Die Bibel

 

1 Mose 4

Lernen

   

1 Und der Mensch erkannte Eva,sein Weib, und sie ward schwanger und gebar Kain; und sie sprach: Ich habe einen Mann erworben mit Jehova.

2 Und sie gebar ferner seinen Bruder, den Abel. Und Abel wurde ein Schafhirt, und Kain wurde ein Ackerbauer.

3 Und es geschah nach Verlauf einer Zeit, da brachte Kain dem Jehova eine Opfergabe von der Frucht des Erdbodens;

4 und Abel, auch er brachte von den Erstlingen seiner Herde und von ihrem Fett. Und Jehova blickte auf Abel und auf seine Opfergabe;

5 aber auf Kain und auf seine Opfergabe blickte er nicht. Und Kain ergrimmte sehr, und sein Antlitz senkte sich.

6 Und Jehova sprach zu Kain: Warum bist du ergrimmt, und warum hat sich dein Antlitz gesenkt?

7 Ist es nicht so, daß es sich erhebt, wenn du wohl tust? Und wenn du nicht wohl tust, so lagert die Sünde vor der Tür. Und nach dir wird sein Verlangen sein, du aber wirst über ihn herrschen.

8 Und Kain sprach zu seinem Bruder Abel; und es geschah, als sie auf dem Felde waren, da erhob sich Kain wider seinen Bruder Abel und erschlug ihn.

9 Und Jehova sprach zu Kain: Wo ist dein Bruder Abel? Und er sprach: Ich weiß nicht; bin ich meines Bruders Hüter?

10 Und er sprach: Was hast du getan! Horch! Das Blut deines Bruders schreit zu mir vom Erdboden her.

11 Und nun, verflucht seiest du von dem Erdboden hinweg, der seinen Mund aufgetan hat, das Blut deines Bruders von deiner Hand zu empfangen!

12 Wenn du den Erdboden bebaust, soll er dir hinfort seine Kraft nicht geben; unstet und flüchtig sollst du sein auf der Erde.

13 Und Kain sprach zu Jehova: Zu groß ist meine Strafe, um sie zu tragen.

14 Siehe, du hast mich heute von der Fläche des Erdbodens vertrieben, und ich werde verborgen sein vor deinem Angesicht und werde unstet und flüchtig sein auf der Erde; und es wird geschehen: wer irgend mich findet, wird mich erschlagen.

15 Und Jehova sprach zu ihm: Darum, jeder, der Kain erschlägt siebenfältig soll es gerächt werden. Und Jehova machte an Kain ein Zeichen, auf daß ihn nicht erschlüge, wer irgend ihn fände.

16 Und Kain ging weg von dem Angesicht Jehovas und wohnte im Lande Nod, östlich von Eden.

17 Und Kain erkannte sein Weib, und sie ward schwanger und gebar Hanoch. Und er baute eine Stadt und benannte die Stadt nach dem Namen seines Sohnes Hanoch.

18 Und dem Hanoch wurde Irad geboren; und Irad zeugte Mehujael, und Mehujael zeugte Methusael, und Methusael zeugte Lamech.

19 Und Lamech nahm sich zwei Weiber; der Name der einen war Ada, und der Name der anderen Zilla.

20 Und Ada gebar Jabal; dieser war der Vater der Zeltbewohner und Herdenbesitzer.

21 Und der Name seines Bruders war Jubal; dieser war der Vater aller derer, welche mit der Laute und der Flöte umgehen.

22 Und Zilla, auch sie gebar Tubalkain, einen Hämmerer von allerlei Schneidewerkzeug aus Erz und Eisen. Und die Schwester Tubalkains war Naama.

23 Und Lamech sprach zu seinen Weibern: Ada und Zilla, höret meine Stimme; Weiber Lamechs, horchet auf meine Rede! Einen Mann erschlug ich für meine Wunde und einen Jüngling für meine Strieme!

24 Wenn Kain siebenfältig gerächt wird, so Lamech siebenundsiebzigfältig.

25 Und Adam erkannte abermals sein Weib, und sie gebar einen Sohn und gab ihm den Namen Seth; denn Gott hat mir einen anderen Samen gesetzt an Stelle Abels, weil Kain ihn erschlagen hat.

26 Und dem Seth, auch ihm wurde ein Sohn geboren, und er gab ihm den Namen Enos. Damals fing man an, den Namen Jehovas anzurufen.

   

Aus Swedenborgs Werken

 

Arcana Coelestia #716

studieren Sie diesen Abschnitt

  
/ 10837  
  

716. That holy things are signified by “seven” is evident from what has been said before respecting the seventh day, or the sabbath n. 84-87), namely, that the Lord is the seventh day; and that from Him every celestial church, or celestial man, is a seventh day, and indeed the celestial itself, which is most holy because it is from the Lord alone. For this reason, in the Word, “seven” signifies what is holy; and in fact, as here, in the internal sense partakes not at all of the idea of number. For they who are in the internal sense, as angels and angelic spirits are, do not even know what number is, and therefore not what seven is. Therefore it is not meant here that seven pairs were to be taken of all the clean beasts; or that there was so much of good in proportion to evil as seven to two; but that the things of the will with which this man of the church was furnished were goods, which are holy, whereby he could be regenerated, as was said above.

