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Phục truyền luật lệ ký 25

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1 Khi nào người ta có tranh tụng nhau, đi đến tòa để cầu quan án xét đoán, thì phải định công bình cho người công bình, và lên án kẻ có tội.

2 Nhược bằng kẻ có tội đáng bị đánh đòn, quan án phải khiến người nằm xuống đất, đánh người trước mặt mình, số bao nhiêu đòn tùy theo lỗi của người đã phạm.

3 Quan án khiến đánh đòn người đến bốn chục, chớ đánh quá, kẻo nếu cứ đánh hơn, thì anh em ngươi vì cớ hình phạt thái quá ấy phải ra hèn trước mặt ngươi chăng.

4 Chớ khớp miệng con bò trong khi nó đạp lúa.

5 Khi anh em ruột ở chung nhau, có một người chết không con, thì vợ của người chết chớ kết đôi cùng người ngoài; anh em chồng phải đi đến cùng nàng, cưới nàng làm vợ, y theo bổn phận của anh em chồng vậy.

6 Con đầu lòng mà nàng sanh ra sẽ nối danh cho người anh em chết, hầu cho danh của người ấy chớ tuyệt khỏi Y-sơ-ra-ên.

7 Ví bằng người kia không đẹp lòng lấy nàng, nàng phải lên đến cửa thành, tới cùng các trưởng lãonói rằng: người anh em chồng tôi không chịu lưu danh anh em người lại trong Y-sơ-ra-ên, và không muốn cưới tôi y theo phận sự anh em chồng.

8 Các trưởng lão của thành ấy sẽ gọi người và nói cùng người; nếu người cứ nói rằng: Tôi không đẹp lòng cưới nàng,

9 thì chị em dâu người sẽ đến gần, trước mặt các trưởng lão, lột giày khỏi chân người, khạc trên mặt người, đoạn cất tiếng nói rằng: Người nào không lập lại nhà anh em mình sẽ bị làm cho như vậy!

10 Trong Y-sơ-ra-ên sẽ gọi nhà người là nhà kẻ bị lột giày.

11 Khi hai người đánh lộn nhau, nếu vợ của một trong hai người đến gần đặng giải cứu chồng khỏi tay kẻ đánh, và nàng giơ tay nắm nhằm chỗ kín của kẻ ấy,

12 thì ngươi phải chặt tay nàng đi; mắt ngươi chớ thương xót nàng.

13 Trong bao ngươi chớ có hai thứ trái cân, một thứ già và một thứ non.

14 Trong nhà ngươi chớ có hai thứ ê-pha, một thứ già và một thứ non.

15 Phải dùng trái cân đúng thật và công bình, cũng phải có ê-pha đúng thật và công bình, để ngươi được sống lâu trên đất mà Giê-hô-va Ðức Chúa Trời ngươi ban cho ngươi.

16 Vì Giê-hô-va Ðức Chúa Trời ngươi lấy làm gớm ghiếc người nào làm các điều nầy và phạm sự bất nghĩa.

17 Hãy nhớ điều A-ma-léc đã làm cho ngươi dọc đường, khi các ngươi ra khỏi xứ Ê-díp-tô;

18 thế nào người không kính sợ Ðức Chúa Trời, đến đón ngươi trên đường, xông vào binh hậu ngươi, đánh các người yếu theo ngươi, trong khi chánh mình ngươi mỏi mệt và nhọc nhằn.

19 Vậy, khi Giê-hô-va Ðức Chúa Trời ngươi đã ban sự bình an cho, và giải cứu ngươi khỏi mọi kẻ thù nghịch vây phủ ngươi trong xứ mà Giê-hô-va Ðức Chúa Trời ngươi ban cho ngươi nhận lấy làm sản nghiệp, thì phải xóa sự ghi nhớ A-ma-léc khỏi dưới trời. Chớ hề quên!

   

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Arcana Coelestia # 4835

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4835. 'Come [in] to your brother's wife and perform the duty of a husband's brother to her' means that this - that representative of the Church - might be continued. This is clear from the meaning of 'coming (or going in) to a brother's wife and performing the duty of a husband's brother to her' as preserving and continuing that which constitutes the Church. The requirement laid down in the Mosaic Law, that if a man died without issue his brother was to marry his widow and raise up seed for his brother, and that the firstborn was to receive his dead brother's name, whereas all other sons were to be his own, was called the duty of a brother-in-law. The fact that this directive was nothing new in the Jewish Church but a practice already in existence is clear from the words used here; and the same goes for many other directives given to the Israelites through Moses, such as the law forbidding them to take wives from the daughters of the Canaanites and requiring them to marry within their own families, Genesis 24:3-4; 28:1-2. From these and many other examples it is evident that a Church had existed previously in which the same kind of practices were followed as those at a later time which were declared to and demanded of the sons of Jacob. Altars and sacrifices likewise had been in use since ancient times, as is evident from Genesis 8:20-21; 22:3, 7-8. From this it is plain that the Jewish Church was not a new Church but a revival of the Ancient Church which had perished.

