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Exode 12

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1 Or l'Eternel avait parlé à Moïse et à Aaron au pays d'Egypte, en disant :

2 Ce mois-ci vous sera le commencement des mois, il vous sera le premier des mois de l'année.

3 Parlez à toute l'assemblée d'Israël, en disant : qu'au dixième [jour] de ce mois, chacun d'eux prenne un petit d'entre les brebis ou d'entre les chèvres, selon les familles des pères, un petit, [dis-je], d'entre les brebis ou d'entre les chèvres, par famille.

4 Mais si la famille est moindre qu'il ne faut pour [manger] un petit d'entre les brebis ou d'entre les chèvres, qu'il prenne son voisin qui est près de sa maison, selon le nombre des personnes; vous compterez combien il en faudra pour manger un petit d'entre les brebis ou d'entre les chèvres, ayant égard à ce que chacun de vous peut manger.

5 Or le petit d'entre les brebis ou d'entre les chèvres sera sans tare, [et sera un] mâle, ayant un an; vous le prendrez d'entre les brebis, ou d'entre les chèvres.

6 Et vous le tiendrez en garde jusqu'au quatorzième jour de ce mois, et toute la congrégation de l'assemblée d'Israël l'égorgera entre les deux vêpres.

7 Et ils prendront de son sang, et le mettront sur les deux poteaux, et sur le linteau de la porte des maisons où ils le mangeront.

8 Et ils en mangeront la chair rôtie au feu cette nuit-là; et ils la mangeront avec des pains sans levain, [et] avec des herbes amères.

9 N'en mangez rien à demi cuit, ni qui ait été bouilli dans l'eau, mais qu'il soit rôti au feu, sa tête, ses jambes, et ses entrailles.

10 Et n'en laissez rien de reste jusques au matin, mais s'il en reste quelque chose jusqu'au matin, vous le brûlerez au feu.

11 Et vous le mangerez ainsi; vos reins seront ceints, vous aurez vos souliers en vos pieds, et votre bâton en votre main, et vous le mangerez à la hâte. C'est la Pâque de l'Eternel.

12 Car je passerai cette nuit-là par le pays d'Egypte, et je frapperai tout premier-né au pays d'Egypte, depuis les hommes jusques aux bêtes, et j'exercerai des jugements, sur tous les dieux de l'Egypte; je suis l'Eternel.

13 Et le sang vous sera pour signe sur les maisons dans lesquelles vous serez, car je verrai le sang, et je passerai par-dessus vous, et il n'y aura point de plaie à destruction parmi vous, quand je frapperai le pays d'Egypte.

14 Et ce jour-là vous sera en mémorial, et vous le célébrerez comme une fête solennelle à l'Eternel en vos âges; vous le célébrerez comme une fête solennelle, par ordonnance perpétuelle.

15 Vous mangerez pendant sept jours des pains sans levain, et dès le premier jour vous ôterez le levain de vos maisons; car quiconque mangera du pain levé, depuis le premier jour jusques au septième, cette personne-là sera retranchée d'Israël.

16 Au premier jour il y aura une sainte convocation, et il y aura de même au septième jour une sainte convocation ; il ne se fera aucune œuvre en ces [jours-là]; seulement on vous apprêtera à manger ce qu'il faudra pour chaque personne.

17 Vous prendrez donc garde aux pains sans levain; parce qu'en ce même jour j'aurai retiré vos bandes du pays d'Egypte; vous observerez donc ce jour-là en vos âges, par ordonnance perpétuelle.

18 Au premier mois, le quatorzième jour du mois au soir, vous mangerez des pains sans levain, jusqu'au vingt-unième jour du mois, au soir.

19 Il ne se trouvera point de levain dans vos maisons pendant sept jours; car quiconque mangera du pain levé, cette personne-là sera retranchée de rassemblée d'Israël, tant celui qui habite comme étranger, que celui qui est né au pays.

20 Vous ne mangerez point de pain levé; [mais] vous mangerez dans tous les lieux où vous demeurerez, des pains sans levain.

21 Moïse donc appela tous les anciens d'Israël, et leur dit : choisissez, et prenez un petit d'entre les brebis, ou d'entre les chèvres, selon vos familles, et égorgez la Pâque.

22 Puis vous prendrez un bouquet d'hysope, et le tremperez dans le sang qui sera dans un bassin, et vous arroserez du sang qui sera dans le bassin, le linteau, et les deux poteaux; et nul de vous ne sortira de la porte de sa maison, jusqu'au matin.

23 Car l'Eternel passera pour frapper l'Egypte, et il verra le sang sur le linteau, et sur les deux poteaux, et l'Eternel passera par-dessus la porte, et ne permettra point que le destructeur entre dans vos maisons pour frapper.

