Biblija

 

ယေဇကျေလ 1

Studija

1 သက္ကရာဇ်သုံးဆယ်ပြည့်၊ ယေခါနိမင်းကြီး နန်းကျပဥ္စမနှစ်၊ စတုတ္ထငါးရက်နေ့၌ ငါသည် သိမ်းသွားသော သူတို့တွင် ခေဗာမြစ်နားမှာရှိနေစဉ်၊

2 မိုဃ်းကောင်းကင်ပွင့်၍ ဘုရားသခင်၏ဗျာဒိတ် ရူပါရုံတို့ကို မြင်ရ၏။

3 ထိုအခါခါလဒဲပြည်၊ ခေဗာမြစ်နားမှာ ထာဝရ ဘုရား၏ နှုတ်ကပတ်တော်သည် ယဇ်ပုရောဟိတ် ဗုဇိသားယေဇကျေလ အမည် ရှိသော ငါဆီသို့ရောက်၍၊ ထာဝရဘုရားလက်တော်သည် ငါ့အပေါ်မှာ တင်လျက်ရှိ၏။

4 ငါကြည့်ရှု၍၊ ပြင်းစွာသော လေကြီးစွာသော မိုဃ်းတိမ်၊ ထွန်းလင်သော မီးစက်သည် မြောက်မျက်နှာမှ ပေါ်လာ၏မီးစက်ထဲက ဟရှဓေလရွှေရောင် ထွက် လေ

5 ထိုမီးစက်ထဲမှာ သတ္တဝါလေးပါးတို့သည် ထင်ရှားကြ၏။ ထိုသတ္တဝါတို့၏ အဆင်းသဏ္ဍာန်ဟူမူကား၊ လူ၏ပုံသဏ္ဍန်ကိုဆောင်၍၊

6 မျက်နှာလေးခုစီ၊ အတောင်လည်း လေးခုစီ ရှိကြ၏။

7 ခြေထောက်သည် ဖြောင့်သေည ခြေထောက်ဖြစ်၏။ ခြေဘဝါးသည် နွားသငယ်ခြေဖဝါးကဲ့သို့ ဖြစ်၍ ဦးသစ်သော ကြေးဝါကဲ့သို့ တောက်လေ၏။ ကိုယ်လေးမျက်နျာအတောင်အောက်၌ လူလက်ရှိ၏။

8 ထိုလေးပါးတို့သည် မျက်နှာတို့နှင့်၎င်း၊ အတောင်တို့နှင့်၎င်း ပြည့်စုံကြ၏။

9 အတောင်ချင်းတခုနှင့်တခု စပ်လျက်ရှိ၍၊ ထိုသတ္တဝါတို့ သွားသောအခါတပါးမျှ မလည်ဘဲ တည့်တည့်သွားတတ်ကြ၏။

10 မျက်နှာအဆင်းသဏ္ဍာန်ဟူမူကား၊ သတ္တဝါ လေးပါးတို့သည် လက်ျာဘက်၌ လူမျက်နှာခြင်္သေ့ မျက်နှာနှင့်၎င်း၊ လက်ဝဲဘက်၌နွားမျက်နှာရွှေလင်းတ မျက်နှင်နှင့်၎င်း ပြည့်စုံကြ၏။

11 အတောင်များတို့သည် အထက်သို့ပြန့်၍၊ အတောင်နှစ်ခုချင်းစပ်လျက်၊ နှစ်ခုဖြင့် ကိုယ်ကိုဖုံးလျက် ရှိကြ၏။

12 ထိုသတ္တဝါတို့သည် ဝိညာဉ်တော်သွားခွင့်ရှိသည် အတိုင်း သွားကြ၏။ သွားသောအခါတပါးမျှ မလည်ဘဲ တည့်တည့်သွားတတ်ကြ၏။

13 ထိုသတ္တဝါတို့၏ အဆင်းအရောင်သည်ကား၊ တောက်သော မီးခဲအရောင်၊ မီးခွက်အရောင်နှင့်တူ၏ မီးသည်တောက်လျက် သတ္တဝါတို့တွင် အနှံ့အပြား လှည့်လည်၍ မီးထဲက လျှပ်စစ်ပြက်လေ၏

