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เอมัส 9

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1 ข้าพเจ้าเห็นองค์พระผู้เป็นเจ้าประทับยืนอยู่ข้างแท่นบูชา และพระองค์ตรัสว่า "จงตีที่หัวเสาเพื่อให้ธรณีประตูหวั่นไหว และจงหักมันเสียให้เป็นชิ้นๆเหนือศีรษะของประชาชนทั้งหมด คนที่ยังเหลืออยู่เราจะสังหารเสียด้วยดาบ จะไม่มีผู้ใดหนีไปได้เลย จะไม่รอดพ้นไปได้สักคนเดียว

2 แม้ว่าเขาจะขุดไปถึงนรก มือของเราจะจับเขามาจากที่นั่น ถ้าเขาจะปีนไปฟ้าสวรรค์ เราจะนำเขาลงมาจากที่นั่น

3 แม้ว่าเขาจะซ่อนอยู่ที่ยอดเขาคารเมล เราจะหาเขาที่นั่นแล้วจับเขามา แม้ว่าเขาจะไปซ่อนอยู่ที่ก้นทะเลให้พ้นตาเรา เราจะบัญชางูที่นั่น และมันจะกัดเขา

4 แม้ว่าเขาจะตกไปเป็นเชลยต่อหน้าศัตรูของเขาทั้งหลาย เราจะบัญชาดาบที่นั่น และดาบจะฆ่าเขาเสีย เราจะจ้องมองดูเขาอยู่เป็นการมองร้าย ไม่ใช่มองดี"

5 องค์พระผู้เป็นเจ้าพระเจ้าจอมโยธา พระองค์ผู้ทรงแตะต้องแผ่นดิน และแผ่นดินก็ละลายไป และบรรดาที่อาศัยอยู่ในนั้นก็ไว้ทุกข์ และแผ่นดินนั้นทั้งหมดก็เอ่อขึ้นมาอย่างแม่น้ำ และยุบลงอีกเหมือนแม่น้ำแห่งอียิปต์

6 ผู้ทรงสร้างห้องชั้นบนไว้ในสวรรค์ และตั้งฟ้าครอบไว้ที่พื้นโลก ผู้ทรงเรียกน้ำทะเลมาแล้วราดน้ำนั้นบนพื้นโลก พระนามของพระองค์คือ พระเยโฮวาห์

7 พระเยโฮวาห์ตรัสว่า "โอ คนอิสราเอลเอ๋ย แก่เราเจ้าไม่เป็นเหมือนคนเอธิโอเปียดอกหรือ เรามิได้พาอิสราเอลขึ้นมาจากแผ่นดินอียิปต์หรือ และพาคนฟีลิสเตียมาจากคัฟโทร์ และพาคนซีเรียมาจากคีร์หรือ

8 ดูเถิด พระเนตรขององค์พระผู้เป็นเจ้าพระเจ้าจับอยู่ที่ราชอาณาจักรอันบาปหนา และเราจะทำลายมันเสียจากพื้นโลก เว้นแต่เราจะไม่ทำลายวงศ์วานยาโคบให้สิ้นเสียทีเดียว" พระเยโฮวาห์ตรัสดังนี้แหละ

9 "เพราะว่า ดูเถิด เราจะบัญชาและจะสั่นวงศ์วานอิสราเอลท่ามกลางประชาชาติทั้งหลายอย่างกับสั่นตะแกรง แต่ไม่มีเม็ดในสักเม็ดเดียวที่ตกลงถึงดิน

10 คนบาปทั้งปวงในประชาชนของเราจะตายด้วยดาบ คือผู้ที่กล่าวว่า `ความชั่วจะตามไม่ทันและจะไม่พบเรา'

11 ในวันนั้น เราจะยกพลับพลาของดาวิดซึ่งพังลงแล้วนั้นตั้งขึ้นใหม่ และซ่อมช่องชำรุดต่างๆเสีย และจะยกที่สลักหักพังขึ้น และจะสร้างเสียใหม่อย่างในสมัยโบราณกาล

12 เพื่อเขาจะได้ยึดกรรมสิทธิ์คนที่เหลืออยู่ของเอโดม และประชาชาติทั้งสิ้นซึ่งเขาเรียกด้วยนามของเรา" พระเยโฮวาห์ผู้ทรงกระทำเช่นนี้ตรัสดังนี้แหละ

