The Bible

 

Genesi 6

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1 OR avvenne che, quando gli uomini cominciarono a moltiplicar sopra la terra, e che furono loro nate delle figliuole,

2 i figliuoli di Dio, veggendo che le figliuole degli uomini erano belle, si presero per mogli quelle che si scelsero d’infra tutte.

3 E il Signore disse: Lo Spirito mio non contenderà in perpetuo con gli uomini; perciocchè anche non sono altro che carne; e il termine loro sarà centovent’anni.

4 In quel tempo i giganti erano in su la terra, e furono anche dappoi, quando i figliuoli di Dio entrarono dalle figliuole degli uomini, ed esse partorirono loro de’ figliuoli. Costoro son quegli uomini possenti, i quali già anticamente erano uomini famosi.

5 E il Signore, veggendo che la malvagità degli uomini era grande in terra; e che tutte le immaginazioni de’ pensieri del cuor loro non erano altro che male in ogni tempo,

6 ei si pentì d’aver fatto l’uomo in su la terra, e se ne addolorò nel cuor suo.

7 E il Signore disse: Io sterminerò d’in su la terra gli uomini che io ho creati; io sterminerò ogni cosa, dagli uomini fino agli animali, ai rettili ed agli uccelli del cielo; perciocchè io mi pento di averli fatti.

8 Ma Noè trovò grazia appo il Signore.

9 Queste son le generazioni di Noè. Noè fu uomo giusto, intiero nelle sue età, e camminò con Dio.

10 E generò tre figliuoli: Sem, Cam e Iafet.

11 Ora, la terra si era corrotta nel cospetto di Dio, ed era piena di violenza.

12 E Iddio riguardò la terra, ed ecco era corrotta; poichè ogni carne aveva corrotta la sua via in su la terra.

13 E Iddio disse a Noè: Appo me la fine di ogni carne è giunta; perciocchè la terra è ripiena di violenza per cagion di costoro; ed ecco io li farò perire, insieme con la terra.

14 Fatti un’Arca di legno di Gofer; falla a stanze, ed impeciala, di fuori e di dentro, con pece.

15 E questa è la forma della qual tu la farai: la lunghezza di essa sia di trecento cubiti, e la larghezza di cinquanta cubiti, e l’altezza di trenta cubiti.

16 E da’ lume all’Arca; e fa’ il comignolo di essa disopra di un cubito; e metti la porta dell’Arca al lato di essa; falla a tre palchi, basso, secondo e terzo.

17 Ed ecco io farò venir sopra la terra il diluvio delle acque, per far perir di sotto al cielo ogni carne in cui è alito di vita; tutto ciò ch’è in terra morrà.

18 Ma io fermerò il mio patto teco; e tu entrerai nell’Arca, tu, ed i tuoi figliuoli, e la tua moglie, e le mogli de’ tuoi figliuoli teco.

19 E di ogni creatura vivente, di ogni carne, fanne entrar dentro l’Arca due per ciascuna, che saranno maschio e femmina, per conservarli in vita teco.

20 Degli uccelli, secondo le loro specie; delle bestie, secondo le loro specie; e di tutti i rettili, secondo le loro specie; due per ciascuna verranno a te, per esser conservati in vita.

21 E tu, prenditi di ogni cibo che si mangia, ed accoglilo appresso a te; acciocchè sia a te ed a quegli animali per cibo.

22 E Noè fece così; egli fece secondo tutto ciò che Iddio gli avea comandato.

   


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

 

Coronis (An Appendix to True Christian Religion) #35

  
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35. Since the Churches in the Christian world, both the Roman Catholic Church and those separated from it, which are named after their leaders, Luther, Melancthon and Calvin, trace all sin from Adam and his transgression, it is permissible to subjoin here something about the sources whence evils are inherited; for these sources are as many as there are fathers and mothers in the world. That inclinations, aptitudes and propensities to various evils are derived from these, is clear as daylight from the testimony of experience, and also from the assent of reason. Who does not know, from the collective testimony of experience, that there is a general likeness of dispositions, and hence of manners and features, from parents in children and children's children, even to indefinite posterity? Who cannot thence infer that original sins are from them? The notion suggested to every one, when he looks at the countenances and manners of brothers and relatives in families, causes him to know and acknowledge this.

[2] What reason, then, is there for deducing the origin of all evils from Adam and his seed? Is there not equal reason for deducing it from parents? Does not the germ of these similarly propagate itself? To deduce the tendencies from which, and according to which, the spiritual forms of the minds of all men n the universe exist, from Adam's seed alone, would be exactly like deriving birds of every species from one egg, also beasts of very nature from one seed, and trees of every kind of fruit from one root. Is there not an infinite variety of men? one like a sheep, another like a wolf? one like a kid, another like a panther? one like a gentle cob harnessed to a carriage, another like an untamable wild ass before it? one like a playful calf, another like a voracious tiger? and so on. Whence has each his peculiar disposition but from his father and his mother? Why, then, from Adam? - by whom, however, is described in a representative type the first Church of this earth, as has been already shown? Would not this be like tracing from one stock, deeply hidden in the earth, a plantation of trees of every appearance and use, and from a single plant shrubs of every value? Would that not also be like extracting light from the obscurity of the ages and of histories, and like unravelling the thread of a riddle that is without an answer? Why not rather derive them from Noah,

Who walked with God (Gen. 6:9),

And

Whom God blessed (Gen. 9:1),

and from whom with his three sons alone surviving

The whole earth was overspread (Gen. 9:19)?

Would not the hereditary qualities of the generations from Adam be thus extirpated, as if drowned by a flood?

[3] But, my friend, I will lay bare the true source of sins. Every evil is conceived of the devil as a father and is born of atheistical faith as a mother; and, on the other hand, every good is conceived of the Lord as a father and is born, as of a mother, of saving faith in Him. The generations of all goods in their infinite varieties with men, are from no other origin than from the marriage of the Lord and the Church; and, on the contrary, the generations of all evils in their varieties with them, are from no other origin than from the union of the devil with the community of the profane. Who does not know, or may not know, that a man must be regenerated by the Lord, that is, be created anew, and that, so far as this takes place, so far he is in goods? Hence this follows: that, in so far as a man is unwilling to be generated anew, or created anew, so far he takes up and retains the evils implanted in him from his parents. This is what lies concealed in the first precept of the Decalogue:

I am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the sons, upon the third and upon the fourth generation of them that hold Me in hatred, and showing mercy unto thousands who love Me and keep My commandments (Exod. 20:5-6; Deut. 5:9-10).

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