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Génesis 26:23

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23 Y de allí subió a Beerseba.

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Tierra

  
by Brita Conroy

Tierra" es una palabra general que puede ser pensada como un contenedor para otras palabras más específicas, como tierra, campo o jardín. Cada uno de estos significa una persona en una serie ascendente a medida que esa persona aprende verdades de la Biblia, piensa en ellas, y trata de aplicarlas a la vida. La serie representa la forma de convertirse en bueno y sabio. "Tierra" y "suelo" son términos que pueden ir en cualquier dirección, como en la parábola del sembrador (Mateo 13:4-8) había tanto tierra buena como mala, pero "campo" y "jardín" significan mentes que se regeneran hacia el bien. En el Apocalipsis la palabra "tierra" se utiliza tanto como un nivel del suelo, ya que la usamos en su sentido natural, como en el sentido de un grupo. La acción en este libro tiene lugar en la gran zona media del mundo espiritual, donde la gente va primero y donde se ordena. Hay tanto gente mala como buena allí, y a veces al final de una iglesia el mal puede tener gran influencia antes de que llegue un gran juicio. Este nivel del reino espiritual se llama la "tierra" a la que el dragón fue arrojado (Apocalipsis 12:9) y al que las estrellas cayeron (Apocalipsis 12:4). La "tierra" que se tragó el diluvio del dragón significa aquellas personas todavía sinceras dentro de la iglesia que descartaron el diluvio de las falsedades del dragón (Apocalipsis 12:15). "Tierra" en la Biblia puede significar una persona o un grupo de personas con ideas afines como en una iglesia. Pero se refiere específicamente a lo externo de la mente de la persona, o del pensamiento general del grupo. Si el cielo y la tierra se mencionan juntos, entonces tanto lo interno como lo externo de la mente son algo a tener en cuenta cuando se lee la historia de la creación.

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Arcana Coelestia # 3438

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3438. 'Jehovah appeared to him that night, and said' means the Lord's perception regarding that obscurity. This is clear from the meaning of 'Jehovah's appearing and saying' - when it has reference to the Lord - as perceiving from the Divine ('Jehovah's appearing to him' is perception from the Divine, see 3367, and 'laying' is perceiving, 2862, 3395. For Jehovah was within Him, and so long as the Human was not yet glorified, Jehovah's 'appearing' was a Divine perception - or perception from the Divine. Therefore 'Jehovah's appearing to him and saying' has this meaning of perceiving from the Divine); and from the meaning of 'night' as a state of shade or obscurity, dealt with in 1712. By that obscurity is meant the literal sense of the Word, for the relationship of that sense to the internal sense is that of shade to light.

[2] To enable people to have a clearer knowledge of what the situation is with the literal sense of the Word, let this be discussed briefly: The relationship of the internal sense to the literal is like the relationship between the interiors and the exteriors of the human being, that is, between all that is celestial or spiritual in him and all that is natural or bodily. His interiors dwell in the light of heaven, but his exteriors in the light of the world. For the nature of the difference between the light of heaven and the light of the world, consequently for the difference between things belonging to the light of heaven and those belonging to the light of the world, see 1521-1533, 1619-1632, 1783, 1880, 2776, 3138, 3167, 3190, 3195, 3222, 3223, 3225, 3337, 3339, 3341, 3413. That is to say, the difference is like that existing between the light of day and the shade of night. Since man dwells in that shade and does not wish to know that truth from the Lord has light within it he inevitably believes that his shade is light, and indeed the reverse also - that his light is shade. For he is like the owl which, when flying in the shade of night, imagines it is in the light, but when flying in the light of day imagines it is in the shade. Indeed the internal eye - that is, the understanding - by means of which a person sees interiorly, assumes no other shape with someone like that, such being exactly how he has shaped it. For he opens it when he looks downwards, that is, to worldly and bodily things, and shuts it when he looks upwards, that is, to spiritual and celestial. With these people it is similar with the Word. That which appears in its literal sense they imagine to belong to the light but that which appears in the internal sense they imagine to belong to the shade. For how the Word appears to anyone depends on his own essential nature. In reality the internal sense of the Word in relation to its literal sense is like the light of heaven to the light of the world, 3086, 3108, that is, it is like the light of day to the light of night.

[3] Within the internal sense there are individual details, millions of which together constitute one particular feature that occurs in the literal sense. Or what amounts to the same, within the internal sense there exist particular features, millions of which together constitute just one general whole that occurs in the literal sense. This general whole is what is seen by man, but not the particular features which are present within it and which constitute it. Nevertheless man can see within the general whole the order that holds the particular features together, though he sees it according to his own essential nature. That order is the holiness which stirs his affections.

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