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Ban giám khảo 13

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1 Dân Y-sơ-ra-ên cứ làm điều ác trước mặt Ðức Giê-hô-va, nên Ðức Giê-hô-va phó chúng nó vào tay dân Phi-li-tin trọn bốn mươi năm.

2 Vả, có một người Xô-rê-a, thuộc về một họ hàng của chi phái Ðan, tên là Ma-nô-a; vợ người son-sẽ, không có con.

3 Thiên sứ của Ðức Giê-hô-va hiện đến cùng người đờn bà ấy mà rằng: Kìa, ngươi son sẻ không có con; nhưng ngươi sẽ thọ thai và sanh một đứa con trai.

4 Vậy, từ bây giờ hãy cẩn thận, chớ uống rượu hay là vật chi say, và cũng đừng ăn vật gì chẳng sạch;

5 vì người sẽ có nghén và sanh một đứa con trai. Dao cạo sẽ không đưa qua đầu nó, bởi vì đứa trẻ từ trong lòng mẹ sẽ làm người Na-xi-rê cho Ðức Chúa Trời; về sau nó sẽ giải cứu Y-sơ-ra-ên khỏi tay dân Phi-li-tin.

6 Người đờn bà đi thuật lại cùng chồng mình rằng: Một người của Ðức Chúa Trời đến cùng tôi, diện mạo người giống như diện mạo thiên sứ của Ðức Chúa Trời, rất đáng kính đáng sợ. Tôi không dám hỏi người ở đâu, người cũng không tỏ cho biết tên người;

7 nhưng người có nói cùng tôi rằng: Kìa, ngươi sẽ thọ thai và sanh một đứa trai; vậy bây giờ, chớ uống rượu hay là vật chi say, và cũng đừng ăn vật gì chẳng sạch; vì đứa trẻ đó, từ trong lòng mẹ cho đến ngày qua đời, sẽ là người Na-xi-rê cho Ðức Chúa Trời.

8 Ma-nô-a cầu nguyện Ðức Giê-hô-va mà rằng: Ôi, Chúa! xin Chúa cho người của Ðức Chúa TrờiChúa đã sai xuống, lại đến cùng chúng tôi, đặng dạy chúng tôi điều phải làm cho đứa trẻ sẽ sanh ra!

9 Ðức Chúa Trời nhậm lời cầu nguyện của Ma-nô-a. Thiên sứ của Ðức Chúa Trời lại đến cùng người đờn bà đương khi ngồi trong đồng ruộng; còn Ma-nô-a, chồng nàng, không có tại đó với nàng.

10 Người đờn bà liền chạy đi thuật cho chồng rằng: Kìa, người đã đến cùng tôi ngày nọ, nay lại hiện đến.

11 Ma-nô-a đứng dậy, đi theo vợ mình, và khi đến gần người đó, thì nói rằng: Ông có phải là người đã nói cùng đờn bà nầy chăng? Người đáp: Ấy là ta.

12 Ma-nô-a tiếp: Khi lời ông ứng nghiệm, thì đứa trẻ phải giữ theo lệ nào, và phải làm làm sao?

13 Thiên sứ của Ðức Giê-hô-va đáp cùng Ma-nô-a rằng: Người đờn bà phải kiêng cữ mọi điều ta đã dặn

14 nàng chớ nên ăn sản vật gì của vườn nho, chớ nên uống rượu hay là vật chi uống say, và cũng đừng ăn vật gì chẳng sạch, người khá giữ theo mọi điều ta đã chỉ dạy cho.

15 Bấy giờ, Ma-nô-a thưa cùng thiên sứ của Ðức Giê-hô-va rằng: Xin cho phép chúng tôi cầm ông đặng dọn dâng cho ông một con dê con.

16 Thiên sứ của Ðức Giê-hô-va đáp cùng Ma-nô-a rằng: Dầu ngươi cầm ta lại, ta cũng chẳng ăn vật thực của ngươi; nhưng nếu muốn làm một của lễ thiêu, thì hãy dâng lên cho Ðức Giê-hô-va. Vả, Ma-nô-a không rõ ấy là thiên sứ của Ðức Giê-hô-va,

17 Ma-nô-a lại thưa cùng thiên sứ của Ðức Giê-hô-va rằng: Danh ông là chi, để chúng tôi tôn trọng ông khi lời ông phán được ứng nghiệm?

18 Thiên sứ của Ðức Giê-hô-va đáp rằng: Sao ngươi hỏi danh ta như vậy? Danh ấy lấy làm diệu kỳ.

19 Ma-nô-a bắt con dê con luôn với của lễ chay, dâng lên cho Ðức Giê-hô-va tại trên hòn đá. Thiên sứ bèn làm ra một việc lạ lùng, có Ma-nô-a và vợ người làm chứng kiến.

