The Bible

 

Danielius 10:21

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21 Aš tau paskelbsiu, kas parašyta tiesos knygoje. Nėra nė vieno, kuris man padėtų prieš juos, tik Mykolas, jūsų kunigaikštis”.

Commentary

 

#97 Fighting over the Body of Moses (Jude 1:9)

By Jonathan S. Rose

Title: Fighting over the Body of Moses (Jude 9)

Topic: Second Coming/ Word

Summary: This time we deliberately pick perhaps the most obscure verse in the most obscure book of the Bible--Jude verse 9, and explore its imagery and allusions, finding that it actually ties in with huge themes throughout Scripture.

Use the reference links below to follow along in the Bible as you watch.

References:
Jude 1:9
Deuteronomy 34:5-6
Zechariah 3:1
Daniel 10:10-end
Daniel 12:1
Matthew 24:21, 15
Revelation 12:1, 7
1 Thessalonians 4:15-17
Luke 9:28-36
Matthew 5:17
Luke 9:35-36; 24:22, 49
Jude 1:9
Ephesians 6:10-12
Jude 1:9, 11, 21

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Spirit and Life Bible Study broadcast from 6/27/2012. The complete series is available at: www.spiritandlifebiblestudy.com

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Apocalypse Revealed #46

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46. And girded about the breasts with a golden girdle. This symbolizes the emanating and at the same time conjoining Divinity which is Divine good.

The golden girdle has this symbolism because the Lord's breast, and specifically the nipples there, symbolize His Divine love. Therefore the golden girdle which encircled them symbolizes the emanating and at the same time conjoining Divinity, which is the Divine goodness of Divine love. Gold, too, symbolizes goodness (see no. 913 below).

A girdle or sash in the Word symbolizes a common bond which holds everything in order and connection. For example, in Isaiah:

There shall come forth a rod from the stem of Jesse..., and righteousness shall be the girdle of His loins, and truth the girdle of His loins. (Isaiah 11:1, 5)

The rod coming forth from the stem of Jesse is the Lord.

It may be seen in Arcana Coelestia (The Secrets of Heaven), published in London, nos. 9837 and 9944, that the girdle of Aaron's ephod and the belt of his tunic symbolized conjunction.

Since a girdle symbolizes a bond conjoining the goods and truths of the church, therefore when the church with the children of Israel was destroyed, Jeremiah the prophet was commanded to buy himself a sash and put it on his loins, and then hide it in a hole in a rock by the Euphrates. And when, at the end of many days, he recovered it, behold, it was ruined and profitable for nothing. (Jeremiah 13:1-12) This represented that the goodness of the church had then come to nothing, with its truths therefore gone.

A sash has the same symbolic meaning in Isaiah 3:24, in the phrase, "instead of a sash, a rent." And so also elsewhere.

That nipples or paps symbolize Divine love is apparent from passages in the Word where they are mentioned, and from their correspondence with love.

  
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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.