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2 Mose 32

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1 Da aber das Volk sah, daß Mose verzog, von dem Berge zu kommen, sammelte sich's wider Aaron und sprach zu ihm: Auf, mache uns Götter, die vor uns her gehen! Denn wir wissen nicht, was diesem Mann Mose widerfahren ist, der uns aus Ägyptenland geführt hat.

2 Aaron sprach zu ihnen: Reißt ab die goldenen Ohrenringe an den Ohren eurer Weiber, eurer Söhne und eurer Töchter und bringet sie zu mir.

3 Da riß alles Volk seine goldenen Ohrenringe von ihren Ohren, und brachten sie zu Aaron.

4 Und er nahm sie von ihren Händen und entwarf's mit einem Griffel und machte ein gegossenes Kalb. Und sie sprachen: Das sind deine Götter, Israel, die dich aus Ägyptenland geführt haben!

5 Da das Aaron sah, baute er einen Altar vor ihm und ließ ausrufen und sprach: Morgen ist des HERRN Fest.

6 Und sie standen des Morgens früh auf und opferten Brandopfer und brachten dazu Dankopfer. Darnach setzte sich das Volk, zu essen und zu trinken, und standen auf zu spielen.

7 Der HERR aber sprach zu Mose: Gehe, steig hinab; denn dein Volk, das du aus Ägyptenland geführt hast, hat's verderbt.

8 Sie sind schnell von dem Wege getreten, den ich ihnen geboten habe. Sie haben sich ein gegossenes Kalb gemacht und haben's angebetet und ihm geopfert und gesagt: Das sind deine Götter, Israel, die dich aus Ägyptenland geführt haben.

9 Und der HERR sprach zu Mose: Ich sehe, daß es ein halsstarriges Volk ist.

10 Und nun laß mich, daß mein Zorn über sie ergrimme und sie vertilge; so will ich dich zum großen Volk machen.

11 Mose aber flehte vor dem HERRN, seinem Gott, und sprach: Ach HERR, warum will dein Zorn ergrimmen über dein Volk, das du mit großer Kraft und starker Hand hast aus Ägyptenland geführt?

12 Warum sollen die Ägypter sagen und sprechen: Er hat sie zu ihrem Unglück ausgeführt, daß er sie erwürgte im Gebirge und vertilgte vom Erdboden? Kehre dich von dem Grimm deines Zornes und laß dich gereuen des Übels über dein Volk.

13 Gedenke an deine Diener Abraham, Isaak und Israel, denen du bei dir selbst geschworen und verheißen hast: Ich will euren Samen mehren wie die Sterne am Himmel, und alles Land, das ich euch verheißen habe, will ich eurem Samen geben, und sie sollen's besitzen ewiglich.

14 Also gereute den HERRN das Übel, das er drohte seinem Volk zu tun.

15 Mose wandte sich und stieg vom Berge und hatte zwei Tafeln des Zeugnisses in seiner Hand, die waren beschrieben auf beiden Seiten.

16 Und Gott hatte sie selbst gemacht und selber die Schrift eingegraben.

17 Da nun Josua hörte des Volks Geschrei, daß sie jauchzten, sprach er zu Mose: Es ist ein Geschrei im Lager wie im Streit.

18 Er antwortete: Es ist nicht ein Geschrei gegeneinander derer, die obliegen und unterliegen, sondern ich höre ein Geschrei eines Singetanzes.

19 Als er aber nahe zum Lager kam und das Kalb und den Reigen sah, ergrimmte er mit Zorn und warf die Tafeln aus seiner Hand und zerbrach sie unten am Berge

20 und nahm das Kalb, das sie gemacht hatten, und zerschmelzte es mit Feuer und zermalmte es zu Pulver und stäubte es aufs Wasser und gab's den Kindern Israel zu trinken

21 und sprach zu Aaron: Was hat dir das Volk getan, daß du eine so große Sünde über sie gebracht hast?

22 Aaron sprach: Mein Herr lasse seinen Zorn nicht ergrimmen. Du weißt, daß dies Volk böse ist.

23 Sie sprachen zu mir: Mache uns Götter, die vor uns her gehen; denn wir wissen nicht, wie es diesem Manne Mose geht, der uns aus Ägyptenland geführt hat.

24 Ich sprach zu ihnen: Wer Gold hat, der reiß es ab und gebe es mir. Und ich warf's ins Feuer; daraus ist das Kalb geworden.

25 Da nun Mose sah, daß das Volk zuchtlos geworden war (denn Aaron hatte sie zuchtlos gemacht, zum Geschwätz bei ihren Widersachern),

26 trat er an das Tor des Lagers und sprach: Her zu mir, wer dem HERRN angehört! Da sammelten sich zu ihm alle Kinder Levi.

