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เอเสเคียล 21

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1 พระวจนะของพระเยโฮวาห์มายังข้าพเจ้าว่า

2 "บุตรแห่งมนุษย์เอ๋ย จงมุ่งหน้าของเจ้าต่อสู้เยรูซาเล็ม และเทศนากล่าวโทษสถานบริสุทธิ์ทั้งหลาย จงพยากรณ์กล่าวโทษแผ่นดินอิสราเอล

3 และกล่าวแก่แผ่นดินอิสราเอลว่า พระเยโฮวาห์ตรัสดังนี้ว่า ดูเถิด เราเป็นปฏิปักษ์กับเจ้า และเราจะชักดาบของเราออกจากฝัก และเราจะขจัดทั้งคนชอบธรรมและคนชั่วออกจากเจ้าเสีย

4 ดังนั้นจงดูเถิดว่าเราจะตัดเอาทั้งคนชอบธรรมและคนชั่วออกจากเจ้าเสีย เพราะฉะนั้นดาบของเราจะออกจากฝักไปต่อสู้เนื้อหนังทั้งสิ้นจากทิศใต้ถึงทิศเหนือ

5 เพื่อเนื้อหนังทั้งสิ้นจะทราบว่าเราคือพระเยโฮวาห์ได้ชักดาบของเราออกจากฝักแล้ว และจะไม่เก็บใส่ฝักอีก

6 บุตรแห่งมนุษย์เอ๋ย เพราะฉะนั้นจงถอนหายใจ ถอนหายใจด้วยความระทมใจและความขมขื่นต่อหน้าต่อตาเขาทั้งหลาย

7 และเมื่อเขาทั้งหลายกล่าวแก่เจ้าว่า `ทำไมเจ้าถอนหายใจ' เจ้าจงกล่าวว่า `เพราะเรื่องข่าวนั้น เมื่อข่าวนั้นมาถึงหัวใจทุกดวงจะละลายและมือทั้งสิ้นจะอ่อนเปลี้ยไป และบรรดาจิตวิญญาณจะแน่นิ่งไป และหัวเข่าทุกเข่าจะอ่อนเปลี้ยดั่งน้ำ ดูเถิด ข่าวนั้นมาถึงและจะสำเร็จ' องค์พระผู้เป็นเจ้าพระเจ้าตรัสดังนี้แหละ"

8 พระวจนะของพระเยโฮวาห์มายังข้าพเจ้าอีกว่า

9 "บุตรแห่งมนุษย์เอ๋ย จงพยากรณ์และกล่าวว่า พระเยโฮวาห์ตรัสดังนี้ว่า ดาบเล่มหนึ่ง ดาบเล่มหนึ่งซึ่งเขาลับให้คม และขัดมันด้วย

10 ลับให้คมเพื่อจะเข่นฆ่า ขัดมันไว้เพื่อจะให้วาววับ เราจะร่าเริงหรือ ดาบนั้นได้ประมาททัณฑกรแห่งบุตรชายของเรา เหมือนต้นไม้ทุกอย่าง

11 เพราะฉะนั้นจึงมอบดาบให้ขัดมัน เพื่อจะถือไว้ได้ ดาบนั้นคมแล้วและขัดมัน เพื่อจะมอบไว้ในมือของผู้ฆ่า

12 บุตรแห่งมนุษย์เอ๋ย จงร้องไห้และคร่ำครวญเถิด เพราะเป็นเรื่องต่อสู้กับประชาชนของเรา และต่อสู้กับบรรดาเจ้านายของอิสราเอล ความหวาดผวาเพราะเหตุดาบนั้นจะอยู่เหนือประชาชนของเรา เพราะฉะนั้นจงตีที่โคนขาของเจ้าเถิด

13 เพราะมีการทดลอง และอะไรเล่าถ้าดาบได้ดูหมิ่นทัณฑกรนั้น ก็จะไม่มีอีก องค์พระผู้เป็นเจ้าพระเจ้าตรัสดังนี้

