ബൈബിൾ

 

Jérémie 50

പഠനം

   

1 La parole que l'Eternel prononça contre Babylone, [et] contre le pays des Caldéens, par le moyen de Jérémie le Prophète.

2 Faites savoir parmi les nations, et publiez-le, et levez l'enseigne; publiez-le, ne le cachez point; dites : Babylone a été prise; Bel est rendu honteux; Mérodac est brisé, ses idoles sont rendues honteuses, et leurs dieux de fiente sont brisés.

3 Car une nation est montée contre elle de devers l'Aquilon, qui mettra son pays en désolation, et il n'y aura personne qui y habite; les hommes et les bêtes s'en sont fuis, ils s'en sont allés.

4 En ces jours-là, et en ce temps-là, dit l'Eternel, les enfants d'Israël viendront, eux et les enfants de Juda ensemble; ils marcheront allant et pleurant, et cherchant l'Eternel leur Dieu.

5 Ceux de Sion s'enquerront du chemin vers lequel [ils devront dresser] leurs faces, [et ils diront] : venez, et vous joignez à l'Eternel. Il y a une alliance éternelle, elle ne sera jamais mise en oubli.

6 Mon peuple a été comme des brebis perdues; leurs pasteurs les ont fait égarer, et les ont fait errer par les montagnes; ils sont allés de montagne en colline, et ils ont mis en oubli leur gîte.

7 Tous ceux qui les ont trouvées les ont mangées, et leurs ennemis ont dit : nous ne serons coupables d'aucun mal, parce qu'ils ont péché contre l'Eternel, contre le séjour de la justice; et l'Eternel a été l'attente de leurs pères.

8 Fuyez hors de Babylone, et sortez du pays des Caldéens, et soyez comme les boucs qui vont devant le troupeau.

9 Car voici, je m'en vais susciter et faire venir contre Babylone une assemblée de grandes nations du pays de l'Aquilon, qui se rangeront en bataille contre elle, de sorte qu'elle sera prise. Leurs flèches seront comme celles d'un homme puissant, qui ne fait que détruire, et qui ne retourne point à vide.

10 Et la Caldée sera abandonnée au pillage, et tous ceux qui la pilleront seront assouvis, dit l'Eternel.

11 Parce que vous vous êtes réjouis, parce que vous vous êtes égayés, en ravageant mon héritage, parce que vous vous êtes engraissés comme une génisse qui est à l'herbe, et que vous avez henni comme de puissants chevaux.

12 Votre mère est devenue fort honteuse, et celle qui vous a enfantés a rougi; voici, elle sera toute la dernière entre les nations, elle sera un désert, un pays sec, une lande.

13 Elle ne sera plus habitée à cause de l'indignation de l'Eternel, elle ne sera tout entière que désolation; quiconque passera près de Babylone sera étonné, et lui insultera à cause de toutes ses plaies.

14 Rangez-vous en bataille contre Babylone, mettez-vous tout alentour; vous tous qui tendez l'arc, tirez contre elle, et n'épargnez point les traits; car elle a péché contre l'Eternel.

15 Jetez des cris de joie contre elle tout alentour; elle a tendu sa main; ses fondements sont tombés, ses murailles sont renversées; car c'est ici la vengeance de l'Eternel; vengez-vous d'elle; faites-lui comme elle a fait.

16 Retranchez de Babylone le semeur, et celui qui tient la faucille au temps de la moisson; que chacun s'en retourne vers son peuple, et que chacun s'enfuie vers son pays, à cause de l'épée de l'oppresseur.

17 Israël est comme une brebis égarée que les lions ont effarouchée. Le Roi d'Assur l'a dévorée le premier, mais ce dernier-ci, Nébucadnetsar Roi de Babylone, lui a brisé les os.

18 C'est pourquoi ainsi a dit l'Eternel des armées, le Dieu d'Israël : voici, je m'en vais visiter le Roi de Babylone et son pays, comme j'ai visité le Roi d'Assyrie.

