Bible

 

Cuộc di cư 2

Studie

   

1 Vả, có một người trong họ Lê-vi đi cưới con gái Lê-vi làm vợ.

2 Nàng thọ thai, và sanh một con trai; thấy con ngộ, nên đem đi giấu trong ba tháng.

3 Nhưng giấu lâu hơn nữa không được, nàng bèn lấy một cái rương mây, trét chai và nhựa thông, rồi để đứa trẻ vào, đem thả trong đám sậy dựa mé sông.

4 Người chị đứa trẻ đứng xa nơi đó đặng cho biết nó sẽ ra sao.

5 Vả, bấy giờ, con gái Pha-ra-ôn xuống sông tắm, còn các con đòi đi dạo chơi trên mé sông; công chúa thấy cái rương mây đó giữa đám sậy, bèn sai con đòi mình đi vớt lên.

6 Công chúa mở rương ra, thấy đứa trẻ, là một đứa con trai nhỏ đương khóc, bèn động lòng thương xót mà rằng: Ấy là một đứa con của người Hê-bơ-rơ.

7 Người chị đứa trẻ bèn nói cùng công chúa rằng: Tôi phải đi kêu một người vú trong bọn đàn bà Hê-bơ-rơ đặng cho dứa trẻ chớ?

8 Công chúa đáp rằng: Hãy đi đi. Người gái trẻ đó kêu mẹ của đứa trẻ.

9 Công chúa nói rằng: Hãy đem đứa trẻ nầy về nuôi cho ta; ta sẽ trả tiền công cho. Người đàn bà ẵm đứa trẻ mà cho .

10 Khi lớn khôn rồi, người bèn dẫn nó vào cho công chúa, nàng nhận làm con, và đặt tên là Môi-se, vì nàng nói rằng: Ta đã vớt nó khỏi nước.

11 Vả, đang lúc đó, Môi-se đã lớn khôn rồi, ra đi đến cùng anh em mình, xem thấy công việc nhọc nhằn của họ; cũng thấy một người Ê-díp-tô đánh một người Hê-bơ-rơ trong vòng anh em mình;

12 ngó quanh quất chẳng thấy ai, bèn giết người Ê-díp-tô đem vùi trong cát.

13 Qua ngày sau, Môi-se đi ra nữa, thấy hai người Hê-bơ-rơ đánh lộn, bèn nói cùng người có lỗi rằng: Sao ngươi đánh người đồng loại mình?

14 Nhưng người đó đáp rằng: Ai đặt ngươi làm vua, làm quan án cho chúng ta? Có phải muốn giết ta như đã giết người Ê-díp-tô kia chăng? Môi-se sợ, nói rằng: Chắc thật, việc nầy phải lậu rồi.

15 Pha-ra-ôn hay việc đó, thì tìm giết Môi-se; nhưng người trốn đi khỏi mặt Pha-ra-ôn, dừng chân tại xứ Ma-đi-an, và ngồi gần bên một cái giếng.

16 Vả, thầy tế lễ xứ Ma-đi-an có bảy con gái; các nàng đó đến giếng xách nước đổ đầy máng đặng cho bầy chiên cha mình uống.

17 Nhưng các kẻ chăn chiên đến đuổi đi; Môi-se bèn đứng dậy, binh vực các nàng đó và cho những bầy chiên uống nước.

18 Khi mấy nàng trở về nhà ê -u-ên, cha mình, thì người hỏi rằng: Sao bữa nay các con về sớm vậy?

19 Thưa rằng: Một người Ê-díp-tô cứu chúng tôi ra khỏi tay bọn chăn chiên, và cũng có xách nước nhiều quá cho bầy chiên uống nữa.

20 Cha lại hỏi rằng: Người đó bây giờ ở đâu? Sao các con bỏ người đi? Hãy mời đến đặng ăn bánh.

21 Môi-se ưng ở cùng người nầy, người bèn gả Sê-phô-ra, con gái mình, cho Môi-se.

22 Nàng sanh một con trai; Môi-se đặt tên là Ghẹt-sôn vì nói rằng: Tôi kiều ngụ nơi ngoại bang.

23 Sau cách lâu, vua xứ Ê-díp-tô băng; dân Y-sơ-ra-ên than thở kêu van vì phải phục dịch khổ sở; tiếng kêu van lên thấu Ðức Chúa Trời.

24 Ngài nghe tiếng than thở chúng, nhớ đến sự giao ước mình kết lập cùng Áp-ra-ham, Y-sác và Gia-cốp.

25 Ðức Chúa Trời đoái lại dân Y-sơ-ra-ên, nhận biết cảnh ngộ của chúng.

   

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 6844

Prostudujte si tuto pasáž

  
/ 10837  
  

6844. Take off your shoes from upon your feet' means that the powers of the senses, which form the external levels of the natural, should be removed. This is clear from the meaning of 'shoes' as the powers of the senses forming the external levels of the natural, dealt with in 1748; and from the meaning of 'feet' as the natural, dealt with in 2162, 3147, 3761, 3986, 4280, 4938-4952. 'Taking off' plainly means removing since one is talking about the powers of the senses. Particular expressions have to be used in application to the actual matter to which they refer; thus 'being taken off' is applied to shoes, and 'being removed' to the powers of the senses. The implications of all this need to be stated. Anyone can see that here 'shoes' represent something that does not accord with Him who is holy and Divine, so that 'taking off one's shoes' was representative of the removal of things like that. Without this representation what would it matter to the Divine whether a person drew near in shoes or in bare feet, provided that inwardly he is the kind of person who can draw near the Divine in faith and love? Therefore the powers of the senses are meant by 'shoes', and those powers, which form the external levels of the natural, are by nature such that they cannot remain when one thinks with reverence about the Divine. Consequently because it was a time when representatives had to be observed, Moses was not allowed to draw near with his shoes on.