14 သတ္တဝါတို့သည်လည်း လျှပ်စစ်နွယ်ကဲ့သို့ အရောင်တောက်၍၊ ပြေးလျက် ပြန်လာလျက်ရှိကြ၏။

15 ထိုသတ္တဝါတို့ကို ငါ့ကြည့်ရှုစဉ်၊ သူတို့အနားမှာ လေးပိုင်းရှိသော ရထားဘီးတခုစီ ထင်ရှား၏။

16 ထိုရထားဘီးတို့၏ အဆင်းအရောင်သည်ကား၊ ကျောက်မျက်ရွဲ အဆင်းအရောင်နှင့်တူ၏။ ထိုလေးခုတို့ သည် အဆင်းအရောင်တညီတည်း ရှိကြ၏။ ပုံသဏ္ဍာန်မူ ကား၊ ဘီးတခုအထဲ၌ ဘီးတခုတပ်သကဲ့သို့ဖြစ်၏။

17 သွားသောအခါ ဘီးလေးမျက်နှာတို့သည် တညီတည်းဖြစ်၍ မလည်ဘဲသွားတတ်ကြ၏။

18 ဘီးဝန်းတို့သည်လည်း မြင့်၍ ကြောက်မက်ဘွယ် ဖြစ်ကြ၏။ ထိုလေးပါးတို့သည်မျက်စိနှင့်ပြည့်ကြ၏။

19 သတ္တဝါတို့သည် သွားသောအခါ၊ ဘီးတို့သည် လည်း ထက်ကြပ်ပါကြ၏။

20 သတ္တဝါတို့သည် မြေကြီးနှင့်ကွာ၍ တက်သော အခါ၊ ဘီးတို့သည်လည်း တက်ကြ၏။ ဝိညာဉ်တော် သွားခွင့်ရှိသည်အတိုင်း၊ သူတို့သည်လည်း သွားကြ၏။ ဘီးတို့သည်လည်း သူတို့နှင့်ထက်ကြပ်တက်၍ လိုက်ကြ ၏။ သတ္တဝါတို့၏ ဝိညာဉ်သည်ဘီးတို့၌ရှိ၏။

21 သူတို့သွားသောအခါဘီးတို့သည်သွားကြ၏။ သူတို့ရပ်သောအခါ ဘီးတို့သည်ရပ်ကြ၏။ သူတို့သည် မြေကြီးနှင့်ကွာ၍ တက်သောအခါ၊ ဘီးတို့သည်လည်း သူတို့နှင့်ထက်ကြပ်တက်၍လိုက်ကြ၏။ အကြောင်းမူကား၊ သတ္တဝါတို့၏ဝိညာဉ်တော်သည် ဘီးတို့၌ရှိ၏။

22 ထိုသတ္တဝါတို့၏ ခေါင်းများအပေါ်မှာ မိုဃ်း မျက်နှာကြက်၏ အဆင်းအရောင်သည်ရှိ၍၊ ကြောက်မက် ဘွယ်သော ကျောက်သလင်းမျက်နှာကြက်ကဲ့သို့ဖြစ်၏။

23 မိုဃ်းမျက်နှာကြက်အောက်မှာ သူတို့အတောင် များသည် တခုသို့တခုတည့်တည့်ပြန့်လျက်ရှိ၍၊ ပြင်ဘက် ၌လည်း ကိုယ်ကိုဖုံးစရာဘို့ အတောင်နှစ်ခုစီရှိ၏။

24 သူတို့သွားသောအခါ သမုဒ္ဒရာရေသံကဲ့သို့၎င်း၊ အနန္တတန်ခိုးရှင်၏အသံတော်ကဲ့သို့၎င်း၊ အတောင်တို့မြည်သောအသံကို ငါကြား၏။ စကားသံသည်လည်း လူအလုံးအရင်း၏ စကားသံကဲ့သို့ဖြစ်၏။ ရပ်သောအခါ အတောင်တို့ကို ချလျက်နေကြ၏။

25 ရပ်၍အတောင်တို့ကို ချသောအခါ၊ သူတို့၏ ခေါင်းများအပေါ်မှာ မိုဃ်းမျက်နှာကြက်ထဲက စကားသံ သည် ထွက်၏။

