성경

 

Levitico 6

공부

   

1 E l’Eterno parlò a Mosè dicendo:

2 "Quand’uno peccherà e commetterà una infedeltà verso l’Eterno, negando al suo prossimo un deposito da lui ricevuto, o un pegno messo nelle sue mani, o una cosa che ha rubata o estorta con frode al prossimo,

3 o una cosa perduta che ha trovata, e mentendo a questo proposito e giurando il falso circa una delle cose nelle quali l’uomo può peccare,

4 quando avrà così peccato e si sarà reso colpevole, restituirà la cosa rubata o estorta con frode, o il deposito che gli era stato confidato, o l’oggetto perduto che ha trovato,

5 o qualunque cosa circa la quale abbia giurato il falso. Ne farà la restituzione per intero e v’aggiungerà un quinto in più, consegnandola al proprietario il giorno stesso che offrirà il suo sacrifizio di riparazione.

6 E porterà al sacerdote il suo sacrifizio di riparazione all’Eterno: un montone senza difetto, preso dal gregge, secondo la tua stima, come sacrifizio di riparazione.

7 E il sacerdote farà l’espiazione per lui davanti all’Eterno, e gli sarà perdonato qualunque sia la cosa di cui si è reso colpevole".

8 L’Eterno parlò ancora a Mosè, dicendo:

9 "Da’ quest’ordine ad Aaronne e ai suoi figliuoli, e di’ loro: Questa è la legge dell’olocausto. L’olocausto rimarrà sulle legna accese sopra l’altare tutta la notte, fino al mattino; e il fuoco dell’altare sarà tenuto acceso.

10 Il sacerdote si vestirà della sua tunica di lino e si metterà sulla carne le brache; leverà la cenere fatta dal fuoco che avrà consumato l’olocausto sull’altare e la porrà allato all’altare.

11 Poi si spoglierà delle vesti e ne indosserà delle altre, e porterà la cenere fuori del campo, in un luogo puro.

12 Il fuoco sarà mantenuto acceso sull’altare e non si lascerà spegnere; e il sacerdote vi brucerà su delle legna ogni mattina, vi disporrà sopra l’olocausto, e vi farà fumar sopra il grasso dei sacrifizi di azioni di grazie.

13 Il fuoco dev’esser del continuo mantenuto acceso sull’altare, e non si lascerà spengere.

14 Questa è la legge dell’oblazione. I figliuoli d’Aaronne l’offriranno davanti all’Eterno, dinanzi all’altare.

15 Si leverà una manata di fior di farina con il suo olio e tutto l’incenso che è sull’oblazione, e si farà fumare ogni cosa sull’altare in sacrifizio di soave odore, come una ricordanza per l’Eterno.

16 Aaronne e i suoi figliuoli mangeranno quel che rimarrà dell’oblazione; la si mangerà senza lievito, in luogo santo; la mangeranno nel cortile della tenda di convegno.

17 Non la si cocerà con lievito; è la parte che ho data loro de’ miei sacrifizi fatti mediante il fuoco. E’ cosa santissima, come il sacrifizio per il peccato e come il sacrifizio di riparazione.

18 Ogni maschio tra i figliuoli d’Aaronne ne potrà mangiare. E’ una parte perpetua, assegnatavi di generazione in generazione, sui sacrifizi fatti mediante il fuoco all’Eterno. Chiunque toccherà quelle cose dovrà esser santo".

19 L’Eterno parlò ancora a Mosè, dicendo:

20 "Questa è l’offerta che Aaronne e i suoi figliuoli faranno all’Eterno il giorno che riceveranno l’unzione: un decimo d’efa di fior di farina, come oblazione perpetua, metà la mattina e metà la sera.

21 Essa sarà preparata con olio, sulla gratella; la porterai quando sarà fritta; l’offrirai in pezzi, come offerta divisa di soave odore all’Eterno;

22 e il sacerdote che, tra i figliuoli d’Aaronne, sarà unto per succedergli, farà anch’egli quest’offerta; è la parte assegnata in perpetuo all’Eterno; sarà fatta fumare per intero.

