The Bible

 

Genesis 11

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1 Daɣ əddənet ket-net wər-itawašawal ar awal iyyanda.

2 Əmalan-tu aytedan ətagalatnen ad d-əhanen sas dənnəg, əgrawnen asalwa iyyan daɣ aṃadal ən Šinar, əɣsaran daɣ-as.

3 Ənamaṇṇan gar-essan: «Əndawat, ad-nagu bargitan, nassaŋŋ-en əs tamsay.» Əgan-tan daɣ adagg ən təhun, əgan kolta daɣ adagg ən talaq.

4 Təzzar əṇṇan: «Əndawat, əkrəsatanaɣ aɣrəm d ogga iḍḍasan ijənnawan, ilatanaɣ eṣəm ad wər nəwəziwəz fəl tasayt n aṃadal.»

5 Izzəbbad-du Əməli fəl ad-inəy aɣrəm d ogga win karrasan maddanəs n Adəm.

6 Təzzar iṇṇa Əməli: «Əntanay da əqqalan aɣrəf iyyanda, əššewalan awal iyyanda. Kud a wa da as əṣṣəntan wədi daɣ a ilkaman wər t-illa a dər z-əgmiyan arn-asan.

7 Əndawat, zabbatatana, ad-nəsənnəffəy awal-nasan fəl ad-ibas ətinəməsəsəgrin gar-essan.»

8 Den da a tan-izawwazawaz Əməli fəl tasayt n aṃadal kul, təzzar əzazzakken akaras n əɣrəm.

9 A di da fəl iga eṣəm Babel fəlas den da ad isannaffay Əməli awal ən maddanəs n Adəm, amaran den da tolas a tan izawwazawaz fəl tasayt n aṃadal.

10 Ənta da əzzurriya ən Šem: Šem iga ṭemeday n awatay as eraw Arfakšad, əššin elan dəffər əlwabil.

11 Šem iga ṣəmmosat ṭəmad n awatay dəffər təhut n Arfakšad, itaraw-du bararan əd təbararen.

12 Arfakšad as iga karadat təṃərwen n awatay əd ṣəmmos eraw Šela.

13 Arfakšad ig'əkkozat ṭəmad n awatay əd karad dəffər təhut ən Šela itaraw-du bararan əd təbararen.

14 Šela iga karadat təṃərwen n awatay as eraw Eber.

15 Šela ig'əkkozat ṭəmad n awatay əd karad dəffər təhut n Eber, itaraw-du bararan əd təbararen.

16 As iga Eber karadat təṃərwen n awatay d əkkoz eraw Feleg.

17 Eber iga əkkozat ṭəmad n awatay əd karadat təṃərwen dəffər təhut ən Feleg, itaraw-du bararan əd təbararen.

18 As iga Feleg karadat təṃərwen n awatay eraw Ru.

19 Feleg iga ṣanatat ṭəmad n awatay əd ṭaza dəffər təhut ən Ru, itaraw-du bararan əd təbararen.

20 As iga Ru karadat təṃərwen n awatay d əššin eraw Sərug.

21 Ru iga ṣanatat ṭəmad n awatay d əṣṣa dəffər təhut ən Sərug, itaraw-du bararan əd təbararen.

22 As iga Sərug karadat təṃərwen n awatay eraw Naxor.

23 Sərug iga ṣanatat ṭəmad n awatay dəffər təhut ən Naxor, itaraw-du bararan əd təbararen.

24 As iga Naxor ṣanatat təṃərwen n awatay əd ṭaza eraw Terax.

25 Naxor iga ṭemeday n awatay əd ṃaraw əd ṭaza dəffər təhut ən Terax, itaraw-du bararan əd təbararen.

26 As iga Terax əṣṣayat təṃərwen n awatay eraw Abram, Naxor əd Haran.

27 Ənta da əzzurriya ən Terax. Terax eraw Abram, Naxor, əd Haran. Haran eraw Lot.

