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เอมัส 2

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1 พระเยโฮวาห์ตรัสดังนี้ว่า "เพราะเหตุการละเมิดของเมืองโมอับ สามครั้งและสี่ครั้ง เราจะไม่ยอมกลับการลงทัณฑ์ เพราะเขาได้เผากระดูกของกษัตริย์เอโดมให้เป็นปูน

2 แต่ เราจะส่งไฟมาบนโมอับ และไฟนั้นจะเผาผลาญปราสาททั้งหลายของเคริโอทเสีย และโมอับจะตายท่ามกลางเสียงสับสนอลหม่าน ท่ามกลางเสียงโห่ร้องและเสียงแตร

3 เราจะตัดผู้วินิจฉัยออกเสียจากท่ามกลางเมืองนั้น และจะประหารเจ้านายทั้งหลายของเมืองนั้นเสียพร้อมกับผู้วินิจฉัย" พระเยโฮวาห์ตรัสดังนี้แหละ

4 พระเยโฮวาห์ตรัสดังนี้ว่า "เพราะเหตุการละเมิดของยูดาห์ สามครั้งและสี่ครั้ง เราจะไม่ยอมกลับการลงทัณฑ์ เพราะว่าเขาปฏิเสธไม่รับพระราชบัญญัติของพระเยโฮวาห์ และมิได้รักษาพระบัญญัติของพระองค์ และการมุสาของเขาได้พาให้เขาหลงเจิ่นไป ตามเยี่ยงที่บิดาของเขาได้ดำเนินมาแล้ว

5 แต่ เราจะส่งไฟมาบนยูดาห์ และไฟนั้นจะเผาผลาญปราสาททั้งหลายของเยรูซาเล็มเสีย"

6 พระเยโฮวาห์ตรัสดังนี้ว่า "เพราะเหตุการละเมิดของอิสราเอล สามครั้งและสี่ครั้ง เราจะไม่ยอมกลับการลงทัณฑ์ เพราะเขาได้ขายคนชอบธรรมเอาเงิน และขายคนขัดสนเอารองเท้าคู่เดียว

7 ซึ่งกระหายหาฝุ่นละอองแห่งแผ่นดินโลกบนศีรษะของคนจน และผลักคนที่ถ่อมใจออกเสียจากหนทางของเขา บุตรชายและบิดาของเขาเข้าหาหญิงคนเดียวกัน เพื่อลบหลู่นามบริสุทธิ์ของเรา

8 ตัวเขาเองนอนอยู่ข้างแท่นบูชาทุกแท่น อยู่บนเสื้อผ้าที่เขายึดมาเป็นประกัน และในนิเวศแห่งพระของเขา เขาทั้งหลายดื่มเหล้าองุ่นสำหรับผู้ที่ถูกปรับโทษ

9 เรายังได้ล้างผลาญคนอาโมไรต์ตรงหน้าเขา ซึ่งส่วนสูงของเขาเหมือนอย่างความสูงของต้นสนสีดาร์ และเป็นผู้ที่แข็งแรงอย่างกับต้นโอ๊ก เราทำลายผลข้างบนของเขาเสีย และทำลายรากข้างล่างของเขาเสีย

10 เรานำเจ้าขึ้นมาจากแผ่นดินอียิปต์ และได้นำเจ้าถึงสี่สิบปีในถิ่นทุรกันดาร เพื่อจะได้กรรมสิทธิ์ที่ดินของคนอาโมไรต์

11 เราได้ตั้งบุตรชายบางคนของเจ้าให้เป็นผู้พยากรณ์ และได้ตั้งชายหนุ่มบางคนของเจ้าให้เป็นพวกนาศีร์ โอ คนอิสราเอลเอ๋ย ไม่เป็นความจริงดังนี้หรือ" พระเยโฮวาห์ตรัสดังนี้แหละ

12 "แต่เจ้าทั้งหลายได้กระทำให้พวกนาศีดื่มเหล้าองุ่น และบัญชาพวกผู้พยากรณ์สั่งว่า `เจ้าอย่าพยากรณ์เลย'

