The Bible

 

Daniel 8

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1 NELL’anno terzo del regno del re Belsasar, una visione apparve a me, Daniele, dopo quella che mi era apparita al principio.

2 Io adunque riguardava in visione or io era, quando vidi quella visione, in Susan, stanza reale, ch’è nella provincia di Elam; riguardava, dico, in visione, essendo in sul fiume Ulai.

3 Ed alzai gli occhi, e riguardai, ed ecco un montone stava in piè dirincontro al fiume, il quale avea due corna, e quelle due corna erano alte; me l’uno era più alto dell’altro, e il più alto saliva l’ultimo.

4 Io vidi che quel montone cozzava verso l’Occidente, verso il Settentrione, e verso il Mezzodì; e niuna bestia poteva durar davanti a lui; e non vi era alcuno che riscotesse di man sua, e faceva ciò che gli piaceva, e divenne grande.

5 Ed io posi mente, ed ecco un becco veniva d’Occidente, sopra la faccia di tutta la terra, e non toccava punto la terra; e questo becco avea un corno ritorto in mezzo degli occhi.

6 Ed esso venne fino al montone che avea quelle due corna, il quale io avea veduto stare in piè, dirincontro al fiume; e corse sopra lui nel furor della sua forza.

7 Ed io vidi che, essendo presso del montone, egli infellonì contro a lui, e cozzò il montone, e fiaccò le sue due corna, e non vi fu forza nel montone da durar davanti a lui; laonde lo gettò per terra, e lo calpestò; e non vi fu chi scampasse il montone di man sua.

8 E il becco divenne sommamente grande; ma come egli si fu fortificato, quel gran corno fu rotto; e in luogo di quello, sorsero quattro altre corna ritorte, verso i quattro venti del cielo.

9 E dell’uno d’essi uscì un piccol corno, il quale divenne molto grande verso il Mezzodì, e verso il Levante, e verso il paese della bellezza;

10 e divenne grande fino all’esercito del cielo, ed abbattè in terra una parte di quell’esercito, e delle stelle, e le calpestò.

11 Anzi si fece grande fino al capo dell’esercito; e da quel corno fu tolto via il sacrificio continuo e fu gettata a basso la stanza del santuario d’esso.

12 E l’esercito fu esposto a misfatto contro al sacrificio continuo; ed egli gettò la verità in terra, ed operò, e prosperò.

13 Ed io udii un santo, che parlava; e un altro santo disse a quel tale che parlava: Fino a quando durerà la visione intorno al servigio continuo, ed al misfatto che devasta? infino a quando saranno il santuario, e l’esercito, esposti ad esser calpestati?

14 Ed egli mi disse: Fino a duemila trecento giorni di sera, e mattina; poi il santuario sarà giustificato.

15 Ora, quando io Daniele ebbi veduta la visione, ne richiesi l’intendimento; ed ecco, davanti a me stava come la sembianza di un uomo.

16 Ed io udii la voce d’un uomo, nel mezzo di Ulai, il qual gridò, e disse: Gabriele, dichiara a costui la visione.

17 Ed esso venne presso del luogo dove io stava; e quando fu venuto, io fui spaventato, e caddi sopra la mia faccia; ed egli mi disse: Intendi, figliuol d’uomo; perciocchè questa visione è per lo tempo della fine.

18 E mentre egli parlava a me, mi addormentai profondamente, con la faccia in terra; ma egli mi toccò, e mi fece rizzare in piè, nel luogo dove io stava.

19 E disse: Ecco, io ti farò assapere ciò che avverrà, alla fine dell’indegnazione; perciocchè vi sarà una fine al tempo ordinato.

20 Il montone con due corna, che tu hai veduto, significa i re di Media, e di Persia.

21 E il becco irsuto significa il re di Iavan; e il gran corno, ch’era in mezzo de’ suoi occhi, è il primo re.

22 E ciò che quello è stato rotto, e quattro son sorti in luogo di esso significa che quattro regni sorgeranno della medesima nazione, ma non già con medesima possanza di quello.

23 Ed alla fine del lor regno, quando gli scellerati saranno venuti al colmo, sorgerà un re audace, e sfacciato, ed intendente in sottigliezze.

24 E la sua potenza si fortificherà, ma non già per la sua forza; ed egli farà di strane ruine, e prospererà, ed opererà, e distruggerà i possenti, e il popolo de’ santi.

25 E per lo suo senno, la frode prospererà in man sua; ed egli si magnificherà nel cuor suo, e in pace ne distruggerà molti; e si eleverà contro al Principe de’ principi; ma sarà rotto senza opera di mani.

26 E la visione de’ giorni di sera, e mattina, ch’è stata detta, è verità; or tu, serra la visione; perciocchè è di cose che avverranno di qui a molto tempo.

27 Ed io Daniele fui tutto disfatto, e languido per molti giorni; poi mi levai, e feci gli affari del re; ed io stupiva della visione; ma niuno se ne avvide.