14 บุตรแห่งมนุษย์เอ๋ย เพราะฉะนั้นจงพยากรณ์เถิด จงตบมือและปล่อยให้ดาบลงมาสองครั้ง เออ สามครั้ง คือดาบสำหรับคนเหล่านั้นที่จะถูกฆ่า เป็นดาบของพวกผู้ยิ่งใหญ่ที่ถูกฆ่า ซึ่งได้เข้าไปในห้องส่วนตัว

15 เพื่อว่าใจของเขาจะละลาย และเพื่อซากปรักหักพังของเขาจะทวีคูณขึ้นอีก เราได้จ่อดาบนั้นไปที่ประตูเมืองทั้งหลายของเขาแล้ว เออ ทำเสียเหมือนอย่างกับฟ้าแลบ เขาขัดมันเพื่อจะเข่นฆ่า

16 รวมกันเข้ามา ไปทางขวาเรียงแถว แล้วไปทางซ้าย ไม่ว่าหน้าของเจ้ามุ่งไปทางไหน

17 เราจะตบมือของเราด้วย และเราจะระบายความโกรธของเราจนหมด เราคือพระเยโฮวาห์ได้ลั่นวาจาแล้ว"

18 พระวจนะของพระเยโฮวาห์มายังข้าพเจ้าอีกว่า

19 "บุตรแห่งมนุษย์เอ๋ย จงขีดทางไว้สองทางให้ดาบแห่งกษัตริย์บาบิโลนเข้ามา ทั้งสองทางให้ออกมาจากแผ่นดินเดียวกัน และจงทำป้ายบอกทาง จงทำไว้ที่หัวถนนที่เข้าไปหากรุง

20 ทำทางหนึ่งให้ดาบมายังรับบาห์แห่งคนอัมโมน และมายังยูดาห์ในเยรูซาเล็มเมืองที่มีกำแพง

21 เพราะว่ากษัตริย์บาบิโลนยืนอยู่ที่ทางแพร่ง อยู่ที่หัวถนนสองถนน กำหนดหาคำทำนาย ท่านเขย่าลูกธนู และปรึกษาเทราฟิม ท่านมองดูที่ตับ

22 ในมือข้างขวา ท่านมีสลากเยรูซาเล็ม เพื่อตั้งเครื่องทะลวง เพื่อจะให้อ้าปากในการฆ่า เพื่อส่งเสียงตะโกน เพื่อวางเครื่องทะลวงกำแพงเข้าที่ประตูเมือง เพื่อก่อเชิงเทินและก่อกำแพงล้อม

23 และจะเป็นเหมือนคำทำนายเท็จสำหรับคนเหล่านั้นในสายตาของเขา คือคนเหล่านั้นที่ให้สัตย์ปฏิญาณแล้ว แต่ท่านจะระลึกถึงความชั่วช้า เพื่อเขาทั้งหลายจะถูกจับเอาไป

24 เพราะฉะนั้น องค์พระผู้เป็นเจ้าพระเจ้าตรัสดังนี้ว่า เพราะว่าเจ้าได้กระทำความชั่วช้าของเจ้าให้เราระลึกได้ โดยการละเมิดของเจ้าที่เผยออก จนบาปของเจ้าปรากฏในการกระทำทั้งสิ้นของเจ้า เราได้ระลึกถึงเจ้า เจ้าจึงต้องถูกจับเอาไปด้วยมือ

25 และเจ้า โอ ผู้ชั่วที่ลามกคือเจ้านายอิสราเอลเอ๋ย ผู้ที่วันกำหนดมาถึงแล้ว คือเวลาแห่งการลงโทษความชั่วช้าครั้งสุดท้าย

26 องค์พระผู้เป็นเจ้าพระเจ้าตรัสดังนี้ว่า จงปลดผ้าโพก และถอดมงกุฎออกเสีย สิ่งต่างๆจะไม่คงอยู่อย่างที่เคยเป็น ให้ยกย่องคนที่ต่ำขึ้น และให้กดคนที่สูงลง