13 ดูเถิด เจ้ากดเราลง เหมือนเกวียนที่เต็มด้วยฟ่อนข้าวกดยัดลง

14 ฉะนั้นการหนีจะประลาตไปจากผู้มีฝีเท้ารวดเร็ว คนที่แข็งแรงจะไม่สามารถเสริมกำลังของเขา คนที่มีกำลังมากจะช่วยชีวิตของตนก็ไม่ได้

15 ผู้ที่ถือคันธนูจะไม่ยืนยงอยู่ได้ ผู้มีฝีเท้าเร็วก็ช่วยตัวเองให้รอดพ้นไม่ได้ หรือผู้ที่ขี่ม้าก็ช่วยตัวเองให้รอดพ้นไม่ได้เหมือนกัน

16 และผู้ที่มีใจกล้าหาญท่ามกลางผู้มีกำลังเข้มแข็งเหล่านั้นจะหนีไปอย่างเปลือยเปล่าในวันนั้น" พระเยโฮวาห์ตรัสดังนี้แหละ

   


Many thanks to Philip Pope for the permission to use his 2003 translation of the English King James Version Bible into Thai. Here's a link to the mission's website: www.thaipope.org

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 10303

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10303. 'And you shall beat some of it very fine' means the arrangement of truths into their own series. This is clear from the meaning of 'beating very small' - when it refers to the frankincense and spices, by which levels of truth are meant - as the arrangement of truths into their own series; for much the same is meant by 'beating' as by 'grinding', though 'grinding' is used in reference to wheat, barley, and spelt, whereas 'beating' is used in reference to oil, frankincense, and spices.

[2] What is meant specifically by 'beating' and 'grinding' no one can know without knowledge of what a person is like when the different kinds of good and truth meant by wheat, barley, flour, fine flour, oil, frankincense, and spices have been arranged into order for the uses they are to serve. For 'grinding' and 'beating' mean arranging them so that they may serve a use. When 'grinding' has reference to different kinds of good, which are meant by 'wheat' or 'barley', it means the way that good is arranged and brought forward in the form of truths, and its application in this form to one use or another. Good furthermore never presents itself within useful services except through truths; for good is arranged into order in the form of truths and in this way acquires specific quality. Unless it has been arranged in the form of truths good has no specific quality; and when it is arranged in the form of truths it is arranged into series, depending on the item under discussion, in accord with the use that item serves. The good enters those items as an affection belonging to love, and this gives rise to what is enjoyable, lovely, and pleasing. Something similar is meant here by 'beating very fine', for 'pure frankincense' means spiritual good, 10296, and the kinds of truth that are arranged into order by the good are the spices stacte, onycha, and galbanum, 10292-10294.

[3] What being arranged into series is must also be stated briefly. Truths are said to have been arranged into series when they have been arranged in accordance with the form of heaven, which consists of angelic communities. The character of that form is clear from the correspondence of all the members, internal organs, and other organs of the human being with the Grand Man, which is heaven. Regarding that correspondence, see in the places referred to in 10030(end). Within those members and organs all the individual parts are arranged into series and into series of series. Fibres and vessels form them, as is well known to those who are acquainted from anatomy with the weavings and interweavings of the more internal constituents of the body. The truths from good present in a person are arranged into similar series.

[4] So it is that a person who has been regenerated is heaven in its smallest form, corresponding to the Grand Man; and that the person's truth and good make him wholly and completely what he is.

A person who has been regenerated is heaven in its smallest form, see in the places referred to 9279.

His truth and his good constitute a person, 10298 above.

The truths with regenerate people have been arranged into series in accord with the arrangement in which angelic communities exist, 5339, 5343, 5530.

The series into which the truths with those who are good have been arranged, and the series into which the falsities with those who are evil have been arranged are meant in the Word by 'sheafs' and 'bundles', as in Leviticus 23:9-15; Psalms 126:6; 129:7; Amos 2:13; Micah 4:12; Jeremiah 9:22; Zechariah 12:6; Matthew 13:30.