19 Et je ferai retourner Israël en ses cabanes; il paîtra en Carmel et en Basan, et son âme sera rassasiée en la montagne d'Ephraïm, et de Galaad.

20 En ces jours-là, et en ce temps-là, dit l'Eternel, on cherchera l'iniquité d'Israël, mais il n'y en aura point; et les péchés de Juda, mais ils ne seront point trouvés; car je pardonnerai à ceux que j'aurai fait demeurer de reste.

21 [Venez] contre ce pays-là, vous [deux] rebelles; monte contre lui, et contre les habitants destinés à la visitation; taris, et détruis à la façon de l'interdit après eux, dit l'Eternel, et fais selon toutes les choses que je t'ai commandées.

22 L'alarme est au pays, et une grande calamité.

23 Comment est mis en pièces et est rompu le marteau de toute la terre! Comment Babylone est-elle réduite en sujet d'étonnement parmi les nations!

24 Je t'ai tendu des filets, et aussi as-tu été prise, ô Babylone! et tu n'en savais rien; tu as été trouvée, et même attrapée, parce que tu t'en es prise à l'Eternel.

25 L'Eternel a ouvert son arsenal, et en a tiré les armes de son indignation; parce que le Seigneur L'Eternel des armées a une entreprise à exécuter dans le pays des Caldéens.

26 Venez contre elle des bouts de la terre, ouvrez ses granges, foulez-la comme des javelles; détruisez-la à la façon de l'interdit, et qu'elle n'ait rien de reste.

27 Coupez la gorge à tous ses veaux, et qu'ils descendent à la tuerie; malheur à eux! car le jour est venu, le temps de leur visitation.

28 [On entend] la voix de ceux qui s'enfuient, et qui sont échappés du pays de Babylone, pour annoncer dans Sion la vengeance de l'Eternel notre Dieu, la vengeance de son Temple.

29 Assemblez à cri public les archers contre Babylone; vous tous qui tirez de l'arc, campez-vous contre elle tout alentour; que personne n'échappe; rendez-lui selon ses œuvres; faites-lui selon tout ce qu'elle a fait; car elle s'est fièrement portée contre l'Eternel, contre le Saint d'Israël.

30 C'est pourquoi ses gens d'élite tomberont dans les places, et on fera perdre la parole à tous ses gens de guerre en ce jour-là, dit l'Eternel.

31 Voici, j'en veux à toi, qui es la fierté même, dit le Seigneur l'Eternel des armées; car ton jour est venu, le temps auquel je te visiterai.

32 La fierté bronchera et tombera, et il n'y aura personne qui la relève; j'allumerai aussi le feu en ses villes, et il dévorera tous ses environs.

33 Ainsi a dit l'Eternel des armées : les enfants d'Israël et les enfants de Juda ont été ensemble opprimés; tous ceux qui les ont pris les retiennent, et ont refusé de les laisser aller.

34 Leur Rédempteur est fort, son Nom [est] l'Eternel des armées; il plaidera avec chaleur leur cause, pour donner du repos au pays, et mettre dans le trouble les habitants de Babylone.

35 L'épée est sur les Caldéens, dit l'Eternel, et sur les habitants de Babylone, sur ses principaux, et sur ses sages.

36 L'épée est tirée contre ses Devins, et ils en perdront l'esprit; l'épée est sur ses hommes forts, et ils [en] seront épouvantés.

37 L'épée est sur ses chevaux, et sur ses chariots, et sur tout l'amas de diverses sortes de gens lequel [est] au milieu d'elle, et ils deviendront [comme] des femmes; l'épée est sur ses trésors, et ils seront pillés.

38 La sécheresse sera sur ses eaux, et elles tariront; parce que c'est un pays d'images taillées, et ils agiront en insensés à l'égard de leurs dieux qui les épouvantent.

39 C'est pourquoi les bêtes sauvages des déserts avec celles des Iles y habiteront, et les chats-huants y habiteront aussi; et elle ne sera plus habitée à jamais, et on n'y demeurera point en quelque temps que ce soit.