27 เราจะกระทำให้เป็นที่พังทลาย พังทลาย พังทลาย และจะไม่มีเลยจนกว่าผู้มีสิทธิ์อันชอบธรรมจะมาถึง และเราจะประทานให้แก่ท่านผู้นั้น

28 บุตรแห่งมนุษย์เอ๋ย และเจ้าจงพยากรณ์และกล่าวว่า องค์พระผู้เป็นเจ้าพระเจ้าตรัสดังนี้เกี่ยวกับคนอัมโมน และเกี่ยวกับเรื่องน่าตำหนิของเขาทั้งหลายว่า ดาบเล่มหนึ่ง ดาบเล่มหนึ่งถูกชักออก เขาขัดมันเพื่อการเข่นฆ่า เขาให้มันดื่มโลหิตเพราะมันวาววับ

29 ขณะเมื่อเขาเห็นนิมิตเท็จมาบอกท่าน ขณะเมื่อเขาให้คำทำนายมุสาแก่ท่าน เพื่อจะวางท่านไว้บนคอของผู้ชั่วที่ถูกฆ่า เวลากำหนดของเขามาถึงแล้ว คือเวลาแห่งการลงโทษความชั่วช้าครั้งสุดท้าย

30 เราจะให้ดาบกลับเข้าฝักอีกหรือ เราจะพิพากษาเจ้าในสถานที่ที่เจ้าถูกสร้างขึ้น ในแผ่นดินดั้งเดิมของเจ้า

31 เราจะเทความกริ้วของเราเหนือเจ้า และเราจะพ่นเจ้าด้วยไฟแห่งความพิโรธของเรา และเราจะมอบเจ้าไว้ในมือของคนเขลา ผู้มีฝีมือในการทำลาย

32 เจ้าจะเป็นฟืนไว้ใส่ไฟ โลหิตของเจ้าจะอยู่กลางแผ่นดิน จะไม่มีใครจดจำเจ้าไว้อีก เพราะเราคือพระเยโฮวาห์ได้ลั่นวาจาแล้ว"

   


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

 

Apocalypse Explained #183

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183. These things saith he that hath the seven spirits of God. That this signifies the Lord from whom come all the truths of heaven and of the church is evident from the fact that it is the Son of man who says these things, and also those which are addressed to the angels of the other churches; and the Son of man is the Lord as to the Divine Human (as may be seen above, n. 63, 151). By the seven spirits of God are meant all the truths of heaven and of the church, because the Spirit of God in the Word signifies the Divine truth proceeding from the Lord. In many passages in the Word mention is made of spirit, and this, when said of man, signifies Divine truth received in his life, thus his spiritual life; but when said of the Lord it signifies the Divine which proceeds from Him, which in general terms is called Divine truth. But because few at this day know what is meant by spirit in the Word, I desire first to show from quotations, that spirit, when said of man, signifies Divine truth received in the life, thus his spiritual life. Now as these two things, the good of love and the truth of faith, constitute the spiritual life of man, therefore, in several passages in the Word, mention is made of heart and spirit, and also of heart and soul; by heart is signified the good of love, and by spirit the truth of faith; the latter is also signified by soul, for by this term in the Word is meant man's spirit.

That by spirit, when said of man, is signified truth received in the life, is evident from the following passages.

[2] In Ezekiel:

"Make you a new heart and a new spirit; why will ye die, O house of Israel?" (18:31).

In the same:

"A new heart will I give you, and a new spirit will I give in the midst of you" (36:26).

In David:

"Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a firm spirit within me. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and contrite heart God does not despise" (Psalms 51:10, 17).

In these passages heart signifies the good of love, and spirit the truth of faith, from which man has spiritual life; for there are two things that constitute man's life, good and truth; these two when united in man constitute his spiritual life.

