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1 Mose 34

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1 Und Dina, die Tochter Leas, die sie dem Jakob geboren hatte, ging aus, die Töchter des Landes zu sehen.

2 Und es sah sie Sichem, der Sohn Hemors, des Hewiters, des Fürsten des Landes, und er nahm sie und lag bei ihr und schwächte sie.

3 Und seine Seele hing an Dina, der Tochter Jakobs, und er liebte das Mädchen und redete zum Herzen des Mädchens.

4 Und Sichem sprach zu Hemor, seinem Vater, und sagte: Nimm mir dieses Mädchen zum Weibe.

5 Und Jakob hörte, daß er seine Tochter Dina entehrt hatte; seine Söhne aber waren mit seinem Vieh auf dem Felde, und Jakob schwieg, bis sie kamen.

6 Und Hemor, der Vater Sichems, kam heraus zu Jakob, um mit ihm zu reden.

7 Und die Söhne Jakobs kamen vom Felde, sobald sie es hörten; und die Männer kränkten sich und ergrimmten sehr, weil er eine Schandtat in Israel verübt hatte, bei der Tochter Jakobs zu liegen; und also sollte nicht geschehen.

8 Und Hemor redete mit ihnen und sprach: Sichem, mein Sohn, seine Seele hängt an eurer Tochter: Gebet sie ihm doch zum Weibe,

9 und verschwägert euch mit uns: gebet uns eure Töchter und nehmet euch unsere Töchter;

10 und wohnet bei uns, und das Land soll vor euch sein: wohnet und verkehret darin, und machet euch darin ansässig.

11 Und Sichem sprach zu ihrem Vater und zu ihren Brüdern: Möge ich Gnade finden in euren Augen! Und was ihr mir sagen werdet, will ich geben.

12 Leget mir sehr viel auf als Heiratsgabe und Geschenk, und ich will es geben, so wie ihr mir sagen werdet; und gebet mir das Mädchen zum Weibe.

13 Und die Söhne Jakobs antworteten Sichem und seinem Vater Hemor betrüglich und redeten, weil er ihre Schwester Dina entehrt hatte;

14 Und sie sprachen zu ihm: Wir können dies nicht tun, unsere Schwester einem unbeschnittenen Manne zu geben, denn das wäre eine Schande für uns.

15 Nur unter der Bedingung wollen wir euch zu Willen sein, wenn ihr werdet wie wir, indem alles Männliche bei euch beschnitten wird;

16 dann wollen wir euch unsere Töchter geben und eure Töchter uns nehmen, und wir wollen bei euch wohnen und ein Volk sein.

17 Wenn ihr aber nicht auf uns höret, euch beschneiden zu lassen, so nehmen wir unsere Tochter und ziehen weg.

18 Und ihre Worte waren gut in den Augen Hemors und Sichems, des Sohnes Hemors.

19 Und der Jüngling zögerte nicht, dies zu tun, denn er hatte Gefallen an der Tochter Jakobs. Und er war geehrt vor allen im Hause seines Vaters.

20 Und Hemor und Sichem, sein Sohn, kamen in das Tor ihrer Stadt, und sie redeten zu den Männern ihrer Stadt und sprachen:

21 Diese Männer sind friedlich gegen uns, so mögen sie im Lande wohnen und darin verkehren; und das Land, siehe, weit nach beiden Seiten ist es vor ihnen. Wir wollen uns ihre Töchter zu Weibern nehmen und unsere Töchter ihnen geben.

22 Nur unter der Bedingung wollen die Männer uns zu Willen sein, bei uns zu wohnen, ein Volk zu sein, wenn bei uns alles Männliche beschnitten werde, so wie sie beschnitten sind.

23 Ihre Herden und ihr Besitz und all ihr Vieh, werden die nicht unser sein? Nur laßt uns ihnen zu Willen sein, und sie werden bei uns wohnen.

24 Und sie hörten auf Hemor und auf Sichem, seinen Sohn, alle, die zum Tore seiner Stadt ausgingen; und alles Männliche wurde beschnitten, alle, die zum Tore seiner Stadt ausgingen.

25 Und es geschah am dritten Tage, als sie in Schmerzen waren, da nahmen die zwei Söhne Jakobs, Simeon und Levi, die Brüder Dinas, ein jeder sein Schwert und kamen kühn wider die Stadt und ermordeten alles Männliche;

26 auch Hemor und seinen Sohn Sichem ermordeten sie mit der Schärfe des Schwertes und nahmen Dina aus dem Hause Sichems und gingen davon.

