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Exodus 23

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1 `Thou dost not lift up a vain report; thou dost not put thy hand with a wicked man to be a violent witness.

2 `Thou art not after many to evil, nor dost thou testify concerning a strife, to turn aside after many to cause [others] to turn aside;

3 and a poor man thou dost not honour in his strife.

4 `When thou meetest thine enemy's ox or his ass going astray, thou dost certainly turn it back to him;

5 when thou seest the ass of him who is hating thee crouching under its burden, then thou hast ceased from leaving [it] to it -- thou dost certainly leave [it] with him.

6 `Thou dost not turn aside the judgment of thy needy one in his strife;

7 from a false matter thou dost keep far off, and an innocent and righteous man thou dost not slay; for I do not justify a wicked man.

8 `And a bribe thou dost not take; for the bribe bindeth the open-[eyed], and perverteth the words of the righteous.

9 `And a sojourner thou dost not oppress, and ye -- ye have known the soul of the sojourner, for sojourners ye have been in the land of Egypt.

10 `And six years thou dost sow thy land, and hast gathered its increase;

11 and the seventh thou dost release it, and hast left it, and the needy of thy people have eaten, and their leaving doth the beast of the field eat; so dost thou to thy vineyard -- to thine olive-yard.

12 `Six days thou dost do thy work, and on the seventh day thou dost rest, so that thine ox and thine ass doth rest, and the son of thine handmaid and the sojourner is refreshed;

13 and in all that which I have said unto you ye do take heed; and the name of other gods ye do not mention; it is not heard on thy mouth.

14 `Three times thou dost keep a feast to Me in a year;

15 the Feast of Unleavened things thou dost keep; seven days thou dost eat Unleavened things, as I have commanded thee, at the time appointed [in] the month of Abib; for in it thou hast come forth out of Egypt, and ye do not appear [in] My presence empty;

16 and the Feast of Harvest, the first fruits of thy works which thou sowest in the field; and the Feast of the In-Gathering, in the outgoing of the year, in thy gathering thy works out of the field.

17 `Three times in a year do all thy males appear before the face of the Lord Jehovah.

18 `Thou dost not sacrifice on a fermented thing the blood of My sacrifice, and the fat of My festival doth not remain till morning;

19 the beginning of the first-fruits of thy ground thou dost bring into the house of Jehovah thy God; thou dost not boil a kid in its mother's milk.

20 `Lo, I am sending a messenger before thee to keep thee in the way, and to bring thee in unto the place which I have prepared;

21 be watchful because of his presence, and hearken to his voice, rebel not against him, for he beareth not with your transgression, for My name [is] in his heart;

22 for, if thou diligently hearken to his voice, and hast done all that which I speak, then I have been at enmity with thine enemies, and have distressed those distressing thee.

23 `For My messenger goeth before thee, and hath brought thee in unto the Amorite, and the Hittite, and the Perizzite, and the Canaanite, the Hivite, and the Jebusite, and I have cut them off.

24 `Thou dost not bow thyself to their gods, nor serve them, nor do according to their doings, but dost utterly devote them, and thoroughly break their standing pillars.

25 `And ye have served Jehovah your God, and He hath blessed thy bread and thy water, and I have turned aside sickness from thine heart;

26 there is not a miscarrying and barren one in thy land; the number of thy days I fulfil:

27 My terror I send before thee, and I have put to death all the people among whom thou comest, and I have given the neck of all thine enemies unto thee.

28 `And I have sent the hornet before thee, and it hath cast out the Hivite, the Canaanite, and the Hittite, from before thee;

29 I cast them not out from before thee in one year, lest the land be a desolation, and the beast of the field hath multiplied against thee;

30 little [by] little I cast them out from before thee, till thou art fruitful, and hast inherited the land.

31 `And I have set thy border from the Red Sea, even unto the sea of the Philistines, and from the wilderness unto the River: for I give into your hand the inhabitants of the land, and thou hast cast them out from before thee;

32 thou dost not make a covenant with them, and with their gods;

33 they do not dwell in thy land, lest they cause thee to sin against Me when thou servest their gods, when it becometh a snare to thee.'

   

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Numbers 14:35

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35 I [am] Jehovah, I have spoken; if I do not this to all this evil company who are meeting against me; -- in this wilderness they are consumed, and there they die.'

