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Domarboken 18

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1 På den tiden fanns ingen konung i Israel. Och på den tiden sökte sig daniternas stam en arvedel till att bo i, ty ända dittills hade icke något område tillfallit den såsom arvedel bland Israels övriga stammar.

2 sände då Dans barn ur sin släkt fem män, uttagna bland dem, tappra män, från Sorga och Estaol, till att bespeja landet och undersöka det; och de sade till dem: »Gån åstad och undersöken landet.» Så kommo de till Efraims bergsbygd, fram till Mikas hus; där stannade de över natten.

3 När de nu voro vid Mikas hus och kände igen den unge levitens sätt att tala, gingo de fram till honom och frågade honom: »Vem har fört dig hit? Och vad gör du på detta ställe, och huru har du det här?»

4 Han omtalade då för dem: »Så och så gjorde Mika med mig; han gav mig lön, och jag blev präst åt honom.»

5 Då sade de till honom: »Fråga då Gud, så att vi få veta om den resa som vi äro stadda på skall bliva lyckosam.»

6 Prästen svarade dem: »Gån i frid. Den resa som I ären stadda på står under HERRENS beskydd.»

7 Då gingo de fem männen vidare och kommo till Lais; och de sågo huru folket därinne bodde i trygghet, på sidoniernas sätt, stilla och trygga, och att ingen gjorde någon skada i landet genom att tillvälla sig makten; och de bodde långt ifrån sidonierna och hade intet att skaffa med andra människor.

8 När de sedan kommo åter till sina bröder i Sorga och Estaol, frågade deras bröder dem: »Vad haven I att säga

9 De svarade: »Upp, låt oss draga åstad mot dem! Ty vi hava besett landet och funnit det mycket gott. Skolen då I sitta stilla? Nej, varen ej sena till att tåga åstad, så att I kommen dit och intagen landet.

10 När I kommen dit, kommen I till ett folk som känner sig tryggt, och landet har utrymme nog. Ja, Gud har givit det i eder hand -- en ort där ingen brist är på något som jorden kan bära.»

11 Så bröto sex hundra man av daniternas släkt, omgjordade med vapen, upp därifrån, nämligen från Sorga och Estaol.

12 De drogo upp och lägrade sig vid Kirjat-Jearim i Juda. Därför kallar man ännu i dag det stället för Dans läger; det ligger bakom Kirjat-Jearim.

13 Därifrån drogo de vidare till Efraims bergsbygd och kommo så fram till Mikas hus.

14 De fem män som hade varit åstad för att bespeja Lais' land togo då till orda och sade till sina bröder: »I mån veta att här i husen finnas en efod och husgudar och en skuren och en gjuten Gudabild. Så betänken nu vad I bören göra.»

15 Då drogo de ditfram och kommo till den unge levitens hus, till Mikas hus, och hälsade honom.

16 Men de sex hundra männen av Dans barn ställde sig vid ingången till porten, omgjordade med sina vapen som de voro.

17 Och de fem män som hade varit åstad för att bespeja landet gingo upp och kommo ditin och togo den skurna gudabilden och efoden, så ock husgudarna och den gjutna gudabilden, under det att prästen stod vid ingången till porten jämte de sex hundra vapenomgjordade männen.

18 När nu de fem männen hade gått in i Mikas hus och tagit den skurna gudabilden med efoden och husgudarna och den gjutna gudabilden, sade prästen till dem: »Vad är det I gören!»

19 De svarade honom: »Tig, lägg handen på din mun, och gå med oss och bliv fader och präst åt oss. Vilket är bäst för dig: att vara präst för en enskild mans hus eller att vara präst för en hel stam och släkt i Israel

20 Då blev prästens hjärta glatt, och han tog emot efoden och husgudarna och den skurna gudabilden och slöt sig till folket.

21 Sedan vände de sig åt annat håll och gingo vidare, och läto därvid kvinnor och barn och boskapen och det dyrbaraste godset föras främst i tåget.

