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ယေဇကျေလ 27

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1 တဖန် ထာဝရဘုရား၏ နှုတ်ကပတ်တော် သည် ငါ့ဆီသို့ ရောက်လာ၍၊

2 အချင်းလူသားတုရုမြို့အတွက် မြည်တမ်းခြင်း ကိုပြု၍၊ တုရုမြို့အား ဆင့်ဆိုရမည်မှာ၊

3 အိုပင်လယ်ဝ၌ တည်သောမြို့၊ များစွာသော ကျွန်းသူကျွန်းသားတို့အဘို့ ကုန်သွယ်တတ်သောမြို့၊ သင့် ကို အရှင်ထာဝရဘုရားမိန့်တော်မူသည်ကား၊ အိုတုရုမြို့၊ သင်က၊ ငါ၏တင့်တယ်ခြင်းစုံလင်ပြီဟု ဆိုတတ်၏။

4 သင်၏နံပါးတို့သည် ပင်လယ်ထဲမှာ ရှိ၏။ သင်၏ဗိသုကာတို့သည် သင့်ကိုစုံလင်စွာ တင့်တယ်စေ ခြင်းငှါ ပြုကြပြီ။

5 သင်၏ပျဉ်ပြားရှိသမျှတို့ကို စေနိရထင်းရူး သစ်သားဖြင့် လုပ်၍၊ ရွက်တိုင်ဘို့ လေဗနန်အာရဇ်ပင် တို့ကို ယူကြပြီ။

6 ဗာရှန်သပိတ်သစ်သားဖြင့် တက်တို့ကို၎င်း၊ ခိတ္တိမ်ကျွန်းတို့မှ ယူခဲ့၍ ဆင်စွယ်နှင့် စီချယ်သော တာရှုရသစ်သားဖြင့် ကန့်တို့ကို၎င်း လုပ်ကြပြီ။

7 အဲဂုတ္တုပြည်၌ ချယ်လှယ်သော ပိတ်ချောရွက် တို့ကို ဖြန့်၍၊ ဧလိရှကျွန်းတို့မှယူခဲ့သော အထည်ပြာ၊ အထည်မောင်းဖြင့် လုပ်သောမျက်နှာကြက်နှင့် ပြည့်စုံ၏။

8 ဇိဒုန်မြို့သား၊ အာဝဒ်မြို့သားတို့သည် သင်္ဘော သားဖြစ်၍၊ တုရုပညာရှိတို့သည်လမ်းပြမာလိန်ဖြစ်ကြ၏။

9 ဂေဗလလူကြီး၊ ပညာရှိတို့သည် သင့်ကို ပြုပြင် လျက်လိုက်ကြ၏။ ပင်လယ်ကူးတတ်သော သင်္ဘောရှိသမျှ၊ သင်္ဘောသားတို့နှင့်တကွ သင်နှင့် ဖောက်ကားရောင်းဝယ် ခြင်းငှါ ပါကြ၏။

10 ပေရသိလူ၊ လုဒလူ၊ ဖုတလူတို့သည် သင်၏ တပ်သား၊ စစ်သူရဲ လုပ်ကြ၏။ ဒိုင်း၊ လွှား၊ သံခမောက်လုံး တို့ကို ပြင်ဆင်၍၊ သင်၏ဂုဏ်အသရေကို ထင်ရှား စေကြ၏။

11 အာဝဒ်အမျိုးသားတို့သည် သင်၏တပ်သားတို့ နှင့်တကွ မြို့ရိုးပတ်လည်၌ စီးကြ၏။ ဂမ္မဒိမ်လူတို့သည် ပြအိုးတို့ကိုစောင့်၍၊ မြို့ရိုးပတ်လည်၌ မြှားတောင့်တို့ကို ပြင်ဆင်သဖြင့်၊ သင်၏တင့်တယ်ခြင်းကို စုံလင်စေ ကြ၏။