[5] When therefore it is evident what 'beating' and 'grinding' mean one can know the meaning in the internal sense of the description stating that the children of Israel ground the manna in mills or beat it in mortars, and made it into cakes, Numbers 11:8. 'The manna' was a sign of celestial and spiritual good, 8464, and 'grinding' and 'beating' arranging it to serve useful purposes; for whatever is mentioned in the Word is a sign of the kinds of realities that exist in heaven and in the Church. Every detail there has an inner meaning. One can also know the meaning when it says that they should not take as a pledge the mill or the milling stone, for anyone who does so takes the [person's] soul as a pledge, Deuteronomy 24:6. 'The mill' and 'the milling stone' mean that which prepares good so that it may be applicable to one use or another. 'Barley' too and 'wheat' mean good, and 'flour' and 'fine flour' truths; and its own truths are the means by which good is applied to any such use, as stated above.

[6] From all this it may be seen what 'mill', 'millstone', and 'sitting at the mill' mean in the following places: In Matthew,

At that time two women will be grinding; one will be taken, the other left. Matthew 24:41.

In the same gospel,

Whoever causes one of these little ones believing in Me to stumble, it would be better for him if an ass's millstone 1 were hung onto his neck and he were plunged into the depth of the sea. Matthew 18:6; Mark 9:42.

In the Book of Revelation,

A mighty angel took up a stone like a great millstone, and cast it into the sea, saying, Thus will Babylon be thrown down with violence; no sound of a mill will be heard in it any more. Revelation 18:21-22.

In Jeremiah,

I will take away from them the voice of joy, the sound of mills, and the light of the lamp. Jeremiah 25:10.

And in Isaiah,

O daughter of Babel, sit on the ground; without a throne, O daughter of the Chaldeans. Take a mill and grind flour. Isaiah 47:1-2.

Even as 'mill' and 'grinding' in the good sense mean application to good purposes, so in the contrary sense they mean application to evil ones. Consequently when Babel and Chaldea are the subject they mean the application [of what is good and true] in favour of their own loves, which are self-love and love of the world; for with them 'barley' and 'wheat' mean adulterated good, and 'flour' the resulting falsified truth. The profanation of goodness and truth through applying them to those loves is also meant by the action of Moses when he ground up the golden calf into tiny pieces, sprinkled them on the water coming down from Mount Sinai, and made the children of Israel drink it, Exodus 32:20; Deuteronomy 9:21.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. i.e. the upper, rotating stone of an ass-driven mill

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

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Arcana Coelestia # 10236

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10236. 'And its pedestal from bronze' means good on the last level of the natural, which is that of the senses. This is clear from the meaning of 'the pedestal' of the laver, containing the water for washing, as the last level of the natural degree, which is called the level of the senses; and from the meaning of 'bronze' as good, dealt with above in 10235. The reason why 'the pedestal' means the last level of the natural, which is called the external level of the senses, is that 'the laver' which is above means the natural degree, in which purification takes place, and therefore that which is below means that which occupies the lowest, that is, the last place, which is the external level of the senses within a person. The natural degree within a person has an external level, a middle level, and an internal level. The external level of the natural degree is that which comes in contact with the world and is called the external level of the senses; the internal level of the natural degree is that which comes in contact with the internal man residing in heaven; and the middle level of the natural degree links the two together, for where an external and an internal exist there must be a middle linking them together. The human mind has a natural degree containing external, middle, and internal levels, see 4009, 4570, 5118, 5126, 5649, 9215.

[2] Strictly speaking, the level of the senses forming the last and lowest of the natural degree should be taken to mean that which is called the flesh and perishes when a person dies, thus that which has enabled the person to function in the world, namely the senses of sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch. It may be recognized that the senses exist on the ground-level so to speak of a person's life, forming the terminus and base on which it rests; for they open out directly onto the world, and through them the world comes in and heaven goes out. These senses the human being shares with animals. But an external aspect of the senses which the human being does not share so much with them, though still an external aspect of the senses, is the deposit in the human memory of impressions received from the world, consisting solely of worldly, bodily, earthly images. The person whose thought and reasoning are based on these alone and not on more internal ideas is called a sensory-minded person. This level of the senses remains with a person after death, though it becomes dormant. It is the external level of the senses that is meant, strictly speaking, by 'the pedestal'.

