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Josua 4

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1 Då nu allt folket helt och hållet hade kommit över Jordan, sade HERREN till Josua:

2 »Väljen ut bland folket tolv män, en man ur var stam,

3 och bjuden dem och sägen: 'Tagen här ur Jordan, från den plats där prästerna stodo med sina fötter, tolv stenar, och lyften upp dem och fören dem över med eder, och läggen ned dem på det ställe, där I skolen lägra eder i natt.'»

4 Då kallade Josua till sig de tolv män som han hade utsett bland Israels barn, en man ur var stam.

5 Och Josua sade till dem: »Dragen åstad framför HERRENS, eder Guds, ark, och gån ut mitt i Jordan; och var och en av eder må där lyfta upp en sten på axeln, efter antalet av Israels barns stammar.

6 Detta skall nämligen bliva ett minnesmärke bland eder. När då edra barn i framtiden fråga: 'Vad betyda dessa stenar?',

7 skolen I svara dem så: 'De betyda att Jordans vatten här blev avskuret i sitt lopp, framför HERRENS förbundsark; ja, när den gick över Jordan, blev Jordans vatten avskuret i sitt lopp. Därför skola dessa stenar vara ett åminnelsemärke för Israels barn till evärdlig tid.'»

8 Då gjorde Israels barn såsom Josua bjöd dem; de togo upp tolv stenar ur Jordan, såsom HERREN hade tillsagt Josua, efter antalet av Israels barns stammar; och de förde dem över med sig till lägerstället och lade ned dem där.

9 Tillika reste Josua tolv stenar mitt i Jordan, på samma plats där prästerna som buro förbundsarken hade stått med sina fötter; och de finnas kvar där ännu i dag.

10 Och prästerna som buro arken blevo stående mitt i Jordan, till dess att allt det var fullgjort, som HERREN hade bjudit Josua att tillsäga folket, alldeles i enlighet med vad Mose förut hade bjudit Josua; och folket gick över med hast.

11 Men när allt folket helt och hållet hade kommit över, gick ock HERRENS ark över, jämte prästerna, och tog plats framför folket.

12 Och Rubens barn och Gads barn och ena hälften av Manasse stam drogo väpnade åstad i spetsen för Israels barn, såsom Mose hade tillsagt dem.

13 Det var vid pass fyrtio tusen män som så drogo åstad, väpnade till strid, för att kämpa inför HERRENJerikos hedmarker.

14 På den dagen gjorde HERREN Josua stor i hela Israels ögon, och de fruktade honom, såsom de fruktat Mose, så länge denne levde.

15 Och HERREN sade till Josua:

16 »Bjud prästerna som bära vittnesbördets ark att stiga upp ur Jordan

17 Och Josua bjöd prästerna och sade: »Stigen upp ur Jordan

18 När då prästerna som buro HERRENS förbundsark stego upp ur Jordan, hade deras fötter knappt hunnit upp på torra landet, förrän Jordans vatten vände tillbaka till sin plats och nådde, såsom förut, upp över alla sina bräddar.

19 Det var på tionde dagen i första månaden som folket steg upp ur Jordan; och de lägrade sig i Gilgal, på gränsen av östra Jerikoområdet.

20 Och de tolv stenarna som de hade tagit ur Jordan reste Josua i Gilgal.

21 Och han sade till Israels barn: »När nu edra barn i framtiden fråga sina fäder: 'Vad betyda dessa stenar?',

22 då skolen I göra det kunnigt för edra barn och säga: 'Israel gick på torr mark över denna Jordan,

23 i det att HERREN, eder Gud, lät vattnet i Jordan torka ut framför eder, till dess I haden gått över den, likasom HERREN, eder Gud, gjorde med Röda havet, som han lät torka ut framför oss, till dess vi hade gått över det;

24 på det att alla folk på jorden må förnimma huru stark HERRENS hand är, så att I frukten HERREN, eder Gud, alltid.'»

   

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Exploring the Meaning of Joshua 4

Napsal(a) New Christian Bible Study Staff, Julian Duckworth

Joshua 4: Twelve stones are taken from the river Jordan

In this chapter we pick up on the command to take twelve men, one from each tribe, which was mentioned in chapter 3. The task is for each man to pick up a large stone from where the priests’ feet stand, and take it across, and put it in the lodging place. These stones will be as memorial stones so that later generations who ask what these stones mean will be told about the miracle of the Lord in the crossing of the river Jordan.

