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Sáng thế 23

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1 Sa-ra hưởng thọ được một trăm hai mươi bảy tuổi. Ấy là bao nhiêu năm của đời Sa-ra.

2 Sa-ra qua đời tại Ki-ri-át-a-ra-ba, tức là Hếp-rôn, thuộc về xứ Ca-na-an. Áp-ra-ham đến chịu tang cho Sa-ra và than khóc người.

3 Ðoạn, Áp-ra-ham đứng dậy trước người chết mình và nói cùng dân họ Hếch rằng:

4 Ta là một khách kiều ngụ trong vòng các ngươi; xin hãy cho một nơi mộ địa trong xứ các ngươi, để chôn người thác của ta.

5 Dân họ Hếch đáp rằng:

6 Lạy Chúa, xin hãy nghe chúng tôi: giữa chúng tôi, Chúa tức là một quân trưởng của Ðức Chúa Trời; hãy chôn người chết của Chúa nơi mộ địa nào tốt hơn hết của chúng tôi. Trong bọn chúng tôi chẳng có ai tiếc mộ địa mình, đặng chôn người chết của Chúa đâu.

7 Áp-ra-ham bèn đứng dậy, sấp mình xuống trước mặt các dân của xứ, tức dân họ Hếch,

8 nói rằng: Nếu các ngươi bằng lòng cho chôn người chết ta, thì hãy nghe lời, và cầu xin Ép-rôn, con của Xô-ha giùm ta,

9 đặng người nhượng cho ta hang đá Mặc-bê-la, ở về tận đầu đồng người, để lại cho đúng giá, hầu cho ta được trong vòng các ngươi một nơi mộ địa.

10 Vả, Ép-rôn, người Hê-tít, đương ngồi trong bọn dân họ Hếch, đáp lại cùng Áp-ra-ham trước mặt dân họ Hếch vẫn nghe và trước mặt mọi người đến nơi cửa thành, mà rằng:

11 Không, thưa chúa, hãy nghe lời tôi: Hiện trước mặt dân tôi, tôi xin dâng cho chúa cánh đồng, và cũng dâng luôn cái hang đá ở trong đó nữa; hãy chôn người chết của chúa đi.

12 Áp-ra-ham sấp mình xuống trước mặt dân của xứ,

13 nói lại cùng Ép-rôn hiện trước mặt dân của xứ đương nghe, mà rằng: Xin hãy nghe, ta trả giá tiền cái đồng, hãy nhận lấy đi, thì ta mới chôn người chết ta,

14 Ép-rôn đáp rằng:

15 Thưa Chúa, hãy nghe lời tôi: một miếng đất giá đáng bốn trăm siếc-lơ bạc, mà tôi cùng chúa, thì có giá chi đâu? Xin hãy chôn người chết của chúa đi.

16 Áp-ra-ham nghe theo lời Ép-rôn, trước mặt dân họ Hếch cân bốn trăm siếc-lơ bạc cho người, là bạc thông dụng nơi các tay buôn bán.

17 Vậy, cái đồng của Ép-rôn, tại Mặc-bê-la, nằm ngang Mam-rê, nghĩa là cái đồng ruộng hang đá, các cây cối ở trong và chung quanh theo giới hạn đồng,

18 đều trước mặt có các dân họ Hếch cùng mọi người đến cửa thành, nhận chắc cho Áp-ra-ham làm sản nghiệp.

19 Sau các việc đó, Áp-ra-ham chôn Sa-ra, vợ mình, trong hang đá của đồng Mặc-bê-la, nằm ngang Nam-rê tại Hếp-rôn, thuộc về xứ Ca-na-an.

20 Ðồng và hang đá đều có các người họ Hếch nhận chắc, để lại cho Áp-ra-ham dùng làm mộ địa.

   

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 2959

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2959. Land of four hundred shekels of silver. That this signifies the price of redemption by means of truth, is evident from the signification of “four hundred shekels” (concerning which presently); and from the signification of “silver” as being truth (see n. 1551, 2048, 2937). That “four hundred shekels” signifies the price of redemption, is because “four hundred” signifies vastation; and “shekel” signifies the price. What vastation is may be seen above (n. 2455, 2682, 2694, 2699, 2701, 2704), namely, that it is twofold; of one kind when a church altogether perishes, that is, when there is no longer any charity or faith, and when it is said to be “devastated” or laid waste;” and of the other kind when they who are of the church are reduced to a state of ignorance, and also of temptation, in order that the evils and falsities with them may be separated and as it were dispersed. They who emerge from this kind of vastation are they who are specifically called the redeemed, for they are then instructed in the goods and truths of faith, and are reformed and regenerated by the Lord (concerning whom see the passages cited). Now whereas “four hundred” when predicated of time, as “four hundred years,” signifies the duration and state of vastation, so when predicated of shekels it signifies the price of redemption; and when mention is made of silver at the same time, there is signified the price of redemption by means of truth.

[2] That “four hundred years” signifies the duration and state of vastation, may also be seen from what was said to Abram:

Jehovah said unto Abram, Knowing thou shalt know that thy seed shall be a sojourner in a land that is not theirs, and shall serve them; and they shall afflict them four hundred years (Genesis 15:13); where it seems that by “four hundred years” is meant the stay of the sons of Israel in Egypt. But that their stay in Egypt is not what is signified, but something else which is not manifest to anyone except from the internal sense, is evident from the fact that the stay of the sons of Israel in Egypt was but half of that time; as is clearly evident from the generations from Jacob to Moses; for from Jacob came Levi; from Levi, Kohath; from Kohath, Amram; and from Amram, Aaron and Moses (Exodus 6:16-20). Leviticus and his son Kohath came with Jacob into Egypt (Genesis 46:11); Moses was of the second generation after this, and he was eighty years old when he spoke to Pharaoh (Exodus 7:7); from all which it is evident that from the coming of Jacob into Egypt to the going forth of his sons was about two hundred and fifteen years.

