The Bible

 

Genesi 31

Study

   

1 Or Giacobbe udì le parole de’ figliuoli di Labano, che dicevano: "Giacobbe ha tolto tutto quello che era di nostro padre; e con quello ch’era di nostro padre, s’è fatto tutta questa ricchezza".

2 Giacobbe osservò pure il volto di Labano; ed ecco, non era più, verso di lui, quello di prima.

3 E l’Eterno disse a Giacobbe: "Torna al paese de’ tuoi padri e al tuo parentado; e io sarò teco".

4 E Giacobbe mandò a chiamare Rachele e Lea perché venissero ai campi, presso il suo gregge, e disse loro:

5 "Io vedo che il volto di vostro padre non è più, verso di me, quello di prima; ma l’Iddio di mio padre è stato meco.

6 E voi sapete che io ho servito il padre vostro con tutto il mio potere,

7 mentre vostro padre m’ha ingannato e ha mutato il mio salario dieci volte; ma Dio non gli ha permesso di farmi del male.

8 Quand’egli diceva: I macchiati saranno il tuo salario, tutto il gregge i figliava agnelli macchiati; e quando diceva: Gli striati saranno il tuo salario, tutto il gregge figliava agnelli striati.

9 Così Iddio ha tolto il bestiame a vostro padre, e me l’ha dato.

10 E una volta avvenne, al tempo che le pecore entravano in caldo, ch’io alzai gli occhi, e vidi, in sogno, che i maschi che montavano le femmine, erano striati macchiati o chiazzati.

11 E l’angelo di Dio mi disse nel sogno: Giacobbe! E io risposi: Eccomi!

12 Ed egli: Alza ora gli occhi e guarda; tutti i maschi che montano le femmine, sono striati, macchiati o chiazzati; perché ho veduto tutto quel che Labano ti fa.

13 Io son l’Iddio di Bethel, dove tu ungesti un monumento e mi facesti un voto, Ora lèvati, partiti da questo paese, e torna al tuo paese natìo".

14 Rachele e Lea risposero e gli dissero: "Abbiam noi forse ancora qualche parte o eredità in casa di nostro padre?

15 Non ci ha egli trattate da straniere, quando ci ha vendute e ha per di più mangiato il nostro danaro?

16 Tutte le ricchezze che Dio ha tolte a nostro padre, sono nostre e dei nostri figliuoli; or dunque, fa’ tutto quello che Dio t’ha detto".

17 Allora Giacobbe si levò, mise i suoi figliuoli e le sue mogli sui cammelli,

18 e menò via tutto il suo bestiame, tutte le sostanze che aveva acquistate, il bestiame che gli apparteneva e che aveva acquistato in Paddan-Aram, per andarsene da Isacco suo padre, nel paese di Canaan.

19 Or mentre Labano se n’era andato a tosare le sue pecore, Rachele rubò gl’idoli di suo padre.

20 E Giacobbe si partì furtivamente da Labano, l’Arameo, senza dirgli che voleva fuggire.

21 Così se ne fuggì, con tutto quello che aveva; e si levò, passò il fiume, e si diresse verso il monte di Galaad.

22 Il terzo giorno, fu annunziato a Labano che Giacobbe se n’era fuggito.

23 Allora egli prese seco i suoi fratelli, lo inseguì per sette giornate di cammino, e lo raggiunse al monte di Galaad.

24 Ma Dio venne a Labano l’Arameo, in un sogno della notte, e gli disse: "Guardati dal parlare a Giacobbe, né in bene né in male".

25 Labano dunque raggiunse Giacobbe. Or Giacobbe avea piantato la sua tenda sul monte; e anche Labano e i suoi fratelli avean piantato le loro, sul monte di Galaad.

26 Allora Labano disse a Giacobbe: "Che hai fatto, partendoti da me furtivamente, e menando via le mie figliuole come prigioniere di guerra?

27 Perché te ne sei fuggito di nascosto, e sei partito da me furtivamente, e non m’hai avvertito? Io t’avrei accomiatato con gioia e con canti, a suon di timpano di cetra.

28 E non m’hai neppur permesso di baciare i miei figliuoli e le mie figliuole! Tu hai agito stoltamente.

29 Ora è in poter mio di farvi del male; ma l’Iddio del padre vostro mi parlò la notte scorsa, dicendo: Guardati dal parlare a Giacobbe, né in bene né in male.

30 Ora dunque te ne sei certo andato, perché anelavi alla casa di tuo padre; ma perché hai rubato i miei dèi?"

31 E Giacobbe rispose a Labano: "Egli è che avevo paura, perché dicevo fra me che tu m’avresti potuto togliere per forza le tue figliuole.