22 Men när Dans barn hade kommit ett långt stycke väg från Mikas hus, upphunnos de av de män som voro bosatta i närheten av Mikas hus, och som under tiden hade samlat sig.

23 Vid dessas tillrop vände sig nu Dans barn om och frågade Mika: »Vad fattas dig, eftersom du kommer med en sådan hop?»

24 Han svarade: »I haven tagit de gudar som jag har gjort åt mig, därtill ock prästen, och så gån I eder väg. Vad har jag nu mer kvar? Och ändå frågen I mig: 'Vad fattas dig?'!»

25 Men Dans barn sade till honom: »Låt oss icke höra ett ord mer från dig. Eljest kan det hända att några män i förbittring hugga ned eder, och då bliver du orsak till att I förloren livet, både du själv och ditt husfolk.»

26 Därefter fortsatte Dans barn sin väg; och när Mika såg att de voro starkare än han, vände han om och drog tillbaka hem igen.

27 Sedan de så hade tagit både vad Mika hade låtit förfärdiga och därtill hans präst, föllo de över folket i Lais, som levde stilla och i trygghet, och slogo dem med svärdsegg; men staden brände de upp i eld.

28 Och ingen kunde komma den till hjälp, ty den låg långt ifrån Sidon, och folket däri hade intet att skaffa med andra människor; den låg i Bet-Rehobs dal. Sedan byggde de åter upp staden och bosatte sig där.

29 Och de gåvo staden namnet Dan efter sin fader Dan, som var son till Israel; förut hade staden hetat Lais.

30 Och Dans barn ställde där upp åt sig den skurna gudabilden; och Jonatan, son till Gersom, Manasses son, och hans söner voro präster åt daniternas stam, ända till dess att landets folk fördes bort i fångenskap.

31 De ställde upp åt sig den skurna gudabild som Mika hade gjort, och de hade denna kvar under hela den tid Guds hus var i Silo.

   

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Exploring the Meaning of Judges 18

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

The Tribe of Dan Adopts Micah’s Idolatry

This chapter shows the way in which one person’s distortion of truth, turning it into a falsity, can have severe consequences on a larger scale.

The tribe of Dan – one of the twelve tribes of Israel – was given land to the west, by the coast, but they found it hard to hold on to. The name of the tribe of Dan means ‘to judge’, but if judgment isn't based on the Word there will be chaos. (Arcana Caelestia 842)

Faced with competition for their homeland, the tribal leaders of Dan went looking for a place for themselves elsewhere. They sent five men of valour to spy out the land. These men came to Micah’s house, and they recognised the voice of the young Levite there. They questioned him about his situation, and he told them that Micah had hired him to be a priest to his household. The men of Dan asked the Levite to ask the Lord if their search would be prosperous, and he told them that it would be.

The spiritual meaning of this part of the chapter is to do with an intensifying wrongness. At the textual level, there is reference to the Lord, and an apparent normality in what takes place. But underlying it, there's a wrongness, which will become apparent later in the chapter. The pointers to it here are the five men from Dan, them coming straight to Micah’s house, and the hiring of a priest.

The number ‘five’ has a good meaning in many parts of the Word, but it can also have a bad meaning, as it does here. In this context, it stands for only a little, for disunion and the destruction of the Word (Apocalypse Revealed 738).

Coming directly to Micah’s house and recognising the Levite brings together two evil intentions: Micah’s idol and the men of Dan’s search to take a home for themselves. An example for us could be where two people plot to seek the harm of a third person. (Arcana Caelestia 4724)

The hiring of a priest is something disallowed, for priests are there to serve the Lord and they are provided for by the people, not to be hired. Hiring, spiritually, stands for seeking reward for what you do, whereas the true reward is heaven for those who serve without expecting a reward. (Arcana Caelestia 8002)

The five men leave Micah's house, and go on to Laish in the far north, where there are people who dwell securely in peace and without rulers, far from others and with no ties. Laish means ‘fearless and kneaded together’. It is a picture of perfection, of heaven. (Divine Love and Wisdom 200)

The five men then return to their tribe of Dan and report about Laish. They say that it is ideal for the taking because it has plenty of land and its people are secure. They say that “God has given it into your hands”.

