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Jeremiás sir 2

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1 Jaj; de sûrû felhõt borított haragjában az Úr Sionnak leányára! az égbõl a földre veté Izráel ékességét, és nem emlékezett meg lábainak zsámolyáról az õ haragja napján.

2 Elnyelte az Úr, nem kimélte Jákóbnak minden hajlékát, letörte haragjában Júda leányának erõsségeit, a földre terítette; megfertõzteté az országot és fejedelmeit.

3 Felgerjedt haragjában letördelé Izráelnek minden szarvát; hátravoná jobbkezét az ellenség elõl, Jákób ellen pedig mint lángoló tûz emésztett köröskörül.

4 Feszítette kézívét, mint valami ellenség, kinyújtá jobbkezét, mint támadó, és megölt mindent, a mi a szemnek kivánatos; Sion leányának sátorában, mint a tüzet önté ki búsulását.

5 Olyan volt az Úr, mint valami ellenség; elnyelte Izráelt, elnyelte minden palotáját, elrontá erõsségeit, és megsokasította Júda leányának a búját, baját.

6 És eltapodta sátorát, mint valami kertet, lerombolta gyülekezése helyét; elfeledtete az Úr a Sionon ünnepet és szombatot, és megútált haragja hevében királyt és papot.

7 Megvetette az Úr az õ oltárát, megútálta szent helyét; ellenség kezébe adá palotáinak kõfalait; zajt ütöttek az Úr házában, mint ünnepnapon.

8 Gondolá az Úr, hogy lerontja Sion leányának kõfalát; kiterjeszté a mérõkötelet, nem vonta vissza kezét a pusztítástól, és siralomra jutott a bástya és a kõfal, együtt búslakodnak!

9 Kapui besülyedtek a földbe, elveszté és összetöré annak zárait; királya és fejedelmei a pogányok közt vannak. Nincsen törvény, sõt prófétái sem nyernek kijelentést az Úrtól.

10 A földön ülnek, elnémultak Sion leányának vénei, port szórtak a fejökre; zsákba öltöztek, földre csüggesztették fejöket Jeruzsálemnek szûzei.

11 Elsenyvedtek szemeim a könyhullatástól, belsõ részeim háborognak, májam a földre omlik az én népem leányának romlása miatt, mikor elalélt a kis gyermek és a csecsszopó a város utczáin.

12 Azt mondták anyjoknak: Hol a kenyér, meg a bor? mikor elaléltak, mint a sebesültek a város utczáin, mikor kilehelték lelköket anyjoknak kebelén.

13 Mivel bizonyítsak melletted, mihez hasonlítsalak, Jeruzsálem leánya, mivel mérjelek össze téged, hogy megvígasztaljalak, Sionnak szûz leánya?! Bizony nagy a te romlásod, mint a tenger: kicsoda gyógyít meg téged?!

14 A te prófétáid hazugságot és bolondságot hirdettek néked, és nem fedték fel a te álnokságodat, hogy elfordították volna fogságodat; hanem láttak tenéked hazug és megtévelyítõ prófétálásokat.

15 Összecsapják feletted kezöket minden járó-kelõk; süvöltenek és csóválják fejöket Jeruzsálem leánya felett: Ez-é az a város, a melyrõl azt mondták: tökéletes szépség, az egész földnek öröme?

16 Feltátották ellened szájokat minden ellenségeid; süvöltenek és csikorgatják fogukat, mondván: Nyeljük el õt! Bizony ez a nap az, a melyet vártunk; megértük, látjuk!

17 Megcselekedte az Úr, a miket gondolt; beváltotta szavát, a melyet szólt eleitõl fogva; rombolt és nem kimélt, és megvidámította rajtad az ellenséget, felemelte szarvát a te szorongatóidnak.

18 Kiáltott az õ szívök az Úrhoz: Oh Sion leányának kõfala! Folyjon alá könnyed mint a patak, éjjel és nappal; ne szakadjon félbe, síró szemed meg se pihenjen.

