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1 Trừ cơn đói kém thứ nhứt trong đời Áp-ra-ham, bấy giờ tại xứ lại có một lần nữa. Y-sác bèn đi đến A-bi-mê-léc, vua Phi-li-tin, tại Ghê-ra.

2 Ðức Giê-hô-va hiện đến cùng người và phán rằng: Chớ xuống xứ Ê-díp-tô; hãy ở lại xứ mà ta sẽ chỉ cho.

3 Hãy ngụ trong xứ nầy, ta sẽ ở cùng ngươi và ban phước cho ngươi; vì ta sẽ cho ngươi cùng dòng dõi ngươi các xứ nầy và ta sẽ làm thành lời ta đã thề cùng Áp-ra-ham, cha ngươi.

4 Ta sẽ thêm dòng dõi ngươi nhiều như sao trên trời, sẽ cho họ các xứ nầy; hết thảy dân thế gian đều sẽ nhờ dòng dõi ngươi mà được phước;

5 Áp-ra-ham đã vâng lời ta và đã giữ điều ta phán dạy, lịnh, luật và lệ của ta.

6 Vậy, Y-sác ở tại Ghê-ra.

7 Bởi nàng ê-be-ca sắc-sảo dung nhan, nên khi dân xứ đó hỏi thăm vợ người, thì người đáp rằng: "Ấy là em gái tôi," e khi nói: "Ấy là vợ tôi," thì họ sẽ giết mình chăng.

8 Vả, người ngụ tại xứ đó cũng đã lâu; một ngày kia A-bi-mê-léc, vua Phi-li-tin, ngó ngang qua cửa sổ, thấy Y-sác đương giỡn chơi cùng ê-be-ca, vợ người,

9 bèn đòi Y-sác mà rằng: Quả thật là vợ ngươi đó; sao có nói: Ấy là em gái tôi? Y-sác đáp rằng: Vì tôi có thầm nói: Chớ khá vì nàng mà tôi phải bỏ mình.

10 A-bi-mê-léc hỏi: Ngươi làm chi cho chúng ta vậy? Ngộ có một người dân đến nằm cùng vợ ngươi, ngươi làm cho chúng ta phải phạm tội!

11 A-bi-mê-léc bèn truyền lịnh cho cả dân chúng rằng: Kẻ nào động đến người nầy, hay là vợ người nầy, thì sẽ bị xử tử.

12 Y-sác gieo hột giống trong xứ đó; năm ấy gặt được bội trăm phần; vì Ðức Giê-hô-va đã ban phước cho.

13 Người nên thạnh vượng, của cải càng ngày càng thêm cho đến đỗi người trở nên rất lớn.

14 Người có nhiều bầy chiên, bầy bò và tôi tớ rất đông; bởi cớ ấy, dân Phi-li-tin đem lòng ganh ghẻ.

15 Mấy cái giếng lúc trước đầy tớ của Áp-ra-ham, cha người, đã đào, bây giờ đều bị dân Phi-li-tin lấp đất lại hết.

16 A-bi-mê-léc nói cùng Y-sác rằng: Hãy ra khỏi nơi ta, vì ngươi thạnh vượng hơn chúng ta bội phần.

17 Vậy, Y-sác bỏ chốn nầy đi đến đóng trại tại trũng Ghê-ra và ở đó.

18 Y-sác bèn đào lại mấy cái giếng người ta đã đào trong đời Áp-ra-ham, cha mình, mà bị dân Phi-li-tin lấp đất lại khi Áp-ra-ham qua đời, và đặt tên mấy giếng đó như tên của cha mình đã đặt.

19 Các đầy tớ của Y-sác còn đào thêm giếng nơi trũng, gặp được một giếng nước mạch.

20 Nhưng bọn chăn chiên Ghê-ra tranh giành cùng bọn chăn chiên của Y-sác, mà rằng: Người đó của chúng ta; nên người đặt tên giếng nầy là Ê-sét. Vì bọn chăn chiên đó có tranh giành cùng mình.

21 Kế ấy, các đầy tớ đào một giếng khác, thì bị tranh giành nhau nữa; người đặt tên giếng nầy là Sít-na.

22 Ðoạn, người bỏ chỗ đó đi đào một giếng khác; về giếng nầy, họ không tranh giành nhau, nên người đặt tên là ê-hô-bốt, mà rằng: Bây giờ Ðức Giê-hô-va đã để cho chúng ta được rộng rãi, và ta sẽ đặng thịnh vượng trong xứ.