24 Vous garderez ceci comme une ordonnance perpétuelle pour toi et pour tes enfants.

25 Quand donc vous serez entrés au pays que l'Eternel vous donnera, selon qu'il [en] a parlé, vous garderez ce service.

26 Et quand vos enfants vous diront : que vous [signifie] ce service?

27 Alors vous répondrez : c'est le sacrifice de la Pâque à l'Eternel, qui passa en Egypte par-dessus les maisons des enfants d'Israël, quand il frappa l'Egypte, et qu'il préserva nos maisons. Alors le peuple s'inclina, et se prosterna.

28 Ainsi les enfants d'Israël s'en allèrent, et firent comme l'Eternel l'avait commandé à Moïse et à Aaron, ils le firent ainsi.

29 Et il arriva qu'à minuit l'Eternel frappa tous les premiers-nés du pays d'Egypte, depuis le premier-né de Pharaon, qui devait être assis sur son trône, jusqu'aux premiers-nés des captifs qui [étaient] dans la prison, et tous les premiers-nés des bêtes.

30 Et Pharaon se leva de nuit, lui et ses serviteurs, et tous les Egyptiens; et il y eut un grand cri en Egypte, parce qu'il n'y avait point de maison où il n'y [eût] un mort.

31 Il appela donc Moïse et Aaron de nuit, et leur dit : levez-vous, sortez du milieu de mon peuple, tant vous que les enfants d'Israël, et vous en allez; servez l'Eternel, comme vous en avez parlé.

32 Prenez aussi votre menu et gros bétail, selon que vous en avez parlé, et vous en allez, et bénissez-moi.

33 Et les Egyptiens forçaient le peuple, et se hâtaient de les faire sortir du pays; car ils disaient : nous sommes tous morts.

34 Le peuple donc prit sa pâte avant qu'elle fût levée, ayant leurs maies liées avec leurs vêtements, sur leurs épaules.

35 Or les enfants d'Israël avaient fait selon la parole de Moïse, et avaient demandé aux Egyptiens des vaisseaux d'argent et d'or, et des vêtements.

36 Et l'Eternel avait fait trouver grâce au peuple envers les Egyptiens, qui les leur avaient prêtés; de sorte qu'ils butinèrent les Egyptiens.

37 Ainsi les enfants d'Israël étant partis de Rahmésès, vinrent à Succoth, environ six cent mille hommes de pied, sans les petits enfants.

38 Il s'en alla aussi avec eux un grand nombre de toutes sortes de gens; et du menu et du gros bétail en fort grands troupeaux.

39 Or parce qu'ils avaient été chassés d'Egypte, et qu'ils n'avaient pas pu tarder [plus longtemps], et que même ils n'avaient fait aucune provision, ils cuisirent par gâteaux sans levain la pâte qu'ils avaient emportée d'Egypte; car ils ne l'avaient point fait lever.

40 Or la demeure que les enfants d'Israël avaient faite en Egypte, était de quatre cent et trente ans.

41 Il arriva donc, au bout de quatre cent et trente ans, il arriva, [dis-je], en ce propre jour-là, que toutes les bandes de l'Eternel sortirent du pays d'Egypte.

42 C'est la nuit qui doit être soigneusement observée à [l'honneur] de l'Eternel, parce qu'[alors] il les retira du pays d'Egypte; cette même nuit-là est à observer à [l'honneur] de l'Eternel, par tous les enfants d'Israël en leurs âges.

43 L'Eternel dit aussi à Moïse et à Aaron : c'est ici l'ordonnance de la Pâque : aucun étranger n'en mangera.

44 Mais tout esclave qu'on aura acheté par argent sera circoncis, [et] alors il en mangera.

45 L'étranger et le mercenaire n'en mangeront point.

46 On la mangera dans une même maison, et vous n'emporterez point de sa chair hors de la maison, et vous n'en casserez point les os.

47 Toute l'assemblée d'Israël la fera.

48 Et si quelque étranger qui habite chez toi, veut faire la Pâque à l'Eternel, que tout mâle qui lui appartient soit circoncis, et alors il s'approchera pour la faire, et il sera comme celui qui est né au pays; mais aucun incirconcis n'en mangera.

