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แหล่งกำเนิด 17

Lernen

   

1 เมื่ออายุอับรามได้เก้าสิบเก้าปี พระเยโฮวาห์ทรงประกฎแก่อับรามและตรัสแก่ท่านว่า "เราเป็นพระเจ้า ผู้ทรงมหิทธิฤทธิ์ จงดำเนินอยู่ต่อหน้าเราและเจ้าจงเป็นคนดีรอบคอบ

2 เราจะทำพันธสัญญาของเราระหว่างเรากับเจ้า และจะให้เจ้าทวีมากขึ้น"

3 อับรามก็ซบหน้าลงถึงดินและพระเจ้าทรงมีพระราชปฏิสันถารกับท่านว่า

4 "สำหรับเรา ดูเถิด นี่เป็นพันธสัญญาของเรากับเจ้า และเจ้าจะเป็นบิดาของประชาชาติมากมาย

5 ชื่อของเจ้าจะไม่เรียกว่า อับราม อีกต่อไป แต่เจ้าจะมีชื่อว่า อับราฮัม เพราะเราจะกระทำให้เจ้าเป็นบิดาของประชาชาติมากมาย

6 เราจะกระทำให้เจ้ามีลูกดกทวีมากขึ้น เราจะกระทำให้เจ้าเป็นชนหลายชาติ กษัตริย์หลายองค์จะเกิดมาจากเจ้า

7 เราจะตั้งพันธสัญญาของเราระหว่างเรากับเจ้าและเชื้อสายของเจ้าที่มาภายหลังเจ้าตลอดชั่วอายุของเขาให้เป็นพันธสัญญานิรันดร์ เป็นพระเจ้าองค์เดียวแก่เจ้าและเชื้อสายของเจ้าที่มาภายหลังเจ้า

8 เราจะให้แผ่นดินที่เจ้าอาศัยอยู่เป็นคนต่างด้าวนี้ คือบรรดาแผ่นดินคานาอันแก่เจ้าและเชื้อสายของเจ้าที่มาภายหลังเจ้าให้เป็นกรรมสิทธิ์นิรันดร์ และเราจะเป็นพระเจ้าของพวกเขา"

9 พระเจ้าตรัสแก่อับราฮัมว่า "เหตุฉะนั้นเจ้าและเชื้อสายของเจ้าที่มาภายหลังเจ้าตลอดชั่วอายุของพวกเขาจะรักษาพันธสัญญาของเรา

10 นี่เป็นพันธสัญญาของเราซึ่งเจ้าจะรักษาระหว่างเรากับเจ้าและเชื้อสายของเจ้าที่มาภายหลังเจ้า คือเด็กผู้ชายทุกคนในท่ามกลางพวกเจ้าจะเข้าสุหนัต

11 เจ้าจะเข้าสุหนัตตัดหนังหุ้มปลายองคชาตของเจ้า และมันจะเป็นหมายสำคัญแห่งพันธสัญญาระหว่างเรากับเจ้า

12 ผู้ชายที่มีอายุแปดวันจะเข้าสุหนัตในท่ามกลางพวกเจ้า เด็กผู้ชายทุกคนตลอดชั่วอายุของพวกเจ้า ผู้ชายที่เกิดในบ้านหรือเอาเงินซื้อมาจากคนต่างด้าวใดๆซึ่งมิใช่เชื้อสายของเจ้า

13 ผู้ชายที่เกิดในบ้านของเจ้าและผู้ชายที่เอาเงินซื้อมาจำเป็นต้องเข้าสุหนัต และพันธสัญญาของเราจะอยู่ที่เนื้อของเจ้า เป็นพันธสัญญานิรันดร

14 เด็กผู้ชายที่มิได้เข้าสุหนัต คือผู้ที่มิได้เข้าสุหนัตตัดหนังหุ้มปลายองคชาตของเขา ชีวิตนั้นจะถูกตัดขาดจากชนชาติของเขา เขาได้ละเมิดพันธสัญญาของเรา"