23 Y-sác ở đó đi, dời lên Bê -e-Sê-ba.

24 Ðêm đó Ðức Giê-hô-va hiện đến cùng người và phán rằng: Ta là Ðức Chúa Trời của Áp-ra-ham, cha ngươi; chớ sợ chi, ta ở cùng ngươi, sẽ ban phước cho và thêm dòng dõi ngươi, vì cớ Áp-ra-ham là tôi tớ ta.

25 Y-sác lập một bàn thờ, cầu khẩn danh Ðức Giê-hô-va và đóng trại tại đó. Ðoạn, các đầy tớ người đào một cái giếng tại nơi ấy.

26 Vua A-bi-mê-léc ở Ghê-ra đi đến viếng Y-sác, có A-hu-sát, bạn mình, và Phi-côn, quan tổng binh mình, đi theo.

27 Y-sác bèn hỏi rằng: Các người ghét tôi, đã đuổi tôi ra khỏi nơi mình, sao còn đi đến tôi mà chi?

28 Chúng đáp rằng: Chúng tôi đã thấy rõ ràng Ðức Giê-hô-va phù hộ người, nên nói với nhau rằng: Phải có một lời thề giữa chúng tôi và người, để chúng ta kết giao ước với người.

29 Hãy thề rằng: Người chẳng bao giờ làm hại chúng tôi, như chúng tôi đã không động đến người, chỉ hậu đãi người và cho đi bình yên. Bây giờ người được Ðức Giê-hô-va ban phước cho.

30 Y-sác bày một bữa tiệc, các người đồng ăn uống.

31 Qua ngày sau, chúng đậy sớm, lập lời thề với nhau. ồi, Y-sác đưa các người đó đi về bình yên.

32 Cùng trong ngày đó, các đầy tớ của Y-sác đến đem tin cho người hay về giếng họ đã đào, rằng: Chúng tôi đã thấy có nước.

33 Người bèn đặt tên cái giếng đó là Si-ba. Vì cớ đó nên tên thành ấy là Bê -e-Sê-ba cho đến ngày nay.

34 Khi Ê-sau được bốn mươi tuổi, cưới Giu-đít, con gái của Bê -e-ri, người Hê-tít; và Bách-mát, con gái của Ê-lôn, cũng người Hê-tít.

35 Hai dâu đó là một sự cay đắng lòng cho Y-sác và ê-be-ca.

   

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Arcana Coelestia # 3448

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3448. And Ahuzzath his companion, and Phicol the captain of his army. That this signifies the primaries of the doctrine of their faith, is evident from the representation of Abimelech, as being the doctrine of faith that looks to rational things; hence “his companion and the captain of his army” signify these primaries, and indeed the primaries which are of doctrine; for a “captain,” like a “prince,” signifies the things that are primary (n. 1482, 2089); and an “army” signifies the doctrinal things themselves. That an “army” signifies the doctrinal things that are of truth, or that are lower truths, is because by “warfare” in the Word, and by “war,” are signified the things that are of spiritual warfare and war (n. 1664, 1788, 2686); as also by “arms,” such as spears,” “shields,” “bows,” “arrows,” “swords,” and the like, as has been shown elsewhere. And because it is truths or doctrinal things by means of which spiritual combats are waged, therefore by “armies” these are signified; and also in the opposite sense things false or heretical.

[2] That both are signified in the Word by “armies,” may be seen from many passages, as in Daniel:

One horn of the he-goat grew exceedingly toward the south, and toward the sunrise, and toward beauty. And it grew even to the army of the heavens, and some of the army and of the stars it cast down to the ground, and trampled upon them. Yea, it magnified itself, even to the Prince of the army. His army was given over with the continual sacrifice to transgression; and it cast down truth to the ground. I heard a holy one speaking; and another holy one said, How long shall be this vision, the continual sacrifice, and the transgression that wasteth, to give both the sanctuary and the army to be trampled down? (Daniel 8:9-13).

The “horn which grew toward the south, toward the sunrise, and toward beauty,” is the power of falsity from evil (n. 2832); the “armies of the heavens” are truths; the “Prince of the army” is the Lord as to Divine truth; and because in a good sense an “army” is truth, it is said that the horn “cast down of the army to the ground,” and afterwards that it “cast truth to the ground.”

