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ဒံယေလ 8

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1 ဗေလရှာဇာမင်းကြီးနန်းစံ သုံးနှစ်တွင်၊ ငါ ဒံယေလသည် ယခင် ဗျာဒိတ်တော်ကို မြင်ပြီးသည်နောက်၊ တဖန် ဗျာဒိတ်ရူပါရုံကို မြင်ရသောအကြောင်းအရာဟူ မူကား၊

2 ဧလံပြည်၊ ရူရှန်မြို့တော်၌ ဥလဲမြစ်နားမှာ ငါရှိ စဉ်၊ ရူပါရုံထင်ရှား၍၊

3 ငါမျှော်ကြည့်သော၊ ရှည်လျားသော ချို နှစ်ချောင်းရှိသော သိုးတကောင်သည် မြစ်တဘက်၌ ရပ် နေ၏။ ထိုချိုနှစ်ချောင်းသည်မညီ၊ တချောင်းသာ၍ ရှည်၏။ သာ၍ ရှည်သောချိုသည် နောက်ပေါက် သတည်း။

4 ထိုသိုးသည် အနောက်၊ တောင်၊ မြောက်၊ သုံး မျက်နှာသို့ တိုးခွေ့သောကြောင့် အဘယ်တိရစ္ဆာန်မျှ မခံနိုင်၊ အဘယ်သူမျှ သူ့လက်မှတ်မကယ်မလွှတ်နိုင်သည် ဖြစ်၍ မိမိအလိုရှိသည့်အတိုင်း ပြုသဖြင့် ကြီးမားခြင်းသို့ ရောက်လာ၏။

5 ထိုအမှုကို ငါဆင်ခြင်လျက်နေသောအခါ၊ မျက်စိ နှစ်လုံးကြား၌ ထူးဆန်းသော ချိုတချောင်းရှိသော ဆိတ် တကောင်သည် အနောက်မျက်နှာကလာ၍၊ မြေကို မနင်းဘဲ မြေကြီးတပြင်လုံးကို ကျော်လေ၏။

6 ချိုနှစ်ချောင်းနှင့်မြစ်တဘက်၌ ထင်ရှားသော သိုးရှိရာသို့ ပြင်းစွာသော အဟုန်နှင့်ပြေး၍

7 အနားသို့ ရောက်သောအခါ၊ ပြင်းစွာ အမျက် ထွက်သဖြင့် သိုးကို ခတ်၍ သိုးချိုနှစ်ချောင်းကို ချိုးဖဲ့၏။ သိုးသည်ခံနိုင်သော တန်ခိုးမရှိသည် ဖြစ်၍ ဆိတ်သည် သူ့ကိုမြေ၌ လှဲ၍နင်းလေ၏။ သူ့လက်မှ အဘယ်သူမျှ သိုးကို မကယ်မလွှတ်နိုင်။

8 သို့ဖြစ်၍၊ ထိုဆိတ်သည် အလွန်ကြီးမားခြင်းသို့ ရောက်လေ၏။ ခွန်အားကြီးသောအခါ ချိုကြီးကျိုးပဲ့၏။ ထိုချိုအရာ၌ ထူးဆန်းသော ချိုလေးချောင်းပေါက်၍၊ မိုဃ်းကောင်းကင်လေးမျက်နှာသို့ မျက်နှာပြုကြ၏။

9 ထိုချိုလေးချောင်းတွင် တချောင်းထဲက အခြား သောချိုတက်တ ချောင်းပေါက်ပြန်၍ တောင်မျက်နှာသို့၎င်း၊ အရှေ့မျက်နှာသို့၎င်း၊ သာယာသော ပြည်သို့၎င်း မျက်နှာပြု၍၊ အလွန်ကြီးမားခြင်းသို့ ရောက်လေ၏။

