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Domarboken 8

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1 Men Efraims män sade till honom: »Huru har du kunnat handla så mot oss? Varför bådade du icke upp oss, när du drog ut till strid mot Midjan?» Och de foro häftigt ut mot honom.

2 Han svarade dem: »Vad har jag då uträttat i jämförelse med eder? Är icke Efraims efterskörd bättre än Abiesers vinbärgning?

3 I eder hand var det som Gud gav de midjanitiska hövdingarna Oreb och Seeb. Vad har jag kunnat uträtta i jämförelse med eder?» Då han så talade, stillades deras vrede mot honom.

4 När sedan Gideon kom till Jordan, gick han över jämte de tre hundra män som han hade med sig; och de voro trötta av förföljandet.

5 Han sade därför till männen i Suckot: »Given några kakor bröd åt folket som följer mig, ty de äro trötta; se, jag är nu i färd med att förfölja Seba och Salmunna, de midjanitiska konungarna.»

6 Men de överste i Suckot svarade: »Har du då redan Seba och Salmunna i ditt våld, eftersom du fordrar att vi skola giva bröd åt din här?»

7 Gideon sade »Nåväl; när HERREN, giver Seba och Salmunna i min hand, skall jag söndertröska edert kött med ökentörnen och tistlar.»

8 Så drog han vidare därifrån upp till Penuel och talade på samma sätt till dem som voro där; och männen i Penuel gåvo honom samma svar som männen i Suckot hade givit.

9 Då sade han ock till männen i Penuel: »När jag kommer välbehållen tillbaka, skall jag riva ned detta torn

10 Men Seba och Salmunna befunno sig i Karkor och hade sin här hos sig, vid pass femton tusen man, allt som var kvar av österlänningarnas hela här; ty de stupade utgjorde ett hundra tjugu tusen svärdbeväpnade män.

11 Och Gideon drog upp på karavanvägen, öster om Noba och Jogbeha, och överföll hären, där den låg sorglös i sitt läger.

12 Och Seba och Salmunna flydde, men han satte efter dem; och han tog de två midjanitiska konungarna Seba och Salmunna till fånga och skingrade hela hären.

13 När därefter Gideon, Joas' son, vände tillbaka från striden, ned från Hereshöjden,

14 fick han fatt på en ung man, en av invånarna i Suckot, och utfrågade denne, och han måste skriva upp åt honom de överste i Suckot och de äldste där, sjuttiosju män.

15 När han sedan kom till männen i Suckot, sade han: »Se här äro nu Seba och Salmunna, om vilka I hånfullt saden till mig: 'Har du redan Seba och Salmunna i ditt våld, eftersom du fordrar att vi skola giva bröd åt dina trötta män?'»

16 Därefter lät han gripa de äldste i staden och tog ökentörnen och tistlar och lät männen i Suckot få känna dem.

17 Och tornet i Penuel rev han ned och dräpte männen i staden.

18 Och till Seba och Salmunna sade han: »Hurudana voro de män som I dräpten på Tabor?» De svarade: »De voro lika dig; var och en såg ut såsom en konungason.»

19 Han sade: »Då var det mina bröder, min moders söner. Så sant HERREN lever: om I haden låtit dem leva, skulle jag icke hava dräpt eder.»

20 Sedan sade han till Jeter, sin förstfödde: »Stå upp och dräp dem.» Men gossen drog icke ut sitt svärd, ty han var försagd, eftersom han ännu var allenast en gosse.

21 Då sade Seba och Salmunna: »Stå upp, du själv, och stöt ned oss; ty sådan mannen är, sådan är ock hans styrka.» Så stod då Gideon upp och dräpte Seba och Salmunna. Och han tog för sin räkning de prydnader som sutto på deras kamelers halsar.

22 Och israeliterna sade till Gideon: »Råd du över oss, och såsom du så ock sedan din son och din sonson; ty du har frälst oss ur Midjans hand

23 Men Gideon svarade dem: »Jag vill icke råda över eder, och min son skall icke heller råda över eder, utan HERREN skall råda över eder.»

24 Och Gideon sade ytterligare till dem: »Ett vill jag dock begära av eder: var och en av eder må giva mig den näsring han har fått såsom byte.» Ty midjaniterna buro näsringar av guld, eftersom de voro ismaeliter.