13 พระเยโฮวาห์ตรัสว่า "ดูเถิด วันเวลาก็มาถึง เมื่อคนที่ไถจะทันคนที่เกี่ยว และคนที่ย่ำผลองุ่นจะทันคนที่หว่านเมล็ดองุ่น จะมีน้ำองุ่นหยดจากภูเขา เนินเขาทั้งสิ้นจะละลายไป

14 เราจะให้อิสราเอลประชาชนของเรากลับสู่สภาพเดิม เขาจะสร้างเมืองที่พังนั้นขึ้นใหม่และเข้าอาศัยอยู่ เขาจะปลูกสวนองุ่นและดื่มน้ำองุ่นของสวนนั้น เขาจะทำสวนผลไม้และรับประทานผลของมัน

15 เราจะปลูกเขาไว้ในแผ่นดินของเขา เขาจะไม่ถูกถอนออกไปจากแผ่นดินซึ่งเราได้มอบให้แก่เขาอีกเลย" พระเยโฮวาห์พระเจ้าของเจ้าตรัสดังนี้แหละ

   


Many thanks to Philip Pope for the permission to use his 2003 translation of the English King James Version Bible into Thai. Here's a link to the mission's website: www.thaipope.org

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Arcana Coelestia #8540

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8540. 'And an omer is the tenth part of an ephah' means the amount of good then. This is clear from the meaning of 'an omer', in that it was the tenth part of an ephah, as the sufficient amount, for 'ten' means that which is complete, 3107, so that 'the tenth part' means the sufficient amount, 8468; and from the meaning of 'an ephah' as good. The reason why 'an ephah' means good is that the ephah and the homer were used to measure dry commodities that served as food, such as wheat, barley, or fine flour; and things that serve as food mean forms of good. And the bath and the hin were used to measure liquid commodities that served as drink; therefore these latter measures mean truths. The container takes its meaning from it contents.

[2] The fact that 'an ephah' was used as a measure is evident from the following places: In Moses,

You shall have a just ephah, and a just hin. Leviticus 19:36.

In Ezekiel,

You shall have just balances, and a just ephah, and a just bath. Ezekiel 45:10.

In the same prophet, The ephah and the bath shall be of one measure, for the ephah is a tenth of a homer. Ezekiel 44:11.

A like use of it as a measure occurs in Amos 8:5.

[3] The meaning of 'an ephah' as good is evident from places where the minchah is referred to; the amount of flour or fine flour for it is measured by the ephah, for example at Leviticus 5:11; Numbers 5:15; 28:5; Ezekiel 45:24; 26:7, 11. And 'minchah' too means good, 4581. That meaning is also evident from the following in Zechariah,

The angel talking to me said to me, Lift your eyes now; what is this going out? And I said, What is this? He said, This is an ephah going out. He said further, This is their eye in all the earth. And behold, a talent of lead was lifted up, and at the same time a woman 1 sitting in the middle of the ephah. Then he said, She is wickedness. 2 And he threw her down into the middle of the ephah, and threw a stone of lead 3 over the mouth of it. And I raised my eyes and saw, and behold, two women going out, and the wind was in their wings. Each had two wings like the wings of a stork, and they lifted up the ephah between earth and heaven. And I said to the angel talking to me, Where are they taking away the ephah? And he said to me, To build her a house in the land of Shinar; and she will be prepared and will remain there on her seat. Zechariah 5:5-11.

[4] No one can ever know what all this means except from the internal sense. He will never know unless he knows from that sense what 'an ephah' means, and what 'the woman in the middle of it', 'the stone of lead over the mouth of the ephah', and also 'Shinar' mean. Once these particular meanings have been brought to the surface it is plain that the profanation existing in the Church at that time is meant. For 'an ephah' means good; 'the woman' means wickedness or evil, as it is explicitly stated there; and 'a stone of lead' means falsity arising from evil which shuts it away, 'a stone' being outward truth, and therefore in the contrary sense falsity, 643, 1298, 3720, 6426, and 'lead' evil, 8298. So it is that the woman in the middle of the ephah, over the mouth of which a stone of lead was placed, means evil shut up in good by falsity, which is the same thing as profanation. For profanation is evil joined to good, 6348. The two women lifting up the ephah between earth and heaven are Churches, 252, 253, by which the profanation was banished. 'Shinar', to which the woman in the ephah was taken away, is external worship that has profanity within it, 1183, 1292