40 Il n'y demeurera personne, a dit l'Eternel, et aucun fils d'homme n'y habitera, comme dans la subversion que Dieu a faite de Sodome et de Gomorrhe, et de leurs lieux circonvoisins.

41 Voici, un peuple et une grande nation vient de l'Aquilon, et plusieurs Rois se réveilleront du fond de la terre.

42 Ils prendront l'arc et l'étendard; ils sont cruels, et ils n'auront point de compassion; leur voix bruira comme la mer, et ils seront montés sur des chevaux; chacun d'eux est rangé en homme de guerre contre toi, fille de Babylone.

43 Le Roi de Babylone en a ouï le bruit, et ses mains en sont devenues lâches; l'angoisse l'a saisi, [et] un travail comme de celle qui enfante.

44 Voici, il montera comme un lion à cause de l'enflure du Jourdain, vers la demeure du pays rude, et après que je les aurai fait reposer je les ferai courir hors de la Caldée, et qui est d'élite, que je lui donne commission contre elle? Car qui est semblable à moi? et qui me déterminera le temps? et qui sera le Pasteur qui tiendra ferme contre moi?

45 C'est pourquoi écoutez la résolution que l'Eternel a prise contre Babylone, et les desseins qu'il a faits contre le pays des Caldéens : si les plus petits du troupeau ne les traînent par terre, et si on ne réduit en désolation leurs cabanes sur eux.

46 La terre a été ébranlée du bruit de la prise de Babylone, et le cri en a été ouï parmi les nations.

   

സ്വീഡൻബർഗിന്റെ കൃതികളിൽ നിന്ന്

 

Apocalypse Explained #601

ഈ ഭാഗം പഠിക്കുക

  
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601. Verse 3. And cried out with a great voice, as a lion roareth, signifies the testification of grievous distress on account of the desolation of Divine truth in the church. This is evident from the signification of "crying out with a great voice," as being the testification of grievous distress (of which presently); and from the signification of "as a lion roareth," as being on account of the desolation of Divine truth in the church; for a "lion" signifies Divine truth in its power (See above, n. 278), and "to roar" signifies the result of distress because of the desolation of truth.

[2] That this is the signification of "crying out with a great voice, as a lion roareth," can be seen from what follows in this chapter, where the desolation of Divine truth in the church is treated of; for "a strong angel coming down out of heaven" means the Lord in relation to the Word, which is Divine truth, of whom it is said afterwards that "the angel lifted up his hand to heaven, and sware by Him that liveth unto the ages of the ages, that there shall be time no longer," which signifies that there shall be no longer any understanding of Divine truth, and thence no state of the church.

[3] And afterwards it is said, "In the days of the voice of the seventh angel the mystery of God shall be finished," which signifies the Last Judgment that was to come when there should be no faith in Divine truth because there would be no good of charity. From this it can be seen that "He cried out with a great voice, as a lion roareth," signifies the testification of grievous distress on account of the desolation of Divine truth in the church.

[4] Moreover, a "lion" is often mentioned in the Word; and in the highest sense a "lion" signifies the Lord in relation to Divine truth, likewise heaven and the church in respect to Divine truth from the Lord; and from this a "lion" signifies Divine truth in respect to power (See above, n. 278). This makes evident what "to roar" or "the roaring of a lion" signifies, namely, an ardent affection for defending heaven and the church, and thus for saving the angels of heaven and the men of the church, which is done by destroying the falsities of evil by means of Divine truth and its power; but in the contrary sense "to roar" or "the roaring of a lion" signifies an ardent desire to destroy and devastate the church, which is done by destroying Divine truth by means of the falsities of evil. Such is the signification of a "lion's roaring," because when a lion is hungry and seeks its prey, and also when it is enraged with anger against its enemy, it is its habit to roar.