12 သင်၌ကုန်သွယ်ရန် ဥစ္စာများသောကြောင့်၊ တာရှုမြို့သည်ငွေသံသံဖြူ၊ ခဲတို့ကို သင့်ဝိုင်းသို့ယူခဲ့၍ သင်နှင့်ကုန်သွယ်ခြင်းကို ပြုလေ၏။

13 ယာဝန်မြို့၊ တုဗလမြို့။ မေရှက်မြို့တို့သည် သင်နှင့်ကုန်သွယ်၍၊ လူကျွန်တို့နှင့် ကြေးနီဖလားတို့ကို သင့်ဈေး၌ ရောင်းကြ၏။

14 တောဂါမအမျိုးသားတို့သည်မြင်းမြင်းစီးသူ၊ လားတို့ကို သင့်ဝိုင်း၌ သွင်းကြ၏။

15 ဒေဒန်မြို့သားတို့သည်လည်း သင်နှင့်ကုန်သွယ် ကြ၏။ များစွာသော တကျွန်းတနိုင်ငံ အရပ်သားတို့သည် သင်လုပ်သော ဥစ္စာကိုဝယ်၍၊ ဦးချို၊ ဆင်စွယ်၊ သစ်သား နက်ကို ပြန်ပေးကြ၏။

16 သင်လုပ်သော ဥစ္စာများသောကြောင့် ရှုရိပြည်သည် သင်နှင့်ကုန်သွယ်၍၊ နပက်ကျောက်၊ ဗြာသောအထည်၊ ချယ်လှယ်သောအဝတ်၊ ပိတ်ချော၊ သန္တာ၊ ကျောက်နီတို့ကို သင့်ဝိုင်း၌ သွင်းကြ၏။

17 ယုဒပြည်နှင့်ဣသရေလပြည်သည် သင်နှင့်ကုန် သွယ်၍၊ ဂျုံစပါး၊ မုရန်စေး၊ ပနက်စေး၊ ဗာလစံစေးဆီပျားရည်တို့ကို သင့်ဈေး၌ သွင်းကြ၏။

18 ဒမာသက်မြို့သည် သင်လုပ်သော ဥစ္စာများ၊ စည်းစိမ်များပြားသောကြောင့်၊ ဟေလဗုန်စပျစ်ရည်၊ ဖြူသောသိုးမွေးကို ဖယ်လှယ်လျက် ဖေါက်ကားတတ်၏။

19 ဝေဒန်မြို့နှင့်ယာဝန်ပြည် ဥဇာလမြို့သည် လည်း သံပြောင်ကို သင့်ဝိုင်းသို့ယူခဲ့၍၊ သင့်ဈေး၌ သစ်ကြံပိုးနှင့် ကြံလည်းရှိ၏။

20 ဒေဒန်မြို့သည် မြင်းစီးသူရဲ သုံးစရာချောသော အထည်မျိုးကို ရောင်း၍သင်နှင့်ကုန်သွယ်၏။

21 အာရပ်ပြည်နှင့် ကေဒါမင်း အပေါင်းတို့သည် သင်လုပ်သော ဥစ္စာကိုရခြင်းငှါ သိုးသငယ်၊ သိုးထီး၊ ဆိတ်များတို့နှင့် ဖယ်လှယ်၍ ကုန်သွယ်ကြ၏။

22 ရှေကုန်သည်၊ ရာဂမကုန်သည်တို့သည် သင်နှင့် ကုန်သွယ်၍ အမြတ်ဆုံးသော နံ့သာမျိုး၊ အဘိုးကြီးသော ကျောက်မျိုး၊ ရွှေမျိုးကိုသင့်ဝိုင်း၌ သွင်းကြ၏။

23 ခါရန်မြို့သား၊ ကန္နေမြို့သား၊ ဧဒင်မြို့သား၊ ရှေဘကုန်သည်၊ အာရှုရိကုန်သည်။ ခိလမဒ်ကုန်သည်တို့ လည်း၊ သင်နှင့်ကုန်သွယ်၍၊