32 Ma chiunque sia colui presso il quale avrai trovato i tuoi dèi, egli deve morire! In presenza dei nostri fratelli, riscontra ciò ch’è tuo fra le cose mie, e prenditelo!" Or Giacobbe ignorava che Rachele avesse rubato gl’idoli.

33 Labano dunque entrò nella tenda di Giacobbe, nella tenda di Lea e nella tenda delle due serve, ma non trovò nulla. E uscito dalla tenda di Lea, entrò nella tenda di Rachele.

34 Or Rachele avea preso gl’idoli, li avea messi nel basto del cammello, e vi s’era posta sopra a sedere. Labano frugò tutta la tenda, e non trovò nulla.

35 Ed ella disse a suo padre: "Non s’abbia il mio signore a male s’io non posso alzarmi davanti a te, perché ho le solite ricorrenze delle donne". Ed egli cercò ma non trovò gl’idoli.

36 Allora Giacobbe si adirò e contese con Labano e riprese a dirgli: "Qual è il mio delitto, qual è il mio peccato, perché tu m’abbia inseguito con tanto ardore?

37 Tu hai frugato tutta la mia roba; che hai trovato di tutta la roba di casa tua? Mettilo qui davanti ai miei e tuoi fratelli, e giudichino loro fra noi due!

38 Ecco vent’anni che sono stato con te; le tue pecore e le tue capre non hanno abortito, e io non ho mangiato i montoni del tuo gregge.

39 Io non t’ho mai portato quel che le fiere aveano squarciato; n’ho subìto il danno io; tu mi ridomandavi conto di quello ch’era stato rubato di giorno o rubato di notte.

40 Di giorno, mi consumava il caldo; di notte, il gelo; e il sonno fuggiva dagli occhi miei.

41 Ecco vent’anni che sono in casa tua; t’ho servito quattordici anni per le tue due figliuole, e sei anni per le tue pecore, e tu hai mutato il mio salario dieci volte.

42 Se l’Iddio di mio padre, l’Iddio d’Abrahamo e il Terrore d’Isacco non fosse stato meco, certo, tu m’avresti ora a rimandato vuoto. Iddio ha veduto la mia afflizione e la fatica delle mie mani, e la notte scorsa ha pronunziato la sua sentenza".

43 E Labano rispose a Giacobbe, dicendo: "Queste figliuole son mie figliuole, questi figliuoli son miei figliuoli, queste pecore son pecore mie, e tutto quel che vedi è mio. E che posso io fare oggi a queste mie figliuole o ai loro figliuoli ch’esse hanno partorito?

44 Or dunque vieni, facciamo un patto fra me e te, e serva esso di testimonianza fra me e te".

45 Giacobbe prese una pietra, e la eresse in monumento.

46 E Giacobbe disse ai suoi fratelli: "Raccogliete delle pietre". Ed essi presero delle pietre, ne fecero un mucchio, e presso il mucchio mangiarono.

47 E Labano chiamò quel mucchio Jegar-Sahadutha, e Giacobbe lo chiamò Galed.

48 E Labano disse: "Questo mucchio è oggi testimonio fra me e te". Perciò fu chiamato Galed,

49 e anche Mitspa, perché Labano disse: "L’Eterno tenga l’occhio su me e su te quando non ci potremo vedere l’un l’altro.

50 Se tu affliggi le mie figliuole e se prendi altre mogli oltre le mie figliuole, non un uomo sarà con noi; ma, bada, Iddio sarà testimonio fra me e te".

51 Labano disse ancora a Giacobbe: "Ecco questo mucchio di pietre, ed ecco il monumento che io ho eretto fra me e te.

52 Sia questo mucchio un testimonio e sia questo monumento un testimonio che io non passerò oltre questo mucchio per andare a te, e che tu non passerai oltre questo mucchio e questo monumento, per far del male.

53 L’Iddio d’Abrahamo e l’Iddio di Nahor, l’Iddio del padre loro, sia giudice fra noi!" E Giacobbe giurò per il Terrore d’Isacco suo padre.

54 Poi Giacobbe offrì un sacrifizio sul monte, e invitò i suoi fratelli a mangiar del pane. Essi dunque mangiarono del pane, e passarono la notte sul monte.

55 La mattina, Labano si levò di buon’ora, baciò i suoi figliuoli e le sue figliuole, e li benedisse. Poi Labano se ne andò, e tornò a casa sua.