15 และพระเจ้าตรัสแก่อับราฮัมว่า "สำหรับซารายภรรยาของเจ้า เจ้าจะไม่เรียกชื่อนางว่า ซาราย แต่จะเรียกชื่อนางว่า ซาราห์

16 เราจะอวยพรแก่นางและให้บุตรชายคนหนึ่งแก่เจ้ากับนางด้วย ใช่ เราจะอวยพรนาง นางจะเป็นมารดาของชนหลายชาติ กษัตริย์ของชนหลายชาติจะมาจากนาง"

17 ดังนั้นอับราฮัมจึงซบหน้าลงหัวเราะคิดในใจของท่านว่า "ชายผู้มีอายุหนึ่งร้อยปีจะให้กำเนิดบุตรได้หรือ ซาราห์ผู้มีอายุได้เก้าสิบปีแล้วจะคลอดบุตรหรือ"

18 อับราฮัมทูลพระเจ้าว่า "โอ ขอให้อิชมาเอลมีชีวิตอยู่ต่อพระพักตร์ของพระองค์"

19 พระเจ้าตรัสว่า "ซาราห์ภรรยาของเจ้าจะคลอดบุตรชายคนหนึ่งแก่เจ้าเป็นแน่ เจ้าจะเรียกชื่อของเขาว่า อิสอัค และเราจะตั้งพันธสัญญาของเรากับเขาและกับเชื้อสายของเขาที่มาภายหลังเขาให้เป็นพันธสัญญานิรันดร

20 สำหรับอิชมาเอลนั้นเราได้ฟังเจ้าแล้ว ดูเถิด เราได้อวยพรเขาและจะกระทำให้เขามีลูกดกทวีมากขึ้นอุดมบริบูรณ์อย่างยิ่ง เขาจะให้กำเนิดเจ้านายสิบสององค์และเราจะกระทำให้เขาเป็นชนชาติใหญ่ชนชาติหนึ่ง

21 แต่พันธสัญญาของเรา เราจะตั้งไว้กับอิสอัคซึ่งซาราห์จะคลอดให้แก่เจ้าปีหน้าในเวลานี้"

22 พระองค์มีพระราชปฏิสันถารกับท่านเสร็จแล้ว พระเจ้าก็เสด็จขึ้นไปจากอับราฮัม

23 อับราฮัมจึงเอาอิชมาเอลบุตรชายของท่าน บรรดาคนทั้งปวงที่เกิดในบ้านของท่านและบรรดาคนทั้งปวงที่ได้ซื้อมาด้วยเงินของท่าน คือผู้ชายทุกคนท่ามกลางคนที่อยู่ในบ้านของอับราฮัม ให้เข้าสุหนัตตัดหนังหุ้มปลายองคชาตของพวกเขาในวันนั้นตามที่พระเจ้าตรัสไว้แก่ท่าน

24 เมื่อท่านเข้าสุหนัตตัดหนังหุ้มปลายองคชาตของท่าน อับราฮัมมีอายุเก้าสิบเก้าปี

25 และอิชมาเอลบุตรชายของท่านมีอายุสิบสามปีเมื่อเขาเข้าสุหนัตตัดหนังหุ้มปลายองคชาตของเขา

26 อับราฮัมและอิชมาเอลบุตรชายของท่านเข้าสุหนัตในวันเดียวกันนั้น

27 บรรดาผู้ชายในบ้านของท่าน ทั้งที่เกิดในบ้านของท่านและซื้อมาด้วยเงินจากคนต่างด้าวก็เข้าสุหนัตพร้อมกับท่าน

   


Many thanks to Philip Pope for the permission to use his 2003 translation of the English King James Version Bible into Thai. Here's a link to the mission's website: www.thaipope.org

Aus Swedenborgs Werken

 