24 ထူးဆန်းသော ဥစ္စာ၊ ပြာသောအထည်၊ ချယ် လှယ်သောအထည်၊ အဘိုးထိုက်သော အဝတ်တန်ဆာ ပါ၍၊ ကြိုးနှင့်ပတ်ရစ်သော အာရဇ်သေတ္တာတို့ကို သင်၏ ကုန်ထဲသို့သွင်းကြ၏။

25 တာရှုသင်္ဘေားတို့သည် သင်၏ကုန်ကို ဆောင် လျက်သွားလာသဖြင့်၊ သင်သည် ပင်လယ်အလယ်၌ ကြွယ်ဝ၍ အလွန်ဘုန်းကြီးလေ၏။

26 ယခုမူကား၊ သင်၏တက်ခတ်သားတို့သည် သင့်ကိုကြီးစွာသော ရေထဲသို့ဆောင်သွား၍၊ အရှေ့လေ သည်လည်း ပင်လယ်အလယ်၌ ချိုးလေ ပြီ။

27 သင်သည် လဲပျက်သောအခါ သင်၏ဥစ္စာ၊ ဝိုင်း၊ ကုန်၊ သင်္ဘော သား၊ လမ်းပြမာလိန်၊ ပြုပြင်သူ၊ ကုန်သည်၊ စစ်သူရဲအလုံးအရင်းပါသမျှတို့သည် ပင်လယ်အလယ်ကျရကြလိမ့်မည်။

28 သင်၏လမ်းပြမာလိန်တို့ အော်ဟစ်သံကြောင့်၊ ပတ်ဝန်းကျင်အရပ်တို့သည် လှုပ်ရှားကြလိမ့်မည်။

29 တက်ခတ်သော သူအပေါင်းတို့သည် သင်္ဘောမှ ဆင်း၍၊ သင်္ဘောသားများနှင့် ပင်လယ်လမ်းပြမာလိန် အပေါင်းတို့သည် ကုန်းပေါ်မှာရပ်လျက်၊

30 သင့်အဘို့အော်ဟစ်၍ ပြင်းစွာငိုကြွေးကြလိမ့် မည်။ မြေမှုန်ကို မိမိတို့ခေါင်းပေါ်မှာ ပစ်တင်၍ပြာ၌ လူးကြလိမ့်မည်။

31 ဆံပင်ကိုလည်း ဖြတ်၍လျှော်တေအဝတ်ကို ဝတ်စည်းလျက်၊ ညှိုးငယ်သောစိတ်နှင့် သင့်အဘို့ပြင်းစွာ ငိုကြွေးမြည်တမ်းရသည်ကား၊

32 ပင်လယ်အလယ်၌ ဆုံးသောမြို့တည်းဟူသော တုရုမြို့နှင့် အဘယ်မြို့တူသနည်း။

33 သင်၏ဥစ္စာတို့သည် ပင်လယ်လမ်းဖြင့် ထွက် သွားသောအခါ၊ လူမျိုးများတို့ကို ရောင့်ရဲစေ၍၊ များပြား သောဥစ္စာ။ ကုန်စလယ်တို့ဖြင့် လောကီရှင်ဘုရင်တို့ကို ကြွယ်ဝစေတတ်၏။

34 ယခုမူကား၊ သင်သည် ပင်လယ်၌၎င်း၊ သင့် ကုန်သွယ်ရန် ဥစ္စာတို့သည် လှိုင်းတံပိုးအလယ်၌၎င်း၊ ကျိုးပဲ့၍၊ သင်နှင့်ပါသောသူအပေါင်းတို့သည် ဆုံးရှုံကြပြီ။

35 ကျွန်းသူ ကျွန်းသားအပေါင်းတို့သည် သင်အမှု ကြောင့် မိန်းမောတွေဝေ၍၊ ရှင်ဘုရင်တို့သည် မျက်နှာ ပျက်လျက် ကြက်သီးမွေးညှင်းထကြ၏။

36 အမျိုးမျိုးသောကုန်သည်တို့သည် သင့်အား ကဲ့ရဲ့သံကို ပြုကြ၏။ သင်သည် ကြောက်မက်ဘွယ်ဖြစ် လေပြီတကား။ နောက်တဖန်မပေါ်လာ ရပါတကားဟု ငိုကြွေးမြည်တမ်းကြလိမ့်မည်ဟု မိန့်တော်မူ၏။

