The Bible

 

ယေဇကျေလ 28

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1 တဖန်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ နှုတ်ကပတ်တော်သည် ငါ့ဆီသို့ရောက်လာ၍၊

2 အချင်းလူသား၊ အရှင်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ အမိန့် တော်ကို တုရုရှင်ဘုရင်အား ဆင့်ဆိုရမည်မှာ၊ သင်သည် ကိုယ်ကို ဘုရားသခင်ကဲ့သို့ ထင်မှတ်သော်လည်း ဘုရား သခင်မဟုတ်၊ လူသက်သက်ဖြစ်လျက်နှင့် ငါသည် ဘုရား ဖြစ်၏။ ပင်လယ်အလယ်၌ ဘုရားပလ္လင်ပေါ်မှာ ငါထိုင် သည်ဟု ဝါကြွားသောစိတ်နှင့် ဆိုသည်ဖြစ်၍၊

3 သင်သည် ဒံယေလထက်သာ၍ ပညာရှိပါသည် တကား။ သင်မသိရအောင် သူတပါးဝှက်ထားနိုင်သော အရာ တစုံတခုမျှမရှိ။

4 ကိုယ်ဥာဏ်ပညာအားဖြင့် ဥစ္စာရတတ်၏။ ရွှေငွေကို ဆည်းပူးပြီ။

5 ထူးဆန်းသော ပညာနှင့် ကုန်စလယ်များအား ဖြင့် စည်းစိမ်ကြီး၍၊ ထိုစည်းစိမ်ကြောင့် စိတ်ဝါကြွားပြီ။

6 သို့ဖြစ်၍၊ အရှင်ထာဝရဘုရား မိန့်တော်မူသည် ကား၊ သင်သည် ကိုယ်ကို ဘုရားသခင်ကဲ့သို့ ထင်မှတ် သောကြောင့်၊

7 ကြောက်မက်ဘွယ်သော တကျွန်းတနိုင်ငံသား တို့ကို သင်ရှိရာသို့ ငါပို့ဆောင်သဖြင့်၊ သူတို့သည် သင်၏ ပညာဂုဏ်ကို ထားနှင့်ခုတ်၍၊ သင်၏တင့်တယ်ခြင်း အသရေကို ရှုတ်ချကြလိမ့်မည်။

8 သင့်ကို မြေတွင်းထဲသို့နှိမ့်ချ၍၊ ပင်လယ်အလယ် ၌ ဆုံးရှုံးသောသူကဲ့သို့ သင့်အသက်သည် ဆုံးရှုံးရလိမ့် မည်။

9 သင့်အသက်ကို သတ်သော သူတို့လက်တွင်၊ သင်သည် ဘုရားသခင်မဟုတ်၊ လူသက်သက် ဖြစ်လျက် နှင့်၊ ငါသည် ဘုရားဖြစ်သည်ဟု သင့်အသက်ကို သတ်သောသူတို့ရှေ့မှာ အမှန်ပြောလိမ့်မည်လော။

10 အရေးဖျားလှီးခြင်းမခံသော လူသေသကဲ့သို့၊ သင်သည် တကျွန်းတနိုင်ငံသားတို့ လက်ဖြင့်သေရမည်။ ငါပြောပြီဟု အရှင်ထာဝရဘုရားမိန့်တော်မူ၏။

11 တဖန်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ နှုတ်ကပတ်တော်သည် ငါ့ဆီသို့ရောက်လာ၍၊

12 အချင်းလူသား၊ တုရုရှဘုရင်အတွက် မြည်တမ်း သော စကားကို မြွက်၍၊ အရှင်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ အမိန့်တော်ကို ဆင့်ဆိုရမည်မှာ၊ သင်သည် ထူးဆန်းသော တံဆိပ်ဖြစ်၏။ ပညာနှင့်ပြည့်စုံ၍ တင့်တယ်ခြင်းအသရေ လည်းစုံလင်လျက်ရှိ၏။

13 ဧဒင် အရပ်၊ ဘုရားသခင်၏ ဥယျာဉ်တော်၌ နေပြီ။ သင်၏ခေါင်းပေါ်မှာ ကျောက်နီ၊ ဥဿဖရားစိန်၊ မျက်ရွဲ၊ ကြောင်၊ နဂါးသွ့၊ နီလာမြ၊ ပတ္တမြား အစရှိသော ကျောက်မြတ် အမျိုးမျိုးတို့ကို ဆောင်လေ၏။ ရွှေဖြင့် လုပ်သော ပတ်သာ၊ ပုလွေတို့သည်လည်း၊ သင်ဘွားသော နေ့၌ပင် သင့်အဘို့ ပြင်ဆင်လျက်ရှိကြ၏။

