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Sáng thế 20

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1 Áp-ra-ham từ đó đi đến miền Nam, kiều ngụ tại Ghê-ra, ở về giữa khoảng Ca-đe và Su-rơ.

2 Áp-ra-ham nói về Sa-ra, vợ mình rằng: Nó là em gái tôi. A-bi-mê-léc, vua Ghê-ra sai người bắt Sa-ra.

3 Nhưng trong cơn chiêm bao ban đêm, Ðức Chúa Trời hiện đến cùng vua A-bi-mê-léc mà phán rằng: Nầy, ngươi sẽ chết bởi cớ người đờn bà mà ngươi đã bắt đến; vì nàng có chồng rồi.

4 Vả, vua A-bi-mê-léc chưa đến gần người đó, nên thưa rằng: Lạy Chúa, Chúa há sẽ hủy diệt cả một dân công bình chăng?

5 Người đó há chẳng nói với tôi rằng: ấy là em gái tôi chăng? và chánh người nữ há chẳng nói rằng: ấy là anh tôi sao? Tôi làm sự nầy bởi lòng ngay thẳng và tay thanh khiết của tôi.

6 Trong cơn chiêm bao, Ðức Chúa Trời phán nữa rằng: Ta cũng biết ngươi vì lòng ngay thẳng mà làm điều đó; bởi cớ ấy, ta mới ngăn trở ngươi phạm tội cùng ta, và không cho động đến người đó.

7 Bây giờ, hãy giao đờn bà đó lại cho chồng nó, vì chồng nó là một đấng tiên tri, sẽ cầu nguyện cho ngươi, thì ngươi mới được sống. Còn như không giao lại, thì phải biết rằng ngươi và hết thảy ai thuộc về ngươi quả hẳn sẽ chết.

8 Vua A-bi-mê-léc dậy sớm, đòi các tôi tớ mình đến, thuật lại hết mọi lời, thì họ lấy làm kinh ngạc.

9 ồi, A-bi-mê-léc đòi Áp-ra-hamnói rằng: Ngươi đã làm gì cho ta vậy? Ta có làm điều chi mất lòng chăng mà ngươi làm cho ta và cả nước phải bị một việc phạm tội lớn dường nầy? Ðối cùng ta, ngươi đã làm những việc không nên làm đó.

10 Vua A-bi-mê-léc lại nói cùng Áp-ra-ham rằng: Ngươi có ý gì mà làm như vậy?

11 Áp-ra-ham đáp: Tôi tự nghĩ rằng: Trong xứ nầy thật không có ai kính sợ Ðức Chúa Trời, thì họ sẽ vì cớ vợ tôi mà giết tôi chăng.

12 Nhưng nó cũng thật là em gái tôi, em một cha khác mẹ; và tôi cưới nó làm vợ.

13 Khi Ðức Chúa Trời làm cho tôi phải lưu lạc xa nhà cha, thì tôi có nói với nàng rằng: Nầy là ơn của ngươi sẽ làm cho ta: Hễ chỗ nào chúng ta sẽ đi đến, hãy nói về ta: Ấy là anh tôi.

14 Ðoạn, vua A-bi-mê-léc đem chiên và bò, tôi trai cùng tớ gái cho Áp-ra-ham, và trả Sa-ra vợ người lại, mà phán rằng:

15 Nầy, xứ ta sẵn dành cho ngươi; ngươi thích đâu thì ở đó.

16 ồi vua phán cùng Sa-ra rằng: Ðây, ta ban cho anh ngươi một ngàn miếng bạc; số tiền đó dùng cho ngươi như một bức màn che trước mắt về mọi việc đã xảy ra cùng ngươi; và mọi người đều sẽ cho ngươi là công bình.

17 Áp-ra-ham cầu xin Ðức Chúa Trời, thì Ngài chữa bịnh cho vua A-bi-mê-léc, vợ cùng các con đòi người; vậy, họ đều có con.

18 Vả, lúc trước, vì vụ Sa-ra, vợ Áp-ra-ham, nên Ðức Giê-hô-va làm cho cả nhà A-bi-mê-léc đều son sẻ.

   

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Arcana Coelestia # 2441

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2441. The sun was gone forth upon the earth. That this signifies the last period, which is called the Last Judgment, is evident from the signification of the “rising of the sun,” when the subject treated of is the times and states of the church. That in the internal sense the times of the day, and also the times of the year, signify the successive states of the church, has been shown before (n. 2323); and that the dawn or morning signifies the Lord’s advent, that is, the approach of His Kingdom (n. 2405) so that in the passage before us the rising of the sun, that is, his “going forth upon the earth,” signifies the Lord’s presence itself; and this for the reason that both the “sun” and the “east” signify the Lord. (As to the “sun,” seen. 31, 32, 1053, 1521, 1529-1531, 2120; as to the “east,” n. 101.)