Six hundred men of the tribe of Dan set out and they too, come to the house of Micah. The five spies tell them about the idols and they meet and greet the young Levite. Then the five spies go in and take all the idols in the house. The Levite joins up with the men from Dan and they go on together.

One spiritual meaning in the story is that evil (Dan, gone bad) loves to destroy peace and innocence (Laish).

The complete loss to Micah of all his idols and his hired priest, shows, too, that in fully turning to evil, there is the final loss of everything that might bring a person back. (Arcana Caelestia 9039)

People living near Micah go and accost the men of Dan about what they have taken -- but Micah is told to stop complaining or his household will be killed.

The Danites leave, and go and capture Laish, killing and burning, and re-naming the city Dan. There they set up the images and appoint priests. These images remain in Dan all the time that the house of God is in Shiloh.

The spiritual meaning of one evil or falsity becoming greater or more numerous is in the way that we might hold a negative emotion or a distorted view in our mind where it then spreads to other emotions and views we have and brings them into greater evil and falsity. This is the intention of evil and also of hell’s influence, to extend it to be as widespread as possible.

This is the outcome of everything that has developed through this and the previous chapter. It describes the spread of evil to become a terrible force for destruction and spiritually, for an individual person, for self-destruction. In the context of the decline of Israel to where ‘everyone did what was right in their own eyes’ this progression presents the pathway and process of that spiritual loss. (Divine Providence 19)

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Arcana Coelestia # 8002

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8002. 'A stranger and a hired servant shall not eat it' means that those who are prompted by a merely natural inclination to do good, and those who do it for the sake of gain, shall not be together with them. This is clear from the meaning of 'a stranger' as those who are prompted to do good by a merely natural inclination, dealt with below; from the meaning of 'a hired servant' as those who do good for the sake of gain, also dealt with below; and from the meaning of 'not eating it' as not being together with them, dealt with immediately above in 8001. 'A stranger' means those who are prompted by a merely natural inclination to do good because strangers were newcomers from other peoples. They were inhabitants, dwelling with the Israelites and Jews in one house; and 'dwelling with' means sharing in the same good. But since, as has just been said, they were from peoples outside the Church the good that is meant is not a kind of good that is prominent in the Church but is the kind to be found outside the Church. And this is called natural good because it is a product of the hereditary inclinations that a person is born with. With some people such good may also be the product of poor health or debility of mind. This is what one should understand when the good done by those meant by 'strangers' is mentioned.

[2] This kind of good is completely different from the good prominent in the Church, for by means of the Church's kind of good conscience is established in a person; and conscience is the level on which the angels come in and which brings him into company with them. Natural good cannot provide any such level for angels to enter. Those whose good is natural do good in the dark, led by blind instinct, not in the light of truth, under the influence of heaven. In the next life therefore they are carried away like chaff by the wind, by anyone and everyone, whether evil or good, but especially by an evil person who knows how to add a certain amount of charm and persuasion to his arguments. Nor can angels at this time guide them away, for angels operate through the truths and forms of the good of faith; they enter in on the level formed within a person out of those truths and forms of the good of faith. From all this it is evident that those who are prompted by a merely natural inclination to do good cannot be integrated among angels. Regarding these people and their lot in the next life, see 3470, 3471, 3518, 4988, 4992, 5032, 6208, 7197.

[3] The fact that 'strangers' are those who are not in their own land nor in their own house but are those staying in a foreign land is clear in Moses,

The land shall [not] be sold outright, for the land is Mine; but you are sojourners and strangers with Me. Leviticus 25:23.

In David,

Hear my prayers, O Jehovah; do not be silent at my tears. For I am a sojourner with You, a stranger as all my fathers were. Psalms 39:12.

And in the Book of Genesis,

Abraham said to the sons of Heth, I am a sojourner and a stranger among you; give me possession of a grave. Genesis 13:3-4.