Arcana Coelestia #6804

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6804. And God remembered His covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob. That this signifies by reason of conjunction with the church through the Lord’s Divine Human, is evident from the signification of “covenant,” as being conjunction (of which in what follows); and from the representation of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, with whom a covenant was made, as being the Lord’s Divine Human. (That Abraham represents the Lord as to the Divine Itself, Isaac as to the Divine rational, and Jacob as to the Divine natural, see n. 1893, 2011, 2066, 2072, 2083, 2630, 3194, 3210, 3245, 3251, 3305, 3439, 3576, 3599, 3704, 4180, 4286, 4538, 4570, 4615, 6098, 6185, 6276, 6425.) That where mention is made of “Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob” in the Word, in the spiritual sense these men are not meant, can be seen from the fact that names never penetrate into heaven, but only what is signified by those who are named, thus the things themselves, their quality and their states, which are of the church and of the Lord’s kingdom, and which are of the Lord Himself.

[2] And moreover the angels in heaven never determine their thoughts to the individual persons, for this would be to limit the thoughts, and to withdraw them from the universal perception of the things, from which is angelic speech. Hence what the angels speak in heaven is unutterable to man, and far above his thought, which is not extended to universals, but confined to particulars. When therefore we read this:

Many shall come from the east and the west, and shall recline with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of the heavens (Matthew 8:11).

The angels perceive the Lord’s presence and the appropriation of the truth and good which proceed from His Divine Human. Also when we read that

Lazarus was taken up into Abraham’s bosom (Luke 16:22).

The angels perceive that he was taken up into heaven where the Lord is present. Hence also it can be seen that by the “covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob” in the internal sense is meant conjunction through the Lord’s Divine Human.

[3] That the Divine Human is a “covenant,” that is, conjunction itself, can be seen from many passages in the Word, as in Isaiah:

I will give Thee for a covenant to the people, for a light of the nations (Isaiah 42:6).

I gave Thee for a covenant of the people, to restore the land, to divide the wasted heritages (Isaiah 49:8).

Incline your ear, and come unto Me; hear and your soul shall live; so will I make a covenant of eternity with you, even the sure mercies of David. Behold I have given Him for a witness to the peoples, a prince and a lawgiver to the nations (Isaiah 55:3-4).

The Lord whom ye seek shall suddenly come to His temple; and the Angel of the covenant whom ye desire, behold He cometh (Malachi 3:1).

He hath put for Me a covenant of eternity, to be disposed for all and to be kept (2 Samuel 23:5).

[4] In these passages the Lord is plainly treated of, and the conjunction of the human race with the Divine Itself of the Lord through His Divine Human. It is known in the church that the Lord as to the Divine Human is the Mediator, and that no one can come to the Divine Itself, which is in the Lord and is called the Father, except through the Son, that is, through the Divine Human. Thus the Lord as to the Divine Human is the conjunction. Who can comprehend the Divine Itself by any thought? And if he cannot comprehend it in thought, who can be conjoined with it in love? But everyone can comprehend the Divine Human in thought, and be conjoined with it in love.

[5] That a “covenant” denotes conjunction can be seen from the covenants made between kingdoms, and that by these they are joined together; and that there are stipulations on each side, which are to be kept, in order that the conjunction may be inviolate. These stipulations or compacts are also called a “covenant.” The stipulations or compacts which in the Word are called a “covenant” are on the part of man, in a close sense, the ten commandments, or Decalogue; in a wider sense they are all the statutes, commandments, laws, testimonies, precepts, which the Lord enjoined from Mount Sinai through Moses; and in a sense still more wide they are the books of Moses, the contents of which were to be observed on the part of the sons of Israel. On the part of the Lord the “covenant” is mercy and election.

[6] That the ten commandments or Decalogue are a “covenant” is evident from Moses:

Jehovah hath told you His covenant, which He commanded you to do, the ten words which He wrote on two tables of stone (Deuteronomy 4:13, 23).