49 Il y aura une même loi pour celui qui est né au pays et pour l'étranger qui habite parmi vous.

50 Tous les enfants d'Israël firent ainsi que l'Eternel avait commandé à Moïse et à Aaron; ils le firent ainsi.

51 Il arriva donc en ce propre jour-là, que l'Eternel retira les enfants d'Israël du pays d'Egypte, selon leurs bandes.

   

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Arcana Coelestia #8002

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8002. 'A stranger and a hired servant shall not eat it' means that those who are prompted by a merely natural inclination to do good, and those who do it for the sake of gain, shall not be together with them. This is clear from the meaning of 'a stranger' as those who are prompted to do good by a merely natural inclination, dealt with below; from the meaning of 'a hired servant' as those who do good for the sake of gain, also dealt with below; and from the meaning of 'not eating it' as not being together with them, dealt with immediately above in 8001. 'A stranger' means those who are prompted by a merely natural inclination to do good because strangers were newcomers from other peoples. They were inhabitants, dwelling with the Israelites and Jews in one house; and 'dwelling with' means sharing in the same good. But since, as has just been said, they were from peoples outside the Church the good that is meant is not a kind of good that is prominent in the Church but is the kind to be found outside the Church. And this is called natural good because it is a product of the hereditary inclinations that a person is born with. With some people such good may also be the product of poor health or debility of mind. This is what one should understand when the good done by those meant by 'strangers' is mentioned.

[2] This kind of good is completely different from the good prominent in the Church, for by means of the Church's kind of good conscience is established in a person; and conscience is the level on which the angels come in and which brings him into company with them. Natural good cannot provide any such level for angels to enter. Those whose good is natural do good in the dark, led by blind instinct, not in the light of truth, under the influence of heaven. In the next life therefore they are carried away like chaff by the wind, by anyone and everyone, whether evil or good, but especially by an evil person who knows how to add a certain amount of charm and persuasion to his arguments. Nor can angels at this time guide them away, for angels operate through the truths and forms of the good of faith; they enter in on the level formed within a person out of those truths and forms of the good of faith. From all this it is evident that those who are prompted by a merely natural inclination to do good cannot be integrated among angels. Regarding these people and their lot in the next life, see 3470, 3471, 3518, 4988, 4992, 5032, 6208, 7197.

[3] The fact that 'strangers' are those who are not in their own land nor in their own house but are those staying in a foreign land is clear in Moses,

The land shall [not] be sold outright, for the land is Mine; but you are sojourners and strangers with Me. Leviticus 25:23.

In David,

Hear my prayers, O Jehovah; do not be silent at my tears. For I am a sojourner with You, a stranger as all my fathers were. Psalms 39:12.

And in the Book of Genesis,

Abraham said to the sons of Heth, I am a sojourner and a stranger among you; give me possession of a grave. Genesis 13:3-4.

'A sojourner', like 'a stranger', means a newcomer and inhabitant from another land; but 'a sojourner' means those who were taught and accepted the Church's truths, whereas those who were not taught them because they were unwilling to accept them are meant by 'strangers'.

[4] As for hired servants, they were people who worked for wages; they were servants, but not ones who had been bought. The fact that they were called 'hired', see Leviticus 19:13; 25:4-6; Deuteronomy 24:14-15. Because hired servants were those who worked for wages they mean in the internal sense those who do good for the sake of gain in the world, and in a yet more internal sense those who do good for the sake of reward in the next life, thus those who wish to earn merit through works.

[5] Those who do good solely for the sake of gain in the world cannot possibly be integrated among angels, since their final objective for doing it is the world, that is, affluence and prestige, not heaven, that is, the blessedness and happiness of their souls. The final objective is what gives direction to actions and what gives them their specific character. Those who do good solely for the sake of gain are described by the Lord as follows in John,

I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life 1 for the sheep. But a hired servant, he who is not the shepherd, whose sheep are not his own, sees the wolf coming and leaves the sheep and flees; and the wolf seizes them, and scatters the sheep. But the hired servant flees because he is a hired servant. John 10:11-13.

And in Jeremiah,

A very beautiful heifer was Egypt; destruction has come from the north. Her hired servants are like calves of the stall, 2 for they also have turned about, fled away together, and not made a stand, because the day of their ruin has come upon them. Jeremiah 46:20-21.

[6] A law forbidding strangers and hired servants to share in holy things along with those belonging to the Church is stated in Moses as follows,

No outsider shall eat what is holy; a stranger staying with a priest, or a hired servant, shall not eat what is holy. Leviticus 22:10.

And a law which allowed people to buy from the sons of strangers slaves who would serve them for evermore appears in the same book,

You shall buy a male or a female slave from the nations that are around you. And also from the sons of strangers sojourning among you - from them you shall buy, and from their families which are with you, even if they were born in your land, in order that they may be your possession. And you may pass them on as an inheritance to your sons after you to inherit as a possession. Forever you shall be their masters. Leviticus 25:44-46.

'The sons of strangers' means factual knowledge acquired with the aid of merely natural light. The necessity for spiritual truths to dominate that knowledge is meant by the law that slaves should be bought from the sons of strangers as possessions for evermore.