   

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Arcana Coelestia #4063

Study this Passage

  
/ 10837  
  

4063. 'He heard the words of Laban's sons, saying' means the nature of the truths belonging to the good meant by 'Laban' in comparison with the good thereby acquired in the Natural by the Lord. This is clear from the meaning of 'sons' as truths, dealt with in 489, 491, 533, 1147, 2623, 3373, and from the representation of 'Laban' as a parallel good that springs from a common stock, dealt with in 3612, 3665, 3778, and so the kind of good which might serve to introduce genuine goods and truths, dealt with in 3974, 3982, 3986 (end), here which had in fact served to do so because the separation of that good is the subject. Jacob 'heard the words' implies in the internal sense the nature of such truths in comparison with the good which the Lord acquired in the Natural. This may be seen from what immediately follows, in that the scene was one of anger: Laban's sons said that Jacob had taken everything that belonged to their father, and Jacob saw that Laban's face was not friendly towards him as it had been before. For 'Jacob' represents the Lord's Natural, and in the previous chapter the good of truth within the Natural, see 3659, 3669, 3677, 3775, 3829, 4009.

[2] How the good meant by 'Laban' compares with the good of truth, represented by 'Jacob', may be seen from what has been stated and shown in the previous chapter. The same may be further illustrated by means of the states which a person passes through when being regenerated, a subject which is also dealt with here, in the representative sense. When someone is being regenerated the Lord maintains him in an intermediate kind of good, a good which serves to introduce genuine goods and truths. But once those goods and truths have been introduced, that intermediate good is separated from them. Anyone who knows anything at all about regeneration and about the new man can appreciate that the new man is entirely different from the old, for the new man has an affection for spiritual and celestial matters since these constitute his feelings of delight and blessedness, whereas the old man's affections are for worldly and earthly things, and these constitute his feelings of delight and pleasure. The new man's ends in view therefore lie in heaven, whereas the old man's lie in the world. From this it is evident that the new man is entirely different from and unlike the old.

[3] So that a person may be led from the state of the old man into that of the new, worldly passions have to be cast aside and heavenly affections assumed. This is effected by countless means known to the Lord alone, many of which the Lord has made known to angels but few if any to man. Even so, every single one of those means is revealed in the internal sense of the Word. When therefore a person is converted from an old man into a new one, that is, when he is regenerated, it does not take place in an instant as some people believe, but over many years. Indeed the process is taking place throughout the person's whole life right to its end. For his passions have to be rooted out and heavenly affections implanted, and he has to have a life conferred on him which he did not possess previously, and of which in fact he scarcely had any knowledge previously. Since therefore his states of life have to be changed so drastically he is inevitably maintained for a long time in an intermediate kind of good which partakes both of worldly affections and of heavenly ones. And unless he is maintained in that intermediate good he in no way allows heavenly goods and truths into himself.

[4] That intermediate good is the kind meant by 'Laban and his flock'. But a person is maintained in that good only so long as it serves its particular use. Once it has served it, it is separated. This separation is the subject in this chapter. The existence of this intermediate good, and its separation when it has served its use, may be illustrated from the changes of state which everyone undergoes from early childhood even to old age. It is well known that in each phase of life - early childhood, later childhood, youth, adulthood, and old age - a person's state is different. It is also well known that a person lays aside the state of early childhood and its playthings when he passes into the state of later childhood, and that he lays aside the state of later childhood when he passes into that of youth, and this in turn when he passes into the state of adulthood, and that he finally lays this aside when he passes into the state of old age. And if anyone thinks it over he can also recognize that each phase of life has its particular delights. He can recognize that by means of these he is introduced by consecutive stages into those which belong to the next phase and that such delights have served to bring him through to that next phase, till at length he is brought to the delight of intelligence and wisdom in old age.

[5] From this it is evident that former things are always left behind when a new state of life is assumed. But this comparison merely serves to make the point that delights are simply means and that they are left behind when a person enters whatever state comes next. When however a person is being regenerated his state is made entirely different from the previous one, towards which the Lord is leading him not by any natural process but by a supernatural one. Nor does anyone reach that state except by the means belonging to regeneration which the Lord alone provides, and so by the intermediate good which has been referred to. And once he has been brought to that state, to the point of his no longer having worldly, earthly, and bodily things as his end in view but those of heaven, that intermediate good is separated. Having something as one's end in view means loving it more than anything else.

  
/ 10837  
  

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

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Arcana Coelestia #3665

Study this Passage

  
/ 10837  
  

3665. 'To the home of Bethuel your mother's father, and take for yourself from there a wife from the daughters of Laban your mother's brother' means a parallel external good, and the truth which sprang from this good and was to be joined [to the good of the natural]. This is clear from the representation of 'Bethuel' as good existing with those who make up a first group of gentiles, dealt with in 2865; from the representation of 'Laban' as the affection for good in the natural man, that is, the affection for external good, strictly speaking a parallel good that springs from a common stock, dealt with in 3129, 3130, 3160, 3612; and from the meaning of 'taking a wife from his daughters' as being brought into association with or joined to affections for truth from that source. For 'taking a wife', as is self-evident, means being joined to, and 'daughters' means affections, see 568, 2362, 3024. From this it is clear what those words mean, namely that the good of the natural represented here by 'Jacob' was to be joined to truths which came from a parallel external good.