   


To many Protestant and Evangelical Italians, the Bibles translated by Giovanni Diodati are an important part of their history. Diodati’s first Italian Bible edition was printed in 1607, and his second in 1641. He died in 1649. Throughout the 1800s two editions of Diodati’s text were printed by the British Foreign Bible Society. This is the more recent 1894 edition, translated by Claudiana.

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De Verbo (The Word) #5

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5. V. The spiritual sense of the Word and its natural sense.

I have sometimes talked with spirits who were unwilling to know anything about the spiritual sense of the Word, saying that its natural sense is the only meaning the Word has, and this is holy because it comes from God. They asserted that if a spiritual sense were to be accepted, the literal form of the Word would be worthless. Many of them insisted on this, but they received a reply from heaven, that the Word without a spiritual sense in it would not be Divine, and because the spiritual sense is its soul, it is consequently Divine, in fact alive; for without this the literal sense would be as if dead. The real holiness of the Word consists in this. Thus the Word can be compared to the Divine Man, who is the Lord; in Him there is not only a natural Divine, but also a spiritual Divine and a celestial Divine. This is why the Lord calls Himself the Word. It was also said that the real holiness of the Word lies in its literal sense, and that this is more holy than the others, the internal senses, because it is the wrapping and container of the others, and it is like the body which is made alive by the soul. So the Word in its literal or natural sense possesses its fullness and also its power; and by its means a person is linked with the heavens, which would be separated from mankind but for the literal sense. Everyone knows and acknowledges that the Word is in its depths spiritual, but up to now it has been obscure where this spirituality was hidden.

[2] But since the spirits who took a stand on behalf of the literal sense alone were unwilling to be convinced by these arguments, there was produced countless passages from the natural sense, which could never be understood without the spiritual sense. For instance there are in the Prophets lists of nothing but names; many kinds of animals are named, such as lions, bears, oxen, calves, dogs, wolves, owls, ojim, 1 dragons; also mountains and forests, and many other things besides, which would mean nothing without a spiritual sense.

For instance, what might be the meaning of a dragon described as red with seven heads and seven diadems on its heads, pulling down with its tail a third of the stars of heaven, and wanting to swallow the baby to which the woman was about to give birth; the woman being given the two wings of the great eagle to fly into the desert, where the dragon ejected water from its mouth after her like a river? Again, without the spiritual sense it would not be known what was the meaning of the dragon's two beasts; by the one which came up out of the sea, resembling a leopard, with feet like a bear's and a mouth like a lion's; and by its other beast which came up out of the ground, as described in Revelation Chapters 12 and 13. Again, what is the meaning there of the Lamb opening the seal of the book, horses coming out, first a white one, then a red, then a black and then a pale one, described in Revelation 6, as well as the other things in that book? Again, in Zechariah, what is the meaning of the four horns and the four smiths (Chapter 1:18-21); the lamp-stand and the two olive trees next to it (Chapter 4); the four chariots coming out between the two mountains, attached to which were horses, red, black, white and dappled (Chapter 6)? Again, the ram and the he-goat and their horns, with which they fought each other in Daniel (Chapter 8); and the four beasts coming up out of the sea (Chapter 7); not to mention vast quantities of similar things? To convince them further it was cited what the Lord said to the disciples in Matthew (Chapter 24) about the ending of the age and His coming again, which no one could understand without the spiritual sense.

[3] The existence of a spiritual sense in every detail of the Word can also be confirmed by some of the Lord's sayings, which could not be grasped unless understood spiritually. For instance, no one would be allowed to call his father on earth 'father', nor 'teacher' or 'master', because they have one Father, Teacher and Master (Matthew 23:7-10); or that they should not judge for fear of being judged (Matthew 7:1-2); or that a husband and wife are not two, but one flesh (Matthew 19:5-6), although they are not one flesh in the natural sense. Nor is there any prohibition of judging one's companion or neighbour as regards his natural life, for this is in society's interest; but the prohibition is on judging him as regards his spiritual life, for this is known to none but the Lord. Again, the Lord did not forbid calling one's father 'father', nor a teacher 'teacher', nor a master 'master' in the natural sense, but He did in the spiritual sense. In this there is only one Father, Teacher and Master. And the same is true in other cases.

[4] They were convinced by this that there is a spiritual sense contained in the natural sense of the Word, and that still the real holiness of the Word resides in its literal sense, because all the inner meanings of the Word are fully present in it. In addition it was proved that the literal sense also exhibits clearly everything which teaches the way to salvation, and so how to live and what to believe. Also, every teaching of the church is to be drawn from the literal sense of the Word, and proved by it; not purely by the spiritual sense, since this does not permit linking with heaven and through heaven with the Lord, but this must take place by means of the literal sense. For the Lord's Divine influence coming through the Word extends from first to last.

Footnotes:

1. Possibly to be emended to ochim, which are mentioned along with ziim and ijim, apparently nocturnal birds: see Isaiah 13:21-22. -Translator

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