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ဒံယေလ 7

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1 ဗာဗုလုန် ရှင်ဘုရင် ဗေလရှာဇာနန်းစံ ပဌမ နှစ်တွင်၊ ဒံယေလသည် အိပ်မက်ကို မြင်၍ အိပ်ပျော်စဉ်၊ စိတ်ထဲ၌အာရုံပြုပြီးမှ မြင်မက်သော အရာတို့ကို ရေးထားသော အချက်ကား၊

2 ငါ ဒံယေလသည် ညဉ့်အခါ အာရုံပြု၍၊ မိုဃ်း ကောင်းကင်လေးမျက်နှာ၌ လေတို့သည် မဟာသမုဒ္ဒရာ ပေါ်မှာ အချင်းချင်းတိုက်ကြလျှင်၊

3 သဏ္ဌာန်ချင်းမတူသော သာရဲလေးကောင်တို့ သည် သမုဒ္ဒရာထဲက ထွက်လာကြ၏။ ပဌမသားရဲသည် ခြင်္သေ့နှင့်တူ၏။ ရွှေလင်းတအတောင်လည်း ရှိ၏။

4 ငါ ကြည့်ရှု၍ နေစဉ်၊ သူ၏အတောင်ကို နှုတ်ကြ၏။ မြေမှ ကိုယ်ကို ချီကြွလျက် လူကဲ့သို့ ခြေဖြင့် မတ်တပ်ရပ်၍၊ လူစိတ်သဘောကိုလည်း ရ၏။ ဒုတိယ သားရဲသည် ဝံနှင့်တူ၏။

5 တဘက်၌ ကိုယ်ကိုကိုယ်ချီကြွ၏။ ပစပ်၌ နံရိုး သုံးချောင်းကို ကိုက်လျက်ရှိ၏။ သင်လော့။ အသား များကို ကိုက်စားလော့ဟု သူ့အား ပြောကြ၏။

6 တဖန်ငါကြည့်ရှုပြန်၍၊ ကျားသစ်နှင့်တူသော သားရဲတကောင်သည် ထင်ရှား၏။ ကျောပေါ်မှာ ငှက် အတောင်လေးခုရှိ၏။ ခေါင်းလေးလုံးနှင့်ပြည့်စုံ၏။ အုပ်စိုးရသော အခွင့်လည်းရှိ၏။

7 ထိုဉ့်အခါ၊ တဖန်ငါသ် အာရုံပြုစဉ်၊ ကြီးစွာ သော ခွန်အားနှင့်ပြ့်စုံ၍ အလွန်ကြောက်မက်ဘွယ် သော စတုတ္ထသားရဲသ် ထင်းရှား၏။ ကြီးစွာသော သံသွားလ်းရှိ၏။ ကိုက်စားချိုးဖဲ့၍ ကြွင်းသော အရာကို ခြေဖြင့် နင်းချေ၏။ သူသ်အရင်သားရဲရှိသမျှတို့ထက် ထူးခြား၏။ ချိုဆယ်ချောင်းလ်း ရှိ၏။

8 ထိုချိုတို့ကို ငါကြည့်ရှုစဉ်၊ ချိုများအလယ်၌ ချိုငယ်တချောင်းသည် ပေါက်ပြန်၏။ ထိုချိုငယ်ရှေ့မှာ အရင်ချိုသုံးချောင်းကို အမြစ်နှင့်တကွ နှုတ်လေ၏။ ထိုချိုငယ်သည် လူမျက်စိကဲ့သို့သော မျက်စိနှင့်၎င်း၊ ကြီးစွာသော စကားကို ပြောတတ်သော နှုတ်နှင့်၎င်း ပြည့်စုံ၏။

9 ထိုအခါ ငါကြည့်ရှုစဉ်၊ ရာဇပလ္လင်များကို တည်ထားလျက်ရှိ၍၊ အသက်ကြီးသော သူတဦးသည် ထိုင်တော်မူ၏။ အဝတ်တော်သည် မိုဃ်းပွင့်ကဲ့သို့ဖြူ၏။ ဆံပင်တော်သည် ဖြူသော သိုးမွှေးနှင့်တူ၏။ ပလ္လင် တော်သည် မီးလျှံဖြစ်၏။ ပလ္လင်တော်အောက်၌ မီးစက် လှည်းဘီးရှိ၏။

