The Bible

 

Daniel 9

Study

   

1 Nell’anno primo di Dario, figliuolo d’Assuero, della stirpe dei Medi, che fu fatto re del regno dei Caldei,

2 il primo anno del suo regno, io, Daniele, meditando sui libri, vidi che il numero degli anni di cui l’Eterno avea parlato al profeta Geremia, e durante i quali Gerusalemme dovea essere in ruine, era di settant’anni.

3 E volsi la mia faccia verso il Signore Iddio, per dispormi alla preghiera e alle supplicazioni, col digiuno, col sacco e con la cenere.

4 E feci la mia preghiera e la mia confessione all’Eterno, al mio Dio, dicendo: "O Signore, Dio grande e tremendo, che mantieni il patto e continui la benignità a quelli che t’amano e osservano i tuoi comandamenti!

5 Noi abbiamo peccato, ci siam condotti iniquamente, abbiamo operato malvagiamente, ci siamo ribellati, e ci siamo allontanati da i tuoi comandamenti e dalle tue prescrizioni,

6 non abbiamo dato ascolto ai profeti, tuoi servi, che hanno parlato in tuo nome ai nostri re, ai nostri capi, ai nostri padri, e a tutto il popolo del paese.

7 A te, o Signore, la giustizia; a noi, la confusione della faccia, come avviene al dì d’oggi: agli uomini di Giuda, agli abitanti di Gerusalemme e a tutto Israele, vicini e lontani, in tutti i paesi dove li hai cacciati, a motivo delle infedeltà che hanno commesse contro di te.

8 O Signore, a noi la confusione della faccia, ai nostri re, ai nostri capi, e ai nostri padri, perché abbiam peccato contro te.

9 Al Signore, ch’è il nostro Dio, appartengono la misericordia e il perdono; poiché noi ci siamo ribellati a lui,

10 e non abbiamo dato ascolto alla voce dell’Eterno, dell’Iddio nostro, per camminare secondo le sue leggi, ch’egli ci aveva poste dinanzi mediante i profeti suoi servi.

11 Sì, tutto Israele ha trasgredito la tua legge, s’è sviato per non ubbidire alla tua voce; e così su noi si sono riversate le maledizioni e imprecazioni che sono scritte nella legge di Mosè, servo di Dio, perché noi abbiam peccato contro di lui.

12 Ed egli ha mandato ad effetto le parole che avea pronunziate contro di noi e contro i nostri giudici che ci governano, facendo venir su noi una calamità così grande, che sotto tutto il cielo nulla mai è stato fatto di simile a quello ch’è stato fatto a Gerusalemme.

13 Com’è scritto nella legge di Mosè, tutta questa calamità ci è venuta addosso; e, nondimeno, non abbiamo implorato il favore dell’Eterno, del nostro Dio, ritraendoci dalle nostre iniquità e rendendoci attenti alla sua verità.

14 E l’Eterno ha vegliato su questa calamità, e ce l’ha fatta venire addosso; perché l’Eterno, il nostro Dio, è giusto in tutto quello che ha fatto, ma noi non abbiamo ubbidito alla sua voce.

15 Ed ora, o Signore, Iddio nostro, che traesti il tuo popolo fuori del paese d’Egitto con mano potente, e ti facesti il nome che hai oggi, noi abbiamo peccato, abbiamo operato malvagiamente.

16 O Signore, secondo tutte le tue opere di giustizia, fa’, ti prego, che la tua ira e il tuo furore si ritraggano dalla tua città di Gerusalemme, il tuo monte santo; poiché per i nostri peccati e per le iniquità de’ nostri padri, Gerusalemme e il tuo popolo sono esposti al vituperio di tutti quelli che ci circondano.

17 Ora dunque, o Dio nostro, ascolta la preghiera del tuo servo e le sue supplicazioni, e fa’ risplendere il tuo volto sul tuo desolato santuario, per amor del Signore!

18 O mio Dio, inclina il tuo orecchio, ed ascolta; apri gli occhi e guarda le nostre desolazioni, e la città sulla quale è invocato il tuo nome; perché noi umilmente presentiamo le nostre supplicazioni nel tuo cospetto, fondati non sulle nostre opere giuste, ma sulle tue grandi compassioni.

19 O Signore, ascolta! Signore, perdona! Signore, sii attento ed agisci; non indugiare, per amor di te stesso, o mio Dio, perché il tuo nome è invocato sulla tua città e sul tuo popolo!"

20 Mentre io parlavo ancora, pregando e confessando il mio peccato e il peccato del mio popolo d’Israele, e presentavo la mia supplicazione all’Eterno, al mio Dio, per il monte santo del mio Dio,

21 mentre stavo ancora parlando in preghiera, quell’uomo, Gabriele, che avevo visto nella visione da principio, mandato con rapido volo, s’avvicinò a me, verso l’ora dell’oblazione della sera.