10 ကောင်းကင်ဗိုလ်ခြေတိုင်အောင်ကြီးမား၍၊ ထိုဗိုလ်ခြေအချို့တို့နှင့် ကြယ်အချို့တို့ကို မြေသို့ချ၍ နင်းလေ၏။

11 ထိုမျှမက၊ ဗိုလ်ခြေသခင်တိုင်အောင် ထောင် လွှားခြင်းကို ပြုလျက်၊ နေ့ရက်အစဉ်ပြုသော ဝတ်ကိုပယ်၍၊ သန့်ရှင်းရာဌာနတော်ကို ရှုတ်ချလေ၏။

12 အပြစ်များသောကြောင့် နေ့ရက်အစဉ်ပြုသော ဝတ်နှင့်တကွ ဗိုလ်ခြေကိုလည်း ထိုချိုသည်ရ၍ သမ္မာ တရားကို မြေသို့နှိမ့်ချ၏။ ထိုသို့ပြု၍ အောင်မြင်ခြင်းသို့ ရောက်လေ၏။

13 ထိုအခါ သန့်ရှင်းသူတပါး၏ စကားပြောသံကို ငါကြား၏။ သန့်ရှင်းသူတပါးက၊ ယခင်ပြောသော သူကို ဟစ်၍၊ သန့်ရှင်းရာဌာနနှင့် ဗိုလ်ခြေကိုနင်းခြင်း အလိုငှာ နေ့ရက်အစဉ်ပြုသောဝတ်ကို ပယ်ခြင်းနှင့်၎င်း၊ ဖျက်ဆီးတတ်သော လွန်ကျူးခြင်းနှင့်၎င်း စပ်ဆိုင်သော ဗျာဒိတ်ရူပါရုံသည်အဘယ်မျှ ကာလပတ်လုံး တည်လိမ့် မည်နည်းဟုမေးမြန်းလျှင်၊

14 ယခင်ပြောသူက ရက်ပေါင်းနှစ်ထောင်သုံးရာ တိုင်တိုင် တည်လိမ့်မည်။ ထိုနောက် သန့်ရှင်းရာဌာနကို တဖန်ဆေးကြောသုတ်သင်ကြလိမ့် မည်ဟုပြန်၍ ပြောဆို ၏။

15 ငါဒံယေလသည် ထိုရူပါရုံကို မြင်၍ အနက်ကို ရှာဖွေသောအခါ၊ လူသဏ္ဌာန်ရှိသောသူတဦးသည် ငါ့ရှေ့တွင် ရပ်နေ၏။

16 အခြားသော သူက၊ အိုဂါဗြေလ၊ ထိုသူသည် ယခု မြင်သော ဗျာဒိတ်ရူပါရုံကို နားလည်စေခြင်းငှါ အနက်ကို ပြန်ပောလော့ဟု၊ ဥလဲ မြစ်နားကြားမှာ လူအသံနှင့်ဟစ်၍ ပြောဆိုသည်ကို ငါကြား၏။

17 ထိုသူသည် ငါရပ်နေရာအပါးသို့လာလျှင်၊ ငါသည် ကြောက်ရွံ့၍ ပြပ်ဝပ်လျက်နေ၏။ ထိုသူက၊ အချင်းလူသား၊ နားလည်လော့။ ဤဗျာဒိတ် ရူပါရုံသည် အမှုကုန် ရသောကာလနှင့်ဆိုင်သည်ဟု ငါ့အား ပြောဆို ၏။

18 ထိုသို့ ဆိုသောအခါ ငါသည် မြေပေါ်မှာပြပ်ဝပ်၍ မိန်းမော တွေဝေလျက်နေ၏။ ထိုသူသည်ငါ့ကိုလက်နှင့် တို့၍ ယခင်နေရာ၌ မတ်တတ်နေစေပြီးလျှင်၊

19 ဒေါသအမျက်တော်အဆုံး၌ ဖြစ်လတံ့သော အရာကိုငါကြား ပြောဦးမည်။ ချိန်းချက်သောအချိန်၌ လက်စသတ်လိမ့်မည်။