   

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Arcana Coelestia # 3727

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3727. As regards the meaning of 'a pillar', the reason why it means a holy boundary and so the ultimate degree of order is that in most ancient times people used to place stones where their boundaries ran which separated one person's property or inheritance from another's. These served as a sign and witness to the existence of the boundaries there. The most ancient people, who in every object and in every pillar thought of something celestial or spiritual, 1977, 2995, thought, when they saw these stones set up as pillars, of the ultimate things present in man, and so of the ultimate degree of order, which is truth in the natural man. And it was from those most ancient people who lived before the Flood that the ancients who lived after it acquired this custom, 920, 1409, 2179, 2896, 2897, and began to regard the stones they set up on their boundaries as sacred, for the reason, as stated, that they meant holy truth as it exists in the ultimate degree of order, and also called those stones 'pillars'. This was how it came about that pillars were introduced into their worship, and why they erected them where they had their sacred groves and subsequently their temples, and also anointed them with oil, a point to be dealt with shortly. Indeed the worship of the Ancient Church consisted of things that had been perceived and things that had carried a meaning among the most ancient people prior to the Flood, as is evident from the paragraphs that have just been referred to. Since the most ancient people talked to angels and were in their company while still on earth, they received it from heaven that 'stones' means truth and 'wood' good; see just above in 3720. This then is why 'pillars' means a holy boundary, and so truth as it exists in the ultimate degree of order with man. For good which flows in from the Lord by way of the internal man terminates in the external man, and in the truth that is there. Man's thought, speech, and activity, which are the ultimates of order, are nothing else than truths stemming from good. In fact they are the images or forms which good takes, for they belong to the understanding part of the human mind, whereas the good that is within them, and from which they spring, belongs to the will part.

[2] The fact that pillars were erected as a sign and a witness, and were also introduced into worship, and that in the internal sense they mean a holy boundary, or truth within man's natural, which is the ultimate degree of order, becomes clear from other places in the Word, as in the following verses where the subject is the covenant made between Laban and Jacob,

Now come, let us make a covenant, I and you, and let it be a witness between me and you. And Jacob took a stone and erected it as a pillar. Laban said to Jacob, Behold this heap, and behold the pillar which I have erected between me and you. This heap is a witness and the pillar is a witness, that I will not pass beyond this heap to you, and that you will not pass beyond this heap and this pillar to me, to do harm. Genesis 31:44-45, 51-52.

Here 'pillar' means truth, as will be seen in the explanation of those verses.

[3] In Isaiah,

On that day there will be five cities in the land of Egypt which speak with the lips of Canaan and swear to Jehovah Zebaoth. On that day there will be an altar to Jehovah in the midst of the land of Egypt, and a pillar at its border to Jehovah, which will be a sign and a witness to Jehovah Zebaoth in the land of Egypt. Isaiah 19:18-20.

'Egypt' stands for facts which belong to the natural man, 'an altar' for Divine worship in general, for in the second Ancient Church that began with Eber the altar became the first and foremost representative in its worship, 921, 1343, 2777, 2811. 'The midst of the land of Egypt' stands for the primary and inmost aspect of worship, 2940, 2973, 3436. 'Pillar' stands for truth as it exists in the ultimate degree of order in the natural. The fact that it stood at the border as a sign and a witness is quite evident.

[4] In Moses,

Moses wrote down all the words of Jehovah and rose up in the morning and built an altar beside Mount Sinai, and twelve pillars for the twelve tribes of Israel. Exodus 24:4.

Here similarly 'an altar' was the representative of all worship, and indeed was the representative of good present in worship. 'The twelve pillars' however were the representative in worship of truth that stems from good - 'twelve' meaning every aspect of truth in its entirety, see 577, 2089, 2129 (end), 2130 (end), 3272; and the twelve tribes likewise meaning every aspect of truth in the Church, as in the Lord's Divine mercy will be shown in the next chapter.