22 E mi ammaestrò, mi parlò, e disse: "Daniele, io son venuto ora per darti intendimento.

23 Al principio delle tue supplicazioni, una parola è uscita; e io son venuto a comunicartela, poiché tu sei grandemente amato. Fa’ dunque attenzione alla parola, e intendi la visione!

24 Settanta settimane son fissate riguardo al tuo popolo e alla tua santa città, per far cessare la trasgressione, per metter fine al peccato, per espiare l’iniquità e addurre una giustizia eterna, per suggellare visione e profezia, e per ungere un luogo santissimo.

25 Sappilo dunque, e intendi! Dal momento in cui è uscito l’ordine di restaurare e riedificare Gerusalemme fino all’apparire di un unto, di un capo, vi sono sette settimane; e in sessantadue settimane essa sarà restaurata e ricostruita, piazze e mura, ma in tempi angosciosi.

26 Dopo le sessantadue settimane, un unto sarà soppresso, nessuno sarà per lui. E il popolo d’un capo che verrà, distruggerà la città e il santuario; la sua fine verrà come un’inondazione; ed è decretato che vi saranno delle devastazioni sino alla fine della guerra.

27 Egli stabilirà un saldo patto con molti, durante una settimana; e in mezzo alla settimana farà cessare sacrifizio e oblazione; e sulle ali delle abominazioni verrà un devastatore; e questo, finché la completa distruzione, che è decretata, non piombi sul devastatore".

   

From Swedenborg's Works

 

The Lord #64

Study this Passage

  
/ 65  
  

64. The reason Jerusalem in the Word means the church in regard to its teachings is that that was the only place in the land of Canaan where the Temple was, where the altar was, where sacrifices were performed, and therefore where there was actual worship of God. That was also why the three annual feasts were celebrated there and why every male in the whole land was commanded to go there. This is why Jerusalem means the church in regard to worship and therefore also the church in regard to its teachings, since worship is defined by teachings and carried out in accord with them. It is also because the Lord was in Jerusalem and taught in its Temple and afterward glorified his human nature there.

Moreover, in the Word as spiritually understood a city means a body of teaching, so a holy city means a body of teaching based on divine truth that comes from the Lord. 1

[2] We can also see that Jerusalem means a church in regard to its teachings from other passages in the Word, such as this in Isaiah:

For Zion’s sake I will not be silent and for Jerusalem’s sake I will not rest until her justice goes forth like radiance and her salvation burns like a lamp. Then the nations will see your justice and all monarchs will see your glory, and a new name will be given you that the mouth of Jehovah will utter. And you will be a crown of beauty in the hand of Jehovah and a diadem of the kingdom in the hand of your God. Jehovah will be well pleased with you and your land will be married. Behold, your salvation will come. See, his reward is with him. And they will call them a holy people, the redeemed of Jehovah; and you will be called a city sought out, not deserted. (Isaiah 62:1-4, 11-12)

This whole chapter is about the Lord’s Coming and about the new church that he is about to establish. This is the new church meant by the Jerusalem that will be given a new name that the mouth of Jehovah will utter and that will be a crown of beauty in the hand of Jehovah and a diadem of the kingdom in the hand of God, with which Jehovah will be well pleased, and which will be called a city sought out, not deserted. This cannot mean the Jerusalem where Jews were living when the Lord came, because this was the opposite in all respects, more properly called “Sodom, ” as it is in Revelation 11:8, Isaiah 3:9, Jeremiah 23:14, Ezekiel 16:46, 48.

[3] Another passage from Isaiah:

Behold, I am creating a new heaven and a new earth; the former ones will not be remembered. Be glad and rejoice forever in what I am creating. Behold, I am going to create Jerusalem as a rejoicing and her people as a gladness, so that I may rejoice over Jerusalem and be glad about my people. Then the wolf and the lamb will feed together; they will do no evil in all my holy mountain. (Isaiah 65:17-19, 25)

This chapter too is about the Lord’s Coming and the church that he is going to establish-a church that was not established among people in Jerusalem but among people who were outside it. This church, then, is meant by the Jerusalem that would be a rejoicing for the Lord and whose people will be a gladness for him, and where the wolf and the lamb will feed together, and where they will do no evil.

Here it is also saying, as it does in the Book of Revelation, that the Lord is going to create a new heaven and a new earth, meaning much the same thing; and it also says that he is going to create Jerusalem.