20 ချိုနှစ်ချောင်းနှင့် ပေါ်လာသော သိုးသည် မေဒိ ရှင်ဘုရင်၊ ပေရသိရှင်ဘုရင်ဖြစ်၏။

21 အမွေးကြမ်းသော ဆိတ်သည် ဟေလသ ရှင်ဘုရင် ဖြစ်၏။ မျက်စိနှစ်လုံးကြား၌ရှိသော ချိုကြီးသည် ပဌမမင်းဖြစ်၏။

22 ိုချိုကျိုးပဲ့၍၊ သူ့အရာ၌ ချိုလေးချောင်းပေါက် သည်မှာ အရင်နိုင်ငံတွင် နိုင်ငံလေးပါး ည်ောင်လိမ့် မည်။ အရင်နိုင်ငံ၏တန်ခိုးနှင့် မပြည့်စုံကြ။

23 ထိုနိုင်ငံတို့၏ အဆုံးစွန်သောကာလ၌ လွန်ကျူး သော သူတို့၏ အပြစ်ပြည့်စုံသောအခါ၊ ရဲရင့်သော မျက်နှာရှိ၍ ပရိယာယ်တို့ကို နားလည်သော မင်းကြီး တပါး ပေါ်လာလိမ့်မည်။

24 ထိုမင်းကြီးသည် ကိုယ်တန်ခိုးမရှိဘဲလျက် တန်ခိုးကြီးလိမ့်မည်။ အထူးသဖြင့် ဖျက်ဆီး၍ တိုးပွား အောင်မြင်လိမ့်မည်။ စွမ်းအားကြီးသော လူစု၊ သန့်ရှင်း သော လူစုကို ပင် ဖျက်ဆီးလိမ့်မည်။

25 သူသည်လိမ္မာစွာပြုသဖြင့်၊ မုသာလည်း အောင် မြင်လိမ့်မည်။ စိတ်ောင်လွှားခြင်းနှင့်တကွ မိဿဟာယ ဖွဲ့သောအားဖြင့် လူများတို့ကို ဖျက်ဆီး၍၊ သခင်တို့၏သခင် ကို ဆန့်ကျင်ဘက်ပြုလိမ့်မည်။ သို့သော်လည်း၊ လူလက် ဖြင့် ဒဏ်မခတ်ဘဲ ကျိုးပဲ့ပျက်စီးခြင်းသို့ ရောက်လိမ့်မည်။

26 ညဦးနှင့် နံနက်ကို တော်ပြသောဗျာဒိတ် ရူပါရုံ စကားမှန်သည် ဖြစ်၍ ထိုစကားကို တံဆိပ်ခက်ထား လော့။ တာရှည်သော ကာလတိုင်တိုင် တည်လိမ့်မည်ဟု ဆို၏။

27 ိုအခါ ငါဒံယေလသည် မော၍ နာလျက် နေ၏။ တဖန် အနာမမြောက်၍ ဘုရင်၏အမှုတော်ကို ဆောင်ရွက်၏။ မြင်ပြီးသော ဗျာဒိတ်ရူပါရုံကို ငါ့အံ့ဩ သော်လည်း ိုအမှုကို အဘယ်သူမျှ မရိပ်မိကြ။

   

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Arcana Coelestia # 10135

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10135. 'And you shall offer the other lamb between the evenings' means a similar removal of evils in a state of light and love in the external man. This is clear from the meaning of 'offering a lamb', or sacrificing it, as being removed from evils by means of the good of innocence from the Lord, as immediately above in 10134; and from the meaning of 'between the evenings' as in a state of light and love in the external man. In the Word 'evening' means a state involving interior things when the truths of faith are set in obscurity, and forms of the good of love are in some coldness; for angels experience different states of love and light, just as in the world different times of day - morning, midday, evening, night or twilight prior to morning, and morning again - give way to one another. When the angels experience a state of love, to them it is morning, and the Lord appears before them as the rising Sun. When they experience a state of light, to them it is midday. When however they experience a state of light set in obscurity, to them it is evening; and when after this they experience a state of love set in obscurity or some coldness, for them it is night, or rather the twilight before morning.

