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Génesis 39

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1 Y descendido José a Egipto, lo compró Potifar, oficial del Faraón, capitán de los de la guardia, varón egipcio, de mano de los ismaelitas que lo habían llevado allá.

2 Mas el SEÑOR fue con José, y fue varón prosperado; y estaba en la casa de su SEÑOR el egipcio.

3 Y vio su señor que el señor era con él, y que todo lo que él hacía, el señor lo hacía prosperar en su mano.

4 Así halló José gracia en sus ojos, y le servía; y él le hizo mayordomo de su casa, y entregó en su poder todo lo que tenía.

5 Y aconteció que, desde cuando le dio el encargo de su casa, y de todo lo que tenía, el SEÑOR bendijo la casa del egipcio a causa de José; y la bendición del SEÑOR fue sobre todo lo que tenía, así en casa como en el campo.

6 Y dejó todo lo que tenía en la mano de José; ni con él sabía de nada más que del pan que comía. Y era José de hermoso semblante y bella presencia.

7 Y aconteció después de esto, que la mujer de su señor alzó sus ojos sobre José, y dijo: Duerme conmigo.

8 Y él no quiso, y dijo a la mujer de su señor: He aquí que mi señor no sabe conmigo lo que hay en casa, y ha puesto en mi mano todo lo que tiene.

9 No hay otro mayor que yo en esta casa, y ninguna cosa me ha reservado sino a ti, por cuanto tú eres su mujer, ¿cómo, pues, haría yo este grande mal y pecaría contra Dios?

10 Y fue que hablando ella a José cada día, y no escuchándola él para acostarse al lado de ella, para estar con ella.

11 Aconteció que entró él un día en casa para hacer su oficio, y no había nadie de los de casa allí en casa.

12 Y ella lo asió por su ropa, diciendo: Duerme conmigo. Entonces él dejó su ropa en manos de ella, y huyó, y se salió fuera.

13 Y acaeció que cuando vio ella que le había dejado su ropa en sus manos, y había huido fuera,

14 llamó a los de casa, y les habló diciendo: Mirad, nos ha traído un hebreo, para que hiciese burla de nosotros; vino él a mí para dormir conmigo, y yo di grandes voces;

15 y viendo que yo alzaba la voz y gritaba, dejó junto a mí su ropa, y huyó, y salió.

16 Y ella puso junto a sí la ropa de él, hasta que vino su señor a su casa.

17 Entonces le habló ella semejantes palabras, diciendo: El siervo hebreo que nos trajiste, vino a mí para deshonrarme;

18 y cuando yo alcé mi voz y grite, él dejó su ropa junto a mí, y huyó fuera.

19 Y sucedió que cuando oyó su señor las palabras que su mujer le hablara, diciendo: Así me ha tratado tu siervo; se encendió su furor.

20 Y tomó su señor a José, y le puso en la casa de la cárcel, donde estaban los presos del rey, y estuvo allí en la casa de la cárcel.

21 Mas el SEÑOR fue con José, y extendió a él su misericordia, y le dio gracia en ojos del príncipe de la casa de la cárcel.

22 Y el príncipe de la casa de la cárcel entregó en mano de José todos los presos que había en aquella prisión; todo lo que hacían allí, él lo hacía.

23 No veía el príncipe de la cárcel cosa alguna que en su mano estaba; porque el SEÑOR era con él, y lo que él hacía, el SEÑOR lo prosperaba.

   

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Arcana Coelestia # 4973

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4973. And he was in the house of his lord the Egyptian. That this signifies that it might be initiated into natural good, is evident from the signification of a “lord,” as being good, of which presently; and from the signification of an “Egyptian,” as being memory-knowledge in general, and hence the natural (see n. 4967). That to be “in a house” is to be initiated, is because a “house” is the mind in which good is (see n. 3538), here the natural mind; and moreover “house” is predicated of good (n. 3652, 3720). There is in man a natural mind and a rational mind; the natural mind is in his external man, the rational mind in his internal. Memory-knowledges are the truths of the natural mind, which are said to be “in their house” when they are conjoined there with good; for good and truth constitute together one house, as husband and wife. But the goods and truths here treated of are interior; for they correspond to the celestial of the spiritual from the rational, which is represented by Joseph. The interior corresponding truths in the natural mind are applications to uses, and the interior goods therein are uses.