27 Und er sprach zu ihnen: So spricht der HERR, der Gott Israels: Gürte ein jeglicher sein Schwert um seine Lenden und durchgehet hin und zurück von einem Tor zum andern das Lager, und erwürge ein jeglicher seinen Bruder, Freund und Nächsten.

28 Die Kinder Levi taten, wie ihnen Mose gesagt hatte; und fielen des Tages vom Volk dreitausend Mann.

29 Da sprach Mose: Füllet heute eure Hände dem HERRN, ein jeglicher an seinem Sohn und Bruder, daß heute über euch der Segen gegeben werde.

30 Des Morgens sprach Mose zum Volk: Ihr habt eine große Sünde getan; nun will ich hinaufsteigen zu dem HERRN, ob ich vielleicht eure Sünde versöhnen möge.

31 Als nun Mose wieder zum HERRN kam, sprach er: Ach, das Volk hat eine große Sünde getan, und sie haben sich goldene Götter gemacht.

32 Nun vergib ihnen ihre Sünde; wo nicht, so tilge mich auch aus deinem Buch, das du geschrieben hast.

33 Der HERR sprach zu Mose: Was? Ich will den aus meinem Buch tilgen, der an mir sündigt.

34 So gehe nun hin und führe das Volk, dahin ich dir gesagt habe. Siehe, mein Engel soll vor dir her gehen. Ich werde ihre Sünde wohl heimsuchen, wenn meine Zeit kommt heimzusuchen.

35 Also strafte der HERR das Volk, daß sie das Kalb hatten gemacht, welches Aaron gemacht hatte.

   

Dalle opere di Swedenborg

 

Arcana Coelestia #8882

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8882. 'You shall not take the name of your God in vain' means instances in which the truth or the good of faith is profaned or blasphemed. This is clear from the meaning of 'the name of God' as everything in its entirety with which the Lord is worshipped, thus every truth or good of faith, dealt with in 2724, 3006, 6674; and from the meaning of 'taking in vain' as profaning and blaspheming. To be precise 'taking God's name in vain' means turning what is true into what is bad, that is, believing it to be true and yet living a bad life. It is also turning what is good into what is false, that is, living in a holy manner and yet not believing. Both are forms of profanation, 4601. Belief belongs to the understanding and life to the will; consequently thought and will in people whose belief is out of keeping with their life are divided. But the will is entering constantly into the understanding, for the understanding is the outward form assumed by the will, that is, the will brings itself to light there. This being so, when a person thinks in one way and lives in another, truth and evil or goodness and falsity are combined with each other; that is, things of heaven with a person are combined with those of hell. This combination cannot be dissolved, and so the person cannot be healed, except by a tearing apart which takes away with it everything of spiritual life. Therefore people who are like this are sent to the most horrible hell of all, where they suffer dreadful torments.

[2] This is how the Lord's words in Matthew should be understood,

Every sin and blasphemy will be forgiven people, but the blasphemy of the Spirit will not be forgiven people. If anyone speaks a word against the Son of Man, it will be forgiven him; but he who speaks against the Holy Spirit, it will not be forgiven him, either in this age or in the one to come. Matthew 12:31-32.

Also by these words in Luke,

When the unclean spirit has gone out of a person he passes through dry places seeking rest - and if he does not find any he says, I will return to my house out of which I came. And if when he comes he finds it swept and decorated, he goes away and brings seven other spirits more evil than himself, and they enter in and dwell there. And the last things of the person become worse than the first. Luke 11:24-26.

[3] By these words the Lord is describing the profanation of truth. 'When the unclean spirit goes out' is used to mean acknowledgement of and real belief in truth, 'the house which has been swept' to mean a life contrary to truths, and 'his coming back with seven others' to mean a state of profanation. These are the things which are meant by 'taking God's name in vain'. The fact that the person cannot be healed from such a condition and so receive forgiveness is also meant by the words following immediately after - 'Jehovah will not render him innocent who takes His name in vain' - which are used to mean that this thing cannot be forgiven. For more about what profanation is and with whom it exists, see 593, 1003, 1008, 1010, 1059, 1327, 1328, 2051, 2426, 3398, 3399, 3402, 3489, 6348, 6595, 6960, 6963, 6971, 8394