25 De svarade: »Ja, vi vilja giva dig dem.» Och de bredde ut ett kläde, och var och en kastade på detta den näsring han hade fått såsom byte.

26 Och guldringarna, som han hade begärt, befunnos väga ett tusen sju hundra siklar i guld -- detta förutom de halsprydnader, de örhängen och de purpurröda kläder som de midjanitiska konungarna hade burit, och förutom de kedjor som hade suttit på deras kamelers halsar.

27 Och Gideon lät därav göra en efod och satte upp den i sin stad, Ofra; och hela Israel lopp där i trolös avfällighet efter den. Och den blev för Gideon och hans hus till en snara.

28 Så blev nu Midjan kuvat under Israels barn och upplyfte icke mer sitt huvud. Och landet hade ro i fyrtio år, så länge Gideon levde.

29 Men Jerubbaal, Joas' son, gick hem och stannade sedan i sitt hus.

30 Och Gideon hade sjuttio söner, som hade utgått från hans länd, ty han ägde många hustrur.

31 En bihustru som han hade i Sikem födde honom ock en son; denne gav han namnet Abimelek.

32 Och Gideon, Joas' son, dog i en god ålder och blev begraven i sin fader Joas' grav i det abiesritiska Ofra

33 Men när Gideon var död, begynte Israels barn åter i trolös avfällighet löpa efter Baalerna; och de gjorde Baal-Berit till gud åt sig.

34 Israels barn tänkte icke på HERREN, sin Gud, som hade räddat dem från alla deras fienders hand runt omkring.

35 Ej heller visade de Jerubbaals, Gideons, hus någon kärlek, till gengäld för allt det goda som han hade gjort mot Israel.

   

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Exploring the Meaning of Judges 8

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

Judges 8: Gideon subdues the Midianites.

In this chapter, Gideon continued to dismantle Midian’s oppression over Israel, facing opposition from some of his fellow Israelites in the process. First, the men of Ephraim complained that he did not call them to war. Gideon replied by praising them for their vineyards, and for capturing the two Midianite princes. So, Ephraim’s indignation subsided.

Then Gideon went to the city of Succoth, and asked for bread to feed his army. But the men of Succoth refused, instead taunting him because he had not yet captured the kings of Midian. Gideon told them them he would punish them with thorns and briars, after he had killed the two kings. The people of Penuel were equally dismissive when Gideon asked them for help, and he swore to tear down their tower.

In due course, Gideon captured the two Midianite kings, Zebah and Zalmunna. Gideon told his oldest son to kill them, but he was young, and too afraid to do it. So Gideon killed the two kings, and punished the people of Succoth and Penuel.

When he returned from battle, the people of Israel asked Gideon to rule over them. However, he refused, saying that the Lord would rule Israel. He then collected gold from people’s earrings, used it to make an ephod (a priest’s garment), and set it up in his own city, Ophrah. The people began to worship it, and it became a snare for Gideon.

And Israel had peace for forty years under Gideon. Gideon had seventy sons, and died at an old age. As soon as he passed away, the Israelites forgot all the goodness that the Lord had shown them, and turned to worship other gods.

*****

The message of Gideon’s exchange with the Ephraimites is that sincerity and openness are the most powerful response to confrontation. Gideon, led by his trust in the Lord, could see the reason for Ephraim’s outburst, so he dealt with it by praising their strengths. This encounter shows how our faith in the Lord gives us a broader perspective, granting us the ability to respond rather than react (see Swedenborg’s work, Arcana Caelestia 8159[3]).

When Gideon lashes out at the people of Succoth and Penuel, it may appear that he is acting purely from anger, and a wish to retaliate. In reality, he is filled with zeal to drive out the Midianites and free Israel. It is unthinkable to him that his own people would refuse to give his soldiers food. In our own lives, we can at times be astounded by our own resistance to serving the Lord’s purpose. We are constantly torn between two forces: heaven and hell (Arcana Caelestia 3839[3]).

The killing of the two Midianite kings reflects the need for justice in spiritual matters. If we fail to heed the truths we know and believe, we will suffer the consequences of fear and guilt. These are not inflicted by the Lord, but follow on from our own choices (Arcana Caelestia 2447). Gideon’s son’s inability to kill the kings means that behind spiritual justice, there must be an understanding of the essential value of all life (Arcana Caelestia 5826[2]).

