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Hemelse Verborgenheden in Genesis en Exodus # 5276

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5276. Grote overvloed der opbrengst in het gehele land van Egypte; dat dit de vermenigvuldiging betekent van het ware in het ene en het andere natuurlijke, staat vast uit de betekenis van de overvloed der opbrengst, namelijk de vermenigvuldiging van het ware, waarover hierna; en uit de betekenis van het land van Egypte, namelijk het ene en het andere natuurlijke; met Egypte immers wordt de wetenschap aangeduid, zie de nrs. 1164, 1165, 1186, 1462, 4749, 4964, 4966 en omdat de wetenschap wordt aangeduid, wordt ook het natuurlijke aangeduid; de oorzaak hiervan is dat datgene wetenschappelijk wordt genoemd dat in het natuurlijke is; dus is het land van Egypte het natuurlijk gemoed waarin het wetenschappelijke is; vandaar wordt met het gehele land van Egypte het ene en het andere natuurlijke aangeduid, namelijk het innerlijke en het uiterlijke; dat het natuurlijke innerlijk en uiterlijk is, zie de nrs. 5118, 5126.

Dat de overvloed der opbrengst de vermenigvuldiging van het ware betekent, komt omdat de honger daaraan wordt tegenovergesteld, welke het gebrek aan het ware betekent; het woord waarmee in de oorspronkelijke taal de overvloed der opbrengst wordt uitgedrukt, is een woord waaraan de honger is tegenovergesteld en het betekent in de innerlijke zin een volle voorraad en een voldoende mate van erkentenissen, omdat de honger het gebrek daaraan betekent. Erkentenissen zijn niet iets anders dan de ware dingen van de natuurlijke mens, maar die hem nog niet zijn toegeëigend; de vermenigvuldiging van zulke ware dingen wordt hier verstaan; de erkentenissen worden niet ware dingen bij de mens voordat zij met het verstand worden erkend, wat gebeurt wanneer zij door het zelf worden bevestigd en deze ware dingen worden hem niet toegeëigend voordat hij volgens deze leeft; niets immers wordt de mens toegeëigend dan dat wat van het leven wordt; zo immers is hijzelf daarin, omdat zijn leven daarin is.

  
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Nederlandse vertaling door Henk Weevers. Digitale publicatie Swedenborg Boekhuis, van 2012 t/m 2021 op www.swedenborg.nl

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Arcana Coelestia # 5462

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5462. 'And you, go, take corn for the famine of your houses' means that in the meantime they will be left in freedom to consider their own interests. This is clear from the meaning of 'you, go', after they had been held in bonds and one was then kept back in place of them, as their being left in freedom in the meantime; from the meaning of 'corn' as truth, dealt with in 5276, 5280, 5292; from the meaning of 'the famine' as an absence of cognitions and a desolation, dealt with in 5360, 5376; and from the meaning of 'your houses' as the dwelling-places where specifically truths of every kind reside, namely the natural mind. For 'a house' is the natural mind, see 4973, 5023, and the truths represented by 'the sons of Jacob' here, are those known to the external Church, and so are truths in the natural, 5401, 5415, 5428. From all these meanings taken together one may see that 'take corn for the famine of your houses' means so as to consider their own interests amid the desolation of truth in which they find themselves.

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

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Arcana Coelestia # 5428

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5428. 'And they did not recognize him' means that truth from the Divine was not seen in natural light that was not yet brightened with heavenly light. This becomes clear from what has gone immediately before this, for since 'Joseph recognized his brothers' means that general truths known to the Church were seen by the celestial of the spiritual by the light this possessed, it follows that 'they did not recognize him' means that the celestial of the spiritual, which is truth from the Divine, was not seen by the general truths known to the Church while these were in natural light not yet brightened with heavenly light. This meaning may indeed be seen from what has been stated immediately above; but as it belongs among arcana let some examples be used to shed light on the matter. Take as an example the glory of heaven. Consider those who, when they think about the glory of heaven, see this in natural light that has not been brightened with heavenly light because no intermediary is present, especially if no agreement exists. Such people's idea of the glory of heaven cannot be anything different from the kind of idea they possess about the glory of the world when they read, for instance, about the revelations made to prophets, in particular those made to John and described in the Book of Revelation, in which everything is most magnificent. One may tell these people that the glory of heaven surpasses all worldly magnificence, so completely that one cannot begin to compare it with that glory. One may also tell them that even this is not really the glory of heaven, but that the glory of heaven consists in that which is of God shining out of every individual thing to be seen there, and in a perception of Divine realities and in the wisdom gained from that perception. One may tell these people too that this alone is the glory to those who are there, for they consider worldly magnificence, in comparison with such wisdom, to be nothing at all, and they attribute all wisdom to the Lord and none whatsoever to themselves. But if people behold the glory of heaven in natural light devoid of an intermediary, and especially if no agreement exists, that glory goes completely unrecognized.

[2] Take angelic power as another example. Consider those who, when they think about angelic power, in particular that of the archangels who are mentioned in the Word, do so in natural light that has not been brightened with heavenly light because no intermediary is present, especially if because no agreement exists. Such people's idea of that power cannot be anything different from the idea they have of the power wielded by powerful rulers in the world. That is to say, they think that angels have thousands upon thousands of subordinates over whom they rule, and that high positions in heaven involve that kind of domination. One may tell these people that angelic power does indeed surpass all power wielded by powerful rulers in the world and is so great that just one of the subordinate angels can drive away millions of hellish spirits and send them down into their own hells, which is why in the Word angels are called 'powers' and 'dominions'. One may also tell those people that the least of the angels is the greatest; that is, the one who believes, wishes, and perceives that all power originates entirely within the Lord and never at all within himself is a very highly powerful ruler. And therefore those who are 'powers' in heaven utterly detest any power that derives from themselves. But neither is any of this recognized when beheld in natural light devoid of the intermediary, and more so if no agreement exists.

[3] Take yet another example. Consider a person who looks at freedom from a natural idea devoid of an intermediary linking it to a spiritual one, and especially if no agreement exists between the two. He cannot see freedom as anything else than thinking and willing from what is within himself and being able to carry out without restriction whatever he so thinks and wills. More than that, to the end that he can have whatever he thinks and wills the natural man wishes to become very rich; and to the end that he can carry out whatever he thinks and wills he wishes to become very powerful. Once he has attained this he imagines that he is in perfect freedom and consequently possesses real happiness. If however one tells people like this that true freedom, called heavenly freedom, is not at all like that, but that it involves no willing from what is within oneself, only from the Lord, and does not involve any thinking from what is within oneself, only from heaven, and that feelings of pain and sorrow ensue if one is allowed to think from what is within oneself and to will from what is in oneself, nothing of this is recognized.

These examples may serve to some extent to show what is implied by truth from the Divine not being seen in natural light that has not yet been brightened with heavenly light, meant by Joseph's brothers not recognizing him.

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