10 မျက်နှာတော်မှာ မီးရောင်ခြည်ွက်လေ၏။ အတိုင်းမသိ များစွာသော သူတို့သည် အမှုတော်ကို ဆောင်ရွက်၍၊ ကုဋေသင်္ချေမက ရှေ့တော်၌ ခစား၍ နေကြ၏။ တရားစီရင်ခြင်းငှါ ပြင်ဆင်၍ စာစောင်များ ကိုဖွင့်ားကြ၏။

11 ထိုအခါ ချိုငယ်ပြောသော စကားကြီး အသံ ကြောင့် ငါကြည့်ရှု၍ နေစဉ်၊ ထိုသားရဲအသက်ကို သတ်ပြီးလျှင် သူ၏ ကိုယ်ကိုမီးရှို့၍ ဖျက်ဆီးကြ၏။

12 အခြားသော သားရဲမူကား၊ အစိုးရသော အခွင့် တန်းခိုးရှုံးသော်လည်း၊ ချိန်းချက်သော ကာလပတ်လုံး အသက်ရှင်ရကြ၏။

13 ထိုညဉ့်အခါ ငါသည် အာရုံပြု၍၊ လူသားနှင့် တူသောသူတဦးသည် မိုဃ်းတိမ်ကိုစီးလျက်၊ အသက်ကြီး သော သူ၏အထံတော်သို့ ရောက်လာ၏။ ထိုသူကို အထံတော်ပါးသို့သွင်းကြ၏။

14 အရပ်ရပ်တို့၌နေ၍ အသီးသီးအခြားခြားသော ဘာသာစကားကို ပြောသောလူမျိုးတကာတို့ကို အုပ်စိုးစေခြင်းငှာ၊ ထိုသူသည် နိုင်ငံနှင့် တကွ အာဏာစက်တန်ခိုးကိုရ၏။ အာဏာစက်တော် သည် ကမ္ဘာအဆက်ဆက်တည်၏။ နိုင်ငံတော်သည် ပျက်စီးခြင်းသို့ မရောက်နိုင်ရာ။

15 ငါဒံယေလသည် ကိုယ်ခန္ဓာတုန်လှုပ်၍၊ ထိုရူပါရုံ ကြောင့် စိတ်ပူပန်ခြင်းရှိလျှင်

16 အနား၌ ရပ်နေသော သူတယောက်ထံသို့ သွား၍ ယခုမြင်သမျှကား၊ အဘယ်သို့ဆိုလိုသနည်းဟု မေးမြန်သော်၊

17 ိုသူက၊ ဤသားရဲလေးကောင်တို့သည် မြေကြီး ပေါ်မှာ ပေါ်လတံ့သော နိုင်ငံလေးပါးဖြစ်၏။

18 သို့သော်လည်း၊ အမြင့်ဆုံးသော ဘုရား၏ သန့် ရှင်းသူတို့သည် နိုင်ငံကိုသိမ်းယူ၍ ကမ္ဘာအဆက်ဆက် စံစား ကြလတံ့ဟု အနက်အဓိပ္ပါယ်ကို ကြားပြော၏။

19 ထိုအခါ အခြားသော သားရဲထက်ထူးခြား၍ အလွန်ကြောက်မက်ဘွယ်ဖြစ်လျက်၊ သံသွားနှင့်၎င်း၊ ကြေး ဝါလက်သည်းခြေသည်းနှင့်၎င်း ပြည့်စုံသဖြင့်၊ ကိုယ်စား ချိုးဖဲ့၍ ကြွင်းသမျှကို ခြေဖြင့်နင်းချေတတ်သော စတုတ္ထသားရဲကား၊ အဘယ်သို့ဆိုလိုသည်ကို၎င်း၊

20 သူ၏ခေါင်း၌ရှိသော ချိုဆယ်ချောင်းကား၊ အဘယ်သို့ဆိုလိုသည်ကို၎င်း၊ နောက်ပေါက်၍ အရင်ချို သုံးချောင်းကိုနှုတ်၍၊ ကြီးစွာသော စကားကို ပြောတတ် သော နှုတ် နှင့် မျက်စိရှိသဖြင့်၊ မိမိအဘော်တို့ ထက်သာ၍ ရဲရင့်သော မျက်နှာအဆင်းရှိသော ချိုတချောင်းကား၊ အဘယ်သို့ ဆိုလို သည်ကို၎င်း သိခြင်းငှါ ငါအလိုရှိ၏။