26 သူတို့၏ခေါင်းများအထက်၊ မိုဃ်းမျက်နှက်ကြက် အပေါ်၌လည်း နီလာကျောက်ကဲ့သို့ အဆင်းအရောင် ရှိသော ရာဇပလ္လင်သဏ္ဌာန်ပေါ်၏။ ပလ္လင်သဏ္ဍာန် အပေါ်၌လည်း လူပုံသဏ္ဍာန်ကဲ့သို့ ပေါ်၏။

27 ပလ္လင်အတွင်း၌၎င်း၊ ပတ်လည်၌၎င်း၊ ခါး သဏ္ဍာန်မှသည် အထက်ပိုင်း၌ ဟရှမေလရွှေအရောင် နှင့်မီးအရောင်ကဲ့သို့ ထင်ရှား၏ အောက်ပိုင်း၌ မီး အရောင်ကဲ့သို့ ထင်ရှား ၍ ပတ်လည်၌ ထွန်းတောက်လေ၏

28 ထိုသို့ထွန်းတောက်သော အရောင်သည် မိုဃ်း ရွာသောနေ့တွင်၊ မိုဃ်းတိမ်၌ပေါ်သော သက်တံ့၏ အရောင်ကဲ့သို့ ဖြစ်၏။ ဤရွှေကား၊ ထာဝရဘုရား၏ ဘုန်းတော်သဏ္ဌာန်အဆင်းအရောင်ဖြစ်သတည်း။

Iz Swedenborgovih djela

 

Apocalypse Explained #503

Proučite ovaj odlomak

  
/ 1232  
  

503. And there was hail and fire mingled with blood, signifies the destroying infernal falsity and evil mingled with the truths and goods of the Word, to which violence was offered. This is evident from the signification of "hail," as being the destroying infernal falsity (of which presently); from the signification of "fire" as being the destroying infernal evil (of which also presently); and from the signification of "blood," as being the Divine truth, here that to which violence was offered, consequently Divine truth falsified, because it is said "hail and fire mingled with blood." That "blood" signifies Divine truth proceeding from the Lord and received by man, and in the contrary sense its destruction by the falsities of evil, and thus violence offered to it, may be seen above n. 329.

[2] This signification of "hail and fire," as being destroying falsity and evil, is also from the appearances in the spiritual world when Divine truth flows down there out of heaven and flows into the sphere where those are who are in falsities from evil and who are eager to destroy the truths and goods of the church; to those who stand afar off there is then an appearance of a shower of hail and fire, a shower of hail in consequence of their falsities, and a shower of fire from their evils. The reason of this appearance is that when Divine truth flows into the sphere where falsities and evils are, it is changed into something similar to what is in that sphere; for all influx is changed in the recipient subject according to its quality, as with the light of the sun in black subjects, and the heat of the sun in putrid subjects. So it is with Divine truth (which is the light of heaven) and Divine good (which is the heat of heaven) in evil subjects, which are spirits who are in falsities from evil; thence is this appearance. From this it is that "hail and fire" have these significations in the Word; for the sense of the letter of the Word comes for the most part from appearances in the spiritual world.

[3] That "hail" signifies infernal falsity destroying the truth of the church is evident elsewhere in the Word, where the destruction of truth is described by "hail;" as in Egypt, when Pharaoh would not let the people of Israel go, which is thus described in Moses:

Moses said to Pharaoh that he would cause it to rain a very grievous hail, such as had not been in Egypt. There shall be hail upon man and upon beast, and upon every herb of the field in the land of Egypt. And Moses stretched forth his rod toward heaven; and Jehovah sent voices and hail, and the fire ran along the earth; and Jehovah caused hail to rain upon the land of Egypt; and there was hail, and fire with it, raining in the midst of the very grievous hail. And the hail smote all that was in the field, from man even to beast; and the hail smote every herb of the field, and broke down every tree of the field. Only in the land of Goshen, where the sons of Israel were, was there no hail. And the flax and the barley were smitten; for the barley was a ripening ear, and the flax was a stalk. But the wheat and the spelt were not smitten, for these were covered (Exodus 9:18-35).

