The Bible

 

エゼキエル書 2

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1 彼はわたしに言われた、「人のよ、立ちあがれ、わたしはあなたに語ろう」。

2 そして彼がわたしに語られた時、霊がわたしのうちに入り、わたしを立ちあがらせた。そして彼のわたしに語られるのを聞いた

3 彼はわたしに言われた、「人のよ、わたしはあなたをイスラエルの民、すなわちわたしにそむいた反逆の民につかわす。彼らもその先祖も、わたしにそむいて今日に及んでいる。

4 彼らは厚で強情な者たちである。わたしはあなたを彼らにつかわす。あなたは彼らに『なる神はこう言われる』と言いなさい。

5 彼らは聞いても、拒んでも、(彼らは反逆のだから)彼らの中に預言者がいたことを知るだろう。

6 人のよ、彼らを恐れてはならない。彼らの言葉をも恐れてはならない。たといあざみといばらがあなたと一緒にあっても、またあなたが、さそりの中に住んでも、彼らの言葉恐れてはならない。彼らのをはばかってはならない。彼らは反逆のである。

7 彼らが聞いても、拒んでも、あなたはただわたしの言葉を彼らにらなければならない。彼らは反逆の家だから。

8 人のよ、わたしがあなたに語るところを聞きなさい。反逆ののようにそむいてはならない。あなたのを開いて、わたしが与えるものを食べなさい」。

9 この時わたしが見ると、見よ、わたしの方に伸べたがあった。また見よ、の中に巻物があった。

10 彼がわたしのにこれを開くと、その表にも裏にも文字が書いてあった。その書かれていることは悲しみと、嘆きと、災の言葉であった。

   

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Apocalypse Revealed #510

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510. But after the three and a half days the breath of life from God entered them, and they stood on their feet. (11:11) This symbolically means that at the end of the prior church, as the New Church commences and grows, these two essential elements of the New Church are made living by the Lord in people who accept them.

Three and a half days means, symbolically, at the end and then the beginning (no. 505), thus at the end of the church still existing and the beginning of a new one, here the beginning of the church in people in whom the New Church commences and grows, because we are told now in regard to the two witnesses that the breath of life entered them and they stood on their feet.

The breath of life from God symbolizes spiritual life, and standing on their feet symbolizes natural life in harmony with spiritual life, and thus one made living by the Lord. This is the symbolic meaning because the breath of life refers to a person's inner being, called his inner self, which regarded in itself is spiritual. For it is a person's spirit that thinks and wills, and to think and will is, in itself, a spiritual activity. 1 Standing on the feet symbolizes a person's outer being, called his outer self, which in itself is natural. For it is the body that says and does what the spirit in it thinks and wills, and to speak and act is a natural activity. That the feet symbolize natural things may be seen in nos. 49, 468.

[2] We need to say what all this means specifically. Everyone who is reformed is reformed first in respect to his inner self, and afterward in respect to his outer self. The inner self is reformed, not by simply knowing and understanding the truths and goods by which a person is saved, but by willing and loving them, and the outer self by saying and doing what the inner self wills and loves. To the extent the outer self does this, then, to the same extent the person is regenerated. He is not regenerated prior to that because before then his inner self is not present in the effect, but subsists only in the cause, and unless a cause has an effect, it dissipates. It is like a house founded on a field of ice, a house that sinks to the bottom when the sun melts the ice. In short, it is like a person without feet on which to stand and walk. The same is the case with the inner or spiritual self unless it is founded on the outer or natural self.

This, now, is what is symbolically meant by the two witnesses' standing on their feet after breath from God entered them, and also by similar statements in Ezekiel:

(Jehovah) said to me, "Prophesy regarding the breath...." And (when) I prophesied... breath came into them, and they... stood upon their feet... (Ezekiel 37:9-10)

Also in Ezekiel:

(The voice speaking to me said,) "Son of man, stand on your feet...." Then the spirit 1 entered me... and set me on my feet. (Ezekiel 2:1-2)

And again in Ezekiel:

...I fell on my face. But the spirit 1 ...entered me and set me on my feet... (Ezekiel 3:23-24)

This, too, is the meaning of the Lord's words to Peter:

...Peter said..., ."..(wash) not my feet only, but also my hands and my head!" Jesus said to him, "He who is bathed needs only to have his feet washed, and he is completely clean." (John 13:9-10)

Footnotes:

1. In the original Latin, the word for breath and spirit is the same, and it is translated here as both breath and spirit.

  
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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.