Bibliorum

 

Ezechiele 15

Study

   

1 LA parola del Signore mi fu ancora indirizzata, dicendo:

2 Figliuol d’uomo, che cosa è il legno della vite, più che qualunque altro legno? che cosa è ciò ch’è stato tralcio, fra gli alberi della selva?

3 Può egli prendersene alcun legno da farne qualche lavorio? può egli pur prendersene un cavigliuolo, da appiccarvi su qualunque arnese?

4 Ecco, dopo che sarà stato posto nel fuoco, per esser consumato, e che il fuoco ne avrà consumati i due capi, e che il mezzo ne sarà inarsicciato, varrà egli più nulla da farne alcun lavorio?

5 Ecco, mentre è intiero, non se ne può fare alcun lavorio; quanto meno potrassene più fare alcun lavorio, dopo che il fuoco l’avrà consumato, e ch’egli sarà inarsicciato?

6 Perciò, così ha detto il Signore Iddio: Quale è, fra le legne del bosco, il legno della vite, il quale io ho ordinato per pastura del fuoco, tali renderò gli abitanti di Gerusalemme.

7 E volgerò la mia faccia contro a loro; quando saranno usciti d’un fuoco, un altro fuoco li consumerà; e voi conoscerete che io sono il Signore, quando avrò volta la mia faccia contro a loro.

8 E renderò il paese desolato; perciocchè hanno commesso misfatto; dice il Signore Iddio.

   


To many Protestant and Evangelical Italians, the Bibles translated by Giovanni Diodati are an important part of their history. Diodati’s first Italian Bible edition was printed in 1607, and his second in 1641. He died in 1649. Throughout the 1800s two editions of Diodati’s text were printed by the British Foreign Bible Society. This is the more recent 1894 edition, translated by Claudiana.

from the Writings of Emanuel Swedenborg

 

True Christian Religion #583

Studere hoc loco

  
/ 853  
  

583. IV. The process of regeneration is on the model of a person's conception, gestation in the womb, birth and upbringing.

The natural and spiritual events in a person's life, that is, what happens to his body and what to his spirit, are so ordered as permanently to correspond. The reason is that a person is by birth spiritual as regards his soul, and he is clothed with a natural form which is constituted by his material body. When therefore this is laid aside, his soul, clothed in his spiritual body, comes into the world where all things are spiritual, and there associates with people like him. Now the spiritual body has to be formed in the material one, a process accomplished by the inflow of truths and various kinds of good from the Lord through the spiritual world. These are inwardly received by the person in such things belonging to the natural world as are called civil and moral; so it is evident how the process of formation takes place. Because, as already said, there is a permanent correspondence between the natural and spiritual events in a person's life, it follows that this process must resemble his conception, gestation in the womb, birth and upbringing. That is why natural births in the Word mean spiritual births, that is, the birth of good and truth. For whatever stands in the literal or natural sense of the Word, enfolds and stands for something spiritual. I demonstrated fully in the chapter on the Sacred Scripture that every detail of the literal sense of the Word contains a spiritual sense.

[2] The natural births mentioned in the Word refer to spiritual births, as is evident from the following passages.

We have conceived, we have given birth, we have as it were brought forth [wind], we have not done what is sound, Isaiah 26:18.

At the presence of the Lord you give birth 1 , O earth, Psalms 114:7.

Has the earth given birth in one day? Shall I break and not bring to birth, and cause to give birth but close 2 up the womb? Isaiah 66:7-10. Sin gives birth and No shall be on the point of being breached, Ezekiel 30:16.

The pangs of childbirth shall come upon Ephraim. He is an unwise child, because at the right time he does not stand in the womb of sons, Hosea 13:12-13.

There are many other similar passages. Since natural births in the Word mean spiritual births, and these are the Lord's work, He is called He who forms and brings out of the womb. This is clear from these passages among others:

Jehovah your maker and who forms you from the womb, Isaiah 44:2.

He who brings me from the womb, Psalms 22:9.

I have been placed upon you from the womb, from my mother's inmost parts it was you who brought me forth, Psalms 71:6.

Pay attention to me, you who were carried by the belly, borne by the womb, Isaiah 46:3.

This is why the Lord is called 'Father' (as at Isaiah 9:6; 63:16, John 10:30; 14:8-9), and those who are in possession of good and truth from Him are called 'sons', 'born of God' and 'brothers' among themselves (Matthew 23:8-9). It is also why the church is called 'mother' (Hosea 2:2, 5; Ezekiel 16:45).

V:

1. Reading parturis for parturit, as elsewhere when this verse is quoted.

2. 'not close' in the Latin, but corrected in the author's copy.

  
/ 853  
  

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

Bibliorum

 

Isaiah 66:7-10

Study

      

7 "Before she travailed, she brought forth; before her pain came, she delivered a son.

8 Who has heard such a thing? who has seen such things? Shall a land be born in one day? shall a nation be brought forth at once? for as soon as Zion travailed, she brought forth her children.

9 Shall I bring to the birth, and not cause to bring forth?" says Yahweh: "shall I who cause to bring forth shut [the womb]?" says your God.

10 "Rejoice with Jerusalem, and be glad for her, all you who love her: Rejoice for joy with her, all you who mourn over her;