28 Haran aba-tu dat ši-s daɣ akal wa daɣ ihu, daɣ əɣrəm n Ur wa n Kəl Kasday.

29 Abram əd Naxor əzlafan: Abram izlaf Saray, Naxor izlaf Milka, elles ən Haran, šis ən Milka əd Yiska.

30 Saray wər tətirəw, wər təla barar waliyyan.

31 Iddew Terax əd rur-es Abram d ahaya-nnet Lot ag Haran əd təḍaggalt-net Saray tanṭut ən rur-es Abram. Əg̣madan aɣrəm n Ur wa n kəl Kasday s akal ən Kanan. Əglan har oṣan aɣrəm ən Xaran, əɣsaran daɣ-as.

32 Taɣrəst ən Terax ṣanatat ṭəmad n awatay əd ṣəmmos, aba-tu daɣ Xaran.

   

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Spiritual Experiences #155

  
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155. About Speech and the understanding of things, with Angels

1. ) I have spoken with spirits around me about the speech of angels and their understanding of matters which the spirits are extremely interested in knowing about. Having been taught by experience, I said that the angels' speech cannot be perceptible to us, because it contains countless elements almost simultaneously, which would have to be unfolded extensively in a sequence and in many roundabout ways; and that it is not portrayable to us except by forms virtually beyond our grasp and my powers of description, whirling around together in gyrating motions, following the varying pattern of more inward forms. About these forms as they were shown to me, I have spoken elsewhere [191a-92a].

2. ) Meanwhile, there is a form of speech, or of very many speaking at the same time, which, when it falls into the lower orb, does not appear the same, but sometimes quite different, for the most part turning into pictorial symbolism like that of the Prophets, which consequently more inwardly contains heavenly, and therefore hidden, matters. There is a reactive understanding with the angels, that is, arising from these symbolic displays, which, when exhibited through our mental images, are transformed into heavenly subjects that angels can understand, so that the earthly paradise can pass over into the heavenly one.

3. ) It was also shown to me how angels, from facts of nature alone properly joined together, have understood a series of very lofty, heavenly matters. Yet this cannot happen with the angels except through the mercy of God the Messiah. 1747, the 21st of August (old calendar).

4. ) Such gyrating motions I have sometimes been able, by the Divine mercy of God the Messiah, to feel come over me vividly, and I was able to gather therefrom that myriads of such more inward mental images could compose one material one, we may call it, 1 in which such a countless number of elements are contained that a person in the world could never believe it, much less comprehend it. In every more inward mental image, in its turn, [are contained countless elements], but in an incalculably greater degree of perfection.

Now this form, and consequently the influence of God the Messiah through angels, and from them through spirits, upon human minds, becomes disturbed when a person lives in a contrary order, especially when one wants to go into the mysteries of religion by means of knowledge that has been called up by the love of self and the world, and therefore by cupidity. From this there arises a confusion or disturbance like that among the Babylonians building the tower, when their lips were confounded [Gen. 11:4-9], 2

5. ) affirming the absence of God the Messiah from humanity, even though all things are nevertheless ordered in such a way that they may be restored to a semblance of some heavenly form. This can take place in countlessly many ways. For no matter what abstruseness, entanglement, jumble, comes to exist in the lower realm or world, it can nevertheless be brought back to order by God the Messiah; otherwise mankind would perish and not be able to understand anything. On this account there is still a spiritual influence enabling them to exercise their reason. The door from the heavenly Paradise to the earthly one is said to be opened when one is acting from what is higher, that is, according to order - which also is "to turn the face toward." About the Babylonic confounding [of the lip] and the opening of the heavenly Paradise.

Footnotes:

1. The meaning is not that "material" is the wrong term, but it is being used in the sense of "an idea with man in the material world." -tr.

2. This paragraph and the first half of the next is emphasized in the original by the word "Obs." written four times in the margin.

  
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Thanks to the Academy of the New Church, and Bryn Athyn College, for the permission to use this translation.