21 ငါကြည့်ရှုစဉ်တွင် အသက်ကြီးသောသူသည် ရောက်လာလျှင်၊ အမြင့်ဆုံးသော ဘုရား၏ သန့်ရှင်းသော သူတို့အား စီရင်ရသော အခွင့်ကို ပေး၍၊

22 ထိုသူတို့သည် နိုင်ငံကိုသိမ်းယူဝင်စားသော အချိန်ရောက်သည့်တိုင် အောင် ထိုချိုသည် သန့်ရှင်းသူတို့ကို စစ်တိုက်၍ နိုင်လေ ၏။

23 ထိုသူကလည်း စတုတ္ထသားရဲသည် မြေကြီးပေါ် မှာ အခြားသော နိုင်ငံရှိသမျှတို့ထက် ထူးခြားသော စတုတ္ထနိုင်ငံရှိသမျှတို့ထက် ထူးခြားသော စတုတ္ထနိုင်ငံ ဖြစ်၏။ ထိုနိုင်ငံသည် မြေကြီးရှိသမျှကို ကိုယ်စားချိုးဖဲ့ နင်းချေလိမ့်မည်။

24 ိုနိုင်ငံ၌ ပေါက်သော ချိုဆယ်ချောင်းသည် ပေါ်လတံ့သော မင်းကြီးဆယ်ပါးဖြစ်၏။ သူတို့နောက် အခြားသော မင်းကြီးပေါ်လာလိမ့်မည်။ အရင်မင်းကြီး က် ူးခြား၍ သုံးပါးတို့ကို နှိမ့်ချလိမ့်မည်။

25 အမြင့်ဆုံးသော ဘုရားကို ဆန့်ကျင်ဘက်ပြု၍၊ ကြီးစွာသော စကားကို ပြောလိမ့်မည်။ အမြင့်ဆုံးသော ဘုရား၏သန့်ရှင်းသူတို့ကို ညှဉ်းဆဲနှိပ်စက်လိမ့်မည်။ ကာလအချိန်နှင့်ပညတ်တရားတို့ကို ပြောင်းလဲစေခြင်းငှါ ကြံစည်လိမ့်မည်။ တကာလ၊ နှစ်ကာလ၊ ကာလတဝက် ပတ်လုံး သူသည် အခွင့်ရလိမ့်မည်။

26 ထိုနောက်မှ တရားစီရင်ခြင်း ဖြစ်လိမ့်မည်။ ထိုအခါသူ၏ တန်ခိုးအာဏာကို နှုတ်၍ရှင်းရှင်း ဖျက်ဆီး ကြလိမ့်မည်။

27 ကောင်းကင်အောက်၌ နိုင်ငံနှင့်တကွ အာဏာ စက် ဘုန်းတန်ခိုးရှိသမျှကို အမြင့်ဆုံးသော ဘုရား၏ သန့်ရှင်းသော အမျိုးသားတို့သည် ရကြလိမ့်မည်။ ထို ဘုရားသခင်၏ နိုင်ငံတော်သည် ထာဝရနိုင်ငံဖြစ်၏။ မင်းကြီး အပေါင်းတို့သည် တိုးဝင်၍ ကျွန်ခံရကြလိမ့်မည်။

28 ဤရှေ့ကား အနက်အဓိပ္ပါယ်ပေတည်းဟု ဆိုလေ၏။ ငါဒံယေလသည် စိတ်ပူပန်ခြင်းသို့ရောက်၍ မျက်နှာညှိုးငယ်ခြင်းရှိ၏။ သို့သော်လည်း မြင်ရသော အာရုံများကို စိတ်နှလုံးထဲ၌သိုထား၏။

   

Komentář

 

Daniel's First Vision: 4 Beasts and the Little Horn

Napsal(a) Andy Dibb

Woodcut

This opening verse of the prophecies of Daniel has a resounding similarity to the opening verses of most of the preceding chapters of the book of Daniel. Like them, it places the vision in a context, we are shown the point of our regeneration at which the Lord is directing us: the first year of Belshazzar, king of Babylon.