[2] That “seven” signifies what is holy, or holy things, is evident from the rituals in the representative church, wherein the number seven so frequently occurs. For example, they were to sprinkle of the blood and the oil seven times, as related in Leviticus:

Moses took the anointing oil, and anointed the tabernacle and all that was therein, and sanctified them; and he sprinkled thereof upon the altar seven times, and anointed the altar and all its vessels, to sanctify them (Leviticus 8:10-11).

Here “seven times” would be entirely without significance if what is holy were not thus represented. And in another place: When Aaron came into the holy place it is said: He shall take of the blood of the bullock and sprinkle with his finger upon the faces of the mercy seat toward the east; and before the mercy seat shall he sprinkle of the blood with his finger seven times (Leviticus 16:14).

And so at the altar:

He shall sprinkle of the blood upon it with his finger seven times, and cleanse it and sanctify it (Leviticus 16:19).

The particulars here, each and all, signify the Lord Himself, and therefore the holy of love; that is to say, the “blood” the “mercy seat” and also the “altar” and the “east” toward which the blood was to be sprinkled, and therefore also “seven.”

[3] And likewise in the sacrifices, of which in Leviticus:

If a soul shall sin through error, and if the anointed priest shall sin so as to bring guilt on the people, he shall slay the bullock before Jehovah, and the priest shall dip his finger in the blood, and sprinkle of the blood seven times before Jehovah, toward the veil of the sanctuary (Leviticus 4:2-3, 6).

Here in like manner “seven” signifies what is holy; because the subject treated of is expiation, which is of the Lord alone, and therefore the subject treated of is the Lord. Similar rites were also instituted in respect to the cleansing of leprosy, concerning which in Leviticus:

Of the blood of the bird, with cedar wood, and scarlet, and hyssop, the priest shall sprinkle upon him that is to be cleansed from the leprosy seven times, and shall make him clean. In like manner he was to sprinkle of the oil that was upon the palm of his left hand seven times before Jehovah. And so in a house where there was leprosy, he was to take cedar wood and hyssop and scarlet, and with the blood of the bird sprinkle seven times (Leviticus 14:6-7, 27, 51).Here anyone may see that there is nothing at all in the “cedar wood” the “scarlet” the “oil” the “blood of a bird” nor yet in “seven” except from the fact that they are representative of holy things. Take away from them what is holy, and all that remains is dead, or profanely idolatrous. But when they signify holy things there is Divine worship therein, which is internal, and is only represented by the externals. The Jews indeed could not know what these things signified; nor does anyone at the present day know what was signified by the “cedar wood” the “hyssop” the “scarlet” and the “bird.” But if they had only been willing to think that holy things were involved which they did not know, and so had worshiped the Lord, or the Messiah who was to come, who would heal them of their leprosy-that is, of their profanation of holy things-they might have been saved. For they who so think and believe are at once instructed in the other life, if they desire, as to what each and all things represented.

[4] And in like manner it was commanded respecting the red heifer:

The priest shall take of her blood with his finger and sprinkle of her blood toward the face of the tent of meeting seven times (Numbers 19:4).

As the “seventh day” or “sabbath” signified the Lord, and from Him the celestial man, and the celestial itself, the seventh day in the Jewish Church was of all religious observances the most holy; and hence came the “sabbath of sabbath” in the seventh year (Leviticus 25:4), and the “jubilee” that was proclaimed after the seven sabbaths of years, or after seven times seven years (Leviticus 25:8-9. That in the highest sense “seven” signifies the Lord, and hence the holy of love, is evident also from the golden candlestick and its seven lamps (concerning which in Exodus 25:31-33, 37; 37:17-19, 23; Numbers 8:2-3; Zechariah 4:2) and of which it is thus written by John:

Seven golden lampstands; and in the midst of the seven lampstands One like unto the Son of man (Revelation 1:12-13).

It very clearly appears in this passage that the “lampstand with the seven lamps” signifies the Lord, and that the “lamps” are the holy things of love, or celestial things; and therefore they were “seven.”

[5] And again:

Out of the throne went forth seven torches of fire, burning before the throne, which are the seven spirits of God (Revelation 4:5).

Here the “seven torches” that went forth out of the throne of the Lord are the seven lights, or lamps. The same is signified wherever the number “seven” occurs in the Prophets, as in Isaiah:

The light of the moon shall be as the light of the sun, and the light of the sun shall be sevenfold, as the light of seven days, in the day that Jehovah bindeth up the breach of His people (Isaiah 30:26).

Here the “sevenfold light, as the light of seven days” does not signify sevenfold, but the holy of the love signified by the “sun.” See also what was said and shown above respecting the number “seven” (Genesis 4:15). From all this again it is clearly evident that whatever numbers are used in the Word never mean numbers (as was also shown before, (Genesis 6:3).

  
/ 10837  
  

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