[5] Because altars were representative of all good in worship, and the Jewish Church was established so as to represent the celestial Church which acknowledged no other truth than truth stemming from good, which is called celestial truth (for the celestial Church was totally unwilling to separate truth from good, so much so that it was unwilling even to refer to anything of faith or truth without thinking about good, and doing so from good, see 202, 337, 2069, 2715, 2718, 3246), truth was therefore represented by the stones of the altar. And they were forbidden to represent it by means of pillars lest in so doing they separated truth from good and by representation worshipped truth instead of good. This accounts for the following prohibition in Moses,

You shall not plant for yourself a grove of any kind of tree beside the altar of Jehovah your God which you shall make for yourself. And you shall not erect for yourself a pillar, which Jehovah your God hates. Deuteronomy 16:21-22.

For worshipping truth separated from good, or faith separated from charity, is contrary to the Divine since it is contrary to order, meant by 'you shall not erect for yourself a pillar, which Jehovah your God hates'.

[6] Despite this they did erect them and so represented things that are contrary to order, as is clear in Hosea,

Israel, according to the multiplying of his fruit, multiplies altars; according to the goodness of their land they make well their pillars. But He will overturn their altars, and lay waste their pillars. Hosea 10:1-2.

In the first Book of Kings,

Judah did what was evil in the eyes of Jehovah, and they built for themselves high places and pillars and groves on every high hill, and under every green tree. 1 Kings 14:22-23.

In the second Book of Kings,

The children of Israel set up pillars for themselves and groves on every high hill and under every green tree. 2 Kings 17:10.

In the same book,

Hezekiah removed the high places, and broke down the pillars, and cut down the grove, and smashed the bronze snake which Moses had made, because they had been burning incense to it. 2 Kings 18:4.

[7] Since gentile nations too derived through tradition the idea that the holiness of worship was to be represented by means of altars and pillars, and yet they were under the influence of evil and falsity, the altars among the nations therefore mean the evils of worship and the pillars the falsities. This was why the command was given for them to be destroyed. In Moses,

The altars of the nations you shall overthrow, and you shall break down their pillars and tear down their groves. Exodus 34:13; Deuteronomy 7:5; 12:3.

In the same author,

You shall not bow down to the gods of the nations, or worship them, or do according to their works, for you shall utterly destroy them, and utterly break down their pillars. Exodus 23:24.

'The gods of the nations' stands for falsities, 'their works' for evils, 'breaking down their pillars' for destroying worship arising out of falsity.

[8] In Jeremiah,

Nebuchadnezzar king of Babel will break down the pillars of the house of the sun that is in the land of Egypt, and the houses of the gods of Egypt he will burn with fire. Jeremiah 43:13.

In Ezekiel,

By means of the hoofs of his horses Nebuchadnezzar king of Babel will trample all your streets, slay the people with the sword, and cause your mighty pillars to come down to the ground. Ezekiel 26:11.

This refers to Tyre. 'Nebuchadnezzar king of Babel' stands for that which lays waste, 1327 (end). 'The hoofs of horses' stands for the lowest form of intellectual concepts, such as facts based on mere sensory impressions - 'hoofs' meaning lowest concepts, as will in the Lord's Divine mercy be confirmed elsewhere. 'Horses' stands for matters of the understanding, 2760-2762, 'streets' for truths, and in the contrary sense for falsities, 2336. 'trampling' on them is destroying cognitions of truth, which are meant by 'Tyre' - 'Tyre', the subject here, meaning cognitions of truth, 1201. 'Slaying the people with the sword' stands for destroying truths by means of falsity - 'people' being used in reference to truths, 1259, 1260, 3295, 3581, and 'sword' meaning falsity engaged in conflict, 2799. From this one may see what 'causing your mighty pillars to come down to the ground' means - 'might' being used in reference either to truth or to falsity, as is also clear from the Word.