In the internal sense, time is an indication of state. This means that the events and prophecies of Daniel do not follow in a strict chronological order, but rather happen on different levels at the same time. While Nebuchadnezzar is king of Babylon, representing selfishness in our inner self, Belshazzar rules our outer self. The work of overcoming selfish motives has to go hand in hand with the removal of that very selfishness in our external—otherwise the exercise is purely intellectual. Daniel’s visions in the last six chapters of the book, indicate the process by which we become aware of the effects of selfishness in our daily lives: when Belshazzar is king.

In spiritual development, we sometimes delude ourselves that change follows effort without delay. Nothing could be further from the truth. Our habits are very powerful—often we are not even aware that we have them. Yet "regeneration" literally means "re-birth," which entails casting out each and every obstacle in the path of our spiritual development. This can only be done by examining the exterior motives in our lives, and getting to the very bottom or root of our behaviors.

Daniel’s vision traces this exploration for us. Each of the four beasts he saw rising up from the sea depict the states of an evil life in us, with the added twist in their relationship to the religious principles a person purports to hold. Each must be examined and rejected. Every detail of the vision, therefore is important.

As with all numbers in the Word, the number "four" has a special meaning vitally important to the exposition. "Four" represents a joining together, and so has the same meaning as the number "two," (Arcana Coelestia 1686, 9103, 9601) which is obvious since "four" is the result of two multiplied into itself.

In a general sense, when the term "four winds" is mentioned in the Word, it means "all things of good and of truth, thus all things of heaven and of the church" (Arcana Coelestia 9642:10) flowing into a person, for "wind" means the influx of life from the Lord (Apocalypse Revealed 343). Thus the Lord breathed life into Adam in the Garden of Eden, and again on His disciples, filling them with the Holy Spirit. In an ideal situation, the presence of the Lord, both in our will and our understanding, in equal measure, indicates a state of regeneration. In that state, we are as "four-square" as the New Jerusalem.

As in so many cases in the book of Daniel, the symbolism needs to be reversed in order to see its full meaning. Daniel is in Babylon, a servant to the king, and thus anything usually relating to the Lord is inverted to relate to the king of Babylon, as selfishness: the opposite of love to the Lord.

The influx then is not goodness and truth, but evil and falsity, specifically love of self and control over others. The "sea" in this vision depicts the great restless tide of selfishness controlling our external being. The book of Daniel is a picture of a person whose conscience is restricted to thoughts and feelings, yet whose behavior, attitudes, and habits still reflect the old states of selfishness (Apocalypse Explained 316). Babylon reigns. In the vision that follows, the states and their effects are revealed.

The vision of the four beasts coming up from the sea tells our story when we cynically misuse truth to live selfishly, until evil completely takes over and would destroy us (Apocalypse Explained 556, Apocalypse Revealed 574). Evil will succeed unless the power of the truth, in our conscience, overcomes evil and allows us to reject it.

The first of these beasts was like a lion with eagle’s wings. Lions are mentioned many times in the Word, and usually describe the power of truth to destroy falsity and evil (Apocalypse Explained 556). But in this vision, describing Babylon, the lion takes on the opposite meaning: the lion represents the power of the love of self (Arcana Coelestia 6367), and the power of falsity to destroy truths.

The eagle's wings, representing human reason, were taken away from the lion, and he was made to stand on his two feet like a man, and a man’s heart was given to him. A person engrossed in selfishness loses their ability to appreciate religion, and weighted down by their own contrary thoughts, find themselves alienated from the truth.

Next, Daniel saw a bear raised up on one side. This posture indicates our eagerness to misinterpret the Word to suit our own means (Arcana Coelestia 781). This a vision of the human state when self love (Nebuchadnezzar) rules our internal being, and the expression of that selfishness (Belshazzar) controls our daily actions. The bear is the pleasure of justifying evil with our own 'superior' reasoning.

It is easy to be kind, while manipulating other people for our own benefit. It is easy to present oneself as a spiritual being in order to deceive other people. In such a life, charity is a dead form. Thus the bear had three ribs hanging from its mouth.

