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1 Mosebok 34

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1 Men Dina, den dotter som Lea hade fött åt Jakob, gick ut för att besöka landets döttrar.

2 Och Sikem, som var son till hivéen Hamor, hövdingen i landet, fick se henne, och han tog henne till sig och lägrade henne och kränkte henne.

3 Och hans hjärta fäste sig vid Dina, Jakobs dotter, och flickan blev honom kär, och han talade vänligt med flickan.

4 Och Sikem sade till sin fader Hamor: »Skaffa mig denna flicka till hustru

5 Och Jakob hade fått höra att hans dotter Dina hade blivit skändad. Men eftersom hans söner voro med hans boskap ute på marken, teg Jakob, till dess de kommo hem.

6 Så gick nu Hamor, Sikems fader, ut till Jakob för att tala med honom.

7 Men när Jakobs söner kommo hem från marken, sedan de hade fått höra vad som hade hänt, blevo de förbittrade och vredgades högeligen över att han hade gjort vad som var en galenskap i Israel, i det han hade lägrat Jakobs dotter -- en otillbörlig gärning.

8 Då talade Hamor med dem och sade: »Min son Sikems hjärta har fäst sig vid eder syster; given henne åt honom till hustru.

9 Och befrynden eder med oss; given edra döttrar åt oss, och tagen I våra döttrar till hustrur,

10 och bosätten eder hos oss, ty landet skall ligga öppet för eder; där mån I bo och draga omkring och förvärva besittningar.»

11 Och Sikem sade till hennes fader och hennes bröder: »Låten mig finna nåd för edra ögon; vad I fordren av mig vill jag giva.

12 Begären av mig huru stor brudgåva och skänk som helst; jag vill giva vad I fordren av mig; given mig allenast flickan till hustru

13 svarade Jakobs söner Sikem och hans fader Hamor med listiga ord, eftersom han hade skändat deras syster Dina,

14 och sade till dem: »Vi kunna icke samtycka till att giva vår syster åt en man som har förhud; ty sådant hålla vi för skamligt.

15 Allenast på det villkoret skola vi göra eder till viljes, att I bliven såsom vi, därigenom att allt mankön bland eder omskäres.

16 Då skola vi giva våra döttrar åt eder och själva taga edra döttrar till hustrur; och vi skola då bo hos eder och bliva med eder ett enda folk.

17 Men om I icke viljen lyssna till oss och låta omskära eder, så skola vi taga vår syster och draga bort.»

18 Och Hamor och Sikem, Hamors son, voro till freds med vad de begärde.

19 Och den unge mannen dröjde icke att göra så, ty han hade fått behag till Jakobs dotter. Och han hade större myndighet än någon annan i hans faders hus.

20 Så trädde då Hamor och hans son Sikem upp i sin stads port och talade till männen i staden och sade:

21 »Dessa män äro fredligt sinnade mot oss; må vi alltså låta dem bo i landet och draga omkring där; landet har ju utrymme nog för dem. Vi vilja taga deras döttrar till hustrur åt oss och giva dem våra döttrar.

22 Men allenast på det villkoret skola männen göra oss till viljes och bo hos oss och bliva ett enda folk med oss, att allt mankön bland oss omskäres, likasom de själva äro omskurna.

23 Och då bliva ju deras boskap och deras egendom och alla deras dragare vår tillhörighet. Må vi fördenskull allenast göra dem till viljes, så skola de bo kvar hos oss

24 Och folket lydde Hamor och hans son Sikem, alla de som bodde inom hans stadsport; allt mankön, så många som bodde inom hans stadsport, läto omskära sig.

25 Men på tredje dagen, då de voro sjuka av såren, togo Jakobs två söner Simeon och Levi, Dinas bröder, var sitt svärd och överföllo staden oförtänkt och dräpte allt mankön.

26 Också Hamor och hans son Sikem dräpte de med svärdsegg och togo Dina ut ur Sikems hus och gingo sin väg.

27 Och Jakobs söner kommo över de slagna och plundrade staden, därför att deras syster hade blivit skändad;

28 de togo deras får och fäkreatur och åsnor, både vad som fanns i staden och vad som fanns på fältet.

29 Och allt deras gods och alla deras barn och deras kvinnor förde de bort såsom byte, tillika med allt annat som fanns i husen.