[3] Because heart signifies good, and spirit truth, when both are received in the life, therefore heart, in the opposite sense, signifies evil, and spirit falsity; for most expressions in the Word have also an opposite sense. Heart and spirit are used in this sense in the following passages in David:

"A generation that sets not their heart aright, and whose spirit is not steadfast with God" (Psalms 78:8).

In Ezekiel:

"Every heart shall melt, and every spirit shall faint" (21:7).

In Moses:

"Jehovah hath made heavy the spirit of the king of Heshbon, and hath hardened his heart" (Deuteronomy 2:30).

In Isaiah:

"Conceive chaff, bring forth stubble; fire shall devour your spirit" (33:11).

In Ezekiel:

"Woe unto the foolish prophets, who go away after their own spirit" (13:3).

In the same:

"That which ascendeth upon your spirit shall never come to pass" (20:32).

[4] From these considerations it is evident, that the whole of man's life is meant by heart and spirit; and because his whole life has reference to these two, namely, to good and truth, and, in the spiritual sense, to love and faith, therefore, by heart and spirit those two lives are meant. This is also why heart and spirit signify man's will and understanding, because these two faculties constitute his life; for a man has no life but in those faculties; the reason is, that the will is the receptacle of good and its love, or of evil and its love, and the understanding is the receptacle of truth and its faith, or of falsity and its faith, and, as has been said, all things in man have reference to good and truth or to evil and falsity, and, in the spiritual sense, to love and faith (see The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem 28-35). The reason why by spirit, when said of man, is signified truth or falsity, and hence his life from the one or the other is, that by spirit is properly meant the spirit which is in man, and which thinks, and this it does either from truths or from falsities. But, as said above, the two things that constitute man's life are understanding and will. The life of the understanding is to think from either truths or falsities, and the life of the will is to affect, or inflame with love, those things which the understanding thinks. These two lives of a man's spirit correspond to the two lives of his body, which are the life of the respiration of the lungs and the life of the pulse of the heart; man's spirit is united to the body by this correspondence (as may be seen above, n. 167, and in the work, Heaven and Hell 446, 447).

[5] Because of this correspondence, the spirit is so named from a term which, in the original, and in several other languages, signifies wind; therefore to expire is frequently expressed in the Word by giving up the spirit. Thus in David:

"I have taken away their spirit, he has expired" (Psalms 104:29).

In Ezekiel:

The Lord Jehovih said to the dry bones, "Behold, I bring spirit into you, that ye may live: and the Lord Jehovih said, Come from the four winds, O spirit, and breathe into these slain; and the spirit came into them, and they lived again" (37:5, 9, 10).

In the Apocalypse:

"The two witnesses were slain by the beast that came up out of the abyss, but after three days and a half the spirit of life from God entered into them, and they stood upon their feet" (11:7, 11).

In Luke:

Jesus, taking the hand of the dead maid, "cried, saying, Maid, arise; and her spirit came again, and she arose straightway" (8:54, 55).

[6] When these passages are understood it will be evident what is signified by spirit when said of man, in numerous places in the Word, from which the following only shall be adduced; as in John:

"Except anyone be born of water and of the spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God. The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh and whither it goeth; so is every one that is born of the spirit" (3:5, 8).

In the same:

The Lord breathed on the disciples, and said, "Receive ye the Holy Spirit" (20:21, 22).

In the Book of Genesis:

"Jehovah breathed into man's nostrils the breath of lives" (2:7);

besides other places.

[7] That spirit, in the spiritual sense, signifies truth, and man's life thence derived, which is intelligence, is quite clear from the following passages. In John:

"The hour cometh, and now is, when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth" (4:23).

In Daniel:

"In him was an excellent spirit of knowledge and understanding. I have heard concerning thee that the spirit of God is in thee, and that light and understanding and excellent wisdom are found in thee" (5:12, 14).

In Moses:

"Thou shalt speak unto all the wise in heart, whom I have filled with the spirit of wisdom" (Exodus 28:3).