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

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Arcana Coelestia # 2708

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2708. 'And dwelt in the wilderness' means that which is obscure comparatively. This is clear from the meaning of 'dwelling' as living, dealt with in 2451, and from the meaning of 'a wilderness' as that which possesses little life, dealt with in 1927, here as that which is obscure comparatively. By that which is obscure comparatively is meant the state of the spiritual Church in comparison with the state of the celestial Church, that is, the state of those who are spiritual in comparison with the state of those who are celestial. Those who are celestial are moved by the affection for good, those who are spiritual by the affection for truth. Those who are celestial possess perception, whereas those who are spiritual possess the dictate of conscience. To those who are celestial the Lord appears as a Sun, but to those who are spiritual as a Moon, 1521, 1530, 1531, 2495. The light which the former have - enabling them to see good and truth from the Lord with their eyes as well as to perceive it - is like the light of the sun in the daytime; but the light which the latter have from the Lord is like the light of the moon at night, and so, compared with those who are celestial, these dwell in obscurity. The reason for this is that those who are celestial dwell in love to the Lord, and so in the Lord's life itself, whereas those who are spiritual dwell in charity towards the neighbour and in faith, and so, it is true, in the Lord's life but in a rather more obscure way. All this explains why those who are celestial never reason about faith or the truths of faith, but because a perception of truth from good exists with them, simply say, 'That is so', whereas those who are spiritual talk and reason about the truths of faith because a conscience for what is good received from truth exists with them. A further reason for this difference is that with those who are celestial the good of love has been implanted in the will part of their minds, where man's chief life resides, but with those who are spiritual it has been implanted in the understanding part, where man's secondary life resides. This is the reason why, compared with the celestial, the spiritual dwell in obscurity, see 81, 202, 337, 765, 784, 895, 1114-1125, 1155, 1577, 1824, 2048, 2088, 2227, 2454, 2507. This comparative obscurity is here called 'a wilderness'.

[2] In the Word 'a wilderness' can mean that which is sparsely inhabited and cultivated, or it can mean that which is totally uninhabited and uncultivated, and so is used in two senses. When it means that which is sparsely inhabited and cultivated, that is, where there are few dwellings, and where there are sheepfolds, pastures, and waters, it means that thing or those persons who, compared with others, have little life and light, as is the case with that which is spiritual or those who are spiritual in comparison with that which is celestial or those who are celestial. When however it means that which is totally uninhabited and uncultivated, that is, where there are no dwellings, sheepfolds, pastures, and waters, it means those who have undergone vastation as regards good and desolation as regards truth.

[3] That 'a wilderness' can mean that which, compared with other places, is sparsely inhabited and cultivated, that is, where there are few dwellings, and where there are sheepfolds, pastures, and waters, is clear from the following places: In Isaiah,

Sing to Jehovah a new song, His praise from the end of the earth, those that go down to the sea, and the fullness of it, the islands and their inhabitants. The wilderness and its cities will lift up [their voice]; Kedar will inhabit the settlements, 1 the inhabitants of the rock will sing, they will shout from the top of the mountains. Isaiah 42:10-11.

In Ezekiel,

I will make with them a covenant of peace and I will banish the evil wild animal from the land, and they will dwell securely in the wilderness and sleep in the woods, and I will give them and the places around My hill a blessing. The tree of the field will give its fruit, and the earth will give its increase. 2 Ezekiel 34:25-27.

This refers to those who are spiritual. In Hosea,

I will bring her into the wilderness and will speak tenderly to her; and I will give her her vineyards from it. Hosea 2:14-15.

This refers to the desolation of truth and to the comfort that follows later.

[4] In David,

The folds of the wilderness drip, and the hills gird themselves with rejoicing; the meadows clothe themselves with flocks, and the valleys are covered over with grain. Psalms 65:12-13.

In Isaiah,

I will make the wilderness into a pool of water, and the parched land into streams of water. I will put in the wilderness the shittim-cedar, and the myrtle, and the oil tree. I will set in the wilderness the fir, that men may see and know, and may consider and understand together, for the hand of Jehovah has done this, and the Holy One of Israel has created it. Isaiah 41:18-20.