23 Ogni oblazione del sacerdote sarà fatta fumare per intero; non sarà mangiata".

24 L’Eterno parlò ancora a Mosè, dicendo:

25 "Parla ad Aaronne e ai suoi figliuoli, e di’ loro: Questa è la legge del sacrifizio per il peccato. Nel luogo dove si sgozza l’olocausto, sarà sgozzata, davanti all’Eterno, la vittima per il peccato. E’ cosa santissima.

26 Il sacerdote che l’offrirà per il peccato, la mangerà; dovrà esser mangiata in luogo santo, nel cortile della tenda di convegno.

27 Chiunque ne toccherà la carne dovrà esser santo; e se ne schizza del sangue sopra una veste, il posto ove sarà schizzato il sangue lo laverai in luogo santo.

28 Ma il vaso di terra che avrà servito a cuocerla, sarà spezzato; e se è stata cotta in un vaso di rame, questo si strofini bene e si sciacqui con acqua.

29 Ogni maschio, fra i sacerdoti, ne potrà mangiare; è cosa santissima.

30 Ma non si mangerà alcuna vittima per il peccato, quando si deve portare del sangue d’essa nella tenda di convegno per fare l’espiazione nel santuario. Essa sarà bruciata col fuoco.

   

스웨덴보그의 저서에서

 

Apocalypse Explained #1154

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1154. Beasts of burden and sheep.- That these signify worship from truths and goods that are from a spiritual-natural origin, profaned, is evident from the signification of beasts of burden, which denote the truths that have reference to charity, of which we shall speak presently; and from the signification of sheep, which denote the goods of charity, as is evident from all the passages in the Word where they are mentioned; as in the following: Matthew 7:15; 9:36; 10:5, 6, 16; 12:10, 11, 12; 15:21-29; 18:12, 13; 25:31-41; 26:31; Mark 6:34; 14:27; John 10:1-18, 26-31; 21:15, 16, 17; and many passages in the prophets. In these passages sheep signify those who are in the good of charity, and therefore, in the abstract sense, the goods of charity. But by beasts of burden are signified the truths that have reference to the goods of charity; and asses especially are meant - which are used for riding upon and carrying burdens - and they signify such things as are of use and pertain to instruction; as in Isaiah:

"They carry their wealth upon the shoulder of beasts of burden" (30:6).

Here by wealth knowledges are signified.

And in Luke,

"the Samaritan set the man wounded by the robbers on his own beast of burden" (10:34);

where, by setting the man on his own beast of burden is signified to instruct him according to his capability, as may be seen above, n. 375:42, 376:30, 444:14, where that parable is explained.

The signification of beasts of burden when asses are meant, may be seen above, n. 31:8, 140. It is said that beasts of burden and sheep signify truths and goods from a spiritual-natural origin, because here those goods and truths are meant that pertain to those who are in the external church of the Lord, and thence in the first or ultimate heaven; these are natural, but still receptive of the Spiritual, and therefore they are called spiritual-natural. Here, however, as elsewhere, it is meant that worship from such truths and goods is profaned.

[2] Continuation concerning the Athanasian Creed.- The operation of the Divine Providence, notwithstanding that man is ignorant of it, shall be illustrated by two comparisons. It is like a gardener who collects the seeds of shrubs, fruit-trees, and flowers of every kind, and provides himself with spades, rakes, and various other implements for preparing the ground. He afterwards brings his garden into a state of cultivation, digging it, cutting it in to beds, putting in the seeds, and smoothing the ground. This is as it were the gardener's own work; but it is the Lord who causes the seeds to take root, to spring out of the earth, to put forth leaves and then flowers, and lastly to yield new seeds, which are for the gardener's benefit. It is also like a man who is about to build a house. He provides himself with the requisite materials, such as timber, rafters, stone, mortar, and various other things. But the Lord while man is ignorant of it afterwards builds the house from the foundation to the roof entirely suited to the man. From these comparisons it follows that unless a man provides himself with the requisites for his garden or his house, he will have neither the former with the advantage of its fruits, nor the latter to afford him a dwelling. So is it in the case of reformation.

