Die Bibel

 

Genesi 3

Lernen

   

1 OR il serpente era astuto più che qualunque altra bestia della campagna, che il Signore Iddio avesse fatta. Ed esso disse alla donna: Ha pure Iddio detto: Non mangiate del frutto di tutti gli alberi del giardino?

2 E la donna disse al serpente: Noi possiamo mangiare del frutto degli alberi del giardino.

3 Ma del frutto dell’albero, ch’è in mezzo del giardino, Iddio ha detto: Non ne mangiate, e nol toccate, chè non muoiate.

4 E il serpente disse alla donna: Voi non morreste punto.

5 Ma Iddio sa che, nel giorno che voi ne mangereste, i vostri occhi si aprirebbero; onde sareste come dii, avendo conoscenza del bene e del male.

6 La donna adunque, veggendo che il frutto dell’albero era buono a mangiare, e ch’era dilettevole a vedere e che l’albero era desiderabile per avere intelletto, prese del frutto, e ne mangiò, e ne diede ancora al suo marito, acciocchè ne mangiasse seco. Ed egli ne mangiò.

7 Allora gli occhi di amendue loro si apersero, e conobbero ch’erano ignudi; onde cucirono insieme delle foglie di fico, e se ne fecero delle coperte da cignersi attorno.

8 Poi, all’aura del dì, udirono la voce del Signore Iddio che camminava per lo giardino. E Adamo, con la sua moglie, si nascose dal cospetto del Signore Iddio, per mezzo gli alberi del giardino.

9 E il Signore Iddio chiamò Adamo, e gli disse: Ove sei?

10 Ed egli disse: Io intesi la tua voce per lo giardino, e temetti, perciocchè io era ignudo; e mi nascosi.

11 E Iddio disse: Chi ti ha mostrato che tu fossi ignudo? Hai tu mangiato del frutto dell’albero, del quale io ti avea vietato di mangiare?

12 E Adamo disse: La donna, che tu hai posta meco, è quella che mi ha dato del frutto dell’albero, ed io ne ho mangiato.

13 E il Signore Iddio disse alla donna: Che cosa è questo che tu hai fatto? E la donna rispose: Il serpente mi ha sedotta, ed io ho mangiato di quel frutto.

14 Allora il Signore Iddio disse al serpente: Perciocchè tu hai fatto questo, sii maledetto sopra ogni altro animale, e sopra ogni altra bestia della campagna; tu camminerai in sul tuo ventre, e mangerai la polvere tutti i giorni della tua vita.

15 Ed io metterò inimicizia fra te e la donna, e fra la tua progenie e la progenie di essa; essa progenie ti triterà il capo e tu le ferirai il calcagno.

16 Poi disse alla donna: Io accrescerò grandemente i dolori del tuo parto e della tua gravidanza; tu partorirai figliuoli con dolori, e i tuoi desiderii dipenderanno dal tuo marito, ed egli signoreggerà sopra te.

17 E ad Adamo disse: Perciocchè tu hai atteso alla voce della tua moglie, ed hai mangiato del frutto dell’albero, del quale io ti avea data questo comandamento: Non mangiarne: la terra sarà maledetta per cagion tua; tu mangerai del frutto di essa con affanno, tutti i giorni della tua vita.

18 Ed ella ti produrrà spine e triboli; e tu mangerai l’erba de’ campi.

19 Tu mangerai il pane col sudor del tuo volto, fin che tu ritorni in terra; conciossiachè tu ne sii stato tolto; perciocchè tu sei polvere, tu ritornerai altresì in polvere.

20 E Adamo pose nome Eva alla sua moglie; perciocchè ella è stata madre di tutti i viventi.

21 E il Signore Iddio fece delle toniche di pelle ad Adamo ed alla sua moglie; e li vestì.

22 Poi il Signore Iddio disse: Ecco, l’uomo è divenuto come uno di noi, avendo conoscenza del bene e del male; ora adunque e’ si convien provvedere che talora egli non istenda la mano, e non prenda ancora del frutto dell’albero della vita, e ne mangi, e viva in perpetuo.