This refers to the regeneration of those who have no knowledge of the truth, that is, gentiles, and to the enlightenment and teaching of those who have experienced desolation. 'The wilderness' is used in reference to these. 'The cedar, the myrtle, and the oil tree' stands for the truths and goods of the interior man, 'fir' for those of the exterior man. In David,

Jehovah turns rivers into a wilderness, and streams of waters into dryness. He turns a wilderness into a pool of water, and parched land into streams of water. Psalms 107:33, 35

Here the meaning is similar. In Isaiah,

The wilderness and the dry land will be glad for them, and the lonely place will rejoice and blossom like the rose. It will bud prolifically. Waters will break forth in the wilderness, and streams in the lonely place. Isaiah 35:1-2, 6.

In the same prophet,

You will be like a watered garden and like a spring of waters whose waters do not fail; and those that be of you will build the wilderness of old. Isaiah 58:11-12.

In the same prophet,

Until the spirit is poured out on us from on high, and the wilderness will become Carmel, and Carmel counted as a forest. And judgement will dwell in the wilderness and righteousness on Carmel. Isaiah 32:15-16.

This refers to the spiritual Church which, though inhabited and cultivated, is, in comparison [with the celestial Church], called 'a wilderness', for it is said that 'judgement will dwell in the wilderness and righteousness on Carmel'. It is evident from the places just quoted that 'a wilderness' means an obscure state compared with other states not only because it is described as 'a wilderness' but also as 'a woodland'; and an obscure state is plainly the meaning in Jeremiah,

O generation, observe the word of Jehovah. Have I been a wilderness to Israel, or a land of darkness? Jeremiah 2:31.

[5] That 'a wilderness' can mean that which is totally uninhabited and uncultivated, that is, where there are no dwellings, sheepfolds, pastures, and waters, and so can mean those who have experienced vastation as regards good and desolation as regards truth, is also clear from the Word. This kind of wilderness is used with two different meanings; that is to say, it may be used in reference to those who are subsequently reformed or in reference to those who are unable to be reformed. Regarding those who are subsequently reformed, such as Hagar and her son represent here, it is said in Jeremiah,

Thus said Jehovah, I have remembered you, the mercy of the days of your youth, your going after Me in the wilderness, in a land not sown. Jeremiah 2:2.

This refers to Jerusalem, which in this case means the Ancient Church that was spiritual. In Moses,

The portion of Jehovah is His people, Jacob is the line of His inheritance. He found him in a wilderness land and in the waste, the howling, the lonely place. He encompassed him, led him to understand, and kept him as the pupil of His eye. Deuteronomy 32:9-10.

In David,

They wandered in the wilderness, in a desolate way; they did not find an inhabited city. Psalms 107:4.

This refers to those who have experienced desolation of truth and are being reformed. In Ezekiel,

I will bring you to the wilderness of the peoples and I will enter into judgement with you there, as I entered into judgement with your fathers in the wilderness of the land of Egypt. Ezekiel 20:35-36.

This likewise refers to the vastation and desolation of those who are being reformed.

[6] The travels and wanderings of the Israelites in the wilderness represented nothing else than the vastation and desolation prior to reformation of those who have faith. It consequently represented the temptation of them, for when people undergo spiritual temptations they experience vastation and desolation, as may also become clear from the following in Moses,

Jehovah carried you 3 along in the wilderness, as a man carries his son, in [all] the way [you went], until [you reached] this place. Deuteronomy 1:31.

And elsewhere in the same book,

You shall remember all the way in which Jehovah your God has led you forty years already in the wilderness to afflict you, to tempt you, and to know what is in your heart, whether you will keep His commandments or not. He afflicted you, caused you to hunger, caused you to eat manna which you do not know nor your fathers knew, so that you may recognize that man does not live by bread only but that man lives by all that goes out of the mouth of Jehovah. Deuteronomy 8:2-3.

