265 - Vessels Broken and New
Durch Jonathan S. Rose
Title: Vessels Broken and New
Topic: Salvation
Summary: When we feel the "vessel" of our selves being shattered, as painful as that is, it gives us an opportunity to let the Potter make us into something new.
Use the reference links below to follow along in the Bible as you watch.
References:
Isaiah 30:9, 14
Leviticus 6:24, 28; 11:29, 33
2 Kings 4
Job 10:1; 16:11-12
Psalms 2:7-9
Psalms 31:9, 11-12
Isaiah 8:9; 11:1, 4; 29:16; 45:9; 64:8
Jeremiah 18:1, 6; 19:1, 10; 32:14; 48:11-12, 38
Daniel 2:31, 41
Matthew 9:17; 13:47-48; 25:1-4
John 19:28-30
Acts of the Apostles 9:15
2 Corinthians 4:7
1 Thessalonians 4:3, 7
2 Timothy 2:21-22
Revelation 21:5; 2:25, 27
Psalms 22
Apocalypse Revealed #491
491. "And they will prophesy one thousand two hundred and sixty days." This symbolically means that these two - an acknowledgment of the Lord and a life in accordance with the Ten Commandments, which are the two essential elements of the New Church - must be taught until the end and a new beginning.
That these two, an acknowledgment of the Lord and a life in accordance with the Ten Commandments, are the two essential elements of the New Church, and are meant by the two witnesses, may be seen just above in no. 490. And that to prophesy means, symbolically, to teach, in nos. 8, 133.
One thousand two hundred and sixty days means, symbolically, until the end and a new beginning, that is, until the end of the previous church and thus the beginning of a new one. This is the symbolic meaning of the number because the number has the same symbolic meaning as three and a half; for when expressed in terms of years, 1260 days is equivalent to three and a half years, 1 and three and a half symbolizes an end and a beginning (no. 505).
This same number has the same symbolic meaning in the next chapter:
Then the woman fled into the wilderness, where she has a place prepared by God, that they should feed her there one thousand two hundred and sixty days. (Revelation 12:6)
Fußnoten:
1. Reckoning a year to comprise 360 days, or 12 months of 30 days each, a reckoning common in the ancient Near East before the establishment of the Julian calendar.