23 Perciò il Signore Iddio mandò l’uomo fuor del giardino di Eden, per lavorar la terra, dalla quale era stato tolto.

24 Così egli cacciò l’uomo, e pose dei Cherubini davanti al giardino di Eden, con una spada fiammeggiante che si vibrava in giro, per guardar la via dell’albero della vita.

   


To many Protestant and Evangelical Italians, the Bibles translated by Giovanni Diodati are an important part of their history. Diodati’s first Italian Bible edition was printed in 1607, and his second in 1641. He died in 1649. Throughout the 1800s two editions of Diodati’s text were printed by the British Foreign Bible Society. This is the more recent 1894 edition, translated by Claudiana.

Aus Swedenborgs Werken

 

True Christianity #470

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470. We Are Not Life, but We Are Vessels for Receiving Life from God

There is a generally held belief that there is life in us, that it belongs to us, and that therefore we are not only vessels for receiving life but we ourselves are life. This common belief derives from the way things appear to be, because we are alive, that is, we sense, think, speak, and act completely as if we had autonomy. Therefore the statement that we are not life, but are vessels for receiving life, cannot help but seem like something completely unheard of before, or like a paradox that goes against our sense-oriented thinking because it goes against the way things appear to be. I have blamed this misleading belief on the way things appear to be - the belief that we are in fact life, and therefore that life has been created as part of us and grafted onto us from birth. But the real reason for this misleading belief (which is based on the way things appear to be) is that many people today are earthly, and few are spiritual. The earthly self makes judgments based on appearances and resulting false impressions, when in fact these run directly counter to the truth, which is that we are not life but are vessels for receiving life.

[2] The fact that we are not life but are vessels for receiving life from God is demonstrated by the following clear points of evidence: All things that have been created are intrinsically finite. Human beings, because they are finite, could only have been created from finite things. Therefore in the Book of Creation it says that Adam was made from the ground and its dust [Genesis 2:7; 3:19]. In fact, he was named for the ground, since "Adam" means the soil of the earth. And every human being actually consists of nothing other than types of materials that are in the earth or are in the atmosphere from the earth. The elements that are in the atmosphere from the earth we absorb through our lungs and through the pores all over our bodies; we absorb the denser substances through foods made up of earthly elements.

[3] As for the human spirit, however, that too has been created from things that are finite. What is the human spirit but a vessel for the life that the mind possesses? The finite things of which it is made are spiritual substances. These substances exist in the spiritual world, but they have also been incorporated into our earth in a hidden way. If these spiritual substances were not present within material substances, seeds would not be loaded with hidden instructions and would not miraculously develop, without deviation, from the first shoot all the way to the production of fruit and new seeds. Worms would not be generated from emanations from the ground and from the gases exuded by plants with which the atmosphere is saturated.

[4] It is unreasonable to think that the Infinite could create anything other than what is finite; and that human beings, because they are finite, are anything other than forms that the Infinite is able to bring to life from the life he has within himself. Indeed, this is what is meant by the following: "Jehovah God formed the human being, the dust from the earth, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life" (Genesis 2:7). Because God is infinite, he is life in itself. This life is not something he can create and then transfer into a human being - that would make the human being God. The serpent or Devil, and from him, Eve and Adam, had the insane thought that this had actually happened. This is why the serpent said, "On the day you eat some of the fruit of this tree, your eyes will be opened and you will be like God" (Genesis 3:5).

[5] At the end of the earliest church, when it came to its final close, people latched onto the dreadful conviction that God had transfused and transferred himself into human beings. I know so because I have heard it from their own mouths. On account of their horrendous belief that they are gods, they remain profoundly hidden in an underground chamber. No one can get near it without collapsing as a result of inner dizziness. (The fact that Adam and his wife mean and describe the earliest church was made known under the previous heading [466].)

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