[3] The nature of this level of the senses was represented by the pedestals of the ten lavers which were placed next to the temple. These pedestals are described as follows,

Solomon made ten pedestals from bronze. Four cubits was the length of each pedestal, and four cubits the breadth; three cubits was the height. On the panels 1 which were between the frames there were lions, oxen, and cherubs, and on the frames in like manner above. In addition each pedestal had four wheels, and boards of bronze 2 ; but its four corners had shoulders 3 . Under a laver there were shoulders 3 of cast [bronze]. The workmanship of the wheels was like the workmanship of a chariot wheel; their axles 4 , and their rims 5 , and their tires, and their spokes were all of cast [bronze]. After this manner he made the ten pedestals. They were all of one casting, one measure, one symmetry. Therefore he made ten lavers from bronze; each laver contained forty baths, four cubits was each laver. 1 Kings 7:27-39.

[4] Here representative objects serve to describe the nature of the external level of the senses in a person, and in particular protection provided by the Lord to prevent a person from entering from the sensory level of his mind, thus from the world, into things of heaven or the Church. To do so is contrary to Divine order. For the world cannot enter into heaven, but heaven can into the world, which happens when the Lord coming by way of heaven flows into a person by means of the Word and resides in him, and so enlightens, teaches, and leads him. The fact that entering from the world into the things of heaven is contrary to Divine order may be recognized from the consideration that those who enter into them from the sensory level of their mind, thus who do so from factual knowledge derived from the world, have no belief at all.

[5] Protection against this is meant by 'lions, oxen, and cherubs'. By 'lions' protection to prevent truths from entering is meant, for lions are truths in their power, 6367, 6369, and by 'oxen' protection to prevent forms of good from entering, for oxen are forms of good in their power, 2781. By 'cherubs' the Lord's protection against such an occurrence is meant, see 308, 9509; and by 'the shoulders' of which also mention is made power and resistance are meant, see 1085, 4931-4937, 9836. By 'the chariot-like wheels' the ability to be made wise when everything enters from heaven is meant, for in this way everything moves on according to order, 'chariot wheels' being the ability to move on, thus to learn, 8215, 9872, and chariots being doctrinal teachings which heaven and the Church possess, 5321, 8215.

[6] What a sensory-minded person is must again be stated briefly. A person is called sensory-minded whose thought is based solely on such ideas in the memory as are derived from the world and whose mind cannot be raised to more internal levels. Such is the situation with those in particular who have no belief at all in heaven or in the Deity because they do not see them; for they trust solely in the senses, and what they do not perceive through these is not thought by them to have any existence. Such people come near to having a mind no different from that of animals, which too are led solely by their external senses. They are still wily and clever in action and reasoning, but they do not see truth in its own light. In former times such people were referred to as serpents of the tree of knowledge. Most of the hellish crew are of that sort. But what a sensory-minded person is and what the sensory level of the mind is, see the places referred to in 9331(end), and also 9726, 9730, 9731, 9922(end), 9996; and what it is to be raised above or drawn away from the level of the senses, the places referred to in 9922(end).

[7] Good on the level of the senses, meant by 'a pedestal made from bronze', is an expression which denotes the pleasure and delight that influence thought and imagination based solely on such things as are earthly, bodily, and worldly. It is distinguishable from other kinds of delight by the fact that it sees no other purposes to be served apart from those indulging the self or benefiting the self. For the sensory-minded person is steeped in self-love and love of the world, and the delights that are his go with those loves. And since the loves of a sensory-minded person are such as these, it is evident that he is cleverer than others in reasoning and in doing things for the sake of gain and position. For his body is burning with the fire of that love, and that fire produces a light that is called natural illumination. And when this light flares into brightness the light of heaven which belongs to the interior man is altogether blotted out. So it is that because the things belonging to the light of heaven are in thick darkness they are said not to exist. It is different in the case of those whose actions are burning with the fire of heaven and whose thoughts are lit by the light from it. All this shows what should be understood by good on the level of the senses, meant by the pedestal of the laver made from bronze.

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. literally, enclosing pieces

2. The rare Hebrew word here is usually taken to mean axles.

3. i.e. supports

4. literally, hands

5. literally, backs

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