[3] Again:

The king of the north 1 shall set forth a multitude greater than the former, and he shall come on at the end of the times of years, coming with a great army, and with much substance. And he shall stir up his power and his heart against the king of the south, with a great army; and the king of the south shall war in battle with an exceeding great and mighty army; but he shall not stand, for they that eat of his meat shall destroy him, and his army shall overflow; and many shall fall down slain (Daniel 11:13, 25-26).

The subject of this whole chapter is the war between the king of the north and the king of the south; and by the “king of the north” are meant falsities, as also by his “army;” and by the “king of the south” and his “army” are meant truths: it is a prophecy of the vastation of the church.

[4] In John:

I saw heaven opened, and behold a white horse, and he that sat upon him was called faithful and true. He was clothed in a garment dipped in blood. And his armies in heaven followed him upon white horses, clothed in fine linen white and clean. And I saw the beast and the kings of the earth and their armies gathered together to make war against him that sat upon the horse, and against his army (Revelation 19:11, 13-14, 19);

“he that sat upon the white horse” denotes the Lord’s Word, or the Lord as to the Word (n. 2760-2762); “his armies in heaven that followed him” denote the truths therefrom, consequently those in heaven who are in truths; the “beast” denotes the evils of the love of self; the “kings of the earth and their armies” denote falsities. The combats of falsity with truth are what are here described.

[5] In David:

By the word of Jehovah were the heavens made, and all the army of them by the breath of His mouth (Psalms 33:6).

The “army of them,” or of the heavens, denotes truths. Because truths are signified by an “army,” the sons of the kingdom and the angels, from the truths in which they are, are called the “army of the heavens” as in Luke:

Suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly army praising God (Luke 2:13).

In David:

Bless Jehovah, all ye His armies, ye ministers of His that do His will (Psalms 103:21).

Praise ye him all His angels; praise ye Him all His army (Psalms 148:2).

In Isaiah:

Lift up your eyes on high, and see who hath created these; He that bringeth out their army by number. He calleth them all by name; of the multitude of the powerful and of the mighty not a man is lacking (Isaiah 40:26).

I have made the earth and created man upon it; I, My hands have stretched out the heavens, and all their army have I commanded (Isaiah 45:12); where the “army of the heavens” denotes truths, thus the angels, because they are in truths, as has been shown.

[6] In the first book of Kings:

I saw Jehovah sitting on His throne, and all the army of the heavens standing by Him on His right hand and on His left (1 Kings 22:19).

In Joel:

Jehovah uttereth His voice before His army; for His camp is very great; for he is strong that doeth His word (Joel 2:11).

In Zechariah:

I will encamp about My house against the army that passeth through and returneth, and no exactor shall pass through them any more. Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion; make a loud noise, O daughter of Jerusalem; behold thy King cometh unto thee (Zech. 9:8-9); where the coming of the Lord is treated of; his “army” denotes truths Divine. It is from this and also because the Lord alone fights for man against the hells which are in the continual effort to assault him, that in the Word the Lord is so often called “Jehovah Zebaoth,” “God Zebaoth,” the “Lord Zebaoth,” that is, “of armies” as in Isaiah:

The voice of a tumult of the kingdoms of the nations gathered together; Jehovah Zebaoth mustereth the army for the battle (Isaiah 13:4);

“the kingdoms of the nations” denote falsities from evils; “mustering the army for the battle” denotes fighting for man.

[7] Inasmuch as the twelve tribes of Israel represented the Lord’s heavenly kingdom, and “tribes” and likewise “twelve” signified all things of faith in one complex, that is, all truths of the kingdom (n. 577, 2089, 2129, 2130, 3272), therefore also they were called the “armies of Jehovah;” as in Exodus 7:4; 12:17, 41, 51; and it was commanded that they should be brought out of Egypt “according to their armies” (Exodus 6:26); and should mete out the camp “according to their armies” (Numbers 1:52); and should be distributed into their “armies” (Numbers 2).

