Bibliorum

 

Genèse 23

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1 Or Sara vécut cent vingt-sept ans; ce sont là les années de sa vie.

2 Et elle mourut en Kirjath-Arbah, qui est Hébron, au pays de Canaan; et Abraham vint pour plaindre Sara, et pour la pleurer.

3 Et s'étant levé de devant son mort, il parla aux Héthiens, en disant :

4 Je suis étranger et forain parmi vous; donnez-moi une possession de sépulcre parmi vous, afin que j'enterre mon mort, [et que je l'ôte] de devant moi.

5 Et les Héthiens répondirent à Abraham, et lui dirent :

6 Mon Seigneur, écoute-nous; tu es parmi nous un Prince excellent, enterre ton mort dans le plus distingué de nos sépulcres; nul de nous ne te refusera son sépulcre, afin que tu y enterres ton mort.

7 Alors Abraham se leva, et se prosterna devant le peuple du pays; [c'est-à-dire], devant les Héthiens.

8 Et il leur parla, et dit : S'il vous plaît que j'enterre mon mort, [et que je l'ôte] de devant moi, écoutez-moi, et intercédez pour moi envers Héphron, fils de Tsohar;

9 Afin qu'il me cède sa caverne de Macpéla, qui est au bout de son champ; qu'il me la cède au milieu de vous, pour le prix qu'elle vaut, et que je la possède pour en faire un sépulcre.

10 Or Héphron était assis parmi les Héthiens. Héphron donc Héthien répondit à Abraham, en présence des Héthiens, qui l'écoutaient, savoir de tous ceux qui entraient par la porte de sa ville, en disant :

11 Non, mon Seigneur, écoute-moi : Je te donne le champ, je te donne aussi la caverne qui y est, je te la donne en présence des enfants de mon peuple; enterres-y ton mort.

12 Et Abraham se prosterna devant le peuple du pays.

13 Et il parla à Héphron, tout le peuple du pays l'entendant, et lui dit : S'il te plaît, je te prie, écoute-moi : Je donnerai l'argent du champ; reçois-le de moi, et j'y enterrerai mon mort.

14 Et Héphron répondit à Abraham, en disant :

15 Mon Seigneur, écoute-moi : La terre [vaut] quatre cents sicles d'argent entre moi et toi; mais qu'est-ce que cela ? Enterre donc ton mort.

16 Et Abraham ayant entendu Héphron, lui paya l'argent dont il avait parlé, les Héthiens l'entendant, [savoir] quatre cents sicles d'argent, ayant cours entre les marchands.

17 Et le champ d'Héphron, qui était en Macpéla au devant de Mamré, tant le champ que la caverne qui y était, et tous les arbres qui étaient dans le champ, et dans tous ses confins tout autour,

18 Tout fut acquis en propriété à Abraham, en présence des Héthiens, [savoir] de tous ceux qui entraient par la porte de la ville.

19 Et après cela Abraham enterra Sara sa femme dans la caverne du champ de Macpéla, au devant de Mamré, qui est Hébron, au pays de Canaan.

20 Le champ donc et la caverne qui y est, fut assuré par les Héthiens à Abraham, afin qu'il le possédât pour y faire son sépulcre.

   

from the Writings of Emanuel Swedenborg

 

Arcana Coelestia #2913

Studere hoc loco

  
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2913. 'And spoke to the sons of Heth, saying' means those with whom a new spiritual Church was to exist. This becomes clear from the meaning of 'Heth' and of Hittite. Many were the nations inhabiting the land of Canaan who are mentioned one by one in various places in the Word, among them the Hittites, see Genesis 15:20; Exodus 3:8, 17; 13:5; 23:23; Deuteronomy 7:1; 20:17; Joshua 3:10; 11:1, 3; 12:8; 24:11; 1 Kings 9:20; and elsewhere. Most of them belonged to the Ancient Church which was spread through many lands, including the land of Canaan, see 1238, 2385. All who belonged to that Church acknowledged charity as the chief thing, and everything they taught was about charity or life. People who cultivated teachings about faith were called Canaanites and were separate from the rest of the inhabitants in the land of Canaan, Numbers 13:29 - see 1062, 1063, 1076.

[2] The Hittites belonged among those in the land of Canaan who were more acceptable. This is also made clear by the fact that Abraham, and subsequently Isaac and Jacob, dwelt among them and had a burial-place there, and also by the fact that they treated Abraham with greatest respect, as is quite clear from what is recorded about them in this chapter, especially verses 5-6, 10-11, 14-15. Since they were an upright nation they therefore represent and mean the spiritual Church, or the truth of the Church. But it happened that like all the others who belonged to the Ancient Church the Hittites fell away in the course of time from charity or good that goes with faith; and this explains why later on they mean the falsity of the Church, as in Ezekiel 16:3, 45, and elsewhere. Yet the Hittites did belong among those who were more honourable, as may be seen from the fact that David had Hittites with him, such as Ahimelech, 1 Samuel 26:6, and Uriah, who was a Hittite, 2 Samuel 11:3, 6, 17, 21 - by whose wife Bathsheba David begot Solomon, 2 Samuel 12:24. 'Heth' means exterior cognitions that have regard to life and which constitute the external truths of the spiritual Church, 1 see 1203.