27 Die Söhne Jakobs kamen über die Erschlagenen und plünderten die Stadt, weil sie ihre Schwester entehrt hatten.

28 Ihr Kleinvieh und ihre Rinder und ihre Esel und was in der Stadt und was auf dem Felde war, nahmen sie;

29 und all ihr Vermögen und alle ihre Kinder und ihre Weiber führten sie gefangen hinweg und raubten sie und alles, was in den Häusern war.

30 Da sprach Jakob zu Simeon und zu Levi: Ihr habt mich in Trübsal gebracht, indem ihr mich stinkend machet unter den Bewohnern des Landes, unter den Kanaanitern und unter den Perisitern. Ich aber bin ein zählbares Häuflein, und sie werden sich wider mich versammeln und mich schlagen, und ich werde vertilgt werden, ich und mein Haus.

31 Und sie sprachen: Sollte man unsere Schwester wie eine Hure behandeln?

   

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Arcana Coelestia #4503

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4503. The sons of Jacob came upon those who were pierced, and plundered the city. That this signifies that all that posterity destroyed the doctrine, is evident from the signification of the “sons of Jacob,” as being the posterity from Jacob (of which above); from the signification of “to plunder” as being to destroy; and from the signification of a “city,” as being the doctrine of the church (see above, n. 4500). That after Simeon and Leviticus had slain every male in the city, and also Hamor and Shechem, they went forth, and that the sons of Jacob then came upon those who were pierced and plundered the city, is a mystery not manifest except from the internal sense.

[2] This mystery is that after the truth and good of the church represented by Simeon and Leviticus had been extinguished, and falsity and evil had taken their place, there were then superadded those falsities and evils which are signified in the opposite sense by the rest of the sons of Jacob. (That each son of Jacob represented some general principle of faith and charity was shown above, n. 2129, 3858, 3913, 3926, 3939, 4060; what was represented by Reuben, n. 3861, 3866, 3870; what by Judah, n. 3881; what by Dan, n. 3921-3923; what by Naphtali, n. 3927, 3928; what by Gad, n. 3934, 3935; what by Asher, n. 3938, 3939; what by Issachar, n. 3956, 3957; and what by Zebulun, n. 3960, 3961.) These generals of faith and charity represented by them become falsities and evils of that kind when once the truth and good of the church have been extinguished, and then these falsities and evils are superadded; for falsities and evils continually grow in the church that has once been perverted and extinguished, and it is these which are signified by the sons of Jacob coming upon those who were pierced and plundering the city, after Simeon and Leviticus had slain every male in the city, and Hamor and Shechem also, and had taken away Dinah, and had gone forth.

[3] That by “those who are pierced” are signified in the Word truths and goods extinguished is evident from the following passages.

In Isaiah:

Thou art cast forth out of thy sepulchre like an abominable shoot, the raiment of the slain that are pierced with the sword, that go down to the stones of the pit, as a carcass trodden under foot (Isaiah 14:19);

said of Babylon; “those pierced with the sword” denote those who have profaned the truths of the church. Again:

So that their pierced shall be cast forth, and the stink of their carcasses shall come up (Isaiah 34:3);

treating of the falsities and evils that infest the church, which are meant by the “pierced.”

[4] In Ezekiel:

The violent of the nations shall draw their sword against the beauty of thy wisdom, and they shall profane thy comeliness; they shall let thee down into the pit, and thou shall die the deaths of those who are pierced in the midst of the seas (Ezekiel 28:7-8);

said of the prince of Tyre, by whom are signified the primary things of the knowledges of truth and good; “dying the deaths of those who are pierced in the midst of the seas,” denotes those who hatch falsities by means of memory-knowledges, and thereby defile the truths of the church.

[5] Again:

These also shall go down with them into hell, unto those who are pierced with the sword; when thou shalt be made to go down with the trees of Eden into the earth of lower things, thou shalt lie in the midst of the uncircumcised, with them that are pierced with the sword (Ezekiel 31:17-18).