14 သင်သည် ဖြန့်၍ လွှမ်းမိုးသော ခေရုဗိမ် ဖြစ်လျက်၊ ငါ့အခွင့်နှင့် ဘုရားသခင်၏ သန့်ရှင်းသော တောင်ပေါ်မှာ နေရာကျ၍ မီးတောက်သော ကျောက်တို့ တွင် သွားလာရ၏

15 ဘွားသောနေ့မှစ၍ သင့်အပြစ်ထင်ရှားသော နေ့တိုင်အောင်၊ ပြုလေရာရာ၌ စုံလင်လျက်ရှိ၏။

16 သို့ရာတွင်၊ ကုန်သွယ်ခြင်း များပြားသောအား ဖြင့်၊ အဓမ္မအမှုတို့နှင့်ပြည့်စုံ၍ ပြစ်မှားသောအပြစ် ရောက်လေပြီ ထိုကြောင့်၊ ဆိုးယုတ်သော သူကဲ့သို့၊ သင့်ကိုဘုရားသခင်၏ တောင်တော်ပေါ်က ငါနှင်ထုတ် မည် အိုလွှမ်းမိုးသော ခေရုဗိမ်မီးတောက်သော ကျောက်တို့အထဲက သင့်ကိုငါ ပယ်ရှင်းမည်

17 သင်သည် ကိုယ်၌ တင့်တယ်ခြင်းအသရေ ကြောင့်၊ ဝါကြွားသော စိတ်ရှိလျက် ဂုဏ်ထွန်းတောက် သောကြောင့်၊ သင်၏ပညာသည် ဖေါက်ပြန်လျက်ရှိလေ ပြီ။ ငါသည်သင့်ကို မြေတိုင်အောင်နှိမ့်ချမည်။ ရှင်ဘုရင် တို့သည် သင့်ကိုကြည့်ရှု၍ ဝမ်းမြောက်စေခြင်းငှါ၊ သူတို့ ရှေ့မှာ သင့်ကို ငါချထားမည်။

18 သင့်အပြစ်သည်များပြား၍ ကုန်သွယ်ခြင်း အဓမ္မအားဖြင့်၊ သန့်ရှင်းရာဌာနတို့ကို ညစ်ညူးစေသော ကြောင့်၊ သင့်ကိုမီးရှို့ဘို့ သင့်အလယ်မီးကိုငါညှိမည် သင့်ကိုမြင်သော သူအပေါင်းတို့ရှေ့မှာ၊ သင်၏ ပြာကို မြေပေါ်သို့ ငါချထားမည်

19 သင့်ကိုသိသောလူ အမျိုးမျိုးတို့သည် သင်၏ အမှုကြောင့် မိန်းမောတွေဝေကြလိမ့်မည်။ သင်သည် ကြောက်မက်ဘွယ်ဖြစ်လိမ့်မည်။ နောက်တဖန် မပေါ်လာရ ဟု မိန့်တော်မူ၏။

20 တဖန်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ နှုတ်ကပတ်တော်သည် ငါ့ဆီသို့ရောက်လာ၍၊

21 အချင်းလူသား၊ သင်သည် ဇိဒုန်မြို့တဘက်၌ မျက်နှာထား၍ ပရောဖက်ပြုလျက်၊

22 အရှင် ထာဝရဘုရား၏ အမိန့်တော်ကို ဆင့်ဆိုရမည် မှာ၊ အိုဇိဒုန်မြို့၊ သင့်တဘက်၌ ငါနေ၏။ သင့်အလယ်၌ ငါ့ဘုန်းတန်ခိုးသည် ထင်ရှားလိမ့်မည်။ သင့်ကိုငါသည် အပြစ်ဒဏ်ပေး၍ ရိုသေခြင်းကိုခံရသောအခါ၊ ငါသည် ထာဝရဘုရားဖြစ်ကြောင်းကို လူများသိရကြလိမ့်မည်။

23 သင့်အပေါ်သို့ ကာလနာဘေးကို၎င်း၊ သင်၏ လမ်းတို့၌ ထားဘေးကို၎င်း၊ ငါစေလွှတ်၍၊ ပတ်လည်၌ တိုက်သော ထားဖြင့်သူရဲတို့သည် သင့်အလယ်၌ လဲ၍ သေကြသောအခါ၊ ငါသည် ထာဝရဘုရားဖြစ်ကြောင်းကို သိရကြလိမ့်မည်။

