The Bible

 

Genesi 27:36

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36 Ed Esaù disse: Non fu egli pur nominato Giacobbe? egli mi ha frodato già due volte; egli mi tolse già la mia primogenitura; ed ecco, ora mi ha tolta la mia benedizione. Poi disse a suo padre: Non mi hai tu riserbata alcuna benedizione?


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.

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Arcana Coelestia #3502

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3502. And make me dainties, such as I have loved. That this signifies pleasant things from thence, because from good, is evident from the signification of “dainties” as being things pleasant; and because they came from Esau, by whom is represented the good of the natural, therefore they signify things pleasant because from good. In the original language “dainties” signify things that are delightful and pleasing to the taste; and in the internal sense they signify that which is delightful of good, and that which is pleasing of truth, because like the other bodily senses, the taste corresponds to celestial and spiritual things; concerning which correspondence, of the Lord’s Divine mercy hereafter. It cannot be seen how the case herein is unless it is known in what manner the natural is made new, or receives life from the rational, that is, from the Lord through the rational.

[2] The natural does not become new, or receive life corresponding to the rational, that is, is not regenerated, except by means of doctrinal things, or the knowledges of good and truth-the celestial man by the knowledges of good first, but the spiritual man by the knowledges of truth first. Doctrinal things, or the knowledges of good and truth, cannot be communicated to the natural man, thus cannot be conjoined and appropriated, except by means of delights and pleasantnesses accommodated to it, for they are insinuated by an external or sensuous way; and whatever does not enter by some delight or pleasantness does not inhere, thus does not continue.

This is what is meant by the truth of good and the pleasantness thereof, and this is what is treated of in what follows.

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