Gideon’s ephod is a symbol showing how easily we can deviate from obeying the Lord. The text does not tell us the reason for Gideon’s actions, but perhaps he felt it was better for the people to worship something superficially related to worshiping the Lord, rather than following a foreign god. Seeing a priest’s garment reminds us that a priest serves the Lord. But we can so easily focus on the majesty of the ephod itself, and think no more about the priest’s duty nor about the Lord. We sometimes drift further from the Lord without even realizing it (see Swedenborg’s work, Divine Providence 327).

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Arcana Coelestia # 5826

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5826. 'You know that my wife bore me two sons' means if spiritual good is what the Church possesses, internal good and truth will exist. This is clear from the representation of Israel, who says these things about himself, as spiritual good from the natural, dealt with immediately above in 5825; from the representation of Rachel, to whom the wife who had borne him two sons refers here, as the affection for interior truth, dealt with in 3758, 3782, 3793, 3819; and from the representation of Joseph and Benjamin,' the two sons she had borne, as internal good and truth, 'Joseph' being internal good and 'Benjamin' internal truth.

[2] What is meant by internal good and truth existing if spiritual good is what the Church possesses is this: Spiritual good, which 'Israel' represents, is the good of truth, that is, truth existing in will and action. This truth or good of truth causes a person to be a Church. When truth has been implanted in his will - something he perceives to have happened from the fact that he feels an affection for truth because his intention is to live according to it - internal good and truth are present in him. When that internal good and truth are present in a person he has the Lord's kingdom within him and he is consequently the Church; and together with those who are very similar to him he constitutes the Church at large. From this it may be recognized that for the Church to be the Church spiritual good, which is the good of truth, must exist and not simply truth by itself. At the present day it is by virtue of truth alone that a Church is called the Church, and it is what marks off one Church from another. Let anyone ask himself whether truth is anything unless it has life in view. What are religious teachings without that end in view? What for example are the Ten Commandments if separated from a life led according to them? For if someone knows them and the full extent of their meaning and yet leads a life contrary to them, what use are they? Surely none at all; indeed do they not serve to condemn some people? The same is so with other religious teachings that are derived from the Word. These too, being spiritual laws, are commandments for leading a Christian life; they likewise have no use at all unless they are made a person's guide to life. Let anyone weigh up what resides with himself and discover whether he has anything there which really is anything other than what enters into the life he leads, or whether life which really is his life resides anywhere else in a person than in his will.

[3] This is the reason why the Lord has declared in the Old Testament and confirmed in the New that all the Law and all the Prophets are founded on love to God and love towards the neighbour, thus on life. They are not founded on faith apart from life, nor thus in any way at all on faith alone, nor consequently on confidence; for without charity towards the neighbour such confidence is impossible. If it seems to exist with the wicked at times when their lives are in danger or death is at hand it is a spurious or false confidence; for among such people in the next life not a trace of this confidence can be seen, however ardently they may have appeared when near to death to profess that they possessed it. But faith, no matter whether you call it confidence or else trust, does nothing for the wicked, as the Lord Himself teaches in John,

As many as received Him, to them He gave power to be sons of God, to those believing in His name, who were born, not of blood, 1 nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God. John 1:12-13.

[4] Those born of blood' stands for those who do violence to charity, 374, 1005, also those who render truth profane, 4735. 'Those born of the will of the flesh' stands for those governed by evils that spring from self-love and love of the world, 3813. 'Those born of the will of man' stands for those governed by utterly false notions; for 'man' (vir) means truth and in the contrary sense falsity. 'Those born of God' stands for those who have been regenerated by the Lord and are consequently governed by good. The latter are the ones who receive the Lord; they are the ones who believe in His name; and they, not the former, are the ones to whom He gives power to be sons of God. From all this it is quite evident what contribution faith alone makes to salvation.

[5] To take the matter further, if a person is to undergo regeneration and become a Church he must be led by means of truth into good, which happens when truth becomes truth existing in will and action. This truth is good and is called the good of truth. It constantly brings forth new truths, since then for the first time it is fruitful. The truth that is brought forth or made fruitful from it is what is called internal truth; and the good from which it springs is called internal good. For nothing becomes internal until it has been implanted in the will, the will being the inmost part of a person. As long as good and truth remain outside the will and solely in the understanding they are outside the person; for the understanding is outside, the will inside.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. literally, bloods

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