[3] It is still further evident that by “four hundred” in the Word something else is signified than what is meant by the number itself in the historic sense, from its being said:

The dwelling of the sons of Israel which they dwelt in Egypt was four hundred and thirty years; and it came to pass at the end of four hundred and thirty years, in the selfsame day it came to pass that all the armies of Jehovah went out from the land of Egypt (Exodus 12:40-41);

when nevertheless the stay of the sons of Israel there was but half that number of years; but it was four hundred and thirty years counting from Abraham’s entrance into Egypt; and therefore it was so said for the sake of the internal sense that lies concealed in the words. In the internal sense, by the sojourning of the sons of Jacob in Egypt is represented and signified the vastation of the church; the state and duration of which is described by the number “four hundred and thirty years”; by “thirty” the state of vastation of Jacob’s sons, that it was none at all, because they were such that they could not be reformed by any state of vastation (concerning the signification of the number thirty, see n. 2276); and by “four hundred years,” the general state of vastation of those who were of the church.

[4] Therefore they who go forth from this vastation are they who are called the “redeemed” as is also plain from the words spoken to Moses:

Wherefore say unto the sons of Israel, I am Jehovah, and I will bring you out from under the burdens of Egypt, and I will deliver you from their bondage, and I will redeem you with a stretched out arm, and with great judgments (Exodus 6:6).

Jehovah brought you out with a mighty hand, and redeemed you out of the house of servants, from the hand of Pharaoh king of Egypt (Deuteronomy 7:8; 13:5).

Thou shalt remember that thou wast a servant in the land of Egypt, but Jehovah thy God redeemed thee (Deuteronomy 15:15; 24:18).

In Samuel:

Thy people whom thou hast redeemed to thee out of Egypt (2 Samuel 7:23).

Because those who emerge from the state of vastation are called the “redeemed,” therefore by “four hundred shekels” is signified the price of redemption.

[5] That a “shekel” signifies the price or estimation is evident from the following passages in the Word; in Moses:

And all thy estimation shall be in the shekel of the holiness (Leviticus 27:25).

And in another place:

When a soul hath committed a trespass, and sinned in error from the holy things of Jehovah, he shall bring his guilt offering to Jehovah, a ram without blemish out of the flock, according to thy estimation, in silver of shekels, after the shekel of holiness (Leviticus 5:15).

From these passages it is plain that by a “shekel” is signified the price or estimation. It is said the “shekel of holiness,” because the price or estimation has regard to truth and good from the Lord; and truth and good from the Lord are the holy itself in the church. For this reason it is called the “shekel of holiness” in other places also (as in Exodus 30:24; Leviticus 27:3; Numbers 3:47, 50; 7:13, 19, 25, 31, 37, 43, 49, 55, 61, 67, 73; 18:16).

[6] That the “shekel” denotes the price of what is holy, is clearly evident in Ezekiel, where the Holy Land and the Holy City are treated of. It is there said of the shekel:

The shekel shall there be twenty gerahs; twenty shekels, five and twenty shekels, fifteen shekels, shall be your maneh [pound] (Ezekiel 45:12).

That here by “shekel,” and by “pound,” and by the numbers, are signified holy things, that is, good and truth, anyone can see; for the Holy Land, and the Holy City in it (or the New Jerusalem there treated of) is no other than the kingdom of the Lord, where neither shekel nor gerah nor pound, nor the counting by them, but the number itself, from its signification in the internal sense, determines the estimation or the price of what is good and what is true.

[7] In Moses:

They shall give every man an expiation for his soul lest there should be a plague, half a shekel, after the shekel of holiness: the shekel is twenty gerahs and the half shekel for a therumah [an oblation] to Jehovah (Exodus 30:12-13); where ten gerahs, which are the “half shekel,” denote the remains which are from the Lord. (Remains are goods and truths stored up with man, and these are signified by “ten,” as may be seen above, n. 576, 1738, 1906, 2284; and also that remains are goods and truths from the Lord stored up with man, n. 1906, 2284). These therefore are called an “oblation to Jehovah,” and it is said that by them there shall be an expiation for the soul. The reason why it is so often said that the shekel was twenty gerahs (as in the passages quoted, and also in Leviticus 27:25; Numbers 3:47; 18:16, and elsewhere) is that the “shekel which is twenty gerahs” signifies the estimation of the good of remains (that “twenty” signifies the good of remains may be seen above, n. 2280). On this account the shekel was likewise a weight, according to which the value both of gold and of silver was estimated (see Genesis 24:22; Exodus 38:24; Ezekiel 4:10; 45:12); the value of gold, because “gold” signifies good (n. 113, 1551, 1552); and of silver, because “silver” signifies truth (n. 1551, 2048). From all this it is now plain that by “land of four hundred shekels of silver” is signified the price of redemption by means of truth. It is called “land” because the subject is the spiritual church, which is reformed and regenerated by means of truth from the the Lord, (n. 2954). (That by “land” is signified the church, may be seen above, n. 662, 1066, 1067, 1262, 1733, 1850, 2117, 2118 at the end.)

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