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Apocalypse Explained # 787

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787. And the whole earth wondered after the beast. That this signifies acceptance by the more learned in the church, and a remote reception by those who are less learned, is evident from the signification of wondering after the beast, when said of that discordance with the Word which is apparently removed by conjunctions concerning works with faith that have been devised, as denoting acceptance by the more learned, and reception by the less learned, of which we shall speak presently; and from the signification of earth, as denoting the church (concerning which see above, n. 29, 304, 417, 697, 741, 742, 752).

[2] The reason why the whole earth wondering after the beast signifies acceptance and reception is, that wondering exercises an attraction, and those whom it attracts follow it. In the Word mention is sometimes made of going and walking after God; also after other gods, after a leader, and after many; and this signifies to follow and acknowledge in heart; also to be and to live with them, and to be in fellowship with them, as in the following passages. In 1 Kings:

"David hath kept my precepts, and walked after me with all his heart, to do what is right in mine eyes" (14:8).

In 1 Samuel:

"The sons of Jesse went after Saul to the war" (17:13).

In Moses:

"Thou shalt not go after a multitude to evils; thou shalt not speak in a cause to turn aside after a multitude to pervert" (Exodus 23:2).

In Jeremiah:

Thou shalt not go "after other gods whom thou hast not known" (7:9).

Again:

"They went after other gods to serve them" (11:10; Deuteronomy 8:19).

Again:

"The man who goeth after Baal-peor, Jehovah thy God will destroy from the midst of thee" (Deuteronomy 4:3).

It is therefore evident that to go after any one signifies to follow him, to obey him, to act from him, and to live from him. To walk also signifies to live. From these things it is evident, that by wondering after the beast is signified acceptance and reception, from a persuasion that discordance with the Word is apparently removed.

[3] The reason why acceptance by the learned, and remote reception by the less learned is signified is, because the learned devised the conjunction of faith with its life, which produce good works; but the less learned, not being able to search inwardly into these discordances, received them, every one according to his apprehension. Hence the dogma that faith alone is the essential means of salvation has been received in the whole world or the Christian Church.

[4] It shall also be explained, in a few words, how the chief point of that religion, that salvation consists in faith alone, and not in good works, has been to all appearance removed, and is thence accepted by the learned. For the latter have devised degrees of the progression of faith to good works; these they call degrees of justification. The first degree they make to consist in hearing from masters and preachers; the second degree, information derived from the Word proving this. The third degree they make to be acknowledgment. Now, because nothing of the church can be acknowledged in heart, unless temptation precedes, therefore they adjoin temptation to this degree; and if the doubts, which are then presented, are dissipated from the Word, or by the preacher, and victory is obtained by this means, they say that the man has confidence, which is said to be a certainty of the truth of the thing, and also confidence that he is saved by the Lord's merit. But because the doubts which occur in temptations arise chiefly from not understanding the Word, where deeds, works, doing, and working, are so often mentioned, they say that the understanding is to be kept in obedience to faith. Hence follows the fourth degree, which is the endeavour to do good; and in this they come to a conclusion, saying that when man arrives at this degree he is justified, and that then all the actions of his life are accepted by God, the evils of his life not being seen by Him, because they are pardoned.

This conjunction of faith with good works has been devised by the learned, and also accepted by them, but it rarely extends to the common people. In the first place, because it is beyond the comprehension of some of them; and, secondly, because they are for the most part engaged in their business and employment, these diverting the mind from understanding the inner mysteries of this doctrine.

[5] The conjunction of faith with good works, and thereby an apparent agreement with the Word, is received in a different manner by those who are less learned. These know nothing about the degrees of justification, but believe that faith alone is the only means of salvation. And when they see from the Word, and hear from the preacher, that goods must be done, and that man is to be judged according to his works, they think that faith produces good works, for they suppose that to know those things which the preacher teaches, and thence to think that it is so, constitutes faith. And because this goes before, they believe that faith produces good works, which they call the fruits of faith, not knowing that such faith is a faith of the memory only, which, strictly considered, is historical faith, because derived from another, thus of that other with them, and that such faith can never produce any good fruit.

Into this error the majority of the Christian world has fallen in consequence of faith alone having been received as the chief, in fact, as the only means of salvation. But how faith and charity, or believing and doing, make one, shall be explained in what follows.

  
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Translation by Isaiah Tansley. Many thanks to the Swedenborg Society for the permission to use this translation.