24 ထိုအခါ ဣသရေလအမျိုး၏ ပတ်လည်၍နေ၍၊ မထီမဲ့မြင်ပြုသော သူတို့တွင် စူတတ်သော ဆူးပင်၊ နှောက်ရှက်တတ်သောငြောင့် တစုံတခုမျှ မကုတ်ကြွင်းရ။ ငါသည် ထာဝရဘုရားဖြစ်ကြောင်းကို သိရကြလိမ့်မည်ဟု မိန့်တော်မူ၏။

25 တဖန် အရှင်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ မိန့်တော်မူသည်ကား၊ ဣသရေလအမျိုးသားတို့သည် ကွဲပြားလျက်နေသော လူ အမျိုးမျိုးထဲက ငါခေါ်၍စုဝေးသောအခါ၊ သူတို့အားဖြင့် လူမျိုးများရှေ့၌ ရိုသေခြင်းကိုငါခံ၍၊ ငါ့ကျွန်ယာကုပ်အား အငါအရင်ပေးသော ပြည်၌သူတို့သည် နေကြလိမ့်မည်။

26 ထိုပြည်၌ စိုးရိမ်စရာမရှိ။ အိမ်ဆောက်ခြင်း၊ စပျစ်ဥယျာဉ်စိုက် ခြင်းအမှုကိုပြု၍ နေကြလိမ့်မည်။ သူတို့ ပတ်လည်၌ နေ၍မထီမဲ့မြင်ပြုသော သူအပေါင်းတို့ကို ငါသည် အပြစ်ဒဏ်စီရင်သောနောက် သူတို့သည် စိုးရိမ် စရာမရှိဘဲနေ၍၊ ငါသည် သူတို့၏ ဘုရားသခင် ထာဝရ ဖြစ်ကြောင်းကို သိရကြလိမ့်မည်ဟု မိန့်တော်မူ၏။

   

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Apocalypse Explained #236

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236. (Verse 17) Because thou sayest I am rich, and have become wealthy, and have need of nothing. That this signifies their faith, that they believe themselves to be in truths more than others, is evident from the signification of thou sayest, as involving what is believed by them; and because those are here treated of who are in faith alone, therefore thou sayest signifies their faith. Moreover, to say, in the spiritual sense, signifies to think, because what is said goes out from the thought; and thought is spiritual, because it belongs to man's spirit, and saying and discourse therefrom are natural, because they belong to the body. It is from this that to say, in the Word, has significations varying according to the subject treated of. And from the signification of I am rich, as being to possess the knowledges (cognitiones) of truth and good, and thence to be intelligent and wise, which will be seen in what follows. Also from the signification of and have become wealthy, and have need of nothing, as being to know all things, so that nothing is wanting.

[2] That those who hold the doctrine of faith alone and justification thereby thus believe, or are of such a character, is not known to those who are not in that faith, although amongst them there are such; nevertheless it has been granted me to know by much experience that they are of such a character.

I have conversed with many who, in the world, believed themselves to be more intelligent and wise than others, from the fact of their knowing so many things concerning faith alone and justification thereby, and indeed such things as the simple were not acquainted with, which they also called interior things, and mysteries of doctrine; and they believed they knew and understood all things, so that they lacked nothing. Amongst these were many who had written concerning faith alone, and justification by that faith; but it was shown them that they knew nothing of truth, and that those who lived the life of faith, which is charity, and did not understand justification by faith alone were far more intelligent and wise than they. It was also shown them that the things which they knew were not truths but falsities, and that to know and think these is not to be intelligent and wise, because intelligence is concerned with truth, and wisdom with the life therefrom. The reason of this was also made known to them, namely, that they were in no spiritual affection of truth, but only in the natural affection of knowing those things which are taught by the learned, or their rulers, some for the sake of employment, others for the reputation for erudition; also that those who are in the latter and not in the former affection, believe that when they know those things they know everything, and especially those who have confirmed themselves in them by the sense of the letter of the Word, and have laboured by fallacies of reasoning to connect them with other falsities.