Footnotes:

1. literally, this woman

2. literally, evil (noun, not adjective)

3. i. e. a hard cover made of lead

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

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Arcana Coelestia #1798

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1798. That 'Abram said, See, to me You have not given seed' means that there was no internal dimension of the Church, [which is love and faith,] is clear from the meaning of 'seed' as love and faith, dealt with already in 255, 256, 1025, and in what follows below from the meaning of 'an heir'. The fact that love and faith deriving from love constitute the internal dimension of the Church has been stated and shown frequently already. No other kind of faith that constitutes the internal dimension of the Church is meant than the faith which is a product of love or charity, that is, which originates in love or charity.

[2] In a general sense faith embraces everything that is taught by the Church; but doctrinal teachings separated from love or charity do not in any way constitute the internal dimension of the Church, for such teachings are no more than knowledge which is present in the memory and which also exists with the worst of people, even with those in hell. But doctrinal teachings which originate in charity, that is, which are a product of charity, do constitute the internal dimension of the Church, for this dimension is essentially its life. The life itself constitutes the internal aspect of all worship, and so too do all doctrinal teachings that flow from the life that belongs to charity. It is these teachings when they comprise faith that are meant here, and it is faith such as this that constitutes the internal dimension of the Church, as may become clear from the single consideration that anyone who is leading a charitable life has an awareness of all things of faith.

[3] Just examine, if you care to do so, any doctrinal teachings, so that you may see what they are and what they are like. Do they not all have regard to charity, and so to faith that derives from charity? Take simply the Ten Commandments, the first of which is that you should worship the Lord God. Anyone who possesses the life of love or charity worships the Lord God, for it is in this that the life within him consists. Another commandment says that you should keep the Sabbath. Anyone in whom the life of love, that is, in whom charity, is present keeps the Sabbath holy since nothing delights him more than worshipping the Lord and declaring His glory day by day. The commandment that you should not kill has regard entirely to charity. Anyone who loves his neighbour as himself shudders at doing him any injury whatever, and even more at killing him. Likewise with the commandment that you should not steal, for the person who possesses the life of charity would rather give from what is his own to his neighbour than take away anything from him. Equally the commandment that you should not commit adultery. A man in whom the life of charity is present is minded rather to protect his neighbour's wife lest anyone should do such great harm to her, and regards adultery as a crime committed against conscience, such as destroys conjugial love and the responsibilities that go with it. Coveting things that belong to the neighbour is also contrary to the mind of those in whom the life of charity is present, for the essence of charity is to will good to others from oneself and what is one's own, thus they in no way covet what belongs to another.

[4] These Commandments, included among the Ten, are more external matters of doctrine concerning faith, which are not simply retained as knowledge in the memory of him in whom charity and the life of charity are present, but are in his heart. They are also inscribed upon him because they are grounded in his charity and so in his very life, in addition to other things of a dogmatic nature that are inscribed upon him which in a similar way he knows from charity alone. For he lives in accordance with a conscience for that which is right. Anything right or true which he is unable to understand and examine in this fashion he nevertheless believes in simplicity - that is, in simplicity of heart - to be right or true because the Lord has so said. Nor is anything wrong with such belief, even if that which is believed is not in itself true, only an appearance of truth.

[5] People may believe for example that the Lord can be angry, punish, tempt, and the like. Also, they may believe that in the Holy Supper the bread and wine have some spiritual meaning, or that flesh and blood are present in some way or other which they are able to explain. But whether they express the one or the other of these views about the Holy Supper, it makes no difference provided that two things are characteristic of these persons: Few people in fact give the matter any thought at all, and if any do give it any thought it makes no difference which view is held provided, a) It is done from a simple heart because it is what they have been taught, and b) They are leading charitable lives. When they hear that the bread and wine mean in the internal sense the Lord's love towards the whole human race, and the things that go with that love, and man's reciprocated love to the Lord and towards the neighbour, they believe it instantly and rejoice that it really is so. This is never the case with those who possess doctrine yet lack charity. They dispute everything and condemn anyone who does not speak - though they say it is to believe - as they do. From these considerations it may become clear to anyone that love to the Lord and charity towards the neighbour constitute the internal dimension of the Church.

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