[2] Such states experienced by the angels follow unceasingly one after another, and serve unceasingly to make them more perfect. But those changes are not due to the Sun there, to its rising and setting, but to the state of the interiors within the angels themselves; for as with people in the world they have a desire at one time to turn towards their internal interests, at another towards their external ones. When they turn towards internal interests they experience a state of love and consequently of light in clearness, and when they turn towards external interests they experience a state of love and consequently of light set in obscurity; for what is external is such, compared with what is internal. This is the origin of the changes of state experienced by angels. The reason why they have such states and such changes is that the Sun of heaven, which in that world is the Lord, is the Divine Love itself. Therefore the heat radiating from it is the good of love, and the light from it is the truth of faith. For everything radiating from that Sun has life, unlike the things radiating from the sun in the world, which are dead.

[3] From this it becomes clear what heavenly heat is and what heavenly light is, also why it is that 'heat', 'flame', and 'fire' in the Word mean the good of love, 'light' and its 'brightness' the truth of faith, and 'the sun' the Lord Himself in respect of Divine Love.

The Lord in heaven is the Sun, see 3636, 3643, 4321(end), 5097, 7078, 7083, 7171, 7173, 8812.

The heat from it is the good of love, 3338, 3339, 3636, 3693, 4018, 5215, 6032, 6314.

The light from that Sun is Divine Truth, the source of faith, intelligence, and wisdom, see the places referred to in 9548, 9684.

From all this it now becomes clear what 'morning' and what 'evening' mean.

[4] But it should be recognized that in the present verse 'the morning' implies midday as well, and evening early morning twilight as well; for when the words 'morning and evening' are used in the Word an entire day is meant, so that 'morning' includes midday, and 'evening' night or twilight. This explains why 'the morning' in the present verse means a state of love and also of light in clearness, that is, in the internal man, and 'the evening' a state of light, as well as of love in obscurity, that is, in the external man.

[5] The fact that 'between the evenings' is not used to mean the period of time between the evening of one day and the evening of the next day, but the time between evening and morning, thus all of the night or twilight, is evident from the consideration that the continual burnt offering of a lamb was presented not only in the evening but also in the morning. From this it becomes clear that something similar is meant elsewhere by 'between the evenings', for example, where it says that the Passover should be kept between the evenings, Exodus 12:6; Numbers 9:5, 11, which is explained in yet another place by the following words,

You shall sacrifice the Passover in the evening when the sun goes down, at the fixed time of the departure from Egypt. After that you shall cook and eat it in the place which Jehovah your God will have chosen; and in the morning you shall turn 1 and go into your tents. Deuteronomy 16:6-7.

[6] The fact that 'evening' in general means a state of light shining in obscurity is clear in Jeremiah,

Arise, and let us go up into the south. Woe to us, for the day goes away, for the shadows of evening are set at an angle! Arise, and let us go up at night, and let us destroy the palaces. Jeremiah 6:4-5.

Here 'evening' and 'night' mean the last times of the Church, when all matters of faith and love have been destroyed. In Zechariah,

There will be one day, which is known to Jehovah, when around evening time there will be light. On that day living waters will go out from Jerusalem. And Jehovah will be King over all the earth. Zechariah 14:7-9.

This refers to the Lord's Coming. The end of the Church is meant by 'evening time'; 'light' is the Lord's Divine Truth. A similar example occurs in Daniel,

The holy one said to me, Up to the evening, [when it is becoming] the morning, two thousand three hundred times. Daniel 8:13-14.