[3] I will state something here also from experience concerning these persons. Some spirits, who, when they lived as men in the world, were then believed by others to be learned men, were examined to see whether they knew what spiritual faith is. They said that they did know; therefore when communication with those who held that faith had been granted, they perceived that they had not faith, and did not know what faith is. Upon this it was asked them what they now believed concerning faith alone, on which the whole doctrine of their church is founded; but they were ashamed and struck dumb. There were also many from amongst the learned of the church, who were asked whether they knew what regeneration is. They answered that they knew it to be baptism, because the Lord declares that unless a man be born by water and the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God; but when it was shown them that baptism is not regeneration, but that by water and the Spirit are meant truths and a life according to them, and that no one can enter into heaven unless he is thereby regenerated, they retired, confessing their ignorance. Moreover, when asked about angels, heaven and hell, the life of man after death, and many other things, they were found to be quite ignorant respecting them, such things being all like thick darkness in their minds: they then confessed that they had, indeed, believed that they knew everything, but now they were convinced that they knew scarcely anything.

By knowing something, in the spiritual world, is meant to know something of truth; but to know falsities is to know nothing, because in such knowledge there is neither intelligence nor wisdom. It was afterwards told them that this state is meant by the words of the Lord,

"Thou sayest, I am rich, and become wealthy; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked."

[4] The reason why the rich in the Word signify those who are in truths is, that spiritual riches mean nothing else; hence also in the Word, by riches are signified the knowledges of truth and good, and by the rich, those who are intelligent by their means. This is evident from the following passages. In Ezekiel:

"In thy wisdom and in thine intelligence thou hast made to thyself riches, gold and silver in thy treasures; by the multitude of thy wisdom thou hast multiplied to thyself riches" (28:4, 5).

These things are said to the prince of Tyre, by whom, in the spiritual sense, are meant those who are in the knowledges (cognitiones) of truth; by riches are meant those knowledges in general. By gold in thy treasures are meant the knowledges of good and truth. That knowledges are signified by these expressions is quite clear; for it is said, "In thy wisdom and in thine intelligence thou hast made to thyself riches; and by the multitude of thy wisdom thou hast multiplied to thyself riches."

(The reason why by the prince of Tyre are meant those who are in the knowledges of truth is, that prince signifies primary truths (see Arcana Coelestia 1482, 2089, 5044), and Tyre the knowledges of truth, n. 1201: that by treasures are signified possessions of knowledges, may be seen n. 1694, 4508, 10227; and that by gold is signified good, and by silver truth, n. 1551, 1552, 2954, 5658.)

[5] In Zechariah:

"Tyre collecteth silver as dust, and gold as the mire of the streets; behold the Lord shall impoverish her, and shall shake her wealth into the sea" (9:3, 4).

Here also by Tyre are signified those who procure to themselves knowledges, which are denoted by silver, gold and wealth.

In David:

The daughter of Tyre shall bring to thee a gift," the king's daughter; "the rich of the people shall flatter thy faces" (Psalms 45:12).

The church is here described as to the affection of truth, which is meant by the daughter of Tyre; for daughter denotes the church as to affection (see Arcana Coelestia 3262, 3963, 6729, 9059); and king denotes truth (n. 1672, 2015, 2069, 3670, 4575, 4581, 4966, 6148). On this account it is said that the daughter of Tyre shall bring to thee a gift, and that the rich of the people shall flatter thy faces; the rich of the people are those who abound in truths.

[6] In Hosea:

"Ephraim hath said, Truly I am rich; I have found me wealth; all my labours shall not find me iniquity which is sin; but yet I will speak to the prophets, and I will multiply visions" (12:8, 10).

By becoming rich and finding wealth is not meant being enriched in worldly, but in heavenly, riches and wealth, which are the knowledges of truth and good; for by Ephraim is meant the Intellectual of those who belong to the church, which is enlightened when the Word is read (see Arcana Coelestia 5354, 6222, 6238, 6267). Hence it is said, "I will speak to the prophets, I will multiply visions." By prophets are signified truths of doctrine, and also by visions.

[7] In Jeremiah:

"I, Jehovah, giving to every man according to his ways, according to the fruits of his doings. As the partridge gathereth but bringeth not forth, he maketh riches but not with judgment; in the midst of his days he shall forsake them, in the end he shall become a fool" (17:10, 11).

The subject here treated of is those who acquire knowledges (cognitiones) merely as knowledge, when yet the life is that to which they should be subservient. This is what is meant by gathering as a partridge and not bringing forth, by making riches but not with judgment, and by becoming a fool in the end. And because the knowledges of truth and good are intended to be subservient to the life, for this is perfected by them, therefore it is said that Jehovah gives to every man according to his ways, and according to the fruits of his doings.

[8] In Luke:

"Whosoever he be of you that forsaketh not all his possessions, he cannot be my disciple" (14:33).