30 Men Jakob sade till Simeon och Levi: »I haven dragit olycka över mig, då I nu haven gjort mig förhatlig för landets inbyggare, kananéerna och perisséerna. Mitt folk är allenast en ringa hop; man skall nu församla sig mot mig och slå mig ihjäl; så skall jag med mitt hus förgöras.»

31 Men de svarade: »Skulle man då få behandla vår syster såsom en sköka

   

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Arcana Coelestia #4434

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4434. And his soul clave unto Dinah. That this signifies an inclination to conjunction, is evident from the signification of “his soul cleaving,” as being an inclination. That it is to conjunction is evident, because in the internal sense the things which belong to conjugial love involve spiritual conjunction, which is that of truth with good, and of good with truth. The reason why in the internal sense the things which belong to conjugial love involve this conjunction, is that conjugial love derives its origin from the marriage of truth and good, and of good and truth (n. 2618, 2727-2729, 2737, 2803, 3132). Hence also the adulterations of good are meant in the Word by “adulteries,” and the falsifications of truth by “whoredoms” (n. 2466, 2729, 2750, 3399). From all this it may be seen that by all that is related of Shechem and of Dinah in this chapter nothing else is meant in the internal sense than the conjunction of the truth represented by Shechem with the affection of truth represented by Dinah; thus that by the words “his soul clave unto Dinah” is signified an inclination to conjunction.

[2] As in the whole of this chapter conjugial love toward Dinah is treated of, and how Shechem sought her for a woman, and as by the things of conjugial love there is signified spiritual conjunction, I may confirm from the Word that marriages and what belongs to them involve nothing else.

In John:

Let us be glad and exult, and let us give the glory unto Him, because the wedding of the Lamb is come, and His wife hath made herself ready, as have they who are called unto the wedding supper of the Lamb (Revelation 19:7, 9).

In the same:

I saw the holy city, New Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. One of the seven angels spoke with me, saying, Come, I will show thee the bride, the Lamb’s wife; and he carried me away in the spirit upon a mountain great and high, and showed me the great city, the holy Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God (Revelation 21:2, 9-10).

That by what relates to betrothal and marriage naught else is here signified than the Lord’s conjunction with the church, and this by means of truth and good, is very evident, for the “holy city” and the “New Jerusalem” are nothing else than the church. (That a “city” is the truth of the church may be seen above, n. 402, 2268, 2449, 2451, 2712, 2943, 3216; and that “Jerusalem” is the spiritual church, n. 402, 2117, 3654)

[3] In Malachi:

Judah hath dealt treacherously, and an abomination has been committed in Israel and in Jerusalem, for Judah hath profaned the holiness of Jehovah, because he hath loved and hath betrothed to him the daughter of a strange god. Jehovah hath borne witness between thee and the wife of thy youth, against whom thou hast dealt treacherously (Malachi 2:11, 14); where “to love and betroth the daughter of a strange god” is to conjoin one’s self with falsity instead of truth, which is the “wife of youth.”

[4] Ezekiel:

Thou hast taken thy sons and thy daughters whom thou hast borne unto Me, and hast sacrificed to devour them. Was there little of thy whoredoms? Thou art the daughter of thy mother, who loathes her husband and her sons; and thou art the sister of thy sisters who loathed their husbands and their sons (Ezekiel 16:20, 45);

here the abominations of Jerusalem are treated of, which because they were from evils and falsities, are described in this chapter by such things as are contrary to marriages, namely, by adulteries and whoredoms. The “husbands whom they loathed” are goods; the “sons” are truths; and the “daughters” are the affections of these.

[5] In Isaiah:

Sing, O barren one, that didst not bear, resound with singing and shout for joy that didst not travail, because more are the sons of the desolate than the sons of the married one. The reproach of thy widowhood shalt thou remember no more, because thy makers are thy husbands, Jehovah Zebaoth is His name, and thy Redeemer the Holy One of Israel, the God of the whole earth is He called; for as a woman forsaken and afflicted in spirit hath Jehovah called thee, and as a woman of youth when she is divorced, hath said thy God. All thy sons are taught of Jehovah, and much is the peace of thy sons (Isaiah 54:1, 5-6, 13);

as by marriage is signified the conjunction of truth and good and of good and truth, it is evident what is signified by “husband and wife,” by “sons and daughters,” by “widows,” by the “divorced,” and by “bearing,” “travailing,” “being desolate,” and “being barren;” for these things belong to marriage. What these signify in the spiritual sense has been frequently shown in the explications.

