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耶利米哀歌 3

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1 我是因耶和華忿怒的杖,遭遇困苦的人。

2 引導我,使我行在黑暗中,不行在明裡。

3 他真是終日再三反攻擊我。

4 他使我的枯乾;他折斷(或譯:壓傷)我的骨頭

5 他築壘攻擊我,用苦楚(原文是苦膽)和艱難圍困我。

6 他使我在幽暗之處,像死了許久的人一樣。

7 他用籬笆圍住我,使我不能出去;他使我的銅鍊沉重。

8 我哀號求救;他使我的禱告不得上達。

9 他用鑿過的石頭擋住我的道;他使我的彎曲。

10 他向我如埋伏,如獅子在隱密處。

11 他使我離正,將我撕碎,使我淒涼。

12 他張將我當作靶子。

13 他把箭袋中的箭射入我的肺腑。

14 我成了眾民的笑話;他們終日以我為歌曲。

15 他用苦楚充滿我,使我飽用茵蔯。

16 他又用沙石磣斷我的,用灰塵將我蒙蔽。

17 你使我遠離平安,我忘記處。

18 我就:我的力量衰敗;我在耶和華那裡毫無指望!

19 耶和華啊,求你記念我如茵蔯和苦膽的困苦窘迫。

20 我心想念這些,就在裡面憂悶。

21 我想起這事,裡就有指望。

22 我們不致消滅,是出於耶和華諸般的慈愛;是因他的憐憫不致斷絕。

23 早晨,這都是新的;你的誠實極其廣大!

24 我心裡耶和華是我的分,因此,我要仰望他。

25 凡等候耶和華,心裡尋求他的,耶和華必施恩給他。

26 人仰望耶和華,靜默等候他的救恩,這原是的。

27 人在幼年負軛,這原是的。

28 他當獨無言,因為這是耶和華加在他身上的。

29 他當貼塵埃,或者有指望。

30 他當由人打他的腮頰,要滿受凌辱。

31 因為主必不永遠丟棄人。

32 主雖使人憂愁,還要照他諸般的慈愛發憐憫

33 因他並不甘使受苦,使憂愁。

34 人將世上被囚的踹(原文是壓)在

35 或在至者面前屈枉人,

36 或在人的訟事上顛倒是非,這都是主不上的。

37 除非主命定,誰能成就成呢?

38 禍福不都出於至者的嗎?

39 活人因自己的罪受罰,為何發怨言呢?

40 我們當深深考察自己的行為,再歸向耶和華

41 我們當誠心向上的神舉手禱告。

42 我們犯罪背逆,你並不赦免。

43 你自被怒氣遮蔽,追趕我們;你施行殺戮,並不顧惜。

44 你以黑遮蔽自己,以致禱告不得透入。

45 你使我們在萬民中成為污穢和渣滓。

46 我們的仇敵都向我們大大張

47 恐懼和陷坑,殘害和毀滅,都臨近我們

48 因我眾民遭的毀滅,我就眼淚流如河。

49 我的眼多多流淚,總不止息,

50 直等耶和華垂顧,從

51 因我本城的眾民,我的眼,使我的心傷痛。

52 無故與我為仇的追逼我,像追雀一樣。

53 他們使我的命在牢獄中斷絕,並將一塊石頭拋在我身上。

54 眾水流過我,我:我命斷絕了!

55 耶和華啊,我從深牢中求告你的名。

56 你曾見我的聲音;我求你解救,你不要掩耳不

57 我求告你的日子,你臨近我,:不要懼

58 主啊,你伸明了我的冤;你救贖了我的命。

59 耶和華啊,你見了我受的委屈;求你為我伸冤。

60 他們仇恨我,謀害我,你都見了。

61 耶和華啊,你見他們辱罵我的話,知道他們向我所設的計,

62 並那些起來攻擊我的人口中所說的話,以及終日向我所設的計謀。

63 求你觀看,他們下,起來,都以我為歌曲。

64 耶和華啊,你要按著他們所做的向他們施行報應。

65 你要使他們裡剛硬,使你的咒詛臨到他們。

66 你要發怒追趕他們,從耶和華的除滅他們。

   

Commentary

 

Foot lifted up

  

In Genesis 29:1, this signifies the elevation of the natural from external truth to internal good. (Arcana Coelestia 3761)

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Arcana Coelestia #3761

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3761. 'Jacob lifted up his feet' means a raising up of the natural. This is clear from the meaning of 'lifting up' as a raising up, and from the meaning of 'the feet' as the natural, dealt with below. The raising up meant here is the subject of the chapter itself, namely a raising up from external truth towards internal good. In the highest sense the subject is how the Lord according to order raised His Natural even up to the Divine, rising up step by step from external truth towards internal good. In the representative sense it is how the Lord according to a similar order makes man's natural new when regenerating him. The fact that a person who is being regenerated in adult life progresses according to the order described in the internal sense of this chapter and of those that follow is known to few. This fact is known to few because few stop to reflect on the matter and also because few at the present day are able to be regenerated; for the last days of the Church have arrived when no charity exists any longer, nor consequently any faith. This being so, people do not even know what faith is, even though the assertion 'men is saved by faith' is on everyone's lips; and not knowing this they therefore have even less knowledge of what charity is. And since they know no more than the terms faith and charity and have no knowledge of what these are essentially, it has therefore been stated that few are able to reflect on the order in accordance with which a person is made new or regenerated, and also that few are able to be regenerated.

[2] Because the subject here is the natural, and the latter is represented by 'Jacob', it is not said that he rose up and went to the land of the sons of the east but that 'he lifted up his feet'. Both these expressions mean a raising up. As regards 'rising up' having this meaning, see 2401, 2785, 2912, 2927, 3171; and as regards the expression 'lifting up the feet' which occurs here, this is used in reference to the natural - 'the feet' meaning the natural, see 2162, 3147. 'The feet' means the natural or natural things because of their correspondence with the Grand Man - currently the subject at the ends of chapters. In the Grand Man those belonging to the province of the feet are those who dwell in natural light and little spiritual light. This also is why the parts beneath the foot - the sole and the heel - mean the lowest natural things, see 259, and why 'a shoe', which is also mentioned several times in the Word, means the bodily-natural, which is the lowest part of all, 1748.

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