[4] Another passage from Isaiah:

Wake up! Wake up! Put on your strength, O Zion. Put on your beautiful garments, O Jerusalem, holy city. No more will the uncircumcised or the unclean come into you. Shake yourself from the dust, rise up, and sit [in a higher place], Jerusalem. The people will acknowledge my name on that day, because I am the one saying “Here I am!” Jehovah has comforted his people; he has redeemed Jerusalem. (Isaiah 52:1-2, 6, 9)

This chapter too is about the Lord’s Coming and the church that he is going to establish. So the Jerusalem into which the uncircumcised or the unclean will no longer come, and which the Lord will redeem, means the church; and Jerusalem the holy city means the church’s teachings that come from the Lord.

[5] In Zephaniah:

Rejoice, O daughter of Zion! Be glad with all your heart, O daughter of Jerusalem! The King of Israel is in your midst. Do not fear evil anymore. He will be glad over you with joy; he will rest in your love; he will rejoice over you with singing. I will give you a name and praise among all the peoples of the earth. (Zephaniah 3:14-17, 20)

Again, this is about the Lord and the church from him, the church over which the King of Israel (who is the Lord) will rejoice with singing and be glad with joy, in whose love he will be at rest, and to whom he will give a name and praise among all the peoples of the earth.

[6] In Isaiah:

Thus says Jehovah your Redeemer and your Maker, who says to Jerusalem, “You will be inhabited,” and to the cities of Judah, “You will be built.” (Isaiah 44:24, 26)

And in Daniel:

Know and understand: from [the time] the word goes forth that Jerusalem must be restored and built until [the time of] Messiah the Leader will be seven weeks. (Daniel 9:25)

We can see that here too Jerusalem means the church because this latter was restored and built up by the Lord, but Jerusalem, the capital city of the Jews, was not.

[7] Jerusalem means the church that comes from the Lord also in the following passages. In Zechariah:

Thus says Jehovah: “I will return to Zion and dwell in the midst of Jerusalem. Jerusalem will be called the city of truth, and the mountain of Jehovah Sabaoth will be called the holy mountain.” (Zechariah 8:3; see also 8:20-23)

In Joel:

Then you will know that I am Jehovah your God, dwelling on Zion, my holy mountain. Jerusalem will be holy. And on that day it will happen that the mountains will drip with new wine and the hills will flow with milk; and Jerusalem will abide from generation to generation. (Joel 3:17-21)

In Isaiah:

On that day the branch of Jehovah will be beautiful and glorious. And it will happen that those remaining in Zion and those left in Jerusalem will be called holy-all who are written as alive in Jerusalem. (Isaiah 4:2-3)

In Micah:

At the very last of days the mountain of the house of Jehovah will be established on the top of the mountains. Teaching will go forth from Zion and the word of Jehovah from Jerusalem. To you the former kingdom will come, the kingdom of the daughter of Jerusalem. (Micah 4:1-2, 8)

In Jeremiah:

At that time they will call Jerusalem the throne of Jehovah, and all nations will gather at Jerusalem because of the name of Jehovah. They will no longer follow the stubbornness of their own evil heart. (Jeremiah 3:17)

In Isaiah:

Look upon Zion, the city of our appointed feasts! Your eyes will see Jerusalem as a peaceful abode and as a tabernacle that will not be taken down; its tent pegs will never be removed and not one of its cords will be torn away. (Isaiah 33:20)

There are other passages elsewhere, such as Isaiah 24:23; 37:32; 66:10-14; Zechariah 12:3, 6, 9-10; 14:8, 11-12, 21; Malachi 3:2, 4; Psalms 122:1-7; 137:4-6.

[8] As for Jerusalem in these passages meaning the church that the Lord was going to establish and that has in fact been established, and not the Jerusalem in the land of Canaan that was inhabited by Jews, this too we can tell from the places in the Word where this latter city is described as totally lost and as destined for destruction, passages such as Jeremiah 5:1; 6:6-7; 7:17-18, and following; 8:6-8, and following; 9:10-11, 13, and following; 13:9-10, 14; 14:16; Lamentations 1:8-9, 17; Ezekiel 4:1; 5:9; 12:18-19; 15:6-8; 16:1-63; 23:1-49; Matthew 23:37, 39; Luke 19:41-44; 21:20-22; 23:28-30; and in many other places.

Footnotes:

1. [Swedenborg’s Footnote] A city in the Word means the teachings of a church and of a religion: see Arcana Coelestia 402, 2712, 2943, 3216, 4492-4493. The gate of a city means the teachings through which we come into the church: 2943, 4477. That is why the elders sat in the gate of the city and gave judgment: 2943. Going out of the gate means departing from the teachings: 4492-4493. Representations of cities and palaces appear in heaven when angels are discussing specific teachings: 3216.

  
/ 65  
  

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