The Bible

 

Genesis 1:17

Study

       

17 And God set them in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth,

Commentary

 

Third day

  

'The third day' as in Genesis 22:4, signifies something complete and a beginning of sanctification. 'Day,' in the Word, signifies a state, as do all references to time. When 'third' is added, it signifies the end of that state and the beginning of the following state. In the internal sense of the Word, 'three days' and 'the third day' signify the same thing. The Lord rose again on the third day, which is also why the Lord distinguished the stages of his life into three in Luke 8:32. The Lord also endured the last temptation on the cross, on 'the third hour of the day' in Mark 15:25. In Exodus 19:16, 'the third day' signifies the end of a state of preparation for reception, and so an end of purification. In Hosea 6:2, 8, 'the third day' has the same meaning as 'the seventh day,' which is a state of peace.

(References: Arcana Coelestia 8811; Luke 8; Mark 15)


From Swedenborg's Works

 

Arcana Coelestia #41

Study this Passage

  
/ 10837  
  

41. Anything that is man's own has no life in it; and when depicted visually it looks like something hard as a bone and black. But anything that comes from the Lord does contain life. It has that which is spiritual and celestial within it, and when depicted visually it looks human and alive. It is perhaps incredible, but nevertheless absolutely true, that every expression, every idea, and every least thought of an angelic spirit is alive. In even the most detailed areas of his thought there is an affection that comes from the Lord, who is life itself. Consequently all that derives from the Lord has life within it, for it contains faith in Him, and is here meant by 'a living creature'. It then has the outward appearance of a body, meant here by that which is moving, or creeping. To man these matters remain arcana, but since the subject here is the living and moving creature, they ought at least to be mentioned here.

  
/ 10837  
  

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