[2] The reason why the powers of the senses that form the external levels of the natural are by nature such that they cannot receive the Divine is that they are steeped in ideas of worldly, bodily, and also earthly things because they are the first to receive them. Therefore sensory impressions contained in the memory as a result of the activity of the senses draw their nature from the light and heat of the world, and hardly at all from the light and heat of heaven. As a consequence they are the last things that can be regenerated, that is, receive something of the light of heaven. This explains why, when a person is ruled by his senses and sensory impressions control his thinking, he inevitably thinks of the Divine as he does of earthly things. If also he is ruled by evil those impressions make him think in ways altogether contrary to the Divine. When therefore a person thinks about the kinds of things that have to do with faith and love to God he is raised, if he is governed by good, from the powers of the senses which form the external levels of the natural to more internal levels, consequently from earthly and worldly things nearer to celestial and spiritual ones.

[3] This is something people do not know about, the reason being that they do not know that internal levels distinct and separate from external ones are present within them, or that thought exists on increasingly internal levels as well as on more external ones. And unaware of these things a person cannot reflect on them. But see what has been stated already about thought ruled by sensory impressions:

People whose thought is ruled by sensory impressions have little wisdom, 5084, 5089, 5094, 6201, 6310-6312, 6314, 6316, 6318, 6598, 6612, 6614, 6622, 6624.

A person may be raised above the level of the senses, and when he is raised he comes into a quite gentle light; and this happens especially to those who are being regenerated, 6183, 6313, 6315.

All this now shows what is meant by 'taking off one's shoes from upon one's feet'. A person's natural divides into the external, the middle, and the internal, see 4570, 5118, 5126, 5497, 5649. The internal natural is meant by 'the feet', the middle natural by 'the soles', and the external by 'the shoes'.

  
/ 10837  
  

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

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 5126

Prostudujte si tuto pasáž

  
/ 10837  
  

5126. 'And you will put Pharaoh's cup into his hand' means in order that they might consequently serve the interior natural. This is clear from the meaning of 'putting the cup to drink' as making one's own, dealt with above in 5120, besides the obvious meaning of serving; and from the representation of 'Pharaoh' as the interior natural, dealt with in 5080, 5095, 5118. For there is an interior natural and there is an exterior natural, the exterior natural being made up of impressions which enter in directly from the world by way of the senses into the natural mind, that is to say, they enter the memory belonging to that mind and therefore enter the place where mental images are formed, see 5118.

[2] So that people can know what the exterior natural and what the interior natural are like, which make up the exterior man, and from this can know what the rational is which makes up the interior man, a brief reference to them must be made here. From infancy to childhood a person relies solely on his senses, for during those years he is receiving, through his bodily senses, nothing but earthly, bodily, and worldly impressions, which during those years are also the raw material from which he forms his ideas and thoughts. Communication with the interior man has not yet been opened up, except insofar as he is able to take in and hold on to those impressions. The innocence which exists in him at this time is solely external, not internal, because true innocence resides within wisdom. But the Lord uses this - his external innocence - to bring order into what enters through the senses. If innocence did not come to him from the Lord in that first period no foundation would ever be laid down on which the intellectual or rational degree of the mind proper to a human being could be established.

[3] From childhood to early youth communication is opened up with the interior natural, by the person's learning about what is decent, public-spirited, and honourable, both through what parents and teachers tell him and through his own efforts to find out about such matters. During early youth to later youth however communication is opened up between the natural and the rational, by his learning about what is true and what is good so far as his public life and private life are concerned, and above all about what is good and what is true so far as his spiritual life is concerned, all of which he learns about through listening to and reading the Word. Indeed insofar as he uses truths to immerse himself in good deeds, that is, insofar as he puts the truths he learns into practice, the rational is opened up; but insofar as he does not use truths to immerse himself in good deeds, or does not put truths into practice, the rational is not opened up. Nevertheless the things he has come to know remain within the natural; that is to say, they remain in his memory, left on the doorstep so to speak outside the house.

[4] But insofar - during these years and the next period of life - as he impairs the things he knows, refuses to accept them, and acts contrary to them, that is, insofar as he believes falsities and practises evils instead, the rational is closed, as is the interior natural also. But in spite of that, the Lord's Divine Providence enables communication to remain open enough to give him the ability to understand the good or truth he knows about. But he does not make these his own unless he truly repents and for a long while after that wrestles with falsities and evils. With people however who allow themselves to be regenerated the opposite takes place; for gradually, that is, in consecutive stages, their rational is opened up, the interior natural then becoming ranged in order beneath it, and the exterior natural beneath that. This occurs especially in the period from late youth to adulthood; it also continues in progressive stages to the final period of those regenerating people's lives, and after that in heaven for ever. From all this one may know what constitutes a person's interior natural and what his exterior natural.

  
/ 10837  
  

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