In Luke:

John "grew, and waxed strong in spirit" (1:80).

And concerning the Lord,

Jesus "the child grew, and waxed strong in spirit, and was filled with wisdom" (2:40).

[8] When it is known what is signified by the term spirit when used in reference to man, its meaning may be known when said of Jehovah, or the Lord, to whom are attributed all the things which a man has, face, eyes, ears, arms, hands, as also heart and soul, thus also spirit, which in the Word is called the spirit of God, the spirit of Jehovah, the spirit of His nostrils, the spirit of His mouth, the spirit of truth, the spirit of holiness, and the Holy Spirit, by which is meant Divine truth proceeding from the Lord, as is evident from many passages in the Word.

The reason why Divine truth proceeding from the Lord is the spirit of God is, that all the life which men possess is therefrom, as also the heavenly life of those who receive that Divine truth in faith and life. That this is the spirit of God, the Lord himself teaches in John:

"The words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life" (6:63).

In Isaiah:

"There shall go forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse: the spirit of Jehovah shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might" (11:1, 2).

Again:

"I have put my spirit upon him: he shall bring forth judgment to the nations" (42:1).

Again:

"When [the enemy] shall come like a river, the spirit of Jehovah shall lift up a standard against him" (59:19).

Again:

"The spirit of the Lord Jehovih is upon me, therefore Jehovah hath anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor" (61:1).

And in John:

"He whom the Father hath sent, speaketh the words of God; for God hath not given the spirit by measure" (3:34);

this is said of the Lord. That the Holy Spirit is Divine truth proceeding from the Lord, is evident in John:

"I tell you the truth: it is expedient for you that I go away; for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I depart, I will send him unto you. When he, the Spirit of Truth, is come, he will guide you into all truth; for he shall not speak of himself, he shall receive of mine and shall show it unto you" (16:7, 13, 14).

[9] That the Comforter, here mentioned, is Divine truth proceeding from the Lord is quite clear; for it is said the Lord himself spoke "the truth" to them, and declared that, when He should go away, He would send the Comforter, the Spirit of Truth, who should guide them into all truth, and that He would not speak from himself but from the Lord. It is here said, he shall receive of mine, because Divine truths proceed from the Lord; and mine is said of what proceeds; for the Lord himself is Divine love, and that which proceeds from Him is Divine truth, thus is His own (see what is said in the work, Heaven and Hell 139, 140, and the preceding numbers, and in The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem 307). That to go forth and to proceed is meant by being sent and sending, may be seen in Arcana Coelestia 2397, 4710, 6831, 10561; in like manner here by I will send Him unto you.

[10] That the Comforter is the Holy Spirit is evident in John:

"The Comforter, the Holy Spirit, he shall teach you all things" (14:26).

In the same:

Jesus stood and cried with a loud voice: "Saying, If anyone thirst, let him come unto me and drink. He that believeth on me, as the Scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water. This spake he of the Spirit which they that believe on him should receive; for the Holy Spirit was not yet, because Jesus was not yet glorified" (7:37-39).

That the Holy Spirit is Divine truth proceeding from the Lord, which flows into man, both immediately from the Lord Himself and mediately by angels and spirits, is clear also from the above words. For the Lord declares that he who believes on Him, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water; and then it is added that He spake this concerning the Spirit which they should receive; for water, in the spiritual sense, signifies truth, and rivers of living water, Divine truth from the Lord in abundance; the same is therefore meant by the Spirit which they should receive. (That water signifies truth, and living water Divine truth, may be seen above, n. 71.) And because Divine truth proceeds from the Lord's Human glorified, and not immediately from His Divine itself, because this was glorified in itself from eternity, it is therefore here said,

"The Holy Spirit was not yet, because Jesus was not yet glorified."

(That to glorify is to make Divine, and that the Lord fully glorified His Human, that is, made it Divine by his last temptation and victory on the cross, may be seen in The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem 293-295, 300-306.)