[3] The subject in the present verse is a new Church which the Lord establishes when the previous one breathes its last, and in the verses which follow the subject is the reception of faith among those people. The subject is not some particular Church among the sons of Heth but in general the re-establishment by the Lord of a spiritual Church after its predecessor fades away and approaches its end. The sons of Heth are simply those who represent and carry a spiritual meaning. Please see what has been stated already about Churches in the following places:

In course of time a Church goes into decline and decay, 494, 501, 1327, 2422.

It departs from charity, and brings forth evils and falsities, 1834, 1835.

At that point the Church is said to be vastated and made desolate, 407-411, 2243.

The Church is established among gentiles; the reason why, 1366.

Within a Church undergoing vastation something of the Church is always preserved as a nucleus, 468, 637, 931, 2422.

If the Church did not exist in the world the human race would perish, ibid.

The Church is like the heart and lungs in that vast body, of which every member of the human race is a part, 637, 931, 2054, 2853.

The nature of the spiritual Church, 765, 2669.

Charity constitutes the Church, not faith separated from charity, 809, 916.

If all possessed charity the Church would be one even though they differ in matters of doctrine and in forms of worship, 1285, 1316, 1798, 1799, 1834, 1844, 2385.

All people on earth who belong to the Lord's Church, though they are scattered throughout the entire world, still so to speak make a single whole, as is the case in heaven, 2853.

Every Church is internal and external, and both together constitute a single Church, 409, 1083, 1098, 1100, 1242.

The external Church is valueless if there is no internal Church, 1795.

The Church is compared to the rise and the setting of the sun, to the seasons of the year, and also to the periods of the day, 1837.

The Last Judgement is the final period of the Church, 900, 931, 1850, 2117, 2118.

V:

1. Or, reading what Swedenborg has in his rough draft the truths of the external spiritual Church

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

from the Writings of Emanuel Swedenborg

 

Arcana Coelestia #2425

Studere hoc loco

  
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2425. 'But I shall not be able to escape into the mountain' means doubt as to whether he would be able to possess good that flows from charity, that is, to think and act from that good. This is clear from the meaning of 'a mountain' as love and charity, dealt with in 795, 1430.

[2] With regard to that doubt, people governed by the affection for truth possess the affection for good within their affection for truth. But that affection for good is in so much obscurity that they do not perceive and so do not know what the affection for good is, or what genuine charity is. They do indeed think that they know, but they do so from truth, and so from acquired knowledge, but not from good itself. Nevertheless they perform the good works of charity, not to merit anything by doing so, but from a sense of obedience. They act in this way insofar as they understand it to be the truth. For they allow the Lord to lead them away from the obscurity surrounding good by means of truth which to them looks like the truth. For example, because they do not know what the neighbour is they do good to everyone they imagine to be their neighbour, especially the poor, who call themselves the poor because they lack worldly riches; they do good to orphans and widows because they are termed such; to strangers because they are such; and so on with the rest. They behave in this way without knowing what is really meant by the poor, orphans, widows, strangers, and many more. Nevertheless because within their affection there is, lying in obscurity, as stated, the affection for good by means of which the Lord leads them to do those things, good is at the same time present with them interiorly. Within that good the angels are present with them, and there take pleasure in the appearances of truth for which those people have an affection.

[3] But those who are governed by good that flows from charity, and from this by an affection for truth, exercise discrimination when performing all those deeds, for they dwell in light, and the light of truth has no other source than good, because the Lord flows in by way of good. They do not do good to the poor, orphans, widows, and strangers just because these are so termed, for they know that the good, whether poor or rich, are pre-eminently the neighbour; for by the good, good is done to others, and therefore insofar as they do good to the good they are doing it through them to others. They know also how to discriminate between one good and another, and so between one good person and another. They call the common good itself their neighbour to a higher degree, for within this neighbour the good of a greater number of persons is seen. The Lord's kingdom on earth, which is the Church, they acknowledge as being their neighbour to an even higher degree, towards whom charity should be shown; and the Lord's kingdom in heaven to an even higher degree than that. People however who set the Lord above all of these, who adore Him alone and love Him above all things, derive all degrees of the neighbour from Him, for in the highest sense the Lord alone is the Neighbour and so is all good insofar as this is derived from Him.

[4] Those however whose disposition is quite the reverse derive degrees of the neighbour from themselves and acknowledge as neighbour only those who show them favour and are subservient to them. Calling these and no others their brothers and friends, they discriminate between them only to the degree that they make one with themselves. All this shows what the neighbour is, namely that everyone is the neighbour according to the love which governs him; and he is truly the neighbour who is governed by love to the Lord and charity towards the neighbour, but in a different way for everyone. Thus it is the good itself with each one that is the determining factor.

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