[5] That this is the signification of "to roar" and "roaring" in the Word can be seen from the following passages. In Isaiah:

Thus Jehovah said unto me, Like as the lion, and the young lion roareth over his prey, when a multitude of shepherds goeth out against him, and he is not dismayed at their voice nor affected by their tumult, so shall Jehovah of Hosts come down to wage war upon Mount Zion and upon the hill thereof (Isaiah 31:4).

Jehovah is compared to a lion roaring, because a "lion" signifies the Lord in relation to Divine truth and its power, and "to roar" signifies the eagerness to defend the church against evils and falsities; therefore it is said, "so shall Jehovah of Hosts come down to wage war upon Mount Zion, and upon the hill thereof," "Mount Zion" meaning the celestial church, and "the hill thereof" (or Jerusalem) the spiritual church; the "prey over which the lion roareth" signifies deliverance from hell.

[6] In Joel:

Jehovah shall roar out of Zion, and shall give forth His voice from Jerusalem, and the heavens and the earth shall quake; but Jehovah shall be a shelter for His people, and a stronghold for the sons of Israel (Joel 3:16).

The protection of the faithful by the Lord by means of Divine truth is described by "Jehovah shall roar out of Zion, and shall give forth His voice from Jerusalem;" the vehement power of Divine truth, and consequent terror, are described by "the heavens and the earth shall quake;" and salvation and protection by "Jehovah shall be a shelter for His people, and a stronghold for the sons of Israel;" "the people of Jehovah" and "the sons of Israel" being the faithful who are of the church.

[7] In Hosea:

I will not return to destroy Ephraim. They shall go after Jehovah; He shall roar like a lion, for He shall roar, and sons from the sea shall draw near with honor, with honor shall they come as the bird out of Egypt and as the dove out of the land of Assyria; and I will make them to dwell upon their houses (Hosea 11:9-11).

"Ephraim" signifies the church in respect to the understanding of truth, concerning which therefore what follows is said. "To go after Jehovah" signifies to worship the Lord and to live from Him; "He shall roar like a lion, for He shall roar," signifies the protection of such by the Divine truth; "the sons from the sea shall draw near with honor," signifies that those who are in natural good shall draw near to the church; "with honor shall they come as a bird out of Egypt," signifies their natural thought from true knowledges [scientifica]; the "bird" meaning thought, and "Egypt" knowledge, which is natural truth; "and as the dove out of the land of Assyria," signifies that they shall have rational good and truth, a "dove" meaning rational good, and "the land of Assyria" the church in respect to rational truth; for in man there are both natural and rational good and truth; the natural is lower or exterior, looking to the world, the rational is higher or interior, conjoining the natural with the spiritual; the natural is meant by "Egypt," the rational by "Assyria," and the spiritual by "Israel." "To make them to dwell upon their houses" signifies life from the will of good and from the understanding of truth; the human mind, which consists of these, is meant by a "house," and "to dwell" signifies to live.

[8] In Amos:

The Lord Jehovih will not do 1 a word unless He shall reveal His secret unto His servants the prophets. The lion hath roared, who will not fear? The Lord Jehovih hath spoken, who will not prophesy? (Amos 3:7, 8).

"The Lord Jehovih will not do a word unless He hath revealed His secret to His servants the prophets" signifies that the Lord opens the interior things of the Word and of doctrine to those who are in truths from good; "to reveal a secret," signifies to enlighten and to open the interior things of the Word; "His servants the prophets" signify those who are in the truths of doctrine and who receive; "the lion hath roared, who will not fear?" signifies a powerful revelation and manifestation of Divine truth; "the Lord Jehovih hath spoken, who will not prophesy?" signifies its reception and manifestation. The Lord is called "Lord Jehovih" when good is treated of.

[9] In Zechariah:

The voice of the howling of the shepherds that their magnificence is devastated; the voice of the roaring of the young lions that the pride of Jordan is devastated (Zechariah 11:3).