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

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Arcana Coelestia # 2177

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2177. That 'meal of fine flour' means the spiritual and celestial ingredients [of the rational] which were present at that time with the Lord, and 'cakes' the same when both had been joined together, is quite clear from the sacrifices of the representative Church and from the minchah presented at the same time, which consisted of fine flour mixed with oil and made into cakes. Representative worship consisted primarily in burnt offerings and sacrifices. What these represented has been stated above where 'bread' was the subject, in 2165, namely the celestial things of the Lord's kingdom in heaven and of the Lord's kingdom on earth, which is the Church, and also the things of the Lord's kingdom or Church as it exists with every individual, and in general everything that is in essence love and charity, since these are celestial entities. In those times all the sacrifices were called 'bread'. Along with those sacrifices a minchah was included - which, as has been stated, consisted of fine flour mixed with oil to which also incense was added - and also a wine-offering.

[2] What these latter represented becomes clear too, namely things similar to those represented by sacrifices but of a lower order, thus the things which belong to the spiritual Church, and also those which belong to the external Church. It may become clear to anyone that such things would never have been prescribed unless they had represented Divine things, and also that each one represented some specific thing. For unless they had represented Divine things they would have been no different from similar things found among gentiles, among whom also there were sacrifices, minchahs, libations, and incense, as well as perpetual fires and many other things which had come down to them from the Ancient Church, especially from the Hebrew Church. But because they were separated from the internal, that is, the Divine things represented by them, those external forms of worship were nothing but idolatrous, as they also came to be among the Jews, who likewise sank into all kinds of idolatry. From this it may become clear to anyone that heavenly arcana were present within every form of ritual, especially so within the sacrifices and every detail of them.

[3] As regards the minchah, the nature of it and how it was to be made into cakes is described in a whole chapter in Moses - in Leviticus 2; also Numbers 15, and elsewhere. The law regarding the minchah is described in Leviticus in the following words,

Fire shall be kept burning unceasingly on the altar; it shall not be put out. And this is the law of the minchah: Aaron's sons shall bring it before Jehovah to the front of the altar, and he shall take up from it a fistful of fine flour of the minchah and of the oil of it and all the frankincense which is on the minchah, and he shall burn it on the altar; it is an odour of rest for a memorial to Jehovah. And the rest of it Aaron and his sons shall eat. Unleavened bread shall be eaten in a holy place. In the court of the tent of meeting shall they eat it. It shall not be cooked leavened; I have given it as their portion from My fire-offerings; it is most holy. Leviticus 6:13-17.

[4] The fire which was to be kept burning unceasingly on the altar represented the Lord's love, that is, His mercy, which is constant and eternal. 'Fire' in the Word means love, see 934, and therefore 'the fire-offerings made for an odour of rest' means the good pleasure which the Lord takes in those things that belong to love and charity. That 'odour' means good pleasure, that is, that which is pleasing, see 925, 1519. Their 'taking a fistful' represented their being required to love with all their soul or strength, for 'the hand' or 'the palm' of the hand means power, as shown in 878, from which 'the fist' also means the same. 'The fine flour together with the oil and the frankincense' represented all things of charity - 'fine flour' the spiritual ingredient of it, 'oil' the celestial, and 'frankincense' that which was in this manner pleasing. That 'fine flour' represents the spiritual ingredient is evident from what has just been stated and from what is stated below. That 'oil' represents the celestial ingredient, or the good or charity, see 886, and that 'frankincense' on account of its odour represents that which is pleasing and acceptable, 925.

[5] Its being 'unleavened bread' or not fermented means that it was to be genuine, thus something offered from genuineness of heart and having no uncleanness. The eating of the rest by Aaron and his sons represented man's reciprocation and his making it his own, and thus represented conjunction by means of love and charity; and it is for this reason that they were commanded to eat it 'in a holy place'. Hence it is called something most holy. These were the things which were represented by the minchah. It was also the way in which the representatives themselves were perceived in heaven; and when the member of the Church understood them in the same way his ideas were like the perception which the angels possess, so that he was in the Lord's kingdom in heaven even though he was on earth.