Later, the Israelites camped at Gilgal and Joshua set the twelve stones up as a permanent memorial.

A ‘stone’ is a piece of hard rock. It corresponds to a truth; for us it stands for a truth which we have made ours and which guides us in our life (Apocalypse Revealed 231). It might be the truth that the Lord’s providence is involved in everything that happens. It could be the great truth that we will live for ever, or that God came on earth as a human being and overcame the power of hell. These and other truths are rock hard truths or stones.

But here, it is a stone which has been washed and worked on by the waters of the river Jordan, and over much time has become fashioned and rounded by erosion. So, it could be a life-truth, for example that we are to show respect to other people. That’s a great truth, but now it is connected with our understanding of the Lord. So we are to show respect to other people because each and every person has been created by God for a unique purpose. And we can also add that we know how it feels when other people respect us.

So we assemble our twelve memorial stones. These are to be recalled, remembered, revisited by us again and again as time passes. “Yes, God brought me here from where I was before.” (Arcana Caelestia 1988). This meaning of the stones helps us with the apparent contradiction in the chapter between Joshua 4:9 where “the stones are set up in the Jordan and are there to this day” and verse Joshua 4:20 where “Joshua sets up the twelves stones from out of the Jordan, in Gilgal.” Stones can’t be in two places at once, but yes, spiritually they can and need to be.

We need to always remember and be mindful of how the Lord works with us in giving us truths for our life. Everything is the Lord! These are stones in the Jordan. Yet we need to always remember that we are to live, act, and turn away from any evil as if it is only us making that decision and doing it. These are the stones set up at Gilgal (Apocalypse Explained 700[14]). Both of them are involved in our regeneration and spiritual life.

Then we are told that the men of the tribes of Reuben, Gad and half the tribe of Manasseh went across the Jordan armed and went before all the other tribes. This links with several other mentions of these tribes who had chosen to live back over the Jordan and not in the land of Canaan. They stand for our outward life and our life in the world which, while it is not directly spiritual, must have qualities that come from God’s truths. Here, those qualities come from being willing to go in and fight to help take the land (Arcana Caelestia 2184).

Verse 13 says that about 40,000 prepared for war and crossed the river Jordan before the Lord for battle. Here is a number. Numbers in the Word are helpful clues to the inner meaning. The number 40 always stands for some kind of temptation or crisis in the Word – for example, Jesus was in the wilderness 40 days and 40 nights, tempted. Here, 40 has grown to become 40,000 but it has the same meaning of temptation (Arcana Caelestia 2273). Our spiritual life and regeneration will certainly take us into various temptations (‘battles’) and the Lord allows them so that we grow stronger through them. The whole conquest of Canaan is nothing else!

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Arcana Coelestia # 2273

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2273. That 'He said, I will not do it for the sake of the forty' means that they will be saved is clear without explanation. Regarding those who are meant by 'the forty-five' in the previous verse, it was said, 'I will not destroy it if I find forty-five', which meant that they would not perish if goods could be joined to truths. In the verse that follows here which has regard to 'the forty' it is said, 'I will not do it for the sake of the forty', which does not mean that people would be saved merely because of temptations, for there are some undergoing temptations who give way, so that in their case goods are not joined to truths. Nor indeed is anyone saved because of temptations if he places any merit in them, for if he places any merit in temptations he does so from self-love, in that he boasts about his temptations and believes that he has merited heaven more than others, and at the same time he is thinking about his own pre-eminence over others, despising others in comparison with himself, all of which is contrary to mutual love and consequently to heavenly blessedness.

[2] The temptations in which a person is victorious entail the belief that all others are more worthy than he, and that he is more like those in hell than those in heaven, for ideas such as these present themselves to him in temptations. When therefore after temptations a person enters into ways of thinking that are contrary to this outlook it is a sign that he has not been victorious, for the thoughts he had in temptations are those towards which the thoughts that he has following temptations can be turned. But if the thoughts he has after temptations cannot be turned in the direction of those he had during them, he has either given way in temptation, or he has departed into similar, and sometimes graver ones, till he has been brought to that healthier outlook in which he believes he has merited nothing. From this it is clear that 'forty' means people with whom by means of temptations goods have been joined to truths.

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