[3] Those things with which a man must provide himself are the knowledges of truth and good obtained from the Word, from the doctrine of the church, from the world, and from his own study; the Lord does the rest without man's knowledge. It must, however, be borne in mind that all the requisites for sowing a garden or building a house, which, as was said, are the knowledges of truth and good, are merely the necessary materials, which have no life until man uses them, or lives according to them as if from himself. When this is the case, then the Lord enters, imparts life, and builds, that is, reforms. The garden, or the house, is man's understanding; for in it dwells his wisdom which derives all that it has from love.

  
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Translation by Isaiah Tansley. Many thanks to the Swedenborg Society for the permission to use this translation.

스웨덴보그의 저서에서

 

Arcana Coelestia #10261

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10261. 'And olive oil' means the Lord's celestial Divine Good. This is clear from the meaning of 'oil' as good, both celestial and spiritual, dealt with in 886, 4582, 9780; and from the meaning of 'olive' as celestial love, dealt with below, so that 'olive oil' means the good of celestial love, or what amounts to the same thing, celestial good. The expression 'the Lord's celestial Divine Good' is used because the origin of all good that really is good and exists in the heavens lies in what is Divine and the Lord's.

[2] But it should be remembered that in itself the Lord's Divine Good is a single whole; for it is infinite and contains infinite characteristics. What is infinite is a single whole, because the infinite characteristics it contains make one. But the distinguishing of that Good into celestial and spiritual is due to the different ways in which angels in heaven and people on earth receive it. That received by angels and people belonging to the Lord's celestial kingdom is called celestial Divine Good, whereas that received by angels and people belonging to the Lord's spiritual kingdom is called spiritual Divine Good. For all angels in heaven and people on earth receive the Lord's Good, which is a single whole, in various or dissimilar ways. This may be compared to the heat and light from the sun in the world. Though these regarded in themselves are a single whole, they nevertheless vary according to the seasons of the year and times of the day, and are also different in each region of the planet. Such variations of heat and light are due not to the sun but to the changing conditions on the planet brought about by variations as it orbits round the sun and revolves on its axis, so that again the reception is the determining factor. The variations of the one same light as it falls on individual objects, producing different colours, is also attributable to the ways in which it is received. From all this it may now be recognized why it is that the Lord's Divine Good, which is a single whole because it is infinite, is called celestial and spiritual.

[3] The meaning of 'oil' as good, both celestial and spiritual, is clear in the places referred to above. But the fact that 'olive' means celestial love, and 'olive tree' the perception and affection belonging to that love, is clear from the places in the Word where 'olive tree' and 'olive' are mentioned, as in the following: In Zechariah,

The prophet saw a lampstand all of gold. It had seven lamps on it, [and had] two olive trees beside it, one on the right of the bowl, and one on the left of it. He said to the angel, What are these two olive trees, and what are the two olive berries which are in the spouts 1 of the two tubes of gold? He said, These are the two sons of olives, standing beside the Lord of the whole earth. Zechariah 4:2-3, 11-12, 14.

[4] What these prophetic utterances imply none can know unless they know from the internal sense what 'a lampstand' means and what 'an olive tree' means. 'A lampstand' means the spiritual heaven, and its 'lamps' the holy truths there, see 9548, 9551, 9555, 9558, 9561, 9684. From these meanings it is clear that 'an olive tree' means the celestial kingdom born from the perception of and affection for good, and 'olive berries' the holy forms of good there, their truths being meant by 'the sons of olives'. 'Two' means the internal and the external parts of that kingdom, and a joining together.

[5] 'Oil' and 'lampstand' are used with similar meanings in John,

I will give [power] to My two witnesses, that they may prophesy one thousand two hundred and sixty days, clothed in sackcloth. These are the two olive trees and the two lampstands standing before the God of the earth. Revelation 11:3-4.

In Isaiah,

I will plant 2 in the wilderness the cedar of shittah, and the myrtle, and olive wood 3 . Isaiah 41:19.

'The cedar' and 'olive wood' are mentioned because 'the cedar' means spiritual good and 'olive wood' celestial good, spiritual good being charity towards the neighbour and celestial good being love to the Lord. 'Planting them in the wilderness' means doing so in lands outside the Church, thus among gentile nations.

[6] In Hosea,

His branches will go out and his beauty will be like that of the olive, and his smell like Lebanon. Hosea 14:6.