Again:

Go down and lie with the uncircumcised; they shall fall in the midst of those who are pierced with the sword; the chief of the mighty ones shall speak to him in the midst of hell (Ezekiel 32:19-21);

said of Pharaoh and Egypt; “those pierced with the sword” denote those who become insane through knowledges, by which they extinguish in themselves the faith of the truth of the church.

[6] In David:

I am accounted among those who go down into the pit; I have become as a man that has no strength, neglected among the dead, like the pierced that lie in the grave, whom Thou hast remembered no more, and who have been cut off by Thy hand (Psalms 88:4-5);

“those who are pierced in hell,” “in the pit,” and “in the grave,” denote those who have destroyed truths and goods in themselves by falsities and evils. It is obvious that they are not in hell merely because they had been pierced with the sword.

[7] In Isaiah:

A city of tumults, a city that exulteth, they are not pierced with the sword, and are not slain in war; all who have been found in thee were bound together, they fled from afar (Isaiah 22:2-3);

said of fallacies from sensuous things through which the truths of the church cannot be seen, and concerning which they are therefore in negative doubt, and are said to be “pierced, but not with the sword.”

[8] In Ezekiel:

I bring a sword upon thee, and I destroy your high places, and your altars shall be destroyed, and your statues shall be broken, and I will cause your pierced ones to lie before your idols; when the pierced ones shall fall in the midst of you, you shall know that I am Jehovah; then ye shall acknowledge, when the pierced ones shall be in the midst of their idols, round about their altar (Ezekiel 6:3-4, 7, 13); where the “pierced ones” denote those who are in falsities of doctrine.

[9] Again:

Defile the house, and fill the courts with the pierced ones; they went forth and smote in the city (Ezekiel 9:7);

a prophetic vision; “to defile the house and fill the courts with the pierced ones,” denotes to profane goods and truths. Again:

Ye have multiplied your pierced ones in this city, and ye have filled the streets thereof with the pierced one; wherefore said the Lord Jehovih, Your pierced ones whom ye have put in the midst of it, they are the flesh, and that is the pot, and He shall bring you forth out of the midst of it (Ezekiel 11:6-7).

[10] As by “the pierced” are signified those who have extinguished the truths of the church in themselves by falsities and evils, therefore also in the representative church they who touched one who was pierced were unclean, of whom we read in Moses:

Whosoever has touched upon the surface of the field one that is pierced with a sword, or the dead, or a bone of a man, or a grave, shall be unclean seven days (Numbers 19:16, 18).

And therefore inquiry was made, and expiation was made by means of a calf, as again in Moses:

If one pierced be found lying in the field, and it be not known who has smitten him, then the elders of the city and the judges shall come forth, and they shall measure toward the cities which are round about him that is pierced; and it shall be, at the city which is nearest unto him that is pierced the elders of that city shall take a she-calf of an ox, by which labor hath not been done, and which hath not drawn in the yoke, and they shall bring her down unto a river or a valley, and shall behead the calf there, and wash their hands over the beheaded calf, and shall say, Our hands have not shed blood, and our eyes have not seen it; expiate Thy people Israel, O Jehovah, and give not innocent blood in the midst of Thy people; and the blood shall be expiated for them (Deuteronomy 21:1-8).

[11] That these laws were given because by the “pierced” is signified the perversion, destruction, and profanation of the truth of the church by falsity and evil, is manifest from every particular in the internal sense. It is said “a pierced one lying in the field,” because by a “field” is signified the church (see n. 2971, 3310, 3766). A “she-calf” by which labor has not been done signifies that innocence of the external man which is in ignorance. Unless these things were made known by the internal sense, the enjoining of such an expiatory process would excite universal surprise.

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

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Arcana Coelestia #3957

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3957. And she called his name Issachar. That this signifies its quality, is evident from the signification of “calling a name,” as being the quality (see n. 3923, 3935); for Issachar was named from “reward,” and hence the name involves what has been said above concerning reward, and at the same time what is signified by the rest of Leah’s words. As by “Issachar” is meant “reward;” and as in the external sense “reward” is mutual love; and in the internal sense, the conjunction of good and truth, it may be well to state that very few at the present day in the Christian world know that “reward” has this meaning, for the reason that they do not know what mutual love is, and still less that good must be conjoined with truth in order that man may be in the heavenly marriage. I have been permitted to speak on this subject with very many in the other life who were from the Christian world, and with the more learned also; but wonderful to say, scarcely anyone of those with whom I have been permitted to speak knew anything about it, when yet they might of themselves have known much about such things if they had only been willing to use their reason. But as they had not been solicitous about the life after death, but only about life in the world, such things had no interest for them.