20 trong lúc ngọn lửa từ bàn thờ cất bay lên trên trời, thì thiên sứ của Ðức Giê-hô-va cũng dâng lên theo trong ngọn lửa của bàn thờ. Thấy vậy, Ma-nô-a té sấp mặt xuống đất.

21 Thiên sứ của Ðức Giê-hô-va chẳng còn hiện đến cùng Ma-nô-a và vợ người nữa. Ma-nô-a nhận biết ấy là thiên sứ của Ðức Giê-hô-va,

22 bèn nói cùng vợ rằng: Quả thật chúng ta sẽ chết, vì đã thấy Ðức Chúa Trời!

23 Nhưng vợ đáp rằng: Nếu Ðức Giê-hô-va muốn giết chúng ta, lẽ nào Ngài có nhậm của lễ thiêu và của lễ chay nơi tay ta, lại lẽ nào Ngài đã cho chúng ta thấy các điều nầy, và cho ta nghe những lời mà chúng ta đã nghe ngày nay.

24 Người đàn bà này sanh một con trai, đặt tên là Sam-sôn. Ðứa trẻ lớn lên, và Ðức Giê-hô-va ban phước cho.

25 Thần Ðức Giê-hô-va khởi cảm động người tại trong dinh Ðan, giữa khoảng Xô-rê-a và Ê-ra-ôn.

   

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Exploring the Meaning of Judges 13

Napsal(a) New Christian Bible Study Staff, Julian Duckworth

Judges 13: The birth of Samson.

Chapters 13-16 of Judges tell the story of Samson, one of the greatest judges of Israel. At the time of Samson’s birth, Israel had been under Philistine oppression for forty years, because they had once again sinned against the Lord. As we have seen in previous chapters, the Lord appears to have punished them, but this is not the case; it is really our own waywardness that brings about these negative consequences.

This story begins with Samson’s parents, Manoah and his wife. Manoah’s wife was barren, but the angel of the Lord appeared to her, with news that she would have a son. The angel said that she was forbidden to drink alcohol or eat anything unclean, and that her son was never to have his hair cut, for he would be a Nazirite. And finally, the angel prophesied that her son would deliver Israel from the Philistines.

When Manoah’s wife told him what had happened, he prayed to the Lord for the man to return. The angel reappeared to Manoah’s wife, so she brought her husband to speak with the angel directly. Manoah asked what they should do for their child, but the angel only told Manoah that his wife must follow the instructions she had received.

Manoah offered a meal to the angel of the Lord, but the angel declined, saying that the burnt offering must be made to the Lord. Manoah brought out the meat of a young goat, placed it upon a rock, and gave it as a burnt offering to the Lord. The angel of the Lord ascended in the flames toward heaven, and the couple knew that they had seen God.

In time, Samson was born, and the Lord blessed him.

*****

Samson’s name literally means “sun-like”. He was a mighty warrior, a womaniser, and a powerful character prone to sudden outbursts and rage, but his intention was to defend Israel and defeat the Philistines. He was strong in his acknowledgement of his people and his God.

Samson represents the Lord in His divine human, and also the power of the Word in its literal sense. This is why Samson had strength in the abundance of his hair (see Swedenbrog’s works, Doctrine of Sacred Scripture 49[2], and Arcana Caelestia 9836[2]).

Spiritually, barrenness stands for a lack of personal doctrine or a spiritual path, representing how life can feel before regeneration begins. The angel of the Lord appeared to just the woman at first, because the purpose of regeneration is primarily to make us love what is good (represented by a woman). We do this by knowing and obeying truth (represented by a man).

The Nazarites, who vowed not to drink or cut their hair, represented the Lord as the Word in its ultimate and fullest sense (see Swedenborg’s work, Apocalypse Revealed 47). These customs are the marks of a natural and genuine life, as wine can lead us astray, and focusing on appearances can lead to vanity. Above all, Samson’s uncut hair represented this greatness of divine truths from the Word (see Swedenborg’s work, True Christian Religion 214).

The angel was reluctant to tell Manoah and his wife details about their son’s future, except that he would be a Nazarite, and would deliver Israel. He intentionally kept them from knowing what would take place, because if they knew the future, they would no longer be able to act in freedom. Divine Providence - the Lord’s plan for our world - cannot be disclosed to us, or we would no longer live in freedom to make our own decisions (Arcana Caelestia 2493).

Manoah asked the angel what his name was, so he could be honored. However, the angel declined to tell them, as his name was wonderful. A name describes a person’s spiritual qualities, and we are unable to fathom the extent of heavenly qualities because they are of God.

