The Bible

 

Ezechiele 42

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1 Poi egli mi menò fuori verso il cortile esterno dal lato di settentrione, e mi condusse nelle camere che si trovavano davanti allo spazio vuoto, e di fronte all’edificio verso settentrione.

2 Sulla facciata, dov’era la porta settentrionale, la lunghezza era di cento cubiti, e la larghezza era di cinquanta cubiti:

3 dirimpetto ai venti cubiti del cortile interno, e dirimpetto al lastrico del cortile esterno, dove si trovavano tre gallerie a tre piani.

4 Davanti alle camere c’era corridoio largo dieci cubiti; e per andare nell’interno c’era un passaggio d’un cubito; e le loro porte guardavano a settentrione.

5 Le camere superiori erano più strette di quelle inferiori e di quelle del centro dell’edifizio, perché le loro galleria toglievano dello spazio.

6 Poiché esse erano a tre piani, e non avevano colonne come le colonne dei cortili; perciò a partire dal suolo, le camere superiori erano più strette di quelle in basso, e di quelle del centro.

7 Il muro esterno, parallelo alle camere dal lato del cortile esterno, difaccia alle camere, aveva cinquanta cubiti di lunghezza;

8 poiché la lunghezza delle camere, dal lato del cortile esterno, era di cinquanta cubiti, mentre dal lato della facciata del tempio era di cento cubiti.

9 In basso a queste camere c’era un ingresso dal lato d’oriente per chi v’entrava dal cortile esterno.

10 Nella larghezza del muro del cortile, in direzione d’oriente, difaccia allo spazio vuoto e difaccia all’edifizio, c’erano delle camere;

11 e, davanti a queste, c’era un corridoio come quello delle camere di settentrione; la loro lunghezza e la loro larghezza erano come la lunghezza e la larghezza di quelle, e così tutte le loro uscite, le loro disposizioni e le loro porte.

12 Così erano anche le porte delle camere di mezzogiorno; c’erano parimenti una porta in capo al corridoio: al corridoio che si trovava proprio davanti al muro, dal lato d’oriente di chi v’entrava.

13 Ed egli mi disse: "Le camere di settentrione e le camere di mezzogiorno che stanno difaccia allo spazio vuoto, sono le camere sante, dove i sacerdoti che s’accostano all’Eterno mangeranno le cose santissime; quivi deporranno le cose santissime, le oblazioni e le vittime per il peccato e per la colpa; poiché quel luogo è santo.

14 Quando i sacerdoti saranno entrati, non usciranno dal luogo santo per andare nel cortile esterno, senz’aver prima deposti quivi i paramenti coi quali fanno il servizio, perché questi paramenti sono santi; indosseranno altre vesti, poi potranno accostarsi alla parte che è riservata al popolo".

15 Quando ebbe finito di misurare così l’interno della casa, egli mi menò fuori per la porta ch’era al lato d’oriente e misurò il recinto tutt’attorno.

16 Misurò il lato orientale con la canna da misurare: cinquecento cubiti della canna da misurare, tutt’attorno.

17 Misurò il lato settentrionale: cinquecento cubiti della canna da misurare, tutt’attorno.

18 Misurò il lato meridionale con la canna da misurare: cinquecento cubiti.

19 Si volse al lato occidentale, e misurò: cinquecento cubiti della canna da misurare.

20 Misurò dai quattro lati il muro che formava il recinto: tutt’attorno la lunghezza era di cinquecento e la larghezza di cinquecento; il muro faceva la separazione fra il sacro e il profano.

   

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Apocalypse Revealed #36

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36. I became in the spirit on the Lord's day. (1:10) This symbolizes a spiritual state then owing to Divine influx.

"I became in the spirit" means, symbolically, a spiritual state, the state in which John was while he was experiencing the visions, and which we will take up in the following exposition. "On the Lord's day" symbolizes influx from the Lord then, for that day brings the Lord's presence, as it is a holy day.

Concerning the prophets we read that they were in the spirit or in vision, and that the Word came to them from Jehovah.