[2] What the law regarding the duty of a brother-in-law had been is clear in Moses,

If brothers dwell together but one of them dies, and has no son, the wife of the dead one shall not marry a stranger outside [the family]; her brother-in-law shall go in to her, and take her to himself as his wife, and so perform the duty of a brother-in-law to her. Then it will happen, that the firstborn whom she bears shall succeed to the name of his dead brother, so that his name is not wiped out from Israel. But if the man is unwilling to take his sister-in-law, his sister-in-law shall go up to the gate to the elders, and she shall say, My brother-in-law refuses to raise up for his brother a name in Israel; he is unwilling to perform the duty of a brother-in-law for me. Then the elders of his city shall call him and speak to him; and if he stands and says, I do not desire to take her, his sister-in-law shall go up to him in the sight of the elders, and she shall remove his shoe from upon his foot and spit in his face; and she shall answer and say, So will it be done to the man who does not build up his brother's house. Therefore his name will be called in Israel, The house of him who has his shoe taken off. Deuteronomy 25:5-10.

[3] Anyone who does not know what the duty of a brother-in-law represents inevitably believes that the practice existed solely for the sake of preserving a name and consequently an inheritance. But the preservation of a name and an inheritance was not in itself a great enough reason why a brother should have been required to enter into a marriage with his sister-in-law. Rather, the practice was ordained so that the preservation and continuation of the Church might be represented through it. For a marriage represented the marriage of good and truth, which is the heavenly marriage. It therefore represented the Church too, for the Church is a Church by virtue of the marriage of good and truth, and when this marriage exists within it the Church makes one with heaven, which is the true heavenly marriage. And because a marriage represented these things, 'sons and daughters' were therefore representations and also meaningful signs of truths and goods. This being so, 'being without issue' meant a lack of good and truth, and so meant that no representative of the Church existed in that house any longer, and that as a consequence it was not in communion with the Church. In addition 'brother' represented a kindred good to which the truth represented by a widow might be joined. For to be the kind of truth that has life, produces fruit, and thereby continues that which constitutes the Church, truth cannot be joined to any other good but that which is its own and a kindred one. This was how those in heaven perceived the duty of a brother-in-law.

[4] The meaning of this practice - of a sister-in-law removing the shoe from upon the foot of the man who refused to do the duty of a brother-in-law, and of her spitting in his face - was this: Anyone devoid of good and truth, external and internal, would destroy those things that constitute the Church; for 'the shoe' means that which is external, 1748, and 'the face' that which is internal, 1999, 2434, 3527, 4066, 4796. From this it is evident that 'the duty of a brother-in-law' represented the preservation and continuation of the Church. But when through the Lord's Coming representatives of internal things came to an end, that particular law was done away with. It is like a person's soul or spirit in relation to his body. A person's soul or spirit is the internal part of him and his body the external; or what amounts to the same, the soul or spirit is the true likeness of the person, whereas the body is merely a representative image of him. When a person rises again his representative image or that which is external, namely his body, is cast aside, for he is now conscious in that which is internal, namely the true likeness of him. It is also like a person who is in darkness and from there looks at things belonging to light; or what amounts to the same, like one who is in the light of the world and from there looks at things belonging to the light of heaven. For the light of the world in comparison with the light of heaven is as darkness. Within that darkness, that is, within the light of the world, things belonging to the light of heaven as they exist essentially cannot be seen, but are seen so to speak within a representative image, even as the human mind is seen in a person's face. Therefore when the light of heaven is seen in its own essential brightness, the darkness of representative images is dispelled. This was effected through the Lord's Coming.

[4835a] 'And raise up seed for your brother' means so that the Church does not perish. This is clear from the meaning of 'seed' as truth derived from good, or faith grounded in charity, dealt with in 1025, 1447, 16110, 1940, 2848, 3310, 3373, 3671. The same is also meant by the firstborn who was to succeed to the name of the dead brother, 352, 367, 2435, 3325, 3494. 'Raising up seed for a brother' means continuing that which constitutes the Church, in line with what has been stated just above in 4834, and thus means so that the Church does not perish.

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