The Bible

 

以西结书 12

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1 耶和华的又临到我说:

2 人子啊,你在悖逆的中。他们有眼睛不见,有耳朵不见,因为他们是悖逆之

3 所以人子啊,你要预备掳去使用的物件,在白日当他们眼前从你所住的地方移到别处去;他们虽是悖逆之家,或者可以揣摩思想。

4 你要在白日当他们眼前带出你的物件去,好像预备掳去使用的物件。到了晚上,你要在他们眼前亲自出去,像被掳的人出去一样。

5 你要在他们眼前挖通了,从其中将物件带出去。

6 到天黑时,你要当他们眼前搭在头上带出去,并要蒙住脸不见,因为我立你作以色列家的预兆。

7 我就照着所吩咐的去行,白日带出我的物件,好像预备掳去使用的物件。到了晚上,我用挖通了。天黑的时候,就当他们眼前搭在头上带出去。

8 次日早晨耶和华的临到我说:

9 人子啊,以色列家,就是那悖逆之家,岂不是问你:你做什麽呢?

10 你要对他们耶和华如此:这是关乎耶路撒冷的君王和他周围以色列全家的预表(原文是担子)。

11 你要:我作你们的预兆:我怎样行,他们所遭遇的也必怎样,他们必被掳去。

12 他们中间的君王也必在天黑的时候将物件搭在头上带出去。他们要挖通了,从其中带出去。他必蒙住脸,眼不见

13 我必将我的撒在他身上,他必在我的罗中缠住。我必他到迦勒底人的巴比伦;他虽在那里,却不见那

14 周围一切帮助他的和他所有的军队,我必分散四方(方:原文是),也要拔刀追赶他们。

15 我将他们四散在列国、分散在列邦的时候,他们就知道我是耶和华

16 我却要留下他们几个人得免刀、饥荒、瘟疫,使他们在所到的各国中述说他们一切可憎的事,人就知道我是耶和华

17 耶和华的又临到我说:

18 人子啊,你饭必胆战,必惶惶忧虑。

19 你要对这的百姓耶和华耶路撒冷以色列居民如此,他们饭必忧虑,必惊惶。因其中居住的众人所行强暴的事,这必然荒废,一无所存。

20 居民的城邑必变为荒场,也必变为荒废;你们就知道我是耶和华

21 耶和华的临到我说:

22 人子啊,在你们以色列地怎麽有这俗语,说日子迟延,一切异象都落了空呢?

23 你要告诉他们耶和华如此:我必使这俗语止息,以色列中不再用这俗语。你却要对他们:日子临近,一切的异象必都应验。

24 从此,在以色列家中必不再有虚假的异象和奉承的占卜。

25 我─耶和华说话,所的必定成就,不再耽延。你们这悖逆之家,我所必趁你们在世的日子成就。这是耶和华的。

26 耶和华的又临到我说:

27 人子啊,以色列家的人:他所见的异象是关乎後来许多的日子,所的预言是指着极远的时候。

28 所以你要对他们耶和华如此:我的没有一句再耽延的,我所的必定成就。这是耶和华的。

   

From Swedenborg's Works

 

The Lord #15

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15. The Lord Did Not Take Away Our Sins by His Suffering on the Cross, but He Did Carry Them.

THERE are people in the church who believe that through his suffering on the cross the Lord took away our sins and made satisfaction to the Father, and by so doing brought about redemption. Some also believe that he transferred to himself the sins of those who have faith in him, carried those sins, and cast them into the depths of the sea-that is, into hell. They support this among themselves by what John says of Jesus,

Behold the Lamb of God, who is taking up the sins of the world. (John 1:29)

and by the Lord’s words in Isaiah,

He bore our diseases and carried our sorrows. He was pierced because of our transgressions and bruised because of our iniquities. Chastisement was upon him for the sake of our peace; with his wound, healing was given to us. Jehovah made the iniquities of us all fall upon him. He was oppressed and afflicted, but did not open his mouth, like a lamb being led to slaughter. He was cut off from the land of the living. He suffered a blow because of the transgression of my people, to send the ungodly to their grave and the rich to their deaths. As a result of the labor of his soul, he will see and be satisfied. By means of his knowledge he will justify many, because he himself carried their iniquities. He emptied out his own soul even to death and was counted among transgressors. He bore the sins of many and interceded for transgressors. (Isaiah 53:3-end)

Both of these passages are talking about the Lord’s trials and suffering; his taking up our sins, [bearing] our diseases, and having the iniquities of us all fall upon him mean something similar to his carrying our sorrows and our iniquities.