[2] The name “Lord” is often used in the Word; and one who has no knowledge of the internal sense supposes that nothing more is meant by it than what is meant by the use of this term in common speech; but “Lord” is never used in the Word except where good is treated of, and the same is true of “Jehovah;” but when truth is treated of, “God” and “King” are used. For this reason by a “lord” is signified good, as is evident from the following passages.

In Moses:

Jehovah your God, He is God of gods, and Lord of lords (Deuteronomy 10:17).

In David:

Confess ye to Jehovah. Confess ye to the God of gods. Confess ye to the Lord of lords (Psalms 136:1-3); where Jehovah or the Lord is called “God of gods” from the Divine truth which proceeds from Him, and “Lord of lords” from the Divine good which is in Him.

[3] So in the Revelation:

The Lamb shall overcome them; for He is Lord of lords, and King of kings (Revelation 17:14).

And again:

He that sat upon the white horse hath upon His vesture and upon His thigh a name written, King of kings, and Lord of lords (Revelation 19:16).

That the Lord is here called “King of kings” from Divine truth, and “Lord of lords” from Divine good, is plain from the particulars; the “name written” is His quality (n. 144, 145, 1754, 1896, 2009, 2724, 3006); the “vesture” on which it was written is the truth of faith (n. 1073, 2576, 4545, 4763); the “thigh” on which also that quality was written, is the good of love (n. 3021, 4277, 4280, 4575). From this also it is plain that the Lord from Divine truth is called “King of kings” and from Divine good “Lord of lords.” (That the Lord is called “King” from Divine truth may be seen above, n. 2015, 2069, 3009, 3670, 4581)

[4] From this it is also clear what is meant by the “Lord’s Christ,” in Luke:

Answer was made to Simeon by the Holy Spirit, that he should not see death, until he had seen the Lord’s Christ (Luke 2:26).

The “Lord’s Christ” is the Divine truth of the Divine good; for “Christ” is the same as “Messiah,” and “Messiah” is the “Anointed” or “King” (n. 3008, 3009). “The Lord” here is Jehovah. In the Word of the New Testament the name “Jehovah” is nowhere used; but instead of it “Lord” and “God” (n. 2921); as also in Luke:

Jesus said, How say they that the Christ is David’s Son? for David himself saith in the book of Psalms, The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit Thou on My right hand (Luke 20:41-42).

The same passage reads thus in David:

The saying of Jehovah unto my Lord, Sit Thou on My right hand (Psalms 110:1).

It is plain that “Jehovah” in David is called “Lord” in the Evangelist. “Lord” there denotes the Divine good of the Divine Human; omnipotence is signified by “sitting at the right hand” (n. 3387, 4592, 4933 at the end).

[5] When the Lord was in the world He was Divine truth; but when He was glorified, that is, when He had made the Human in Himself Divine, He became Divine good, from which thereafter Divine truth proceeds. For this reason the disciples after the resurrection did not call Him “Master,” as before, but “Lord,” as is evident in John (21:7, 12, 15-17, 20), and also in the rest of the Evangelists. The Divine truth, which the Lord was when in the world, and which thereafter proceeds from Him, that is, from the Divine good, is called also “the angel of the covenant,” in Malachi:

The Lord whom ye seek shall suddenly come to His temple, and the Angel of the covenant whom ye desire (Malachi 3:1).

[6] As Divine good is meant by “Lord,” and Divine truth by “King,” therefore where the Lord is spoken of as having dominion and a kingdom, “dominion” is predicated of Divine good, and a “kingdom” of Divine truth, and therefore also the Lord is called “Lord of nations,” and “King of peoples;” for by “nations” are signified those who are in good, and by “peoples” those who are in truth (n. 1259, 1260, 1849, 3581).

[7] Good is called a “lord” relatively to a servant, and it is called a “father” relatively to a son-as in Malachi:

A son honoreth his father, and a servant his lord; if then I be a father, where is My honor; and if I be a lord, where is My fear? (Malachi 1:6).

And in David:

Joseph was sold for a servant. The discourse of Jehovah proved him. The king sent and loosed him, the ruler of nations opened for him, he set him lord of his house, and ruler in all his possession (Psalms 105:17, 19-21).

That by “Joseph” here is meant the Lord, is evident from the several particulars; the “lord” here is the Divine good of the Divine Human.

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