The Bible

 

Hesekiel 9

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1 Sitten hän huusi suurella äänellä minun korviini ja sanoi: "Tulkaa, kaupungin rankaisijat, ja kullakin olkoon tuhoaseensa kädessään!"

2 Ja katso, kuusi miestä tuli Yläportilta päin, joka on pohjoista kohden, ja kullakin oli kädessä hävitysaseensa. Mutta yksi mies oli heidän keskellään, puettu pellavavaatteisiin ja vyöllänsä kirjoitusneuvot. Ja he tulivat ja asettuivat seisomaan vaskialttarin ääreen.

3 Mutta Israelin Jumalan kirkkaus oli kohonnut yläpuolelta kerubin, jonka yllä se oli ollut, huoneen kynnykselle ja huusi pellavavaatteisiin puetulle miehelle, jolla oli kirjoitusneuvot vyöllänsä;

4 ja Herra sanoi hänelle: "Kierrä kaupungin, Jerusalemin, läpi ja tee merkki niitten miesten otsiin, jotka huokaavat ja valittavat kaikkia kauhistuksia, mitä sen keskuudessa tehdään".

5 Ja niille toisille hän sanoi minun kuulteni: "Kiertäkää kaupungin läpi hänen jäljessään ja surmatkaa. Älkää säälikö, älkää armahtako,

6 tappakaa tyyten vanhukset, nuorukaiset, neitsyet, lapset ja vaimot, mutta älkää koskeko keneenkään, jolla on otsassaan merkki; ja alottakaa minun pyhäköstäni." Niin he alottivat niistä miehistä, vanhimmista, jotka olivat temppelin edessä.

7 Ja hän sanoi heille: "Saastuttakaa temppeli ja täyttäkää esipihat surmatuilla. Menkää!" Niin he menivät ja surmasivat kaupungissa.

8 Mutta kun minä heidän surmatessaan olin jäänyt jäljelle, lankesin minä kasvoilleni, huusin ja sanoin: "Voi Herra, Herra! Hävitätkö sinä Israelin koko jäännöksen, kun vuodatat vihasi Jerusalemin ylitse?"

9 Niin hän sanoi minulle: "Israelin ja Juudan heimon syntivelka on ylen suuri; maa on täynnä verivelkoja, ja kaupunki on täynnä oikeuden vääristelyä, sillä he sanovat: 'Herra on hyljännyt tämän maan, ei Herra näe'.

10 Niinpä minäkään en sääli enkä armahda. Minä annan heidän vaelluksensa tulla heidän oman päänsä päälle."

11 Ja katso, pellavavaatteisiin puettu mies, jolla oli kirjoitusneuvot vyöllänsä, toi tämän sanan: "Minä olen tehnyt, niinkuin sinä käskit minun tehdä".

   

Commentary

 

332 - Nowhere to Lay His Head

By Jonathan S. Rose

Title: Nowhere to Lay His Head

Topic: The Word

Summary: How can we provide the Lord a place to lay his head?

References:
Judges 15:3-5
Nehemiah 4:1-3
Lamentations 5:15-18
Ezekiel 13:3-5
Luke 13:31-33
Isaiah 2:19; 42:21-22
Jeremiah 16:16-17
Ezekiel 8:6-10
Micah 7:16-17
2 Samuel 21:9-10
1 Kings 14:11
Job 12:7-8
Hosea 7:11-12
Luke 8:5
Acts 10:9-14
Proverbs 27:8
Isaiah 34:8-11, 13-16
Jeremiah 49:15-16
Mark 10:33-34
Matthew 25:31-33
Luke 19:9-10
Isaiah 35:10
Ezekiel 9:10; 16:43
Job 16:15-16
Matthew 8:18-20

This video is a part of the Spirit and Life Bible Study series, whose purpose is to look at the Bible, the whole Bible, and nothing but the Bible through a Swedenborgian lens.

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From Swedenborg's Works

 

Apocalypse Explained #649

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649. Verse 7. And when they shall have finished their testimony, signifies in the end of the church, when the Divine of the Lord is no longer acknowledged, and thence there is no longer any good of love or truth of doctrine. This is evident from the signification of "testimony," as being the acknowledgment of the Divine in the Lord, and thence of the good of love and truth of doctrine (of which presently), and from the signification of "to finish it," as being to bring to an end; and as this comes to an end at the end of the church; "to finish" here signifies the end of the church; and as there is then no longer any acknowledgment of the Divine in the Lord, there is therefore no good of love or truth of doctrine.

[2] That this is the signification of "testimony," can be seen from what has been thus far said about "the two witnesses," namely, that by them the good of love and charity and the truth of doctrine and faith are meant, because these are what especially testify concerning the Lord, for they are from the Lord, and are His with man; therefore "their testimony" signifies preaching concerning these. That "testimony" here signifies the acknowledgment of the Divine in the Lord is evident from what follows in Revelation:

That the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy (Revelation 19:10).

For unless a man acknowledges this from the heart, and believes it from spiritual faith, he can have no ability to receive the good of love or the truth of doctrine.

[3] At the end of the church indeed the Lord is preached, and from doctrine a Divine is also attributed to Him like the Divine of the Father; yet scarcely anyone thinks of His Divine, for the reason that they place it above or outside of His Human; therefore they do not look to the Lord when they look to His Divine, but to the Father as to another, and yet the Divine that is called the Father is in the Lord, as He Himself teaches in John 10:30, 38; 14:7. For this reason men think of the Lord in the same way as they think of a common man, and from that thought their faith flows, however much they may say with the lips that they believe in His Divine. Let anyone explore, if he can, the idea of his thought about the Lord, whether it be not such. But when it is such man cannot be conjoined to the Lord by faith and love, nor through conjunction receive any good of love or truth of faith. This, then, is why there is at the end of the church no acknowledgment of the Lord, that is, of the Divine in the Lord and from the Lord. It is believed that there is an acknowledgment of the Divine of the Lord, because such is the doctrine of the church; but so long as His Divine is separated from His Human, His Divine is yet not acknowledged interiorly but only exteriorly, and to acknowledge exteriorly is to acknowledge with the mouth only and not with the heart, or in speech only and not in faith.

[4] That this is so can be seen from Christians in the other life, where the thoughts of the heart are manifested. When they are permitted to speak from doctrine and from what they have heard from preaching they attribute a Divine to the Lord, and call it their belief; but when their interior thought and faith are explored they have no other idea of the Lord than as of a common man who has no Divine. It is man's interior thought that is the source of his faith; and as such is the thought and consequent faith of man's spirit, there is plainly no acknowledgment of the Divine in the Lord and from the Lord in the Christian world at the end of the church. In other words, there is an external acknowledgment of the Divine of the Lord, but no internal, and an external acknowledgment is of the natural man alone, while internal acknowledgment is of his very spirit; and after death the external acknowledgment is put to sleep, while the internal is the acknowledgment of his spirit. From this it can in some measure be seen how what follows is to be understood, namely, "the beast that cometh up out of the abyss shall overcome and kill the two witnesses," and their "bodies shall be seen upon the street of the city that is called Sodom and Egypt," and afterwards that "the spirit of life entered into them."

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