "the tree of the border" signify all things of the church, "vine" the internal or spiritual things thereof, "fig-tree" the external or natural things thereof, and "the tree of the border" everything pertaining to knowing and perceiving, "the border" signifying the ultimate in which the interior things close, and in which they are together, and "trees" signifying knowledges and perceptions. Because all these things were perverted and therefore damned, it is said that they were "smitten and broken," which signifies destruction and damnation; that this was done by the falsities of evil which are from the love of the world is signified by "hail for their rain, a fire of flames in their land," "rain as hail" signifying the falsities of evil, and "the fire of flames" the love of the world.

[23] In Nahum:

All thy fortresses shall be like fig-trees with the first-ripe figs, if they be shaken they fall upon the mouth of the eater (Nahum 3:12).

This is said of "the city of bloods," which signifies doctrine in which truths are falsified and goods adulterated. This is compared to "fig-trees with the first-ripe figs, if they be shaken they fall upon the mouth of the eater," and this signifies that the goods therein are not goods, however much they may appear to be goods; and that such are not received, or if received are received only in the memory and not in the heart. That "if they be shaken they fall" signifies that they are not goods although they appear to be goods, because they are "the first-ripe figs;" and their falling "upon the mouth of the eater" signifies that they are not received even in the memory. That "the mouth of the eater" signifies non-reception is evident from appearances in the spiritual world; for those who commit anything to memory appear to receive it with the mouth; so "to fall upon the mouth" signifies not to receive even in the memory but only to hear, and also if they do receive, that it is only in the memory and not in the heart. "Fig-trees with their first-ripe figs" may also mean genuine goods, of which the like is true as of those who are in the falsities of evil.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. The photolithograph has "its host;" the Hebrew "their host;" the latter is found in AE 573.

2. The photolithograph has "immense teeth," but AC 556 and AC 9052 have "immense lion" with Hebrew.

3. The photolithograph has "I saw;" Hebrew has "I found;" this is also found in the explanation AE 403, as well as AE 918, and in AC 217, 1971, 5117.

  
/ 1232  
  

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