And because the two tables of stone, on which the ten commandments were written, were stored up in the ark (Exodus 25:16, 21-22; 31:18; 32:15-16, 19; 40:20), therefore the ark was called the “ark of the covenant” (Deuteronomy 31:9, 24-26; Josh. 3:3, 6, 14; 4:7; Judg. 20:27; 2 Samuel 15:24; 1 Kings 8:21). In the last passage cited, Solomon thus speaks:

There I have set a place for the ark, wherein is the covenant of Jehovah which He made with our fathers (1 Kings 8:21).

And in John:

The temple of God was opened in heaven; and there was seen in His temple the ark of His covenant (Revelation 11:19).

[7] That all the judgments and statutes which the Lord commanded through Moses to the people of Israel, were called the “covenant,” as were also the books of Moses themselves, is evident from Moses:

After the mouth of these words I have made a covenant with you and with Israel (Exodus 34:27).

The things which are here called a “covenant” were the many in regard to sacrifices, feasts, and unleavened bread.

Moses took the book of the covenant, and read in the ears of the people, who said, All that Jehovah hath spoken we will do and hear (Exodus 24:7-8.

Josiah, king of Judah, in the house of Jehovah in the presence of them all read the words of the book of the covenant that was found in the house of Jehovah. And he made a covenant before Jehovah, to establish the words of the covenant written in that book; and all the people stood to the covenant. The king commanded all the people that they should perform the passover to Jehovah God, as it is written in this book of the covenant (2 Kings 23:2-3, 21).

If thy sons will keep My covenant and My testimony that I have taught them, their sons also shall sit on thy throne forevermore (Psalms 132:12).

[8] That a “covenant” denotes conjunction through love and faith is evident from Moses:

Behold the days come, said Jehovah, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah; not according to the covenant that I made with their fathers, because they rendered My covenant vain; but this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days: I will put My law in the midst of them, and I will write it on their heart; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people (Jeremiah 31:31-33);

“to put a law in the midst of them, and to write it on their heart” is to endow with faith and charity; through faith and charity the conjunction is made which is described by the words, “I will be their God, and they shall be My people.”

I will make an everlasting covenant with them, that I will no more turn away from them; and I will do well to them; and I will put My fear in their heart, that they shall not depart from Me (Jeremiah 32:40).

Conjunction through love, which is the “covenant,” is signified by, “I will put My fear in their heart, that they shall not depart from Me.”

[9] In Ezekiel:

I will make a covenant of peace with them, a covenant of eternity it shall be with them; and I will give them, and multiply them, and will set My sanctuary in the midst of them; and My habitation shall be with them, and I will be their God, and they shall be My people (Ezekiel 37:26-27);

here conjunction through love and faith, which are a “covenant,” is described by “a sanctuary in the midst of them,” and by “a habitation with them,” and by the words, “I will be their God, and they shall be My people.”

When I passed by thee, and saw thee, that behold it was thy time, the time of loves, and I entered into a covenant with thee, that thou shouldest be Mine (Ezekiel 16:8);

speaking of Jerusalem, whereby is signified the Ancient Church; that “to enter into a covenant that thou shouldest be Mine” is marriage, or spiritual conjunction, is plain. As a “covenant” signifies conjunction, a wife is also called “a wife of the covenant” (Malachi 2:14); and conjunction among brethren is called “the covenant of brethren” (Amos 1:9).

By “covenant” is also signified conjunction in David:

I have made a covenant with My chosen, I have sworn to David My servant (Psalms 89:3).

[10] That the compact of a covenant on the part of the Lord is mercy and election, is evident in David:

All the ways of Jehovah are mercy and truth to such as keep His covenant and His testimonies (Psalms 25:10).

The mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed; but My mercy shall not depart, and the covenant of My peace shall not be removed, saith thy compassionate One, Jehovah (Isaiah 54:10).

Jehovah thy God, He is God, the faithful God, keeping covenant and mercy with them that love Him, and that keep His commandments, to the thousandth generation (Deuteronomy 7:9, 12).