"The hail in Egypt" has a similar signification as the "hail" here in Revelation; for this reason many like things are said; as that "the hail and the fire ran together," and "the hail smote the herb of the field, and broke down the trees." Many like things are here mentioned, because the plagues of Egypt and the plagues of Revelation that came when the seven angels sounded have a similar signification; for the "Egyptians" signify merely natural men, the "sons of Israel" spiritual men, the "plagues of Egypt" the changes that precede the Last Judgment, the same as here in Revelation; for the drowning of Pharaoh and the Egyptians in the Red Sea represented the Last Judgment and damnation. This makes clear that here, too, "hail and fire" signify falsities and evils destroying the church. (But those things may be seen explained in Arcana Coelestia 7553-7619.)

[4] So "hail" and "coals" (or fire) have a like signification in David:

He smote their vine with hail, and their sycamore trees with a grievous hail; and He shut up their beast to the hail, and their herds to the coals. He sent among them the fierceness of His anger, an incursion of evil angels (Psalms 78:47-49).

Because "hail" signifies falsity destroying the truths of the church it is said "He smote their vine with hail, and their sycamore trees with a grievous hail," for "vine" signifies the spiritual truth of the church, and "sycamores" its natural truth; and as "coals" signifies the love of evil and its ardor for destroying the goods of the church, it is said, "He shut up their beast to the hail, and their herds to the coals," "beast" and "herds" signifying the evil affections or cupidities that arise from evil love, and "coals" the cupidity and ardor for destroying; "an incursion of evil angels" signifies the falsity of evil from hell.

[5] In the same:

He gave them hail for their rain, a fire of flames in their land; and He smote their vine and their fig tree, and broke down the tree of their border (Psalms 105:32, 33).

This, too, is said of the "hail of Egypt" which signifies infernal falsity destroying the truths of the church; and the "vine" and the "fig tree" here also signify similar things as the "vine" and the "sycamore trees" above, namely, the "vine" spiritual truth, and the "fig tree" natural truth, each belonging to the church; and "tree" signifies the perceptions and knowledges of truth and good.

[6] "Hail" has a similar signification in Joshua, when Joshua fought against the five kings of the Amorites, of which it is said:

It came to pass when the kings fled before Israel, and they were in the going down to Beth-horon, that Jehovah cast down great hailstones from heaven upon them unto Azekah; and more died from the hailstones than the sons of Israel slew with the sword (Joshua 10:11).

As the histories of the Word, the same as the prophecies, are representative and contain an internal sense, therefore also does this that is related of the five kings of the Amorites and the battle of the sons of Israel with them; for the "nations" that were driven out of the land of Canaan signified the evil who are to be cast out of the Lord's kingdom, and the "sons of Israel" signified those to whom it would be granted to possess the kingdom, for the "land of Canaan" signified heaven and the church, thus the Lord's kingdom; thence the "five kings of the Amorites" signified those who are in the falsities of evil and who wish to destroy the truths of the good of the church; this is why they were slain by "hailstones out of heaven," that is, were destroyed and perished by their own falsities of evil; for the evil themselves perish in consequence of their evils and falsities, with which they wish to destroy the truths and goods of the church.

[7] In David:

At the brightness before Him His clouds passed, with hail and coals of fire. Jehovah thundered in the heavens, and the Most High uttered His voice, hail and coals of fire. And He sent forth His arrows and scattered them, and many lightnings and discomfited them (Psalms 18:12-14).

Here "hail and fire" have a similar signification as the "hail and fire" in this passage in Revelation, namely, falsities and evils destroying the truths and goods of the church. It is said that such things are from Jehovah, because Divine truth coming down out of heaven is changed with the evil into infernal falsities, as has been said above; and from this change there spring forth many appearances such as the fall of hail and fire; and yet these things are not out of heaven from the Lord, but from those who are in the falsities of evil, who turn the influx of Divine truth and good into the falsity of evil. It has been granted me to perceive these changes, when Divine truth flowed down out of heaven into some hell. On the way it was successively turned into the falsity of evil, like that which was with them; just as it is with the sun's heat when it falls into dung heaps, or the sun's light when it falls into subjects that turn its rays into horrid colors; or when the sun's light and heat produce in fetid marshy lands noxious plants that nourish serpents, while in good lands they produce trees and grasses that nourish men and useful beasts. The cause that such effects are produced in putrid land is not the light and heat of the sun, but the lands themselves which are such, and yet these effects may be ascribed to the sun's fire and heat. From this it can be seen what the origin is of the appearances of hail and fire in the spiritual world, and why it is said that "Jehovah causes them to rain," when yet there is nothing from Jehovah but what is good; and when Jehovah, that is, the Lord, renders the influx powerful, it is not that He may destroy the evil but that He may rescue and protect the good, for He thus conjoins the good to Himself more closely and interiorly, and thus they are separated from the evil, and the evil perish; for if the evil were not separated the good would perish and the angelic heaven would fall to ruin.