Daniel never tells who commanded the bear to 'arise, and devour more flesh,' but perhaps the urging comes from deeper states of selfishness which control our external actions. Whatever its origin, these words give voice to the heart of a person misusing the Word for his or her own gain.

A leopard is "a ferocious beast" which loves to "kill harmless animals." Its very appearance, black spots on white, illustrates the effect of falsity on truth (Apocalypse Revealed 57). But the leopard in Daniel also had four wings like a bird. As in the case of the lion which had the wings of an eagle, the wings here also signify our intellect destroying the truth. The four wings on the leopard depict "confirmations of what is false" (Apocalypse Revealed 574).

The leopard not only had four wings, but also four heads. This is a depiction of human degradation when falsity rules. It is a state of spiritual insanity, for when a selfish internal acts with a falsified external, there is nothing to prevent a person engaging in all kinds evil (Arcana Coelestia 1944:3). In this state, the conscience is enslaved, powerless to stop the madness.

The fourth beast, whose appearance is not described, signifies the "destruction of truth and good" (Apocalypse Revealed 574). Once a person reaches this state of degeneration, they stop at nothing to destroy any restraining influences. Falsity is used to destroy truth through denial or twisting it to suit one’s own ends. This process is described as "teeth like iron" devouring and breaking in pieces (see 1 explanation of Daniel 2 for a description of 'iron')(Apocalypse Revealed 556).

'A horn' is usually a symbol of power, and in the highest sense, the power of truth against falsity. But again, in this story the opposite sense applies, and the power here is of falsity for evil (Apocalypse Explained 316). These ten horns depict the complete power falsity has over the way we act.

The whole sordid description of the four beasts culminates on a little horn. This is the complete perversion of anything good and true drawn from the Word, and so represents the final profanation. If there was no counter-balancing conscience, a person would be irrevocably in hell.

The casting out of the three horns depicts the power of evil and falsity to destroy and remove the truths of the Word (Apocalypse Explained 316). The number "three" represents fullness or completeness, and thus the power of evil when brought into action to destroy all truths. Hence, the old saying 'when you break one of the Commandments, you break them all,' takes on a more powerful meaning.

The next image shifts: we see the thrones "cast down" signifying the falsities (Arcana Coelestia 8215) from the beasts, judged by the truths of the Word forming our conscience. All judgment begins with truth, for truth provides the balances upon which our lives are measured.

In the image of God’s throne, symbolizing judgment, it is important to remember that His judgment is always a product of love and mercy. But the Lord’s love should not be confused with license: just because He loves the human race, individually and collectively, this does not mean evil is permissible. Evil interferes with a person’s reception of the Lord, putting barriers between Him and ourselves. For the most part, the Lord permits evils, but does not will them, because they are useful reminding us to turn away from them (Divine Providence 275, 278). Yet there are times when human beings overstep the mark.

The judgment in this chapter must be seen in its context, which is in the reign of Belshazzar. It is the story of both the beasts and the fact that Belshazzar was weighed in the balances, found wanting, and killed by Darius. That in essence is a judgment on the external’s of our lives, on our behavior. and attitudes which have their origin in the Nebuchadnezzar states of our inner being.

Here, however, we see the origin of truth as "the Ancient of Days," sitting on the throne of judgment, heralding the destruction of one state and the beginning of another (Apocalypse Revealed 574). The "Ancient of Days" is an image of the love of the Lord (Arcana Coelestia 9470), and in a sense is the Divine counterpart to the love we are led to by means of truth. The object of all truth is to lead one to a love of God, and a love of the neighbor, and a life expressive of both. Our love for God is a reflection of His love for us.

In the Word, a garment corresponds to truth one knows and which forms a part of a person’s mind. Thus the garment of the Ancient of Days represents the truth veiling over the Divine Good. This truth is truth in our minds, in our conscious minds (Arcana Coelestia 9470, Apocalypse Explained 67). These garments were as white as snow to show us the quality of the intelligence and wisdom we can have from the Lord (Apocalypse Explained 195:18).

'Hair' means the most external parts of our lives—the natural thoughts and feelings we have which prompt us into action, all perfectly conscious. While we are in this world, this very external part of us seems to be vitally important, but in fact it is only driven by the inner things. If these are from the Lord, then our external will also appear as virgin wool.