[2] The things which they might have known of themselves had they chosen to use their reason, are the following: First, that when man is divested of his body, he comes into the full exercise of a much more enlightened understanding than when living in the body, for the reason that while he is in the body, corporeal and worldly things occupy his thoughts, which induce obscurity; but when he is divested of the body, such things do not interfere, and it is with him as with those who are in interior thought by abstraction of the mind from the things of the outward senses. From this they might know that the state after death is much more clear-sighted and enlightened than the state before death; and that when a man dies, he passes comparatively from shade into light, because he passes from the things of the world to those of heaven, and from the things of the body to those of the spirit. But wonderful to say, although they are able to understand all this, they nevertheless think the contrary, namely, that the state of life in the body is relatively clear, and that the state of life after being divested of the body is relatively obscure.

[3] The Second thing that they may know if they will use their reason, is that the life which man has procured for himself in the world follows him; that is, he is in such a life after death. For they may know that without dying altogether no one can put off the life which he has acquired from infancy; and that this life cannot be changed into another in a moment, still less into an opposite one. For example: he who has acquired a life of deceit, and has found in this the delight of his life, cannot put off the life of deceit, but is still in that life after death. He who is in the love of self, and thereby in hatred and revenge against those who do not serve him, and those who are in other such evils, remains in them after the life of the body; for these are the things which they love, and which constitute the delights of their life, and consequently their veriest life; and therefore such things cannot be taken away from them without at the same time extinguishing all their life. And so in other cases.

[4] The Third thing which a man may know of himself, is that when he passes into the other life he leaves many things behind which have no place there, such as cares for food, for clothing, for a place of abode, and also for gaining money and wealth, as well as for being exalted to dignities, all of which are so much thought of by man in the life of the body; but in the other life are succeeded by others that are not of this earthly kingdom.

[5] Therefore the Fourth thing a man can know is that he who in the world has thought solely of such worldly things, so that he has been wholly possessed by them, and has acquired delight of life in them alone, is not fitted to be among those whose delight is to think about heavenly things, that is, about the things of heaven.

[6] From this follows also a Fifth thing; namely, that when the externals of the body and the world are taken away, the man is then such as he has been inwardly; that is, he so thinks and so wills. If his thoughts have inwardly been deceits, machinations, aspiration for dignities, for gains, and for fame thereby; if they have been hatreds and revenges and the like, it can be seen that he will still think such things, thus the things that belong to hell, however much he might for the sake of the before-mentioned ends have concealed his thoughts from men, and thus appeared outwardly to be worthy, while leading others to believe that he had not such things at heart. That all such externals, or simulations of worth, are also taken away in the other life, may likewise be known from the fact that outward things are put off together with the body, and are no longer of any use. From this everyone may conclude for himself what kind of a man he will then appear to the angels.

[7] The Sixth thing that may be known is that heaven, or the Lord through heaven, is continually working and inflowing with good and truth; and that if there is not then in men-in their interior man which lives after the death of the body-some recipient of good and truth, as a ground or plane, the good and truth that flow in cannot be received; and for this reason man while living in the body ought to be solicitous to procure such a plane within himself; but this cannot be procured except by thinking what is good toward the neighbor, and by willing what is good to him, and therefore doing what is good to him, and thus by acquiring the delight of life in such things. This plane is acquired by means of charity toward the neighbor, that is, by means of mutual love; and is what is called conscience. Into this plane the good and truth from the Lord can inflow, and be received therein; but not where there is no charity, and consequently no conscience; for there the inflowing good and truth pass through, and are turned into evil and falsity.

[8] The Seventh thing that a man can know of himself, is that love to God and love toward the neighbor are what make man to be man, distinct from brute animals; and that they constitute heavenly life, or heaven; while their opposites constitute infernal life, or hell. But the reason why a man does not know these things is that he does not desire to know them, because he lives the opposite life, and also because he does not believe in the life after death; and likewise because he has taken up with principles of faith, but none of charity; and consequently believes in accordance with the doctrinal teachings of many, that if there is a life after death, he can be saved by faith, no matter how he has lived, even if his faith is received in his dying hour.

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