[4] 'Taking God's name in vain' also means blasphemy, which takes place when fun is poked at those things which belong to the Word or to religious teachings and belief, thus which are holy, and they are dragged through the mud and thereby defiled, dealt with in 4050, 5390. But in respect of the Israelite nation, which did not acknowledge any good or truth of faith meant by 'God's name', their use of Jehovah's name, and also of the commandments and statutes they were commanded, in the worship of idols is meant by 'taking God's name in vain'. It was what they did in the wilderness when they worshipped the golden calf; they not only presented it burnt offerings and sacrifices, and ate of consecrated elements from them, but also called the day of that celebration 'a feast to Jehovah'. This is recorded in Moses as follows,

Aaron made out of the gold a molded calf, and they said, These are your gods, O Israel. who caused you to come up out of the land of Egypt. When Aaron saw it he built an altar in front of it, and made a proclamation and said, Tomorrow there will be a feast to Jehovah. Therefore they rose up in the morning of the next day and presented burnt offerings and brought eucharistic offerings. Exodus 32:4-6.

Jehovah's words at the time, concerning those who had taken the name of Jehovah God in vain by doing all this, make it clear that they could not be forgiven, meant by their not being rendered innocent. Those words spoken to Moses are,

Him who has sinned against Me I will blot out of My book. All the same, go, lead this people to the place of which I have spoken to you. But on the day of My visitation, I will visit them for their sin. Exodus 32:33-34.

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

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Arcana Coelestia #6963

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6963. 'And behold, his hand was leprous, like snow' means the profanation of truth. This is clear from the meaning of 'hand' as power, as above in 6947, and as truth since spiritual power consists in truth, 6948, 6960; and from the meaning of 'leprosy' as profanation, in particular the profanation of truth, dealt with below. In the historical part of the Word a great deal is said about leprosy - about the various manifestations of it in the skin, about determining the nature of it from those manifestations, and about whether a leper should be shut away, leave the community, or be set at liberty; and about leprosy in garments, vessels, and actual houses. So much is said about leprosy not on account of leprosy as a disease but because it was a sign of the profanation of truth, thus on account of its spiritual meaning and because the Jews and Israelites more than any others were capable of rendering truth profane.

[2] For if those people had known the inner contents of the Word and the actual truths which the religious observances of the Church among them represented, and if they had believed those truths and yet led the lives they were predisposed to lead - namely lives ruled by self-love and love of the world, involving acts of hatred and vengeance on one another, and involving cruelty to gentiles - they could not have avoided profaning the truths they had once believed. For believing truths and leading a life that goes against them is profaning them. It was for this reason too that they were withheld as far as was possible from any recognition of internal truth, 3398, 3489, withheld from it so completely that they did not even know that they would be alive after death. Nor did they believe that the Messiah was coming to save their souls for evermore, only that He would exalt that nation above all throughout the world. And because that nation was like this, and is also like it today, they are still withheld from faith, even though they live amid Christianity. This then is the reason why the nature of leprosy has been described so extensively.

[3] The meaning of 'leprosy' as the profanation of truth is evident from the regulations regarding leprosy in Moses, Leviticus 13:1-end. That description contains in the internal sense the whole nature of the profanation of truth - what profanation is like if recent, what it is like if long-established, what it is like if it exists inwardly in a person, what it is like if it also exists outwardly, what it is like if it can be cured, what it is like if it cannot, what means can be used, and a number of other details. No one can ever come to know about any of this without the help of the internal sense of the Word. But since profane things are what 'leprosy' describes, a detailed explanation of the contents of that description must not be given; heaven has a feeling of horror at the very mention of what is profane.

[4] So let just the following be quoted from those regulations,

If leprosy has broken out severely in the skin and the leprosy has covered the entire skin of [him who has] the plague, from his head to his heels, wherever the priest looks, 1 and the priest sees that, behold, the leprosy has covered the person's entire flesh, then he shall pronounce [him] clean [who has] the plague. It has all turned white; he is clean. But on the day living flesh appears on him he shall be unclean. Leviticus 17:12-14.

Unless one knew from the internal sense how it could be that one who is leprous all over from his head to his heels was clean it would seem to be an absurdity. But one who is leprous from head to heels means a person who has a knowledge of internal truths but does not acknowledge them, that is, has no belief in them. Profanation does not exist with him inwardly, only outwardly, and is being removed. Therefore he is clean. But if he knows the truths of faith and believes them, and yet leads a life that goes against them, profanation does exist with him inwardly, as it also does with someone who has had a belief in them but subsequently denies them. This explains why it says, 'on the day living flesh appears in him he shall be unclean'; 'living flesh' is used to mean acknowledgement and faith. See also the paragraphs referred to above in 6959.

Note a piè di pagina:

1. literally, under all the survey of the eyes of the priest

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