[2] So I need to say first of all what his carrying iniquities means and then what his taking them up means. The true meaning of his carrying iniquities is that he was subjected to severe trials and endured being treated by the Jews the way the Word was treated by them; and they dealt with him in that way precisely because he was the Word. The church among the Jews was in utter shambles at that time; it had been brought to ruin by their perversion of everything in the Word to the point that there was nothing true left. As a result, they did not recognize the Lord. That is in fact the intent and meaning behind each detail of the Lord’s suffering.

The prophets suffered in much the same way because they represented the Lord’s Word and therefore his church, and the Lord was the quintessential prophet.

[3] We can tell that the Lord was the quintessential prophet from the following passages:

Jesus said, “A prophet is not without honor except in his own country and in his own house.” (Matthew 13:57; Mark 6:4; Luke 4:24)

Jesus said, “It is not fitting for a prophet to die outside of Jerusalem.” (Luke 13:33)

They said of Jesus, “He is a prophet from Nazareth.” (Matthew 21:11; John 7:40-41)

Fear came upon all, and they glorified God, saying that a great prophet had been raised up among them. (Luke 7:16)

A prophet will be raised up from among his people; they will obey his words. (Deuteronomy 18:15-19)

[4] We can tell from the following passages that much the same was done to the prophets.

The prophet Isaiah was commanded to represent the state of the church by taking the sackcloth off his waist and the sandals off his feet and going naked and barefoot for three years as a sign and a wonder (Isaiah 20:2-3).

The prophet Jeremiah was commanded to represent the state of the church by buying a belt and putting it around his waist without putting it in water, then hiding it in a crevice in the rocks near the Euphrates; after some days he found it ruined (Jeremiah 13:1-7).

The same prophet represented the state of the church by not taking a wife for himself in that place or entering the house of mourning or going out to grieve or going into the banquet house (Jeremiah 16:2, 5, 8).

[5] The prophet Ezekiel was commanded to represent the state of the church by taking a barber’s razor to his head and his beard and then dividing the hair, burning a third of it in the middle of the city, striking a third with a sword, and scattering a third to the wind; also, he was told to bind a few hairs in his hems and eventually to throw a few into the midst of a fire and burn them (Ezekiel 5:1-4).

The same prophet was commanded to represent the state of the church by packing his belongings to take into exile and traveling to another place in the sight of the children of Israel. In a while he was to take out his belongings and leave in the evening through a hole dug through the wall, covering his face so that he could not see the ground. And this was to be a sign to the house of Israel. The prophet was also to say, “Behold, I am a sign for you: what I have done, [your leaders] will do” (Ezekiel 12:3-7, 11).

[6] The prophet Hosea was commanded to represent the state of the church by taking a whore as his wife. He did so, and she bore him three children, the first of whom he named Jezreel, the second No Mercy, and the third Not My People (Hosea 1:2-9).

Another time he was commanded to go love a woman who had a lover but was also committing adultery; he bought her for fifteen pieces of silver (Hosea 3:1-2).

[7] The prophet Ezekiel was commanded to represent the state of the church by taking a clay tablet, carving Jerusalem on it, laying siege to it, building a siege wall and a mound against it, putting an iron plate between himself and the city, and lying on his left side for three hundred ninety days and then on his right side [for forty days]. He was also told to take wheat, barley, lentils, millet, and spelt and make himself bread from them, which he was then to weigh and eat. He was also told to bake a cake of barley over human dung; and because he begged not to do this, he was commanded to bake it over cow dung instead (Ezekiel 4:1-15).

Further, prophets also represented other things-Zedekiah with the horns of iron that he made, for example (1 Kings 22:11). Then there was another prophet who was struck and wounded and who put ashes over his eyes (1 Kings 20:37-38).

[8] In general, prophets used a robe of coarse hair (Zechariah 13:4) to represent the Word in its outermost meaning, which is the literal meaning; so Elijah wore that kind of robe and had a leather belt around his waist (2 Kings 1:8). Much the same is true of John the Baptist, who had clothing of camels’ hair and a leather belt around his waist, and who ate locusts and wild honey (Matthew 3:4).

We can see from this that the prophets represented the state of the church and the Word. In fact, anyone who represents one represents the other as well because the church is from the Word, and its life and faith depend on its acceptance of the Word. So too, wherever prophets are mentioned in both Testaments it means the body of teaching the church draws from the Word, while the Lord as the supreme prophet means the church itself and the Word itself.

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