[11] In heaven they greatly wonder that those who form the church do not know that the Holy Spirit, which is Divine truth, proceeds from the Lord's Human, and not immediately from His Divine, when, notwithstanding, the doctrine received in the whole Christian world teaches that, - "As is the Father, so also is the Son, uncreate, infinite, eternal, omnipotent, God, Lord; neither of them is first or last, nor greatest or least. Christ is God and man: God from the nature of the Father, and man from the nature of the mother; but although He is God and man, yet nevertheless there are not two, but one Christ; He is one, not by changing the Divinity into the humanity, but by the Divinity receiving to itself the humanity. He is altogether one, not by a commixing of two natures, but one person alone, because as the body and soul are one man, so God and man is one Christ." This is from the creed of Athanasius.

Now because the Lord's Divine and Human are not two, but one Person alone, and are united as the soul and body, it can be known that the Divine which is called the Holy Spirit goes forth and proceeds from His Divine by means of the Human, thus from the Divine Human; for nothing whatever can proceed from the body except out of the soul by means of the body, because all the life of the body is from its soul. And because, as is the Father so is the Son, uncreate, infinite, eternal, omnipotent, God and Lord, and neither of them is first or last, nor greatest or least, it follows that the proceeding Divine, which is called the Holy Spirit, proceeds from the Divine itself of the Lord by means of His Human, and not from another Divine which is called the Father; for the Lord teaches that He and the Father are one, and that the Father is in Him and He in the Father (concerning which, see below, n. 200). But the reason why most of those in the Christian world think otherwise in their hearts, and consequently believe otherwise, the angels have said is from the fact that they think of the Human of the Lord as separate from His Divine; which nevertheless is contrary to the doctrine that teaches that the Divine and Human of the Lord are not two persons, but one Person alone, and united as soul and body.

That this is in the doctrine of the whole Christian world was provided by the Lord, because it is the essential of the church, and the essential of the salvation of all. But that they have divided the Divine and Human of the Lord into two natures, and have said that the Lord is God from the nature of the Father, and man from the nature of the mother, was because they did not know that when the Lord fully glorified His Human He put off the Human taken from the mother, and put on that from the Father (according to what is shown in The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem 295). That this distinction was also made in a certain council, on account of the Pope, by those who were then present, in order that he might be acknowledged as the Lord's vicar, may be seen in Arcana Coelestia 4738.

[12] That the Spirit of God is Divine truth, and hence spiritual life to the man who receives it, is further evident from the following passages. In Micah:

"I am full of power with the Spirit of Jehovah, and of judgment" (3:8).

In Isaiah:

"I will pour out waters upon him that is thirsty, and rivulets upon the dry ground, and my spirit upon thy seed" (44:3).

Again:

"In that day shall Jehovah of hosts be for a spirit of judgment to him that sitteth in judgment, and for strength to them" (28:5, 6).

In Ezekiel:

"That ye may know that I will put my spirit in you that ye may live" (37:14).

In Joel:

"I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh; and also upon the men-servants, and upon the handmaids" (2:28).

In the Apocalypse:

"The testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy" (19:10).

Because the Spirit of God signifies Divine truth, it is therefore called

the Spirit of the mouth of Jehovah (Psalms 33:6)

"the spirit of his lips" (Isaiah 11:4);

"the breath of God," and "the spirit of his nostrils" (Lamentations 4:20; Psalms 18:15; Job. 4:9).

In Matthew:

John said, "I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance; but he that cometh after me shall baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire" (3:11).

To baptize, in the spiritual sense, signifies to regenerate; the Holy Spirit is Divine truth, and fire is Divine good. (That to baptize signifies to regenerate, may be see above, n. 71; and that fire is the good of love, n. 68.)

[13] From these considerations it is now evident what is meant by the words of the Lord to His disciples:

"Going . . . baptize into the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit" (28:19).