He who does not understand that in the Word possessions denote knowledges from the Word, which are spiritual riches and wealth, may suppose that he ought to deprive himself of all wealth in order to be saved, although no such thing is meant by those words. By possessions are meant everything belonging to man's own intelligence, for no one can be wise from himself, but from the Lord alone; hence to forsake all his possessions, is to attribute nothing of wisdom and intelligence to himself; and he who does not do this, cannot be instructed by the Lord, that is, be His disciple.

[9] Those who do not know that by the rich are meant those who possess the knowledges of truth and good, thus who have the Word, and that by the poor are meant those who do not possess knowledges, yet desire them, cannot but suppose that by the rich man who was clothed in crimson and fine linen, and by the poor man who was laid at his gate (Luke 16) are meant the rich and the poor in the common sense of those words, when notwithstanding by the rich man is there meant the Jewish nation, which had the Word, in which all the knowledges of truth and good are contained; by the crimson with which he was clothed, is meant genuine good (see Arcana Coelestia 9467), and by fine linen genuine truth (see Arcana Coelestia 5319, 9469, 9596, 9744), and by the poor man who was laid at his gate are meant the nations which were outside the church, and had not the Word, and yet desired the truths and goods of heaven and the church. Hence also it is clear, that by the rich are meant those who have the Word, consequently who possess the knowledges of truth and good; for these are contained in the Word.

[10] As also in the prophecy of Elizabeth in Luke:

God "hath filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he hath sent empty away" (1:53).

The hungry are those who desire knowledges; such were the Gentiles who received the Lord and doctrine from Him; but the rich are those who have knowledges, because they have the Word; such were the Jews, but still they were not willing to know truths therefrom, therefore they did not receive the Lord and doctrine from Him. The latter are the rich who were sent empty away; the former are the hungry who were filled with good things.

  
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Translation by Isaiah Tansley. Many thanks to the Swedenborg Society for the permission to use this translation.

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Arcana Coelestia #4302

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4302. 'And he was limping on his thigh' means that truths were not yet arranged into such an order that together with good they could all enter celestial-spiritual good. This is clear from the meaning of 'limping' as possessing good which does not as yet contain genuine truths but does contain general truths into which genuine ones can be instilled and which are such as do not disagree with genuine ones, dealt with below. In the highest sense, however, in which the Lord is the subject, 'limping on the thigh' means that truths were not yet arranged into such an order that with good they could all enter celestial-spiritual good - 'the thigh' meaning celestial-spiritual good, see above in 4277, 4278.

[2] As regards the order which truths must possess when they enter good, in this case celestial-spiritual good, no intelligible explanation of it is possible, for one needs to know before that what order is, and then what kind of order goes with truths, also what celestial-spiritual good is and then how these truths enter by way of good into that celestial-spiritual good. Even if these matters were described they would not be understood except by those who see with heavenly perception; nothing at all would be understood by those who see with merely natural perception. For those who see with heavenly perception dwell in the light of heaven which comes from the Lord, a light that holds intelligence and wisdom within it. But those who dwell in natural light do not possess any intelligence or wisdom except insofar as the light of heaven flows into that natural light and uses it in such a way that things belonging to heaven may be seen - as in a mirror or in some representative image - within things belonging to natural light. For natural light does not render any spiritual truth visible unless the light of heaven is flowing into it.

[3] This alone can be said regarding the order in which truths must exist to enable them to enter good. As with goods, all truths - not only the general ones but also the particular, and indeed the most specific - must in heaven have been arranged into that order so that one truth relates to another within a form like that in which the members, organs, and viscera of the human body relate to one another. That is, their uses relate to one another in general, also in particular, as well as most specifically, and act so as to be a single whole. From this - that is to say, from the order in which truths and goods exist - heaven itself is called the Grand Man. Its actual life comes from the Lord, who from Himself arranges every single thing into such order. Consequently heaven is a likeness and image of the Lord. When therefore truths have been arranged into an order like that into which heaven is arranged they exist in heavenly order and are able to enter good. Truths and goods exist in such order with every angel, and they are also being arranged into such order with every person who is being regenerated. In short, the order of heaven consists in the proper arrangement of truths that are the truths of faith within goods that are those of charity towards the neighbour, and the arrangement of these goods within the good that is the good of love to the Lord.