[8] That by “armies” are signified truths, is evident also in Ezekiel:

Persia and Lud and Put were in thine army, thy men of war; they hanged the shield and the helmet in thee, they set forth thine honor; the sons of Arvad and thine army were upon thy walls round about, and the Gammadim were in thy towers (Ezekiel 27:10-11);

speaking of Tyre, by which are signified the interior knowledges of good and truth, and thus those who are therein (n. 1201); “army” denotes the truths themselves; that “Lud and Put” are also those who are in knowledges may be seen above (n. 1163, 1164, 1166, 1195, 1231); “shield and helmet” are such things as pertain to spiritual combat or war.

[9] That in the opposite sense “armies” signify falsities, is manifest in Isaiah:

It shall come to pass in that day that Jehovah shall visit upon the army of the height in the height, and upon the kings of the earth upon the earth (Isaiah 24:21); where the “armies of the height” denote falsities from the love of self.

In Ezekiel:

I will bring thee back, and put hooks in thy jaws, and I will bring thee forth, and all thine army, horses and horsemen, all of them completely clad, a great company with buckler and shield, all of them handling swords. Thou shalt come from thy place out of the sides to the north, thou and many peoples with thee, all of them riding on horses, a great company and a mighty army (Ezekiel 38:4, 15);

speaking of Gog, by whom is signified external worship separate from internal, thus become idolatrous (n. 1151); his “army” denotes falsities.

[10] In Jeremiah:

I will send against Babylon him that bendeth, bending his bow, and lifting up himself in his coat of mail; spare ye not her young men, give to the curse all her army (Jeremiah 51:2-3);

“Babylon” denotes worship the externals of which appear holy, but the interiors are profane (n. 1182, 1283, 1295, 1304, 1306-1308, 1321, 1322, 1326); “her army” is the falsities of such profane interiors, as in like manner the “army of Babylon” in other passages (as Jeremiah 32:2; 34:1, 21; 39:1).

In Ezekiel:

Pharaoh shall see them, and shall be comforted over all his multitude, Pharaoh and all his army, slain by the sword. For I will put the terror of Me in the land of the living (Ezekiel 32:31-32);

speaking of Egypt, by which are signified those who pervert truths by reasonings from memory-knowledges (n. 1164, 1165); “his army,” or the army of Pharaoh, denotes falsities therefrom; the like is also signified by the “army of Pharaoh” in other passages (as Jeremiah 37:5, 7, 11; 46:2; Ezekiel 17:17).

In Luke:

When ye see Jerusalem compassed with armies, then know that her desolation is at hand (Luke 21:20); where the consummation of the age is treated of, or the last time of the church, when there is no longer any faith. That by “Jerusalem” is signified the church, see above (n. 2117), which is “compassed with armies” when it is beset by falsities.

[11] Hence it is evident that by the “armies of the heavens” which the Jews and idolaters adored, in the internal sense were signified falsities, concerning which in the second book of Kings:

They forsook all the commandments of their God, and made them a molten image, even two calves, and made a grove, and bowed themselves down to all the army of the heavens (2 Kings 17:16).

This is said of the Israelites; and in another place it is written concerning Manasseh that:

He built altars for all the army of the heavens (2 Kings 21:5);

and again that:

Josiah the king brought forth out of the temple all the vessels made for Baal, and for the grove, and for all the army of the heavens (2 Kings 23:4);

and in Jeremiah, that:

They should bring out the bones of the princes, of the priests, and of the prophets, and should spread them before the sun and the moon, and all the army of the heavens, which they have loved, and which they have served, and after which they have walked (Jeremiah 8:1-2

The houses of Jerusalem and the houses of the kings of Judah shall be unclean like Tophet, as to all the houses upon whose roofs they have burned incense unto all the army of the heavens, and have poured out drink-offerings unto other gods (Jeremiah 19:13).

And in Zephaniah:

I will stretch out Mine hand against them that worship the army of the heavens upon the roofs (Zeph. 1:4-5);

for it is principally the stars that are called the “army of the heavens;” and that by the “stars” are signified truths, and in the opposite sense falsities, may be seen above (n. 1128, 1808).

Poznámky pod čarou:

1. The Latin has “the south.”

  
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Arcana Coelestia # 1151

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1151. Gomer, Magog, Madai, Javan, Tubal, Meshech, and Tiras. That these were so many nations among whom such worship existed, and that in the internal sense they signify so many doctrinals, which were the same as rituals, which they devoutly observed, is very evident from the Word, where these nations are frequently mentioned; for they everywhere signify external worship-sometimes external worship corresponding to internal, sometimes the opposite. The reason why they signify the opposite is that all churches, wherever they were, in process of time have been changed, even to their opposites. That the nations here named signify nothing but external worship, consequently their doctrinals which were rituals, can be established, as was said, from the Word in other places, especially in the Prophets.