The fire of the throne is the appearance of the Lord's love. The wheels represents the wisdom and intelligence we have from the Lord, which are full of love and so are described as "burning."

All judgment is done by the Lord. The Lord’s birth in Bethlehem was the beginning of a last judgment on the ancient churches, and that judgment from love by means of wisdom, came about through the life and death of Jesus Christ, the Divine Human of the Lord.

In Daniel’s vision, there is a similar relationship between the Ancient of Days, seated on His throne, and the Son of Man to whom was given all power. The Ancient of Days represents the Lord, and in that vision we saw the unity of the Divine love and Divine wisdom in the fiery throne upon which He sat.

Once the presence of the Lord has been established in us by the overthrow of evil and falsity, we will continue to develop in goodness and truth. This spiritual growth is described in the words that 'the Son of Man was given an everlasting dominion,' a theme repeated in verses 18 and 27. The kingdom of the Son of Man extended over "all peoples, nations and tongues," representing the different states of the human mind which will be made subject to truth from the Word. "Peoples" are the truths of doctrine—in this case, the false ideas which affect our behavior to be judged against the truth introduced into our minds by the conscience. "Nations" mean the evils of life, overthrown in the process of judgment (Apocalypse Revealed 483, Apocalypse Explained 175, 455). Thus in the process of judgment, both our habitual thoughts and feelings will be confronted by truth, and replaced by feelings drawn from the goodness and truth of the Lord. Finally, "tongues" signify the actions drawn from evil feelings and false thoughts—these too will be brought down in our personal "last judgment."

The "time, times, and half a time" are the states of temptation and combat we need to go through in order to regenerate. Yet each minute of that combat is a temptation, and temptation only takes place within the framework or regeneration. Thus a person being tempted, who resists the evil, sits in judgment on that evil, and from the power of the Lord will eventually prevail over it.

These final verses are a vision of things yet to come. This is before our entrance into the Lord’s kingdom, before the power of falsity is broken. We still have growing to do. There are still states we need to face and overcome. Even with this marvelous promise of ultimate victory, Daniel found that his thoughts still troubled him.

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Arcana Coelestia # 3519

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3519. 'And take for me from there two good kids of the she-goats' means truths born from that good. This is clear from the meaning of 'kids of the she-goats' as truths born from good, dealt with below. The reason for having 'two' was that as in the rational so in the natural there are things of the will and those of the understanding. Things in the natural that belong to the will are delights, while those that belong to the understanding are facts. These two have to be joined together if they are to be anything at all.

[2] As regards 'kids of the she-goats' meaning truths born from good, this becomes clear from those places in the Word where kids and she-goats are mentioned. It should be recognized that all gentle and useful beasts mentioned in the Word mean in the genuine sense celestial things, which are forms of good, and spiritual things, which are forms of truth, see 45, 46, 142, 143, 246, 714, 715, 776, 2179, 2180, 2781, 3218. And since there are various genera of celestial things or forms of good, and consequently there are various genera of spiritual things or forms of truth, one beast has a different meaning from another; that is to say, a lamb has one meaning, a kid another, and a sheep, she-goat, ram, he-goat, young bull, or ox another, while a horse or a camel has yet another meaning. Birds have a different meaning again, as also do beasts of the sea, such as sea monsters, and fish. The genera of celestial and spiritual things, and consequently of forms of good and truth, are more than anyone can number, even though when that which is celestial or good is mentioned, and also when that which is spiritual or truth, this is not envisaged as being anything complex, consisting of many parts, but as a single entity. Yet how complex both of these are, that is, how countless the genera are of which they consist, may be seen from what has been stated about heaven in 3241, to the effect that it is distinguished into countless separate communities, according to the genera of celestial and spiritual things, that is, of goods of love and of derivative truths of faith. Furthermore each genus of good and each genus of truth has countless species into which the communities of each genus are separated. And each species in a similar way has separate sub-species.