[8] "Hail" and "the rain of hail" have a similar signification in the following passages. In Isaiah:

Woe to the crown of pride, to the drunkards of Ephraim. Behold, the Lord strong and mighty, as an inundation of hail, as a tempest of slaughter (Isaiah 28:1, 2).

In the same:

The hail shall overthrow the refuge of lies, and the waters shall overflow the hiding place (Isaiah 28:17).

In the same:

Then Jehovah shall cause His glorious voice to be heard, and shall cause His resting arm to be seen in the indignation of anger, and in the flame of a devouring fire, with scattering and inundation, and with hailstones (Isaiah 30:30).

In the same:

It shall hail until the forest shall sink down and the city be laid low in lowliness (Isaiah 32:19).

In Ezekiel:

And I will plead with Gog with pestilence and with blood; and I will rain upon him an overflowing rain, and hailstones, fire and brimstone (Job 38:22).

In Revelation:

Then the temple of God was opened in heaven, and there was seen in His temple the ark of the Covenant; and there were lightnings and voices and thunders and an earthquake and great hail (Revelation 11:19).

And again:

And a great hail as of a talent-weight cometh down out of heaven upon men; and the men blasphemed God because of the plague of the hail, for the plague thereof was exceeding great (Revelation 16:21).

[9] So those who are in falsities of evil are called "hailstones" in Ezekiel:

Say unto them that daub on what is unfit, that it shall fall; there shall come an overflowing rain, in which ye, O great hailstones, shall fall (Ezekiel 13:11).

Here "them that daub on what is unfit" signify those who confirm falsities to make them appear outwardly as truths; such are called "hailstones" because they thus destroy truths; the dispersion of such falsities is signified by "an overflowing rain. "

[10] In Job:

Hast thou come to the treasuries of the snow, and hast thou seen the treasuries of the hail, which I keep back against the time of battle and war, which is the way in which light is diffused? (Job 38:22-24).

Job is asked by Jehovah about many things, whether he knows them, and the things he is asked about signify such things as belong to heaven and the church; and "Hast thou come to the treasuries of the snow, and hast thou seen the treasuries of the hail?" signifies whether he knows why truth is taken away and is destroyed by the falsities of evil, which in the spiritual world appears like a fall of snow and hail out of the sky there. That there are such appearances when the evil are to be dispersed is signified by "which I keep back against the time of battle and war;" thence it is added, "which is the way in which light is diffused?" This signifies the process by which truth is insinuated, "light" meaning truth.

[11] "Hail" signifies the falsity of evil, and "a storm of hail" the destruction of truth, because hail in itself is cold and cannot bear the heat of heaven, and "coldness" signifies the deprivation of the good of love; the good of love is the heat in the angelic heaven (See the work on Heaven and Hell 126-140). Another reason for this meaning is that "stones" in the Word signify truth, and in the contrary sense falsities, and great hail appears to be made up of stones cast down out of heaven, which destroy the crops and herbs of the field, as well as the smaller animals as stones would, and this is why they are called "hailstones." (That "stones" signify in the Word truths, and in the contrary sense falsities, see Arcana Coelestia 643, 1298, 3720, 6426, 8609, 10376)

  
/ 1232  
  

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

Iz Swedenborgovih djela

 

Apocalypse Explained #130

Proučite ovaj odlomak

  
/ 1232  
  

130. Verse 12. And to the angel of the church in Pergamum write, signifies for remembrance to those within the church who are in temptations. This is evident from the signification of "writing," as being for remembrance (See Arcana Coelestia 8620); and from the signification of "angel," as being a recipient of Divine truth, and in the highest sense Divine truth itself proceeding from the Lord (of which more in what follows); and from the signification of the "church in Pergamum," as being those within the church who are in temptations.