[2] The reason why the Lord’s presence is the same as the last period, which is called the Judgment, is that His presence separates the good from the evil, and results in the good being elevated into heaven, and the evil casting themselves down into hell; for in the other life the Lord is the Sun to the universal heaven (see n. 1053, 1521, 1529-1531), for it is the Divine Celestial of His love that so appears before their eyes and actually makes the very light of heaven. In so far therefore as the inhabitants of the spiritual world are in celestial love, so far are they elevated into that celestial light which is from the Lord; but in so far as they are remote from celestial love, so far do they cast themselves away from this light into infernal darkness.

[3] This therefore is the reason why the “rising of the sun,” by which is signified the presence of the Lord, involves both the salvation of the good and the damnation of the evil; and this is why it is now said for the first time that “Lot came to Zoar,” that is, that they who are here represented by Lot were saved; and presently that “Jehovah caused it to rain upon Sodom and Gomorrah brimstone and fire,” that is, that the evil were damned.

[4] To those who are in the evils of the love of self and of the world, that is, to those who are in hatreds against all things of love to the Lord and of charity toward the neighbor, the light of heaven actually appears as thick darkness; on which account it is said in the Word that to such the “sun was blackened;” by which is signified that they rejected everything of love and charity, and received everything that is contrary thereto. As in Ezekiel:

When I shall extinguish thee, I will cover the heavens, and make the stars thereof black; I will cover the sun with a cloud, and the moon shall not make her light to shine; all the luminaries of light in the heavens will I make black over thee, and will set darkness upon thy land (Ezekiel 31:7, 8).

Every one can see that by “covering the heavens,” “blackening the stars,” “covering the sun,” and “blackening the luminaries of heaven,” other things than these are signified.

[5] In like manner in Isaiah:

The sun shall be darkened in his going forth, and the moon shall not cause her light to shine (Isaiah 13:10).

And in Joel:

The sun and the moon are blackened, and the stars withdraw their shining (Joel 2:2, 10).

It is therefore evident what is signified by the Lord’s words in Matthew, where He is speaking of the last period of the church, which is called the Judgment:

Immediately after the affliction of those days, the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven (Matthew 24:29)

where by the “sun” is not meant the sun; nor by the “moon,” the moon; nor by the “stars,” the stars; but by the “sun” are signified love and charity; by the “moon,” the faith thence derived; and by the “stars,” the knowledges of good and truth; which are said to be “obscured,” to “lose their light,” and to “fall from heaven,” when there is no longer any acknowledgment of the Lord, nor any love to Him, nor any charity toward the neighbor; and when these have become nought, the love of self with its falsities takes possession of the man; for the one thing is a consequence of the other.

[6] Hence we read also in John:

The fourth angel poured out his vial upon the sun; and it was given unto him to scorch men with fire, and men were scorched with great heat, and blasphemed the name of God (Revelation 16:8-9)

where also the last times of the church are treated of, when all love and charity are being extinguished; or, speaking according to the common mode, when there is no longer any faith. The extinction of love and charity is meant by the “pouring out of the vial upon the sun;” so that it was the love of self and its cupidities by which men were then “scorched with fire,” and “scorched with great heat;” and from which came the “blaspheming of the name of God.”

[7] By the “sun” the Ancient Church understood nothing else than the Lord and the Divine Celestial of His love; and therefore they were accustomed to pray toward the sun rising, while not thinking at all about the sun. But after their posterity had lost this also, together with the rest of their representatives and significatives, they began to worship the sun itself and also the moon; which worship spread to many nations, so much so that they dedicated temples to them, and set up pillars; and because the sun and the moon then took on an opposite signification, they came to signify the love of self and of the world, which are diametrically contrary to heavenly and spiritual love. Hence in the Word by the “worship of the sun and the moon” is meant the worship of self and of the world.

[8] As in Moses:

Lest thou lift up thine eyes unto heaven, and see the sun and the moon and the stars, all the army of the heavens, and thou be driven to bow down unto them, and serve them (Deuteronomy 4:19).

And again:

If he have gone and served other gods, and the sun and the moon, or any of the army of the heavens, which I have not commanded, then thou shalt stone them with stones, and they shall die (Deuteronomy 17:3, 5). (Deuteronomy 17:6)

Into such idolatry was the ancient worship turned when they no longer believed that anything internal was signified by the rites of the church, but only what was external.

[9] In like manner in Jeremiah:

At that time shall they spread out the bones of the kings of Judah, of the princes, of the priests, of the prophets, and of the inhabitants of Jerusalem, before the sun and the moon, and all the army of the heavens, which they have loved, and which they have served (Jeremiah 8:1-2).

The “sun” here denotes the love of self and its cupidities; their “spreading out the bones” signifies the infernal things that belong to such worshipers.

Again:

He shall break the pillars of the house of the sun, which are in the land of Egypt, and the houses of the gods of Egypt shall he burn with fire (Jeremiah 43:13).

The “pillars of the house” denote the worship of self.

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