[2] The implications of this are that when a person is being regenerated the Lord leads him first of all as an infant, then as a child, after that as a young person, and at length as an adult. The truths which he learns as a small child are totally external and bodily, for he is not yet capable of grasping more interior things. Those truths are no more than cognitions of such things as inmostly contain Divine things within them. For there are some cognitions of things which do not inmostly contain anything Divine and there are other cognitions which do. Cognitions that do contain the Divine inmostly are such that they can receive interior truths into themselves, increasingly so, one after another in their proper order, whereas cognitions that do not contain the Divine are such that they do not so receive them but spurn them. For the cognitions of external and bodily good and truth are like the soil which, depending on its own particular nature, receives into itself one kind of seed but not another, and is productive of one variety of seed but is destructive of another. Cognitions which inmostly contain the Divine receive spiritual and celestial truth and good into themselves, for it is by virtue of the Divine within, bringing order to them, that makes them what they are. But cognitions that do not contain the Divine receive only falsity and evil, such being their nature. Those cognitions of external and bodily truth which do receive spiritual and celestial truth and good are meant here by 'the daughters of Laban from the home of Bethuel', while those that do not receive them are meant by 'the daughters of Canaan'.

[3] The cognitions which people learn from infancy onwards into childhood are like very general vessels, which exist to be filled with goods. And as they are filled a person is enlightened. If the vessels are such that they can contain genuine goods within them, the person is in that case enlightened, step by step and increasingly so from the Divine that is within them. But if they are such that they cannot contain genuine goods within them he is not in that case enlightened. He may indeed give the appearance of being enlightened, but this comes about from the illusory light that goes with falsity and evil. Indeed those cognitions place him all the more in obscurity as regards good and truth.

[4] Such cognitions are manifold, so manifold that one can hardly count even the genera of them, let alone identify their species. For they derive in their multiplicity from the Divine and then pass by way of the rational into the natural. That is to say, certain of them flow in directly by way of the good of the rational, and from there into the good of the natural, and also into the truth that goes with that good, and again from there into the external or bodily natural, where also they depart into various channels; but others flow in indirectly by way of the truth of the rational into the truth of the natural, and also into the good that goes with this truth, and again from there into the external or bodily natural, see 3573, 3616. All this is like nations, families, and houses, in which there are blood relatives and relatives by marriage; that is to say, there are those in the direct line of descent from the chief ancestor and there are those belonging to an increasingly indirect or parallel line. In the heavens these things are quite distinct and separate, for all the communities there are distinguished according to genera and species of good and truth, and so according to how near they are in relation to one another, 685, 2508, 2524, 2556, 2739, 3612. The most ancient people, being celestial, also represented those communities by their dwelling as distinct and separate nations, families, and houses, 470, 471, 483, 1159, 1246. This was also the reason why members of the representative Church were commanded to contract marriages within the families which made up their own nation; for by so doing they could represent heaven and the interconnection of its communities as regards good and truth. That representation is exemplified here by Jacob's going to the home of Bethuel his mother's father and his taking a wife for himself from there from the daughters of Laban his mother's brother.

[5] As regards cognitions themselves of external or bodily truth which come from a parallel good and, as has been stated, contain the Divine and so are able to receive genuine truths within them, they are like cognitions present with small children who at a later time undergo regeneration. They are in general such as those that are found in the historical narratives of the Word, for example, in what is said there about Paradise, about the first human being in Paradise, about the tree of life in the middle of it, and about the tree of knowledge where the deceiving serpent was. These are cognitions which contain the Divine and which receive spiritual and celestial goods and truths into themselves because they represent and mean these. Such cognitions also constitute all the other descriptions in historical narratives of the Word, for example, those in the Word concerning the Tabernacle, concerning the Temple, and concerning the construction of these; likewise what is said about Aaron's vestments and those of his sons; also about the feasts of tabernacles, of first fruits, and of unleavened bread, and about other matters of a similar nature. When these and similar details are known and thought about by a small child, the thoughts of the angels residing with him at that time are concerned with the Divine things which they represent and mean. And because the angels are stirred by an affection for these things, that affection is communicated. This produces the joy and delight that the child gets out of them, and it prepares his mind for the reception of genuine truths and goods. These and very many others are the cognitions of external and bodily truth that come from a parallel good.

  
/ 10837  
  

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