Here by the Father is meant the Divine itself, by the Son, the Divine Human, and by the Holy Spirit, the proceeding Divine which is Divine truth: thus one Divine, and yet a trinity. That this is the case, the Lord teaches in John:

"From these things ye know" the Father, "and have seen him. He that seeth me seeth the Father. I am in the Father, and the Father in me" (14:7, 9, 10).

[14] Because the proceeding Divine, which is Divine truth, flows into man both immediately and mediately by angels and spirits, it is therefore believed that the Holy Spirit is a third person, distinct from the two called Father and Son; but I can assert that no one in heaven knows any other Holy Divine Spirit but the Divine truth proceeding from the Lord. And because the Divine truth is communicated to men also mediately by means of angels, it is therefore said of Jehovah in David,

"Jehovah God maketh his angels spirits" (Psalms 104:1, 4).

These things are now adduced to show that by the seven spirits are signified all the truths of heaven and the church from the Lord. That the seven spirits denote all the truths of heaven and the church, becomes more evident from these passages in the Apocalypse:

"The seven lamps of fire burning before the throne are the seven spirits of God" (4:5).

And moreover,

"In the midst of the elders stood a lamb, having seven horns, and seven eyes, which are the seven spirits of God sent forth into all the earth" (5:6).

That the spirits there mentioned do not mean spirits, is clear from the fact that the lamps, and the eyes of the Lamb are called spirits; for lamps signify Divine truths and eyes the understanding of truth; and when these are said of the Lord, His Divine wisdom and intelligence are meant (concerning which see above, n. 152).

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

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Apocalypse Explained #98

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98. (Verse 2) I know thy works, and thy labour, and thy endurance. That this signifies all things that they will, think and do, thus all things of love and faith in the spiritual and in the natural man, is evident from the signification of works, as being the things of the will and love (concerning which more will be said in what follows); and from the signification of labour, as being the things of the thought and faith (concerning which also more will be said in what follows); and from the signification of endurance, as being the things thence effected, or which they do. But that such things are signified by these words can hardly be comprehended unless it be known that all things done by man flow from the interiors of his mind, and that the mind is all in all things which man performs, and that the body is only a subservient agent which exhibits in a visible form what the mind wills and thinks. This is why by those external things which are here called works, labour and endurance, are signified to will, to think, and thence to do, or, what is the same, to love, believe, and thence to show forth in act. But still these things cannot be comprehended unless it be also known that man possesses two faculties, which are called will and understanding, and that these two faculties are, under one expression, called the mind; also that man has an internal and an external, the internal being in the light of the spiritual world, and the external in the light of the natural world. (These are treated of in The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem, concerning the will and the understanding, n. 28-35; and concerning the internal and the external man, n. 36-52.) These things being understood, it can be known that, by works, in the spiritual sense, is meant whatever a man wills and loves, by labour whatever a man thinks or believes, and by endurance whatever he thence brings forth into act.

[2] But let us pass by these things, as being perhaps too little known, and consequently too obscure, to be clearly perceived, and attend to this only, that by works, in the spiritual sense, are meant all things of the will or love of man, and this because, in what follows, where the seven churches are treated of, it is first said of each, "I know thy works:" as

"Unto the angel of the church of the Smyraeans write; these things, saith the first and the last, I know thy works, and affliction, and poverty" (verses 8, 9);

"Unto the angel of the church in Pergamos write, These things said he that hath the sharp two-edged sword, I know thy works, and where thou dwellest" (vers. 12, 13);

"Unto the angel of the church in Thyatira write, These things saith the Son of God, I know thy works and charity" (vers. 18, 19);

"Unto the angel of the church in Sardis write, These things saith he that hath the seven spirits of God, I know thy works, that thou art said to live" (3:1);

"Unto the angel of the church in Philadelphia write, These things saith he that is holy, he that is true, I know thy works" (verses 7, 8); and

"Unto the angel of the church of the Laodiceans write; These things saith the Amen, the faithful and true witness, I know thy works" (vers. 14, 15).