[3] The commonest genera of good and truth are what the living creatures offered as burnt offerings and sacrifices represented. And because the genera are quite distinct and separate, people were explicitly commanded to use those living creatures and no others, that is to say, in some sacrifices lambs and ewe-lambs, and also kids and female kids of she-goats were to be used, in other sacrifices rams and sheep, and also he-goats, were to be used, while in other sacrifices again, calves, young bulls, and oxen, or else pigeons and doves, were to be used, see 992, 1823, 2180, 2805, 2807, 2830, 3218. What kids and she-goats meant however becomes clear both from the sacrifices in which they used to be offered and from other places in the Word. These show that lambs and ewe-lambs meant innocence belonging to the internal or rational man, and kids and she-goats innocence belonging to the external or natural man, and so the truth and the good of the latter.

[4] The fact that truth and good present in the innocence that belongs to the external or natural man is meant by a kid and a she-goat is clear from the following places in the Word: In Isaiah,

The wolf will dwell with the lamb, and the leopard will lie down with the kid, the calf also and the young lion and the sheep together; and a little child will lead them. Isaiah 11:6.

This refers to the Lord's kingdom and to the state there in which people have no fear of evil, that is, no dread of hell, because they are with the Lord. 'The lamb' and 'the kid' stand for people who have innocence within them, and who, being the most secure of all, are mentioned first.

[5] When all the firstborn of Egypt were smitten the people were commanded to kill from among the lambs or among the kids a male without blemish, and to put some of the blood on the doorposts and on the lintel of their houses; and so the destroyer would not strike them with the plague, Exodus 12:5, 7, 13. 'The firstborn of Egypt' means the good of love and charity that was wiped out, 3325. 'The lambs' and 'the kids' are states of innocence, in which those with whom these exist are secure from evil. Indeed all in heaven are kept secure by the Lord through states of innocence. That security was represented by the killing of the lamb or kid, and putting the blood on the doorposts and on the lintel of the houses. .

[6] To avert his own death when a person saw Jehovah manifested as an angel he would sacrifice 'a kid of the she-goats', as Gideon did when he saw Him, Judges 6:19, and also Manoah, Judges 13:15-16, 19. The reason they offered a kid was that Jehovah or the Lord cannot appear to anybody, not even to an angel, unless the one to whom He appears is in a state of innocence. Therefore as soon as the Lord is present people are brought into a state of innocence, for the Lord enters in by way of innocence, even with angels in heaven. Consequently no one is able to enter heaven unless he has a measure of innocence, according to the Lord's words recorded in Matthew 18:3; Mark 10:15; Luke 18:17. Regarding people's belief that they would die when Jehovah appeared to them if they did not offer such a burnt offering, see Judges 13:22-23.

[7] Since genuine conjugial love is innocence itself, 2736, it was customary in the representative Church for a man to go to his wife with the gift of a kid of the she-goats, as one reads of Samson in Judges 15:1, and also of Judah when he visited Tamar, Genesis 38:17, 20, 23. The fact that 'a kid' and 'a she-goat' meant innocence is also evident from the sacrifices made as guilt offerings that a person would offer if he had sinned through error, Leviticus 1:10; 4:28; 5:6. Sinning through error is sinning through ignorance that has innocence within it. The same is evident from the following Divine command in Moses,

You shall bring the first of the firstfruits of your land to the house of Jehovah your God. You shall not boil a kid in its mother's milk. Exodus 23:19; 34:26.

Here the requirement 'to bring the firstfruits of the land to the house of Jehovah' means the state of innocence which exists in early childhood; and 'not boiling a kid in its mother's milk' means that they were not to destroy the innocence of early childhood. This being their meaning, the one command, in both places referred to, follows directly after the other. In the literal sense there seems to be no connection at all between them as there is in the internal sense.

[8] Because kids and she-goats, as has been stated, meant innocence it was also required that the curtains over the tabernacle should be made from she-goat hair, Exodus 25:4; 26:7; 35:5-6, 23, 26; 36:14, as a sign that all the holy things represented in it depended for their very being on innocence. 'She-goat hair' means the last or outermost degree of innocence present in ignorance, such as exists with gentiles who in the internal sense are meant by the curtains of the tabernacle. These considerations now show what truths born of good are, and what the nature of these is, meant by the two good kids of the she-goats which Rebekah his mother spoke about to Jacob. That is to say, they are truths belonging to innocence or early childhood, meant also by the things which Esau was to bring to Isaac his father, dealt with in 3501, 3508. They were not in fact such truths, but initially they appeared to be. Thus it was that Jacob pretended by means of them to be Esau.

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