"The voice of the howling of the shepherds that their magnificence is devastated" signifies the grief of those who teach, because the good of the church has perished; those are called "shepherds" who teach truth and by truth lead to the good of life, and "magnificence" means the good of the church; "the voice of the roaring of the young lions that the pride of Jordan is devastated" signifies grief, because of the desolation of Divine truth in the church. Those are called "lions" who are in Divine truths; "roaring" signifies grief; "the pride of Jordan, which is devastated," signifies the church in respect to Divine truth which introduces.

[10] In Job:

God roareth with His voice; He thundereth with the voice of His majesty; nor yet doth He overthrow when His voice is heard; God thundereth marvelously with His voice (Job 37:4, 5).

"To roar" and "to thunder with the voice" signify the power and efficacy of Divine truth or the Word.

[11] In the passages that have been cited, "to roar" signifies in a broad sense the ardent affection of protecting heaven and the church, or the angels of heaven and the men of the church, which is done by destroying the falsities of evil by means of Divine truth and its power. But in the contrary sense, "to roar" signifies an eager cupidity for ruining and destroying the church, which is done by destroying Divine truth by means of the falsities of evil. In this sense "to roar" is used in the following passages. In Jeremiah:

Babylon shall become heaps, the abode of dragons, an astonishment, and an hissing. They shall roar together like lions; they shall growl like lions' whelps; when they are heated I will set 2 their feasts, and I will make them drunken that they may exult and may sleep the sleep of an age and not awake (Jeremiah 51:37-39).

The destruction of Babylon so that there may be in it no truth or good, is signified by "Babylon shall become heaps, the abode of dragons, an astonishment, and an hissing." "Babylon" signifies those who abuse holy things for the sake of dominion; their eager cupidity for destroying Divine truth by means of the falsities of evil is signified by "they shall roar together like lions, they shall growl like lions' whelps." The eagerness of those who unite in doing this crime is signified by "when they are heated I will set their feasts;" that such will become insane from the falsities of evil is signified by "I will make them drunken that they may exult." That they will never understand anything of truth, and therefore will not see life, is signified by "that they may sleep the sleep of an age and not awake."

[12] In the same:

Is Israel a servant? Is he one born of the house? Why has he become a prey? The young lions roar against him, they give forth their voice, they reduce his land to a waste; his cities are burned, even so that there is no inhabitant (Jeremiah 2:14, 15).

"Is Israel a servant? Is he one born of the house?" signifies the church that had been in truths and goods, but is so no longer. "Israel" signifies the church; a "servant" those who are in truths, and "one born of the house," those who are in goods; "why has he become a prey?" signifies its devastation; "the young lions roar against him, they give forth their voice" signifies the desolation of Divine truth in the church by the falsities of evil; "they reduce his land to a waste" signifies the destruction of the church itself by evils; "his cities are burned even so that there is no inhabitant" signifies the destruction of the doctrinals also of the church by evils, so that there is no good of the church left.

[13] In Ezekiel:

One of the whelps of the lioness grew up, it became a young lion, and it learned to tear the prey; it devoured men. It ravished widows and devastated their cities, and the land was devastated 3 and the fullness thereof by the voice of his roaring (Ezekiel 19:3, 7).

This is said of the Jewish Church, which is here meant by "the mother of lions." A "young lion" signifies the falsity of evil in eagerness to destroy the truth of the church; "to tear the prey" signifies the destruction of the truth and good of the church. "It devoured men, it ravished widows, and devastated cities," signifies the destruction of all the understanding of truth and of good desiring truth, likewise of doctrinals; "men" signifying the understanding of truth, "widows" good desiring truth, and "cities" doctrinals; "the land was laid waste and the fullness thereof by the voice of his roaring" signifies the devastation of the church and the extinction of all truth from the Word by the falsity of evil, "land" meaning the church, "fullness" its truths from the Word, and "the voice of roaring" the falsity of evil destroying.

[14] In Jeremiah:

I call for a sword upon all the inhabitants of the land. Therefore say unto them, Jehovah shall roar from on high, and give forth His voice from the abode of His holiness; in roaring He shall roar against their habitations; a tumult cometh even to the end of the earth; for Jehovah hath a controversy against the nations. He shall enter judgment with all flesh, He shall give the wicked to the sword (25 Jeremiah 25:29-31).

