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1 Mose 6

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1 Da sich aber die Menschen begannen zu mehren auf Erden und zeugeten ihnen Töchter,

2 da sahen die Kinder Gottes nach den Töchtern der Menschen, wie sie schön waren und nahmen zu Weibern, welche sie wollten.

3 Da sprach der HERR: Die Menschen wollen sich von meinem Geist nicht mehr strafen lassen, denn sie sind Fleisch. Ich will ihnen noch Frist geben hundertundzwanzig Jahre.

4 Es waren auch zu den Zeiten Tyrannen auf Erden; denn da die Kinder Gottes die Töchter der Menschen beschliefen und ihnen Kinder zeugeten, wurden daraus Gewaltige in der Welt und berühmte Leute.

5 Da aber der HERR sah, daß der Menschen Bosheit groß war auf Erden und alles Dichten und Trachten ihres Herzens nur böse war immerdar,

6 da reuete es ihn, daß er die Menschen gemacht hatte auf Erden, und es bekümmerte ihn in seinem Herzen,

7 und sprach: Ich will die Menschen, die ich geschaffen habe, vertilgen von der Erde, von den Menschen an bis auf das Vieh und bis auf das Gewürme und bis auf die Vögel unter dem Himmel; denn es reuet mich, daß ich sie gemacht habe.

8 Aber Noah fand Gnade vor dem HERRN.

9 Dies ist das Geschlecht Noahs: Noah war ein frommer Mann und ohne Wandel und führete ein göttlich Leben zu seinen Zeiten.

10 Und zeugete drei Söhne, Sem, Ham, Japheth.

11 Aber die Erde war verderbet vor Gottes Augen und voll Frevels.

12 Da sah Gott auf Erden, und siehe, sie war verderbet; denn alles Fleisch hatte seinen Weg verderbet auf Erden.

13 Da sprach Gott zu Noah: Alles Fleisches Ende ist vor mich kommen, denn die Erde ist voll Frevels von ihnen; und siehe da, ich will sie verderben mit der Erde.

14 Mache dir einen Kasten von Tannenholz und mache Kammern drinnen und verpiche sie mit Pech inwendig und auswendig.

15 Und mache ihn also: Dreihundert Ellen sei die Länge, fünfzig Ellen die Weite und dreißig Ellen die Höhe.

16 Ein Fenster sollst du dran machen, oben an, eine Elle groß. Die Tür sollst du mitten in seine Seite setzen. Und soll drei Boden haben, einen unten, den andern in der Mitte, den dritten in der Höhe.

17 Denn siehe, ich will eine Sintflut mit Wasser kommen lassen auf Erden, zu verderben alles Fleisch, darin ein lebendiger Odem ist unter dem Himmel. Alles, was auf Erden ist, soll untergehen.

18 Aber mit dir will ich einen Bund aufrichten; und du sollst in den Kasten gehen mit deinen Söhnen, mit deinem Weibe und mit deiner Söhne Weibern.

19 Und du sollst in den Kasten tun allerlei Tiere von allem Fleisch, je ein Paar, Männlein und Fräulein, daß sie lebendig bleiben bei dir.

20 Von den Vögeln nach ihrer Art, von dem Vieh nach seiner Art und von allerlei Gewürm auf Erden nach seiner Art: von den allen soll je ein Paar zu dir hineingehen, daß sie leben bleiben.

21 Und du sollst allerlei Speise zu dir nehmen, die man isset; und sollst sie bei dir sammeln, daß sie dir und ihnen zur Nahrung da seien.

22 Und Noah tat alles, was ihm Gott gebot.

   

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Arcana Coelestia #8408

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8408. When we sat by the flesh-pot. That this signifies a life according to what they like, and as they had desired, is evident from the signification of a “pot,” as being a containant of good, and in the opposite sense a containant of evil (of which below); and from the signification of “flesh,” as being the heavenly own, thus good, and in the opposite sense man’s own, thus evil (of which also below); and as by “flesh” is signified one’s own, so by “sitting by the flesh-pot” is signified a life according to what they like, and as they desire, for this life is the life of one’s own. A “pot” denotes a containant of good, and in the opposite sense a containant of evil, for the reason that by the flesh which is boiled in it is signified good, and in the opposite sense evil. As a “pot” has this signification, therefore by it is also signified the corporeal or natural of man, because these are the containants of good or of evil. Therefore in the universal sense by a “pot” is signified a man, and in a still more universal sense a people or a city, and then “flesh” signifies the good or the evil therein; as in Ezekiel:

The men that devise iniquity, and that give wicked counsel in this city, saying, It is not near, itself is the pot, We are the flesh; therefore thus said the Lord Jehovih, Your slain whom ye have put in the midst of it, these are the flesh, but itself is the pot (40:2, 3, 7);

here “the pot” denotes the city, or the people there; and “the flesh” denotes evil; for “the slain,” who are called “the flesh,” denote those with whom good and truth have been extinguished (see n. 4503).

[2] Again:

Utter a parable against the house of rebellion, and say unto them, Thus said the Lord Jehovah, Set on the pot, set it on, and also pour the pieces into it, every good piece, the thigh, and the shoulder; fill it with the choice of the bones; said the Lord Jehovih, Woe to the city of bloods, to the pot whose scum is therein, and whose scum is not gone out of it (Ezekiel 24:3-4, 6);

here “the pot” denotes a city, or the people there, in whom is the evil of the profanation of good; the good which is “the flesh” there, is “the thigh and the shoulder,” the evil is “the scum” therefrom; the profanation of good is the remaining “scum;” therefore also it is called “the city of bloods.”

[3] In Jeremiah:

Jehovah said unto Jeremiah, What seest thou? I said, I see a pot that is boiling, whose face is toward the north; then Jehovah said, From the north evil shall be opened upon all the inhabitants of the land (1:13-14);

here a “boiling pot” denotes a people whom falsities have taken possession of; “the north” denotes the sensuous and corporeal of man from which evil springs. The end of the church is here treated of, when the external, consequently the sensuous and corporeal, and with these falsity and evil, rule; for the Lord’s church goes successively from internal to external, and then expires.

[4] In Zechariah:

In that day shall there be upon the bells of the horses, Holiness to Jehovah; and the pots in the house of Jehovah shall be like the bowls before the altar; and every pot in Jerusalem and in Judah shall be holiness to Jehovah Zebaoth, and all they that sacrifice shall come and take of them and shall boil in them (14:20-21).

The salvation of the faithful is here treated of; the faithful are “the pots,” so called from the reception of good from the Lord, and from this the pot is called “Holiness to Jehovah;” “the bells of the horses upon which is Holiness” denote truths corresponding to good. As “pots” denote recipients and containants of good, therefore also these together with the rest of the vessels of the altar were made of brass (Exodus 38:3); for “brass” signifies the good of the natural (see n. 425, 1551).

[5] Moreover by “a pot” is signified doctrine, because of its containing the good and truth of the church. Doctrine is signified by “the pot” in which by command of Elisha pottage was boiled for the sons of the prophets of which we read in the second book of Kings:

Elisha returned to Gilgal when there was a famine in the land, when the sons of the prophets were sitting before him: he said to his lad, Set on the great pot, and boil pottage for the sons of the prophets: one went out into the field to gather vegetables, and found a vine of the field, and gathered from it wild gourds of the field, and shred them into the pot of pottage: while they were eating of the pottage they cried, Death in the pot, O man of God! but he said that they should take meal, which he threw into the pot; and he said, Pour out for the people, and let them eat; then there was no evil thing in the pot (4:38-41);

be it known that all Divine miracles involve such things as are of the Lord’s kingdom and church (n. 7337, 8364), and that Elisha represents the Word of the the Lord, (n. 2762), and the prophets the doctrines therefrom (n. 2534, 7269); whence it is evident what of the church was represented by this miracle, namely, that the good of the church which has been falsified becomes good by means of truth from the Word; “famine” denotes a lack of the knowledges of truth and of good; “the pot,” doctrine; “pottage,” the good of the external rituals of the Jewish church; “wild gourds from the vine of the field,” falsification; “meal,” truth from the Word (n. 2177), whereby that which has been falsified, and which is “death in the pot,” becomes good. That “pots” signify containants of good, is because they were among the useful vessels in which food was prepared, and by food and all kinds of it are signified such things as nourish the soul, thus affections of good and of truth (n. 681, 1480, 3114, 4792, 5147, 5293, 5340, 5342, 5576, 5915).

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