That these are meant by the "church in Pergamum" is clear from the things written to that church, which follow. From no other source can it be known what is signified by each of the seven churches. For as was shown before, what is meant is not any church in Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamum, Thyatira, Sardis, Philadelphia, or Laodicea, but all who are of the Lord's church, and by each of these churches something that constitutes the church with man is meant. And as the first things of the church are the knowledges of truth and good, and the affections of spiritual truth, these are first treated of, namely, in what is written to the angel of the Ephesian church and of the Smyrnean church; of the knowledges of truth and good to the angel of the Ephesian church, and of the spiritual affection of truth to the angel of the Smyrnean church. And as no one can be imbued with the knowledges of truth and good in respect to life, and be steadfast in the spiritual affection of truth, unless he undergoes temptations, so temptations are now treated of in what is written to the angel of the church in Pergamum. From this it appears in what order the things follow that are taught under the names of the seven churches.

[2] It is said "To the angel of the church, write," and not, To the church, because by "angel" is signified Divine truth, which makes the church; for Divine truth teaches how man is to live that he may become a church. That "angel" in the Word, in its spiritual sense, does not mean any angel, but in the highest sense, Divine truth proceeding from the Lord, and in a respective sense, he that receives it, can be seen from this, that all the angels are recipients of Divine truth from the Lord, and no angel is of himself an angel; but he is so far an angel as he receives Divine truth; for angels more than men know and perceive that all the good of love and all the truth of faith are from the Lord, not from themselves, and as the good of love and the truth of faith constitute their wisdom and intelligence, and as these constitute the whole angel, they know and say that they are merely recipients of the Divine proceeding from the Lord, and thus are angels in the degree in which they receive it. On this account they desire that the term "angel" should be understood spiritually, that is, in a sense abstracted from persons, and as meaning Divine truths. By Divine truth is meant at the same time Divine good, because these proceed from the Lord united (See in the work on Heaven and Hell, n.

[133-140] 1 .

[3] And as Divine truth proceeding from the Lord constitutes the angel, by "angel" in the Word in the highest sense is meant the Lord Himself, as in Isaiah:

The angel of the faces of Jehovah delivered them, in His love and His pity He redeemed them, and took them up, and carried them all the days of eternity (Isaiah 63:9).

In Moses:

The angel who hath redeemed me from all evil, bless them (Genesis 48:16).

In the same:

I send an angel before thee to keep thee in the way; take ye heed of His faces, for my name is in the midst of Him (Exodus 23:20-23).

[4] As the Lord in respect to Divine truth is called an "angel," so also Divine truths are meant by "angels" in the spiritual sense, as in the following passages:

The Son of man shall send His angels, and they shall gather out of His kingdom all things that cause stumbling. In the consummation of the age the angels shall come forth and sever the wicked out of the midst of the just (Matthew 13:41, 49).

In the consummation of the age the Son of man shall send His angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and shall gather together the elect from the four winds (Matt. 24:3, 31).

When the Son of man shall come in His glory, and all the holy angels with Him, then shall He sit upon the throne of His glory (Matthew 25:31).

Jesus said, After this ye shall see heaven opened, and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man (John 1:51).

In these passages, in the spiritual sense, by "angels" Divine truths and not angels are meant. So when it is here said that, in the consummation of the age, "the angels are to gather out all things that cause stumbling," "are to sever the wicked from the midst of the just," "are to gather together the elect from the four winds with a great sound of a trumpet," and that "the Son of man with the angels is to sit upon a throne of glory," it is not meant that angels, together with the Lord, are to do these things, but that the Lord alone will do them by means of His Divine truths; for angels have no power of themselves, but all power is the Lord's through His Divine truth (See in the work on Heaven and Hell 230-233). That "ye shall see the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man," means the like, namely, that Divine truths should be in Him and from Him.

[5] Moreover, in other places also "angels" mean Divine truths from the Lord, consequently the Lord in respect to Divine truths, as:

To the seven angels were given seven trumpets, and the angels sounded on the trumpets (Revelation 8:2, 6-8, 10, 12, 13; 9:1, 13, 14).