19 Kelj fel, riadj éjjel, az õrjárások kezdetén; öntsd ki, mint a vizet a te szívedet az Úr szine elõtt; emeld fel hozzá kezeidet a te kisdedeidnek életéért, a kik elaléltak az éhség miatt minden utczának szegletén.

20 Lásd meg Uram és tekintsd meg, kivel cselekedtél így! Avagy megegyék-é az asszonyok az õ méhöknek gyümölcsét, dédelgetett kisdedeiket; avagy megölettessék-é az Úrnak szent helyén pap és próféta?

21 Az utczákon a földön fekszik gyermek és vén; szûzeim és ifjaim fegyver miatt hullottak el; öldököltél haragod napján, mészároltál, nem kiméltél.

22 Egybehívtad mint valami ünnepnapra az én rettegtetõimet mindenfelõl, és nem volt az Úr haragjának napján, a ki elmenekült és megszabadult volna. A kiket dédelgettem és felneveltem, ellenségem emésztette meg õket!

   

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Arcana Coelestia #3183

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3183. 'And her nurse' means from the innocence belonging to that affection, that is to say, which also they sent away, or separated from themselves. This is clear from the meaning of 'a nurse' or wet nurse, as innocence. Sucklings and those who suckle them are mentioned frequently in the Word, where they mean the first state that young children pass through, which is plainly a state of innocence. For as soon as anyone is born he is brought into a state of innocence. This state then serves as the basis of all other states and is the inner core of them all; and this state is meant in the Word by 'a suckling'. After he has been brought into a state of innocence he is led into a state of affection for celestial good, that is, into a state of love towards parents, which with them exists in place of love to the Lord; this state is meant by 'a young child'. After that he is led into a state of affection for spiritual good, which is mutual love, or charity towards those who are children like himself, which state is meant by the expression 'boys'. When he grows up further still he is led into a state of affection for truth; this is meant by the expression 'young men'. Subsequent states however are meant by 'men' and at last 'old men'. This final state, which is meant by the expression 'old men', is a state of wisdom which has the innocence of earliest childhood within it, and so the first state and the last are united. And when he is old, being so to speak a small child again yet one who is now wise, that person is led into the Lord's kingdom.

[2] From this it becomes clear that innocence is the first state, which is that of 'a suckling'. A woman who suckles an infant other than her own also means innocence therefore, for the state of giver and receiver, as with the one who acts and the other who is acted upon, is perceived as being similar. The reason why here it is said that they sent away 'the nurse' or wet nurse too is so that the affection for truth might be described, that is to say, that it sprang from innocence; for it is not the affection for truth unless it has innocence within it, 2526, 2780, 3111. Indeed it is by means of innocence that the Lord flows into that affection, doing so together with wisdom since true innocence is wisdom itself, see 2305, 2306; and those who possess it are seen in the eyes of angels as infants or small children, 154, 2306.

[3] That 'a suckling' in the Word means innocence is also evident from other places, as in David,

Out of the mouth of infants and sucklings You have founded strength. Psalms 8:2; Matthew 21:16.

Here 'infants' stands for celestial love, 'sucklings' for innocence. In Jeremiah,

Why are you committing great evil against your own souls, to cut off from you man and woman, infant and suckling from the midst of Judah, so that I cause no remnant to be left to you? Jeremiah 44:7.

Here similarly 'infant and suckling' stands for celestial love and its innocence. When these cease to exist no remnants exist any longer, that is, no good or truth that has been stored away by the Lord in the internal man remains any longer, remnants being good and truth stored away there by Him, see 1906, 2284. For when innocence perishes so do all goods and truths, for innocence comes directly from the Divine Himself, and so is the essential element in them. In the same prophet,

The infant and the suckling faint in the streets of the city. Lamentations 2:11.

Here the meaning is similar. In the same prophet,

The sea monsters give the breast, they suckle their young; the daughter of My people is cruel, the tongue of the suckling has cleaved to the roof of its mouth for thirst; the little children begged for bread, none held it out to them. Lamentations 4:3-4.