And further on in the same chapter,

Do not forget that Jehovah led you in the great and terrible wilderness where there were serpents, fiery snakes, and scorpions, parched places where there was no water, and that He brought you water out of the rock of flint. He fed you in the wilderness with manna which your fathers did not know, that He might afflict you, tempt you, to do you good in the end. Deuteronomy 8:15-16.

Here 'wilderness' stands for the vastation and desolation such as people experience who undergo temptations. Their travels and wanderings in the wilderness for forty years describe every state of the Church militant - how when it is self-reliant it goes under but when it relies on the Lord it overcomes.

[7] The description in John of the woman who fled into the wilderness means nothing else than temptation experienced by the Church, referred to as follows,

The woman who brought forth the male child fled into the wilderness, where she has a place prepared by God. To the woman were given two wings of a great eagle, so that she might fly into the wilderness, into her own place. And the serpent poured water like a stream out of his mouth after the woman, to swallow her up in the river. But the earth helped the woman, for the earth opened its mouth and swallowed the stream which the dragon poured out of his mouth. Revelation 12:6, 14-16.

[8] That 'a wilderness' may be used in reference to a totally vastated Church and to people totally vastated as regards good and truth who are unable to be reformed may be seen in the following in Isaiah,

I will make the rivers a wilderness; their fish will stink for lack of water and will die of thirst; I will clothe the heavens with thick darkness. Isaiah 50:2-3.

In the same prophet,

The cities of Your holiness were a wilderness - Zion was a wilderness, Jerusalem lay waste. Isaiah 64:10,

In Jeremiah,

I looked, and behold, Carmel was a wilderness, and all its cities were destroyed from before Jehovah. Jeremiah 4:26.

In the same prophet,

Many shepherds have spoiled My vineyard, they have trampled down [My] portion, they have made the portion of My delight into a desolate wilderness. They have made it into a desolation; desolate, it has mourned over Me. The whole land has been made desolate, for nobody takes it to heart. On all the slopes in the wilderness those who lay waste have come. Jeremiah 12:10-12.

In Joel,

Fire has devoured the folds of the wilderness, and flame will burn up all the trees of the field. The streams of water have dried up, and fire has devoured the folds of the wilderness. Joel 1:19-20.

In Isaiah, He made the world like a wilderness and destroyed its cities. Isaiah 14:17.

This refers to Lucifer. In the same prophet,

The prophecy concerning the wilderness of the sea. Like storms in the south it comes from the wilderness, from a terrible land. Isaiah 21:1 and following verses.

'The wilderness of the sea' stands for truth that has been vastated by facts and by reasonings based on these.

[9] All these places show what is meant by the following reference to John the Baptist,

It was said by Isaiah, The voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare a way for the Lord, make His paths straight. Matthew 3:3; Mark 1:3; Luke 3:4; John 1:23; Isaiah 40:3.

These words imply that at that time the Church was so totally vastated that no good and no truth remained any longer. This is quite evident from the fact that nobody at that time knew of the existence in man of anything internal, or of anything internal in the Word, so that nobody knew that the Messiah or Christ was coming to save them for ever. The places quoted above also show what is meant by the statement that John was in the wilderness until the time of his manifestation to Israel, Luke 1:80, that he preached in the wilderness of Judea, Matthew 3:1 and following verses, and that he baptized in the wilderness, Mark 1:4; for by this he also represented the state of the Church. From the meaning of 'a wilderness' it may also be seen why the Lord retired so often into the wilderness, as in Matthew 4:1; Matthew 15:32-end; Mark 1:12-13, 35, 45; 6:31-36; Luke 4:1; 5:16; 9:10 and following verses; John 11:54; and also from the meaning of 'a mountain' why the Lord retired into the mountains, as in Matthew 14:23; 15:29-31; 17:1 and following verses; 28:16-17; Mark 3:13-14; 6:46; 9:2-9; Luke 6:12-13; 9:28; John 6:15.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. literally, courts. The Hebrew may mean courts or else villages which Swedenborg has in another place where he quotes this verse.

2. The Latin means fruit but the Hebrew means increase which Swedenborg has in other places where he quotes this verse.

3. The Latin means them but the Hebrew means you.

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