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ယေဇကျေလ 43:17

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17 အောက်အထစ်သည်လည်း စတုရန်းဖြစ်၍ အလျား တဆယ်လေးတောင်၊ အနံလည်းတဆယ် လေးတောင်ရှိရမည်။ အနားပတ်သည်လည်း အကျယ် တထွာရှိရမည်။ ဘိနပ်သည်ယဇ်ပလ္လင်ပတ်လည်၌ တတောင်ထွက်၍၊ တက်ရာလမ်းသည် အရှေ့သို့ မျက်နှာ ပြုရမည်။

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Altar

  

The first altar mentioned in the Word was the one built by Noah after he came out of the ark, after being saved from the great flood. On that altar, he sacrificed clean animals to the Lord.

Mountains represent the Lord because of their height; we need to raise our thoughts above worldly things when "talking" with the Lord. An altar is a small artificial mountain. When it's used in worship, it can call to mind this raising of thought. The fire and smoke that rise from an altar are symbolically being sent to the Lord.

Most altars were made from unhewn stones. Stones represent truths. Unhewn stones - ones that have not been shaped by men - represent truths from the Word, truths that have not been adulterated.

The clean beasts to be sacrificed represent good things, charitable acts done because they are right. The clean birds represent thoughts about doctrine and actions, and about what is right. Presenting these things is an acknowledgment that we have them from the Lord, and a giving thanks to Him for them.

In the Israelitish Tabernacle, the altar of burnt offering represented the acknowledgment of good and the altar of incense that of truth. For this reason this larger altar, which was outside by the door, was made of brass which signifies natural good, while the altar of incense was made of gold, which signifies love to the Lord from whom comes truth.

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 3107

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3107. 'Ten [shekels] of gold in weight' means the full amount involved in the introduction. This is clear from the meaning of 'ten', like a hundred, as a complete state, dealt with in 1988, 2636, from the meaning of 'gold' which here is a type of currency whose weight is used to indicate value, and from the meaning of 'weight' as the state of something as regards good, dealt with above in 3104. From this it is evident that 'ten [shekels] of gold in weight' means a complete state of what is being valued as regards good. The fact that the full amount involved in the introduction is meant is clear from the details in this chapter which deals with the introduction or betrothing.

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