[7] People however who do good for the sake of reward in the next life, people who are also meant by 'hired servants', differ from those spoken about immediately above, in that they have life and happiness in heaven as their final objective. But this objective turns and alters the direction of their Divine worship away from the Lord towards themselves, as a consequence of which they want things to go well only for themselves, not for others except insofar as these want the same for them. When this is so self-love resides in their every desire, not love of the neighbour; that is, they do not have any genuine charity. Nor can these people be integrated among angels, for angels utterly loathe both the word and the notion of reward or repayment. The Lord teaches in Luke that one ought to do what is good without reward as the objective,

Love your enemies, and do good, and lend, hoping for nothing from it; then your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Highest. Luke 6:32-35; 14:12-14.

Regarding the nature of good deeds performed to earn merit, see 1110, 1111, 1774, 1835, 1877, 2027, 2273, 2340, 2373, 2400, 3816, 4007 (end), 4174, 4943, 6388-6390, 6392, 6393, 6478.

[8] The reason why the Lord says so many times that those who do good will have their reward in heaven - as in Matthew 5:11-12; 6:1-2, 26; 10:41-42; 20:1-16; Mark 9:41; Luke 6:23, 35; 14:14; John 4:36 - is that before a person has been regenerated he cannot help thinking about reward. But it is different once he has been regenerated. Then he is indignant if anyone thinks that he does good to his neighbour for the sake of reward; for he feels delight and bliss in the doing of good, but not in repayment. In the internal sense 'reward' is the delight belonging to the affection that goes with charity, see 3816, 3956, 6388, 6478.

Note a piè di pagina:

1. literally, soul

2. i.e. mercenaries who are like fat bulls

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

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Arcana Coelestia #6393

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6393. 'And he will bend his shoulder to bear a burden' means that nevertheless he makes every effort. This is clear from the meaning of 'shoulder' as all power or every effort, dealt with in 1085, 4931-4937; and from the meaning of 'bearing a burden' as performing works so as to earn merit. Consequently 'bending the shoulder to bear a burden' means making every effort at performing works in order to earn merit. The reason this is described as 'bearing a burden' is that such people do good not out of an affection for good, thus not in freedom, but out of a selfish affection, which is servitude, 6390.

[2] With regard to those who desire a reward for the works they accomplish, it should also be recognized that they are never satisfied but become annoyed if their reward is not greater than that which everyone else receives; or if they see that others are more richly blessed than themselves, they are sad and complaining. Real blessedness is not considered by them to reside in inward things but in outward ones, that is to say, in their being pre-eminent, having dominion, and being served by angels, thus in their being superior to angels and so being the chief and great ones in heaven. But in actual fact heavenly blessedness does not consist in wishing to have dominion and to be served by others but in wishing to serve others and to be the least, as the Lord teaches,

James and John, the sons of Zebedee drew near, saying, Grant us to sit in Your glory, one on Your right hand and the other on Your left. Jesus said to them, You do not know what you ask. To sit at My right hand and at My left is not Mine to grant, but it is for those for whom it has been prepared. You know that those who are reckoned to rule the gentiles lord it over them, and the great ones have authority over them. It must not be so among you; but whoever would be great among you must be your minister, and whoever would be first among you must be slave of all. For the Son of Man did not come to be ministered to but to minister. Mark 10:35-45.

[3] And He teaches that heaven belongs to those who do good without recompense as their end in view, in Luke,

Everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but he who humbles himself will be exalted. When you give a dinner or a supper, do not invite your friends or your brothers or your kinsmen or rich neighbours, lest perhaps also they invite you back in return, and you are repaid. But when you give a feast invite the poor, the maimed, the lame, the blind, and you will be blessed, for they have nothing with which to repay you. You will be repaid at the resurrection of the just. Luke 14:11-14.

'Repayment at the resurrection of the just' is the inner happiness that comes from doing good without thought of recompense, which people receive from the Lord when they perform useful services. And the more that those who love to serve without thought of repayment love to do good, the nobler are the services committed to their charge. Also, they are in actual fact greater and more powerful than others.

[4] Those who perform good works with a view to repayment also say, because of what they know from the Word, that they wish to be the least in heaven. But they think that by saying this they may become great, so that they still have the same end in view. But those who do good without thought of repayment really do not think about pre-eminence, only about being of service.

[5] See what has been stated and shown already about earning merit through works,

In the next life those who are merit-seekers appear to be splitting wood and cutting grass, 1110, 1111, 4943.

How those people are represented, 1774, 2027.

Those who have done good for selfish and worldly reasons receive no payment in the next life for that good, 1835.

Those who place merit in works interpret the Word literally to their own advantage and laugh with scorn at its inner content, 1774, 1877.

True charity is devoid of all merit-seeking, 2340, 2373, 2400, 3816.

Those who separate faith from charity consider the works they have done to be worthy of merit, 2373 (end).

Those who come into heaven throw off what is their own and any merit of their own, 4007 (end).

Most people believe, when they start to be reformed, that the good they do originates in themselves, and that through this good they are worthy of merit; but they throw off that belief as they undergo regeneration, 4174.

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