Here also 'the olive' means celestial good, and 'Lebanon' means spiritual good, so that 'Lebanon' is similar in meaning to 'the cedar'; for Lebanon was a forest consisting of cedars.

[7] In Isaiah,

Thus will it be in the midst of the earth, in the midst of the peoples, like the stripping of the olive tree, like the gleaning of grapes when the harvesting of them has finished. Isaiah 24:13.

Also Isaiah 17:6. Comparison is made with 'the stripping of the olive tree' and 'the gleaning of grapes after the harvesting has finished' because 'the olive tree' means a Church that is governed by celestial good, and 'the vine' a Church that is governed by spiritual good. For in the Word wherever good is the subject, truth is also, on account of the marriage of them. In like manner wherever the celestial is the subject, the spiritual is also. Furthermore the term 'celestial' is used in reference to good, and 'spiritual' to truth, see in the places referred to in 9263, 9314; therefore the terms are also used in reference to the vine and the olive tree. As regards 'the vine', that it means the spiritual Church, and its goodness and truth, see 1069, 5113, 6376, 9277.

[8] Here also is the reason why elsewhere the vine and the olive tree are spoken of together, as in David,

[Your] wife will be like a fruitful vine on the sides of your house, your sons will be like olive shoots, round about your table. Psalms 128:3-4.

In Habakkuk,

The fig tree will not blossom, neither will there be any produce on the vines; the olive crop will fail 4 . Habakkuk 3:17.

In Amos,

Your very many gardens, and your vineyards, and your fig trees, and your olive trees the caterpillar devoured. Amos 4:9.

The fig tree as well is mentioned, because 'the fig' means the external Church's good, 5113, whereas 'the vine' means the good of the internal spiritual Church, and 'the olive tree' the good of the internal celestial Church. Similar instances occur elsewhere.

[9] Since 'olive wood' meant the good of celestial love the two cherubs which were in the sanctuary in the temple were made from pieces of olive wood, as were the double doors, lintel, and posts, 1 Kings 6:23, 31-32. For the sanctuary in the temple represented the inmost heaven, where celestial good is present, and therefore everything in the sanctuary was a sign of something celestial. The ark there, for the sake of which the sanctuary existed, was a sign of the inmost heaven, where the Lord is, see 9485.

[10] 'The Mount of Olives', which was opposite the temple, had a similar meaning to 'the olive tree', just as 'Lebanon' had to 'the cedar'. Therefore in order that all the things the Lord did when He was in the world, especially Divine celestial ones, might be represented in the heavens, the Lord was very often on the Mount of Olives when He was in Jerusalem, as is clear in Luke,

By day Jesus was teaching in the temple, but by night He went out and spent the night on the mountain which is called Olivet 5 . Luke 21:37.

And elsewhere,

Jesus came out and went away, as was His custom 6 , to the Mount of Olives. Luke 22:39.

Regarding this mountain, that it was opposite the temple, see Mark 13:3; Matthew 24:3.

[11] The fact that 'the Mount of Olives' was a sign of celestial Divine Good is clear in Zechariah, where it is stated,

Jehovah's feet will stand upon the Mount of Olives, which faces 7 Jerusalem; and there He will fight against the nations. And the mountain will be split, part towards the east and towards the sea 8 , with a large valley; and part of it will move away towards the north, and part towards the south. Zechariah 14:3-4.

This is a description of the state of heaven and the Church when the Lord was in the world, fighting against the hells, conquering them, and at the same time restoring the heavens to order. 'The nations' there which He fought against are the evils coming from hell; 'the Mount of Olives' on which His feet stood is the Divine Good of Divine Love, for by this Good He fought and conquered. 'The splitting of the mountain with a large valley, towards the east and towards the sea' means the separation of heaven and hell; and the like is meant by 'its moving away towards the north and the south'. Those living in the light of truth are said to be in the south, and those in the love of good to be in the east, whereas those immersed in evils are said to be towards the sea, and those in falsities towards the north.

각주:

1. literally, the hand

2. literally, give

3. literally, wood of the oil tree

4. literally, the work of the olive will lie (i.e. prove false)

5. literally, [the Mount] of Olives

6. literally, according to custom

7. literally, which is before the face of

8. i.e. the west

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