[6] In the same:

For Zion’s sake I will not be silent, and for Jerusalem’s sake I will not rest; it shall no longer be said to thee, Forsaken one; but thy land shall be called The married one, for Jehovah shall be well pleased in thee, and thy land shall be married; because a young man shall marry a virgin, thy sons shall marry thee, and there shall be joy of the bridegroom over the bride, thy God shall rejoice over thee (Isaiah 62:1, 4-5);

he who knows not the internal sense of the Word may suppose that such things in the Word are only comparisons, like many expressions in common speech, and that this is the reason why the church is compared to a daughter, to a virgin, and a wife; thus the things of faith and charity to those of marriage. But in the Word all things are representative of spiritual and celestial things, and are real correspondences; for the Word has come down from heaven, and because it has come down thence it is in its origin the Divine celestial and spiritual to which those things which belong to the sense of the letter correspond. Hence it is that the things of the heavenly marriage, which is the conjunction of good and truth, fall into such as correspond, thus into those which belong to marriages on earth.

[7] Hence also it is that the Lord likened the kingdom of the heavens (that is, His kingdom in heaven, and His kingdom on earth which is the church) to a “man, a king, who made a wedding for his son, and invited many to it” (Matthew 22:2-14); and also to “ten virgins who took their lamps and went forth to meet the bridegroom” (Matthew 25:1-13). And the Lord likewise called those who are of the church “sons of the wedding”:

Jesus said, Can the sons of the wedding mourn, so long as the bridegroom is with them? But the days will come when the bridegroom shall be taken away from them, and then will they fast (Matthew 9:15).

[8] Hence also the affection of good and the affection of truth are called “the joy and gladness of the bridegroom and the bride,” because heavenly joy is from and in these affections. As in Isaiah:

Thy sons shall marry thee, and there shall be the joy of the bridegroom over the bride, Jehovah thy God shall rejoice over thee (Isaiah 62:5).

In Jeremiah:

The voice of joy and the voice of gladness, and the voice of the bridegroom and the voice of the bride, the voice of them that say, Confess ye to Jehovah, because good is Jehovah (Jeremiah 33:11).

In the same:

I will cause to cease from the cities of Judah and from the streets of Jerusalem the voice of joy and the voice of gladness, the voice of the bridegroom and the voice of the bride, because the land shall go forth into a waste (Jeremiah 7:34; 16:9; 25:10).

And in John:

The light of a lamp shall not shine in Babylon anymore, and the voice of the bridegroom and of the bride shall not be heard in her anymore (Revelation 18:23).

[9] As through love truly conjugial marriages on earth correspond to the heavenly marriage, which is that of good and truth, therefore the laws delivered in the Word concerning betrothals and marriages wholly correspond to the spiritual laws of the heavenly marriage, as that they were to espouse only one wife (Mark 10:2-8; Luke 16:18); for such is the case in the heavenly marriage, namely, that good cannot be conjoined except with its own truth, and truth with its own good. If good were conjoined with any other truth than its own, it would not subsist at all, but would be rent asunder and so would perish. In the spiritual church the wife represents good and the man represents truth, but in the celestial church the husband represents good and the wife truth; and-what is a mystery-they not only represent, but also in all their activities correspond to them.

[10] Moreover, the laws delivered in the Old Testament about marriages have in like manner a correspondence with the laws of the heavenly marriage, such as those in Exodus 21:7-11; 22:15-16; 34:16; Numbers 36:6; Deuteronomy 7:3-4; 22:28-29, and also the laws about the forbidden degrees (Leviticus 18:6-20); as regards each of which, of the Lord’s Divine mercy elsewhere. That the degrees and laws of marriages have their origin in the laws of truth and good, which are those of the heavenly marriage, and bear relation to them, is manifest in Ezekiel:

The priests the Levites shall not take for their wives a widow nor her that is divorced, but virgins of the seed of the house of Israel and a widow that has been the widow of a priest shall they take (Ezekiel 44:22).

The subject here treated of is the holy city New Jerusalem and the heavenly Canaan, and it is evident that these are the Lord’s kingdom and His church. Consequently by “the Levites” are not signified Levites, nor by a “widow and her that is divorced” are there signified a widow and one who has been divorced, but the things to which these correspond.

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