The spiritual meaning of Manoah’s sacrifice comes from the correspondence of a young goat (innocence within the human soul) and the rock (truth). The young goat, placed on the rock as a sacrifice, represents worshipping from our hearts in faith to the Lord. This is the Lord’s requirement of us (Doctrine of Sacred Scripture 18[3] and Arcana Caelestia 9393).

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Doctrine of the Sacred Scripture # 18

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18. 3. The spiritual meaning is what causes the Word to be Divinely inspired and holy in every word. People in the church say that the Word is holy, and this because Jehovah God spoke it. But because its holiness is not apparent from the letter alone, therefore someone who once doubts its holiness on that account, later finds, when he reads the Word, many things in it to confirm himself in that doubt. For he asks himself then, “Is this holy? Is this Divine?”

Therefore, to keep this kind of thinking from flowing in and prevailing among many people, and so causing the conjunction of the Lord with the church where the Word is to perish, it has pleased the Lord now to reveal the spiritual sense, in order to make known in what the holiness in the Word lies.

[2] But let examples illustrate this as well:

The Word has as it subject sometimes Egypt, sometimes Assyria, sometimes Edom, Moab, the sons of Ammon, Tyre and Sidon, Gog. Someone who does not know that the names of these entities symbolize matters relating to heaven and the church may be led astray into the error of supposing that the Word has much to say about nations and peoples and only a little relating to heaven and the church, thus much about earthly matters and little about ones having to do with heaven. On the other hand, when he know what these entities or their names symbolize, it enables him to return from error into the truth.

[3] The same is the case when a person sees in the Word its frequent mention of gardens, groves, and forests, and the trees in them, such as olives, vines, cedars, poplars, and oaks, as well as the frequent mention of lambs, sheep, goats, calves, and oxen; and also of mountains, hills, and valleys, and the springs, rivers, and waters in them; and still more of the like. Someone who knows nothing of the Word’s spiritual meaning cannot help but believe that these are the only things meant. For he does not know that gardens, groves and forests mean wisdom, understanding and knowledge; that olives, vines, cedars, poplars and oaks mean the church’s celestial, spiritual, rational, natural and sensual goodness and truth; that lambs, sheep, goats, calves and oxen mean innocence, charity, and natural affection; that mountains, hills and valleys mean the higher, lower and lowest planes of the church; and that Egypt symbolizes knowledge, Assyria reason, Edom the natural component, Moab the adulteration of goodness, the sons of Ammon the adulteration of truth, Tyre and Sidon concepts of truth and goodness, and Gog outward worship without any internal worship.

However, when a person knows this, he is able then to see that the Word deals only with matters connected with heaven, and that the earthly expressions are simply the vessels in which these are contained.

[4] But let an example from the Word illustrate this too. We read in the book of Psalms:

The voice of Jehovah is upon the waters; the God of glory causes it to thunder; Jehovah is upon the great waters.... The voice of Jehovah breaks the cedars..., Jehovah shatters the cedars of Lebanon, and makes them skip like a calf, Lebanon and Sirion like the offspring of unicorns. The voice of Jehovah strikes like a flame of fire. The voice of Jehovah causes the wilderness to quake; (it) causes the wilderness of Kadesh to quake. The voice of Jehovah makes deer give birth, and strips the forests bare; but in His temple everyone says, “Glory!” (Psalms 29:3-9)

Someone who does not know that each and every word there is holy and Divine may say to himself, if he is a merely natural person, “What does it mean that Jehovah sits upon the waters, that He shatters cedars with His voice, that He makes them skip like a calf, and Lebanon like the offspring of unicorns, that He makes deer give birth?” And so on.

[5] That is because he does not know that in the spiritual sense these declarations describe the power of Divine truth or of the Word. For in that sense the voice of Jehovah, which in this case is thunder, means Divine truth or the Word in its power. The great waters on which Jehovah sits mean the falsities of the rational self. A calf and the offspring of unicorns mean the falsities of the natural and sensual self. A flame of fire means the affection accompanying falsity. A wilderness and the wilderness of Kadesh mean a church without any truth and one without any goodness. The deer which the voice of Jehovah causes to give birth mean gentiles possessing a natural goodness. And the forests which it strips bare mean the kinds of knowledge and concepts which the Word lays open to them. Consequently the passage says next, “in His temple everyone says, ‘Glory!’ ” which means that there are Divine truths in every constituent of the Word; for the temple symbolizes the Lord, and so also the Word, as well as heaven and the church, and glory symbolizes Divine truth.

It is apparent from this that there is no word in the passage that does not describe the Divine power of the Word against falsities of every kind in natural people, and the Divine power of reforming gentiles.

  
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Thanks to the General Church of the New Jerusalem, and to Rev. N.B. Rogers, translator, for the permission to use this translation.