When they were in the spirit or in vision, they were not in the body, but in their spirit, a state in which they saw phenomena such as are found in heaven. But when the Word came to them, they were then in the body and heard Jehovah speaking.

These two states of the prophets must be properly distinguished. In the state of vision the eyes of their spirit were open and the eyes of their body closed; and they heard then what angels said, and what Jehovah said through angels, and also saw representations produced for them in heaven. Moreover, they sometimes seemed to themselves to be taken then from place to place, their body remaining where it was.

[2] This was the state in which John was when he wrote the book of Revelation, and the state sometimes experienced by Ezekiel, Zechariah, and Daniel. They also said that they were then in vision or in the spirit. For Ezekiel says,

The Spirit lifted me up... and brought me back into Chaldea, to those in captivity, in a vision (of God), in the spirit of God. (Thus) went up from me the vision that I had seen. (Ezekiel 11:1, 24)

He also says that the Spirit lifted him up, and he heard behind him an earthquake, and more (Ezekiel 3:12, 24). So, too, that the Spirit lifted him up between earth and heaven, that it brought him in visions of God to Jerusalem, and that he saw abominations (Ezekiel 8:3f.). He was likewise in a vision of God or in the spirit when he saw the four living creatures, which were cherubim (Ezekiel 1; 10), as also when he saw a new earth and a new temple, and an angel measuring them (Ezekiel 40; 41; 42; 43; 44; 45; 46; 47; 48). That he was then in the visions of God, he himself says (Ezekiel 40:2), and that the spirit lifted him up (Ezekiel 43:5).

[3] The same was the case with Zechariah, who had an angel with him at the time, when he saw a man riding a horse among the myrtle trees (Zechariah 1:8ff.); when he saw the four horns, and then a man with a measuring line in his hand (Zechariah 1:18; 2:1ff.); when he saw Joshua the high priest (Zechariah 3:1ff.); when he saw the lampstand and two olive trees (Zechariah 4:1ff.); when he saw the flying scroll and the ephah (Zechariah 5:1, 6); when he saw the four chariots coming from between two mountains, and the horses (Zechariah 6:1ff.).

Daniel was in a like state when he saw the four beasts coming up from the sea (Daniel 7:1ff.), and when he saw the combat between the ram and the male goat (Daniel 8:1ff.). He himself says that he saw these things in visions (Daniel 7:1-2, 7, 13; 8:2; 10:1, 7-8), and that the angel Gabriel appeared to him in a vision (Daniel 9:21).

[4] The same was the case with John, as when he saw the Son of Man in the midst of the seven lampstands (Revelation 1), and finally, the new heaven and the new earth, and then the New Jerusalem coming down out of heaven (Revelation 21, 22. John himself says that he saw these things in the spirit and in vision (1:10; 4:2; 9:17; 21:10). This, too, is meant by the statement, "I saw," everywhere it occurs in this book.

[5] It is clearly apparent from this that to be in the spirit is to be in a state of vision, which is brought about by an opening of the sight of a person's spirit; and when this is opened, phenomena found in the spiritual world are as clearly visible as those in the natural world are to the sight of the body.

The reality of this is something I can attest to from many years' experience.

The disciples were in this state when they saw the Lord after His resurrection, which is why are told that their eyes were opened (Luke 24:30-31).

Abraham was in a like state when he saw the three angels and spoke with them. 1

So, too, Hagar, Gideon, Joshua and others, when they saw angels of Jehovah. Likewise when Elisha's lad saw the mountain full of fiery chariots and horses all around Elisha, for Elisha prayed and said,

"Jehovah, open, I pray, his eyes that he may see." And Jehovah opened the eyes of the lad, and he saw. (2 Kings 6:17)

As regards the Word, however, it was not revealed in a state of the spirit or of vision, but the Lord dictated it to the prophets in an audible voice. Consequently we are nowhere told that the prophets spoke it from the Holy Spirit, but from Jehovah. See The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem Regarding the Lord, no. 53.

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Many thanks to the General Church of the New Jerusalem, and to Rev. N.B. Rogers, translator, for the permission to use this translation.