[4] The fact that 'limping' means possessing good which does not as yet contain genuine truths but does nevertheless contain general truths into which genuine ones can be instilled, and which are the kind that do not disagree with genuine truths; and thus the fact that 'the lame' are those who do possess good though not genuine good because they are without knowledge of truth - good such as gentiles possess who lead charitable lives with one another - becomes clear from those places in the Word where the lame and those who limp are mentioned in the good sense, as in Isaiah,

The eyes of the blind will be opened. and the ears of the deaf will be opened; then will the lame man leap like a hart, and the dumb man sing with his tongue. Isaiah 35:5-6.

In Jeremiah,

Behold, I am bringing them from the north land, and I will gather them from the extremities of the earth, among them the blind one and the lame, the woman who is with child and her who is giving birth, together. Jeremiah 31-8.

In Micah,

On that day, said Jehovah, I will bring together her who limps and will gather her who has been driven away. And I will make her who limps into the remnant, and her who was driven away into a numerous nation; and Jehovah will reign over them in Mount Zion, from now on and for ever. Micah 4:6-7.

In Zephaniah,

At that time I will save her who limps and will gather her who has been driven away, and I will make them a praise and a name. Zephaniah 3:19.

Anyone can see that in these places 'the lame' and 'her who limps' does not mean the lame or one who limps; for it is said of them that they will leap, be gathered together, be made into the remnant, and be saved. But it is evident that people who are governed by good and less so by truths are meant, as upright gentiles are and also those like them within the Church.

[5] Such persons are also meant by 'the lame' to whom the Lord refers in Luke,

Jesus said, When you give a feast invite the poor, the maimed, the lame, and the blind, and you will be blessed. Luke 14:13-14.

And in the same gospel,

The householder said to his servant, Go out quickly into the streets and lanes of the city and bring in here the poor, and the maimed, and the lame, and the blind. Luke 14:21.

The Ancient Church distinguished the neighbour or neighbours to whom they were to perform charitable works into different categories. Some they called the maimed, others the lame, some the blind, and others the deaf, by which they meant those who were spiritually such. Some they also called the hungry, the thirsty, strangers, the naked, the sick, or prisoners, as in Matthew 25:35-36, and likewise widows, orphans, the needy, the poor, and the wretched, by whom they meant none others than those who were such so far as truth and good were concerned, who were to be furnished with whatever was appropriate to their needs, led into 'the way', and thereby receive counsel regarding their souls. But because at the present day charity does not constitute the Church but faith, what those categories of people are used to mean in the Word is totally unknown. Yet it is evident to everyone that it is not an inviting of the maimed, the lame, and the blind to a feast that is meant, nor that the householder commanded such persons to be brought in, but that those who are like this spiritually are meant. It is also evident to them that every single utterance of the Lord contains what is Divine, and so has a celestial and a spiritual sense.

[6] The Lord's words in Mark have a similar meaning,

If your foot causes you to stumble cut it off, it is better for you to enter into life lame than having two feet to be cast into the Gehenna of fire, into the unquenchable fire. Mark 9:45; Matthew 18:8.

A foot which has to be cut off if it causes stumbling means the natural which constantly sets itself against the spiritual and has to be destroyed if it is trying to crush truths, and so means that because of the disagreement and contrary-mindedness of the natural man it is preferable to be governed by simple good even though there is a denial of truth. This is what 'entering into life lame' means. As regards 'the foot' meaning the natural, see 2162, 3147, 3761, 3986, 4280.

[7] 'The lame' also means in the Word those who possess no good at all and consequently no truth, as in Isaiah,

Then the prey will be divided; the prey multiplying, those who limp will take the prey. Isaiah 33:23.

In David,

When I am limping they are glad and are gathered together; the lame whom I do not know are gathered together against me. Psalms 35:15.

Such persons being meant by 'the lame' it was also forbidden to sacrifice anything that was lame, Deuteronomy 15:21-22; Malachi 1:8, 13. Also, no lame person belonging to the seed of Aaron could serve in the priesthood, Leviticus 21:18. As with the lame likewise with the blind, for 'the blind' in the good sense means people who have no knowledge of truth, and in the contrary sense those who are subject to falsities, 2383.

[8] In the original language one word is used to express a person who is lame, another a person who limps. In the proper sense one who is lame means people who are governed by natural good into which spiritual truths are unable to flow owing to the outward natural appearances and the delusions of the senses, while in the contrary sense one who is lame means those who are not governed by any natural good but by evil, which totally blocks the inflow of spiritual truth. One who limps however means in the proper sense those who are governed by natural good into which general truths are allowed to enter but not particular and specific truths owing to lack of knowledge, whereas in the contrary sense one who limps means those who are subject to evil and so do not even allow general truths to enter in.

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