The vastation of the church is attributed to Jehovah, although men are the cause of it. "I call for a sword upon all the inhabitants of the land" signifies falsity destroying every truth in the universal church. "Jehovah shall roar from on high, and give forth His voice from the abode of His holiness," signifies the testification of grief in heaven on account of the vastation of Divine truth. "In roaring He shall roar against their habitations" signifies great grief and lamentation over all things of the church; "a tumult cometh even to the end of the earth" signifies the disturbance of all things of the church from first to last; "for Jehovah hath a controversy against the nations, He shall enter judgment with all flesh," signifies visitation and judgment upon all who are in evils; "He shall give the wicked to the sword" signifies their destruction by falsities.

[15] In Amos:

Jehovah shall roar from Zion, and give forth His voice from Jerusalem; that the habitations of the shepherds may mourn, and the head of Carmel dry up (Amos 1:2).

"Roaring from Zion" signifies grievous distress, and "the voice from Jerusalem" lamentation; "the mourning of the habitations of the shepherds, and the drying up of the head of Carmel," signifies because of the vastation of all the goods and truths of the church; "the habitations of shepherds" signifying all the goods of the church; "the head of Carmel" all its truths, and "mourning" and "drying up" vastation. "The head of Carmel" signifies the truths of the church, because in Carmel there were vineyards, and "wine" signifies the truth of the church.

[16] In Isaiah:

The anger of Jehovah is kindled against His people. He hath lifted up an ensign to the nations from far, and hath hissed to him from the end of the earth. His roaring is like that of a lion, He roareth like young lions; He growleth and seizeth the prey, he shall snatch and none shall deliver, and he growleth against him like the growling of the sea; and if He shall look unto the earth, behold darkness and distress, and the light is darkened in the ruins thereof (5 Isaiah 5:25-30).

Here, too, "the roaring like that of a lion, and like that of young lions," signifies grief and lamentation over the vastation of Divine truth in the church by the falsities of evil. "He seizeth the prey and none shall deliver" signifies the deliverance and salvation of those who are in truths from good. The vastation itself is described by "behold darkness, distress, and the light is darkened in the ruins thereof;" "darkness" meaning falsities; "distress" evil; "the darkening of the light" the disappearance of Divine truth, and "ruins" total overthrow.

[17] In David:

The enemy hath destroyed all things in the sanctuary; the adversaries have roared in the midst of thy feast (Psalms 74:3, 4).

"The enemy" signifies evil from hell; "the sanctuary" the church, and "feast" worship. This makes clear what is signified by these words in series. That roaring signifies grievous lamentation from grief of heart can be seen from these passages. In David:

When I kept silence my bones waxed old through my roaring all the day (Psalms 32:3).

In the same:

I am weakened and crushed exceedingly; I have roared by reason of the roaring of my heart (Psalms 38:8).

And in Job:

My sighing cometh before bread, and my roarings are poured out like the waters (Job 3:24).

അടിക്കുറിപ്പുകൾ:

1. Latin has "does," the Hebrew, as cited just before, has "will do."

2. Latin has "little," the Hebrew "set," as is also found in AE 187, 481.

3. Latin has "devastated," in AC 304, and AC 9348 we have "desolated."

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Foundation for their permission to use this translation.

വ്യാഖ്യാനം

 

The Ancient Church

വഴി New Christian Bible Study Staff

Three Wise Men from the East. Part of the mosaic on the left wall of the Basilica of Sant'Apollinare-Nuovo, in Ravenna, Italy.