[2] Thus, of Magog, Meshech, Tubal, and Gomer, it is written in Ezekiel:

Son of man, set thy face toward Gog, the land of Magog, the prince, head of Meshech and Tubal; and prophesy against him and say, Thus saith the Lord Jehovih, Behold I am against thee, O Gog, prince, head of Meshech and Tubal, and I will turn thee about, and put hooks into thy jaws, and I will bring thee forth, and all thine army, horses and horsemen, all of them clothed in full, a great company with buckler and shield, all of them handling swords; Persia, Cush, and Put with them; with them Gomer and all his hordes; the house of Togarmah in the sides of the north, and all his hordes. In the latter years thou shalt come into the land that is brought back from the sword, that is gathered out of many peoples, upon the mountains of Israel, which have been made a waste (Ezekiel 38:2-6, 8).

This whole chapter treats of the church, which became perverted, and at length made all worship consist in externals, or rituals; charity, which is signified by “the mountains of Israel,” being extinguished. Here “Gog, and the land of Magog the prince and head of Meshech and Tubal,” is worship in externals. Anyone may see that it is not Gog and Magog that are treated of, for the Word of the Lord does not treat of worldly things, but enfolds within it Divine things.

[3] In the same:

Prophesy upon Gog, and say, Thus saith the Lord Jehovih, Behold I am against thee, O Gog, prince, head of Meshech and Tubal; and I will turn thee about, and take a sixth part of thee, I will cause thee to come up from the sides of the north, and will bring thee upon the mountains of Israel; upon the mountains of Israel thou shalt fall, thou and all thy hordes, and the people that are with thee (Ezekiel 39:1-2, 4).

The whole of this chapter, likewise, treats of external worship separated from internal, and become idolatrous, which is here signified by Gog, Meshech, and Tubal, by whom also are meant the doctrinals which they receive and afterwards confirm by the literal sense of the Word, and thus falsify truths and destroy internal worship. For, as was said, the opposite also are signified by the same nations.

[4] In John:

When the thousand years are finished, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison, and shall go forth to deceive the nations which are in the four corners of the earth, Gog and Magog, to gather them together to war. They went up over the plain of the earth, and compassed the camp of the saints about, and the beloved city (Revelation 20:7-9); where “Gog and Magog” have a similar signification. External worship separate from internal, that is, separate from love to the Lord and love toward the neighbor, is nothing else than idolatrous, which encompasses the camp of the saints, and the beloved city.

[5] Of Meshech and Tubal it is said in Ezekiel:

There is Meshech, Tubal, and all her multitude; her graves are round about her; all of them uncircumcised, slain by the sword; for they caused their terror in the land of the living (Ezekiel 32:26).

The subject here is Egypt, or the memory-knowledges wherewith men desire to explore spiritual things. “Meshech and Tubal” denote doctrinals which are rituals, and which, when there is no love, are called “uncircumcised.” Hence they are slain with the sword, and a terror in the land of the living.

[6] Of Javan it is said in Joel:

The sons of Judah and the sons of Jerusalem ye have sold unto the sons of the Javanites that ye might remove them far from their border (Joel 3:6).

“The sons of Judah” denote celestial things of faith; “the sons of Jerusalem,” spiritual things of faith-thus things internal; and “the sons of the Javanites,” worship in externals separate from what is internal. Because this worship is so widely remote from what is internal, it is said that they have “removed them far from their border.”

[7] Javan and Tubal denote true external worship itself in Isaiah:

It shall come that I will gather all nations and tongues, and they shall come, and shall see My glow. And I will set a sign among them, and I will send such as escape of them unto the nations, to Tarshish, Pul, and Lud, that draw the bow, to Tubal and Javan, to the Isles afar off, that have not heard My fame, neither have seen My glory; and they shall declare My glory among the nations (Isaiah 66:18-19).

The subject here is the kingdom of the Lord and His coming. “Tubal and Javan” denote those who are in external worship corresponding to internal, who are to be instructed concerning internal things.

  
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