It is said that to the angels were given trumpets, and that they sounded thereon, because "trumpets" and their "sound" signify Divine truth to be revealed (See above, n. 55). Similar things are also meant:

By the angel warring against the dragon (Revelation 12:7, 9);

By the angel flying in the mid-heaven, having the eternal

gospel (Revelation 14:6);

By the seven angels pouring out the seven bowls (Rev. 16:1-4, 8, 10, 12);

By the twelve angels upon the twelve gates of the New Jerusalem (Revelation 21:12).

That this is so will also be seen in what follows.

[6] That by "angels" are meant Divine truths which are from the Lord is clearly manifest in David:

Jehovah maketh His angels winds, and His ministers a flaming fire (Psalms 104:4);

by which words are signified Divine truth and Divine good; for the "wind" of Jehovah in the Word signifies Divine truth, and His "fire" Divine good (as can be seen from what is shown in the Arcana Coelestia, as that the "wind of the nostrils" of Jehovah is Divine truth, n.8286; that the "four winds" are all things of truth and good, n. 3708, 9642, 9668; consequently "to breathe" in the Word signifies the state of the life of faith, n. 9281; from which it is evident what is signified by Jehovah's "breathing" into the nostrils of Adam (Genesis 2:7); by the Lord's "breathing" upon His disciples (John 20:22); and by these words, "The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the voice thereof, but knowest not whence it cometh" (John 3:8); concerning which see n. 96, 97, 9229, 9281 also n. 1119, 3886, 3887, 3889, 3892, 3893; that "flaming fire" is Divine love, and therefore Divine good, see in the work on Heaven and Hell 133-140, 566-568; and above, n. 68).

[7] That "angel" signifies Divine truth proceeding from the Lord is clearly manifest from these words in Revelation:

He measured the wall of the New Jerusalem, a hundred and forty-four cubits, the measure of a man, which is that of an angel (Revelation 21:17).

That the wall of the New Jerusalem is not the measure of an angel anyone can see, but that all protecting truths are there meant by an "angel" is evident from the signification of the "wall of Jerusalem," and of the number "one hundred and forty-four." (That the "wall" signifies all protecting truths, see Arcana Coelestia 6419; that the number "one hundred and forty-four" signifies all things of truth in the complex, n. 7973; that "measure" signifies the quality of a thing in respect to truth and good, n. 3104, 9603, 10262. These things may also be found explained as to the spiritual sense, in The small work on The New Jerusalem and its Doctrine 1.)

[8] Because by "angels" in the Word Divine truths are signified, therefore the men through whom Divine truths are made known are sometimes called "angels" in the Word, as in Malachi:

The priest's lips ought to guard knowledge, and they shall seek the law at his mouth, because he is the angel of Jehovah (Malachi 2:7).

He is said to be the "angel of Jehovah," because he teaches Divine truth; not that he is the angel of Jehovah, but the Divine truth that he teaches is. Moreover, it is known in the church that no one has Divine truth from himself. "Lips" also here signify the doctrine of truth, and "law" Divine truth itself. (That "lips" signify the doctrine of truth, see Arcana Coelestia 1286, 1288; and that "law" signifies Divine truth itself, see n. 3382, 7463)

[9] From this it is that John the Baptist also is called an angel:

Jesus said, This is he of whom it is written, Behold, I send Mine angel before Thy face, who shall prepare Thy way before Thee (Luke 7:27).

John is called an "angel," because by him, in the spiritual sense, is signified the Word, which is Divine truth, in like manner as by Elias (See Arcana Coelestia 7643, 9372, and what is signified; this is what is meant by the persons mentioned in the Word, see n. 665, 1097, 1361, 3147, 3670, 3881, 4208, 4281, 4288, 4292, 4307, 4500, 6304, 7048, 7439, 8588, 8788, 8806, 9229).

[10] It is said that by "angels" in the Word, in its spiritual sense, Divine truths proceeding from the Lord are meant, because these constitute the angels; when angels utter these truths, they speak not from themselves, but from the Lord. The angels not only know that this is so, but they also perceive it. The man who believes that nothing of faith is from himself, but that all faith is from God, also knows this, indeed, but he does not perceive it. That nothing of faith is from man, but all faith is from God, is the same as saying that nothing of truth that has life is from man, but all truth is from God, for truth is of faith and faith is of truth.

  
/ 1232  
  

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