Again 'suckling' stands for innocence, 'little children' for affections for good. In Moses,

Outside the sword will bereave - and out of the chambers terror - both young man and virgin, and suckling together with old man. Deuteronomy 32:25.

'The sword will bereave young man, virgin, and suckling together with old man' stands for the fact that falsity will destroy the affection for truth and the affection for good, and also innocence together with wisdom. In Isaiah,

They will bring your sons in their bosom, and your daughters will be carried on their shoulder; and kings will be your foster fathers, and their queens your wet nurses. Isaiah 49:22-23.

'Kings as foster fathers' stands for intelligence, 'queens as wet nurses' for wisdom, which, as stated above, is the wisdom that goes with innocence.

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

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Arcana Coelestia #1906

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1906. 'After Abram had been dwelling ten years in the land of Canaan' means the remnants of good and of truth deriving from that good which the Lord acquired to Himself and by means of which this rational was conceived. This is clear from the meaning of 'ten' as remnants, dealt with already in 576. What remnants are has been stated and shown in 468, 530, 560, 561, 660, 661, 798, 1050; that is to say, they are all the states of affection for good and truth conferred by the Lord on a person from earliest childhood right through to life's end. These states are stored away within him for the use of his life after death, for in the next life all the states of his life return one after another and at that time they undergo modification through the states of good and truth which the Lord has conferred on him. The more remnants he acquires therefore during his lifetime, or the more good and truth he acquires, the happier and more beautiful the rest of his states seem to be when they actually return. The truth of this may become clear to anyone if he gives the matter careful consideration. At birth no one of himself possesses any good at all, but is wholly defiled with hereditary evil. Everything good flows in, such as his love for parents, nursemaids, and playmates, this influx being from innocence. These are the gifts which flow in from the Lord through the heaven of innocence and peace, which is the inmost heaven, and this is the manner in which they are imparted to him during early childhood.

[2] Later on, when he grows up, this good, innocent, and peaceful state of early childhood departs from him little by little; and insofar as he is introduced into the world, he enters into its pleasures and delights, and so into evils, and the heavenly things or the goods of early childhood start to be dispersed. Yet they still remain, it being by means of these that the states are moderated which a person takes to himself and acquires later on. Without them he cannot possibly be truly human, for states in which evil desires or any evils occur, if not moderated by means of states in which the affection for good is present, would be more dreadful than those of any animal. Those states of good are what are called remnants, which are conferred by the Lord and implanted in a person's natural disposition, this being done when the person is not aware of it.

[3] In later life he has further new states conferred on him; but these are not so much states of good as of truth, for as he grows up he has truths bestowed on him, and these in a similar way are stored away within his interior man. By means of these remnants, which are those of truth, and which have been born from the influx of spiritual things from the Lord, a person has the ability to think, and also to understand what the good and truth of civil or public life and moral or private life are, and also to receive spiritual truth, that is, the truth of faith. Yet he has no ability to do these things except by means of the remnants of good which he received in early childhood. Of the existence of remnants, and the fact that they are stored away in man in his interior rational, man is completely unaware. That unawareness is due to thinking that nothing flows in but that everything is innate within him, and thus present within him when he is an infant, though the reality is altogether different from that. Remnants are referred to in various places in the Word, and by them are meant those states by which a person becomes human, and this from the Lord alone.

[4] The remnants which resided with the Lord however were all the Divine states which He acquired to Himself and by means of which He united the Human Essence to the Divine Essence. These are in no way comparable with the remnants that reside with man, for the latter are not Divine but human. The remnants the Lord had are what is meant by the ten years Abram dwelt in the land of Canaan. When angels hear the Word they have no knowledge of what 'ten' is; but the moment ten is mentioned by man the idea of remnants comes to them, for 'ten' and 'tenths' in the Word mean remnants, as is clear from what has been stated and shown in 576, 1738. And when they perceive that 'Abram had been dwelling ten years in the land of Canaan' the idea of the Lord comes to them, and with it simultaneously countless things meant by the remnants residing with the Lord when He was in the world.

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