The very first people on earth to have some spiritual awareness were part of what Swedenborg refers to as "The Most Ancient Church," represented in the Bible by Adam. It existed in the land of Canaan. These people were in a state from the Lord in which their internal love was love of the Lord, with loves of marriage, of children, and of one another flowing from that love. From love of the Lord they also had great wisdom; rather than learning about the world and other people and figuring out how to serve them, they could simply feel love and from love instantly understand right and wrong down to the smallest details. Indeed, in looking at the natural world they barely saw it; what they saw was the greater reality of the spiritual world reflected in all the details of the natural world.

The Lord knew, however, that this church would eventually fall, so he inspired a group, represented in the Bible by "Enoch," to record the church's knowledge and concepts so they could be passed on. And the Most Ancient Church did fall; people began letting pride and self-reliance creep into their hearts, their loves got corrupted, and with their loves driving their ideas they drowned in a sea of false thinking, represented in the Bible by the great flood.

The Lord responded by making a subtle but significant change in the nature of human beings: He separated our thoughts from our feelings, giving us the ability to want one thing but think another, so that using our minds we could let knowledge and understanding rule our corrupt hearts. He then took a remnant of the Most Ancient Church and gave it the doctrine of "Enoch." This group, the first and noblest of the Ancient Church, is represented in the Bible by Noah.

According to the Writings, the Ancient Church quickly spread throughout the ancient world, all over the Middle East and northern Africa, with different forms of worship represented by Noah's sons and his grandson Canaan. Its peoples had a deep understanding of the nature of the Lord, and knew Him as "Jehovah." They also had vast knowledge of how every detail of the natural world reflected details of the spiritual world, and used those details to guide themselves in their spiritual development.

But the Ancient Church was also doomed to fall, so the Lord inspired a group starting with Eber to create forms of worship based on the relationship between the natural world and the spiritual world. From understanding the meaning of mountains and groves, this group started worshipping on mountains and in groves. From understanding the meaning of grains and domestic animals, this group started sacrificing them as a form of worship. Meanwhile, the rest of the church had turned from worshipping the Lord to worshipping themselves, and people were twisting their understanding of natural things into idolatry and magic. So the Lord cut them off from a true understanding of spiritual things, an event represented by the story of the Tower of Babel, leaving the descendants of Eber – the Hebrews – to preserve the knowledge that had been passed on from the Most Ancience Church.

But the Hebrews were surrounded by the increasingly pagan descendants of the Ancient Church, and were slowly corrupted to the point that almost none of their knowledge remained. So the Lord ordered Abraham to the Land of Canaan – a land full of spiritual meaning because it was home to the Most Ancient Church – and began re-establishing the representative worship of the Hebrews as a purely external thing. It's noteworthy that the Lord had to introduce himself to Abraham as "God Shaddai" because even the name "Jehovah" had been forgotten.

This third version of the Ancient Church preserved representatives of the Holy Land and forms of worship including sacrifice and circumcision, and also established new representatives, particularly through the 12 sons of Jacob and the resulting tribes. Meanwhile, other pieces of the corrupted Ancient Church continued collapsing, the destruction of Sodom being a notable example.

The preserved ideas nearly vanished again as the Hebrews spent 400 years in captivity in Egypt – like Abraham, Moses did not know the name "Jehovah" when he turned aside to see the burning bush – but were restored as external forms as Moses led the Children into the wilderness. There, at the foot of the "mountain of God," the Lord established the ultimate replacement for the Ancient Church: the Jewish or Israelitish Church, which preserved the name "Jehovah," and preserved spiritual representatives through the ark, the Tabernacle, the Ten Commandments and the laws of Moses. This third church did not have any of the internal spiritual knowledge which existed in the Ancient Church, but kept its ideas alive so the meaning could be restored by the Lord when He came on earth as Jesus.

The Writings also tell us that the Ancient Church had a holy scripture of its own, a written collection of the wisdom preserved by "Enoch." It is the source of the first seven chapters of Genesis (up to the flood), and includes the Book of Jasher, referred to in Joshua 10:12-13, and again in 2 Samuel 1:18, and the books of "Oracles" (aka "Pronouncements", or "Annunciations") and the Wars of Jehovah, which are quoted by Moses in Numbers 21:14, 27.