'A sojourner', like 'a stranger', means a newcomer and inhabitant from another land; but 'a sojourner' means those who were taught and accepted the Church's truths, whereas those who were not taught them because they were unwilling to accept them are meant by 'strangers'.

[4] As for hired servants, they were people who worked for wages; they were servants, but not ones who had been bought. The fact that they were called 'hired', see Leviticus 19:13; 25:4-6; Deuteronomy 24:14-15. Because hired servants were those who worked for wages they mean in the internal sense those who do good for the sake of gain in the world, and in a yet more internal sense those who do good for the sake of reward in the next life, thus those who wish to earn merit through works.

[5] Those who do good solely for the sake of gain in the world cannot possibly be integrated among angels, since their final objective for doing it is the world, that is, affluence and prestige, not heaven, that is, the blessedness and happiness of their souls. The final objective is what gives direction to actions and what gives them their specific character. Those who do good solely for the sake of gain are described by the Lord as follows in John,

I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life 1 for the sheep. But a hired servant, he who is not the shepherd, whose sheep are not his own, sees the wolf coming and leaves the sheep and flees; and the wolf seizes them, and scatters the sheep. But the hired servant flees because he is a hired servant. John 10:11-13.

And in Jeremiah,

A very beautiful heifer was Egypt; destruction has come from the north. Her hired servants are like calves of the stall, 2 for they also have turned about, fled away together, and not made a stand, because the day of their ruin has come upon them. Jeremiah 46:20-21.

[6] A law forbidding strangers and hired servants to share in holy things along with those belonging to the Church is stated in Moses as follows,

No outsider shall eat what is holy; a stranger staying with a priest, or a hired servant, shall not eat what is holy. Leviticus 22:10.

And a law which allowed people to buy from the sons of strangers slaves who would serve them for evermore appears in the same book,

You shall buy a male or a female slave from the nations that are around you. And also from the sons of strangers sojourning among you - from them you shall buy, and from their families which are with you, even if they were born in your land, in order that they may be your possession. And you may pass them on as an inheritance to your sons after you to inherit as a possession. Forever you shall be their masters. Leviticus 25:44-46.

'The sons of strangers' means factual knowledge acquired with the aid of merely natural light. The necessity for spiritual truths to dominate that knowledge is meant by the law that slaves should be bought from the sons of strangers as possessions for evermore.

[7] People however who do good for the sake of reward in the next life, people who are also meant by 'hired servants', differ from those spoken about immediately above, in that they have life and happiness in heaven as their final objective. But this objective turns and alters the direction of their Divine worship away from the Lord towards themselves, as a consequence of which they want things to go well only for themselves, not for others except insofar as these want the same for them. When this is so self-love resides in their every desire, not love of the neighbour; that is, they do not have any genuine charity. Nor can these people be integrated among angels, for angels utterly loathe both the word and the notion of reward or repayment. The Lord teaches in Luke that one ought to do what is good without reward as the objective,

Love your enemies, and do good, and lend, hoping for nothing from it; then your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Highest. Luke 6:32-35; 14:12-14.

Regarding the nature of good deeds performed to earn merit, see 1110, 1111, 1774, 1835, 1877, 2027, 2273, 2340, 2373, 2400, 3816, 4007 (end), 4174, 4943, 6388-6390, 6392, 6393, 6478.

[8] The reason why the Lord says so many times that those who do good will have their reward in heaven - as in Matthew 5:11-12; 6:1-2, 26; 10:41-42; 20:1-16; Mark 9:41; Luke 6:23, 35; 14:14; John 4:36 - is that before a person has been regenerated he cannot help thinking about reward. But it is different once he has been regenerated. Then he is indignant if anyone thinks that he does good to his neighbour for the sake of reward; for he feels delight and bliss in the doing of good, but not in repayment. In the internal sense 'reward' is the delight belonging to the affection that goes with charity, see 3816, 3956, 6388, 6478.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. literally, soul

2. i.e. mercenaries who are like fat bulls

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