[3] Because it was there said of each, "I know thy works," it is clear that by works are signified in general all things of the church; and because all things of the church have reference to love and faith, therefore these are meant by works in the spiritual sense. The reason why such things are meant by works in the spiritual sense, is, that every work, or every deed, or every act, which is apparently done from the body, is not done from the body, but by the body from the will and thought of man; for not one particle of the body is moved, but from the will and thought. This is why works signify those things, but not the things which are manifested in the external form. That this is the case, is known to every one who reflects. Who is there that is wise that regards a man from his deeds alone, and not from his will? If he wills well, he loves his deeds; but if he wills evil, he does not love his deeds: the latter he also sees and explains according to the intention of his will. He who is spiritual attends still less to the deeds, and explores the will. The reason is, as has been said, that deeds are nothing in themselves, but they derive their character entirely from the will; for deeds are the will in act. It is said the will, but, in the spiritual sense, is meant the love, because a man wills what he loves, and what he loves that he wills. The will of man is only a receptacle of his love (as may be seen from what is said and shown in The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem, concerning that faculty of man, n.28-35; and in the work, Heaven and Hell 358, 470-484).

[4] Because works or deeds in the Word signify specifically those things that proceed from a man's love or will, therefore it is often said in the Word that man shall be judged and rewarded according to his works, where works such as they are in the external form are not meant, but in the internal, as in the following passages:

"The Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his angels, and then he shall reward every man according to his works" (Matthew 16:27)

"Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord, Yea, saith the spirit, that they may rest from their labours; their works do follow them" (Apoc. 14:13).

"I will give unto every one of you according to his works" (Apoc. 2:23).

"I saw the dead, small and great, standing before God; and the books were opened: and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works. The sea gave up the dead that were in it; and death and hell delivered up the dead that were in them; and they were judged every man according to their works" (Apoc. 20:12, 13).

"Behold I come, and my reward is with me, to give every man according to his works" (Apoc. 22:12).

And in Jeremiah:

"I will recompense them, according to their works, and according to the doing (factum) of their hands" (25:14).

O Jehovah, "whose eyes are open upon all the ways of men, to give to every one according to his ways and according to the fruit of his works" (32:19).

"I will punish them for their ways, and reward them for their works" (Hosea 4:9).

"According to our ways and according to our works, so Jehovah hath dealt with us" (Zechariah 1:6).

When the Lord foretells concerning the Last Judgment, He makes mention only of works, and declares that those who have done good works shall enter into life eternal, and those who have done evil works into condemnation (Matthew 25:32-46).

[5] That works signify the things of love and faith, the Lord also shows in these words:

"They said unto Jesus, What shall we do, that we may work the works of God? He answered, This is the work of God, that ye believe on him whom" the Father "hath sent" (John 6:28, 29).

And in another place:

"The night shall come when no man can work" (John 9:4).

Night signifies the last time of the church, when there is no faith, because no charity. (That night signifies time see Arcana Coelestia 2353, 6000.) The reason why works are so often mentioned, is, that the sense of the letter of the Word consists only of things external, which are in nature, and are seen by the eyes in order that the spiritual sense may be in each of the expressions, as the soul is in the body; for otherwise the Word would not be a means of communication with the angels, but would be like a house without a foundation (see what was said above, n. 8, 16). This is why the angels, because they are spiritual, do not understand works, when works are named, but the things from which works proceed, which are, as was said above, the will or love, and thence the thought belonging to faith. (But this circumstance may be seen more clearly set forth in the work, Heaven and Hell 470-483, where it is shown that a man after death is such as his life was in the world.) The reason why by labour in the spiritual sense is meant everything that a man thinks, is, that to labour spiritually is to think; and the reason why endurance signifies every thing that a man does is, that to endure in this case is to be assiduous, and to remove the obstacles which are in the natural man, which continually rise up and cause hindrance.

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