If ye will keep My covenant, ye shall be unto Me for a peculiar treasure from all peoples (Exodus 19:5),

I will have respect unto you, and make you fruitful, and multiply you, and will establish My covenant with you (Leviticus 26:9);

“to have respect unto them” is of mercy; “to make them fruitful and multiply them” is to endow them with charity and faith; they who are endowed with these gifts are called the “elect;” so that these are words of election; and also the words “they shall be for a peculiar treasure.”

[11] Signs of a covenant existed also in the representative church, and were such as reminded of conjunction. Circumcision was such a sign (Genesis 17:11); for “circumcision” signified purification from filthy loves, on the removal of which, heavenly love is instilled, through which is conjunction. The Sabbath is also called “an eternal covenant” (Exodus 31:16). It is said also that “the show-bread should be to the sons of Israel for an eternal covenant” (Leviticus 24:8) and especially the “blood”, as is evident from Moses:

Moses took the book of the covenant, and read in the ears of the people, who said, All that Jehovah hath spoken we will do and hear; then Moses took the blood of the peace sacrifice, and sprinkled it on the people, and said, Behold the blood of the covenant which Jehovah hath made with you over all these words (Exodus 24:7-8),

By the blood of Thy covenant I will send forth the bound out of the pit wherein is no water (Zech. 9:11

Blood was a covenant, or the token of a covenant, because it signified conjunction through spiritual love, that is, through charity toward the neighbor; therefore when the Lord instituted the Holy Supper, He called His blood the “blood of the new covenant” (Matthew 26:28). From all this it can now be seen what is meant by a “covenant” in the Word in the internal sense.

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

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Arcana Coelestia #4180

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4180. Except the God of my father, the God of Abraham, and the Dread of Isaac, had been with me. That this signifies unless the Divine and the Divine Human, is evident from the signification of “the God of my father,” when predicated of the Lord, as being the Divine as to good; the “Father” being the Divine good, and the “Son” the Divine truth (n. 2803, 3704), here, the Divine good of each Essence; from the signification of “the God of Abraham,” as being the Divine Itself which is called the Divine Essence, for Abraham represents the Lord as to the Divine Itself (n. 2011, 3439); and from the signification of the “Dread of Isaac,” as being the Divine Human. The “Dread” is mentioned because the Divine truth is meant, for the Divine truth carries with it fear, dread, and terror to those who are not in good; but not so the Divine good, which terrifies no one. The same is meant further on in this chapter: “Jacob swore by the Dread of his father Isaac” (verse 53). For as Laban was then separated from Jacob (that is, the mediate good separated from good Divine) he was in such a state as to wish to inflict evil, as is manifest from what is said of Laban. Therefore as he was in such a state, it is said the “Dread of Isaac.” That the “Dread of Isaac” means the God of Isaac, everyone can see, and also that Laban was in that state. Isaac represents the Lord’s Divine Human, and this as to the Divine rational (n. 1893, 2066, 2072, 2083, 2630, 3012, 3194, 3210, 3973).

[2] As to the Divine truth which is from the Lord carrying fear with it to those who are not in good, but not the Divine good, the case is this: The Holy which proceeds from the Lord has in itself Divine good and Divine truth. These proceed continually from the Lord. From them is the light which is in the heavens, and therefore the light which is in human minds, and consequently wisdom and intelligence, for these are within that light. But that light, or wisdom and intelligence, affects all according to their reception. Those who are in evil do not receive the Divine good, for they are in no love and charity; for all good is of love and charity. The Divine truth however can be received even by the evil, but only by their external man, not by their internal.

[3] This is like the heat and light from the sun. Spiritual heat is love, and thus good; but spiritual light is faith, and thus truth. When heat is received from the sun, the trees and flowers vegetate and produce leaves, flowers, and fruits or seeds. This comes to pass in the time of spring and summer. When however heat is not received from the sun, but only light, nothing vegetates, but all vegetation grows torpid, as in the time of autumn and winter. So also it is with spiritual heat and light, which are from the Lord. If man is like spring or summer, he receives the good of love and charity, and produces fruits; but if he is like autumn and winter, he does not receive the good of love and charity, and accordingly does not produce fruits. Yet he may still receive light, that is, may know the things of faith or truth. Wintry light has a similar effect, for it presents colors and beauties and makes them conspicuous, like summer light, but with the difference that it does not penetrate toward the interiors, because there is no heat in it, and hence no quickening.