[6] For more about the minchah - what it was to consist of in any particular kind of sacrifice; the way in which it was to be baked into cakes; what kind was to be offered by those who were being cleansed, and also what kinds on other occasions (all of which would take too long to introduce and explain here) - see what is said about it in Exodus 29:39-41; Leviticus 5:11-13; 6:16-17, 19-21; 10:12-13; 23:10-13, 6, 17; Numbers 5:15 and following verses; 6:15-17, 19-20; 7: in various places; 28:5, 8, 9, 12-13, 20-21, 28-29; 29:3-4, 9-10, 14-15, 18, 21, 24, 27, 30, 33, 37

[7] 'Fine flour made into cakes' had in general the same representation as bread, namely the celestial ingredient of love, while 'meals represented its spiritual ingredient, as becomes clear in the places indicated above. The loaves which were called 'the bread of the Presence' or 'the shewbread' consisted of fine flour, which was made into cakes and placed on the table to provide an unceasing representation of the Lord's love, that is, of His mercy, towards the whole human race, and man's reciprocation. These loaves are spoken of in Moses as follows,

You shall take fine pour and bake it into twelve cakes; two-tenths [of an ephah] shall there be in one cake And you shall place them in two rows, six in a row, on the clean table before Jehovah. And you shall put pure frankincense on each row, and it shall be bread serving as a memorial, a fire-offering to Jehovah. Every sabbath day [Aaron] shall set it out in order before Jehovah continually; it is from the children of Israel as an eternal covenant. And it shall be for Aaron and his sons, and they shall eat it in a holy place, for it is to him the most holy of fire-offerings to Jehovah, by an eternal statute. Leviticus 24:5-9.

Every item and smallest detail mentioned here represented the holiness of love and charity, 'fine flour' having the same representation as meal of fine flour, namely that which is celestial and that which is spiritual that goes with it, and 'cake' the two when joined together.

[8] From this it is clear what the holiness of the Word is to those who possess heavenly ideas, and indeed what holiness was present within this particular representative observance, on account of which it is called 'most holy'. It is also clear how devoid of holiness the Word is to those who imagine that it does not have anything heavenly within it and who keep solely to externals. Exemplifying the latter are those who in the present verse under consideration perceive 'the meal' to be merely meal, 'the fine flour' merely fine flour, and 'the cake' merely a cake, and who imagine that these things have been stated without each one that is mentioned embodying something of the Divine within it. Their attitude is similar to that of those who imagine that the bread and wine of the Holy Supper are no more than a certain religious observance that does not have anything holy within it. Yet in fact it possesses such holiness that the minds of men are linked by means of it to the minds of those in heaven, when from an internal affection they think that the bread and wine mean the Lord's love and man's reciprocation, and by virtue of that interior thought and affection they abide in holiness.

[9] Much the same was implied by the requirement that when the children of Israel entered the land they were to present as a heave-offering to Jehovah a cake made from the first of their dough, Numbers 15:20. The fact that such things are meant is also evident in the Prophets, from' among whom for the moment let this one place in Ezekiel be introduced here,

You were adorned with gold and silver, and your raiment was of fine linen and silk and embroidered cloth. You ate fine flour, honey, and oil. You became exceedingly beautiful, and attained to a kingdom. Ezekiel 16:13.

This refers to Jerusalem, by which is meant the Church, which Church in its earliest days bore an appearance such as this, that is to say, the Ancient Church, which is described by means of raiment and many other adornments. Its affections for truth and good are also described by 'the fine flour, honey, and oil'. It may become clear to anyone that all these details mean in the internal sense something altogether different from what they do in the sense of the letter. And the same applies to Abraham's saying to Sarah, 'Take quickly three measures of meal of fine flour, knead it, and make cakes'. That 'three' means things that are holy has been shown already in 720, 901.

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