[4] When therefore good is not received, but only light, it is as when heat is not received in objects, but only an image of form and beauty from the light, and hence there is cold within; and where there is cold within, there is a torpor of everything there, and as it were a shrinking and shuddering when light introduces itself there. This is what causes fear, dread, and terror in living things. By this comparison it may in some degree be comprehended how it is with the fear, dread, and terror that come to the evil-that is, that they do not come from the Divine good, but from the Divine truth, and this when they do not receive the Divine good, and yet receive the Divine truth. Also, that Divine truth without good cannot penetrate toward the interiors, but merely adheres to the extremes, that is, to the external man, and mostly to its sensuous part; and that from this a man sometimes appears beautiful in the external form, when yet he is foul in the internal form. From this it may also be seen what is the nature of the faith that exists with very many, which they say saves without good works, that is, without willing well and acting well.

[5] As the Divine truth proceeds from the Divine Human, but not from the Divine Itself, it is therefore the Divine Human which is here signified by the “Dread of Isaac;” for, as just now said, it is the Divine truth which terrifies, but not the Divine good. That the Divine truth proceeds from the Lord’s Divine Human, but not from the Divine Itself, is an arcanum not hitherto disclosed. The case is this: Before the Lord came into the world the Divine Itself flowed into the whole heaven; and as heaven then consisted for the most part of the celestial, that is, of those who were in the good of love, through this influx, by the Divine Omnipotence, there was brought forth the light which was in the heavens, and thereby wisdom and intelligence. But after the human race had removed itself from the good of love and charity, that light could no longer be produced through heaven, nor, consequently, the wisdom and intelligence that would penetrate down to the human race. For this cause, from the necessity of their being saved, the Lord came into the world, and made the Human in Himself Divine, in order that as to His Divine Human He might become the Divine Light, and might thus illuminate the universal heaven and the universal world. From eternity He had been the Light itself, for that Light was from the Divine Itself through heaven. And it was the Divine Itself which took on the human, and made this Divine; and when this was made Divine, He could then thereby illuminate not only the celestial heaven itself, but also the spiritual heaven, and likewise the human race, which received and receives the Divine truth in good, that is, in love to Him and in charity toward the neighbor, as is manifest in John:

As many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God, to them that believe on His name; who were born, not of bloods, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God (John 1:12-13).

[6] From what has now been said we can see what is signified by these words in John:

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and God was the Word. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by Him, and without Him was not anything made that was made.

In Him was life, and the life was the light of men. That was the true light, that lighteth every man that cometh into the world (John 1:1-4, 9).

The “Word” here signifies the Divine truth. Nevertheless that the Lord is Divine good as to each essence, and that the Divine truth proceeds from Him, may be seen above (n. 3704). For the Divine good cannot be received by man, nor even by an angel, but only by the Lord’s Divine Human, as is meant by these words in John:

No one hath seen God at any time; the only-begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, He hath exhibited Him (John 1:18).

But the Divine truth can be received, but in such a quality as is possible with the man who receives; and in this the Divine good can dwell, with a difference according to the reception.

[7] Such are the arcana which are presented to the angels when these words are read by man: “Except the God of my father, the God of Abraham, and the Dread of Isaac, had been with me.” From this it is manifest how much that is heavenly there is in the Word, and in every particular of it, even when nothing of it is apparent in the sense of the letter; and also what angelic wisdom is in comparison with human wisdom; and that the angels are in the highest arcana while the man does not even know that there is any arcanum within. But these things which have been mentioned are only a very few, for in these arcana the angels see and perceive things innumerable, nay, things relatively unlimited, which cannot possibly be uttered, because human speech is not adequate to express them, nor is the human mind capable of receiving them.

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