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Ezekiel 47

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1 Kế đó, người dẫn ta đem ta về cửa nhà; và nầy, có những nước văng ra từ dưới ngạch cửa, về phía đông; vì mặt trước nhà ngó về phía đông, và những nước ấy xuống từ dưới bên hữu nhà, về phía nam bàn thờ.

2 Người đem ta ra bởi đường cổng phía bắc, và dẫn ta đi vòng quanh bởi đường phía ngoài, cho đến cổng ngoài, tức là bởi đường cổng hướng đông; và nầy, có những nước chảy về bên hữu.

3 Người dẫn ta sấn lên phía đông, tay cầm một cái dây, lấy dây đo được một ngàn cu-đê; người khiến ta lội qua nước, nước vừa đến mắt cá ta.

4 Người lại đo một ngàn, và khiến ta lội qua nước, nước vừa đến đầu gối ta. Người lại đo một ngàn, và khiến ta lội qua nước, nước lên đến hông ta.

5 Người lại đo một ngàn nữa; bấy giờ là một con sông, ta không lội qua được; vì nước đã lên, phải đạp bơi; ấy là một con sông mà người ta không có thể lội qua.

6 Bấy giờ người bảo ta rằng: Hỡi con người, có thấy không? ồi người đem ta trở lại nơi bờ sông.

7 Khi đến đó rồi, nầy, bên nầy và bên kia bờ sông có cây rất nhiều.

8 Người bảo ta rằng: Những nước nầy chảy thẳng đến phương đông, xuống nơi đồng bằng, và chảy về biển; và khi đã chảy về biển, nước biển sự trở nên ngọt.

9 Khắp nơi nào sông ấy chảy đến, thì mọi vật hay sống, tức là vật động trong nước, đều sẽ được sống; và ở đó sẽ có loài cá rất nhiều. nước ấy đã đến đó thì nước biển trở nên ngọt, và khắp nơi nào sông ấy chảy đến thì mọi vật sống ở đó.

10 Những kẻ đánh cá sẽ đứng trên bờ sông ấy; từ Eân-Ghê-đi cho đến Eân-Ê-la-im sẽ làm một nơi để giăng lưới; những có trong đó cỏ đủ thứ và rất nhiều, cũng như ở trong biển lớn.

11 Nhưng những chằm những bưng của biển ấy sẽ không trở nên ngọt, mà bỏ làm đất muối.

12 Gần bên sông ấy, trên bề nầy và bờ kia, sẽ sanh đủ thứ cây có trái ăn được, nó không hề héo rụng, và trái nó không hề dứt. Mỗi tháng nó sẽ sanh ra trái mới, vì những nước tưới nó chảy ra từ nơi thánh. Trái nó dùng để ăn, nó dùng để làm thuốc.

13 Chúa Giê-hô-va phán như vầy: Nầy là giới hạn của cõi đất mà các ngươi sẽ chia cho mười hai chi phái Y-sơ-ra-ên làm sản nghiệp. Giô-sép sẽ có hai phần.

14 Các ngươi sẽ được nó mà chia nhau làm sản nghiệp; vì ta đã thề sẽ ban xứ nầy cho tổ phụ các ngươi, thì các ngươi sẽ được đất ấy làm kỷ phần.

15 Nầy là giới hạn của đất; về phía bắc, từ biển lớn, theo con đường Hết-lôn cho đến đường sang Xê-đát,

16 Ha-mát, Bê-rốt và Síp-ra-im, giữa bờ cõi Ða-mách và bờ cõi Ha-mát, Hát-se-Hát-thi-côn trên bờ cõi Ha-vơ-ran.

17 Ấy vậy bờ cõi chạy dài từ biển đến Há-sa-Ê-nôn, trên bờ cõi Ða-mách về phái bắc lấy Ha-mát làm giới hạn; ấy sẽ là phía bắc.

18 Phía đông chạy dài giữa Ha-vơ-ran, Ða-mách, Ga-la-át và đất Y-sơ-ra-ên, dọc theo sông Giô-đanh. Các ngươi khá đo phần đất từ bờ cõi phía bắc cho đến biển phía đông; ấy sẽ là phía đông.

19 Phía nam chạy từ Tha-ma cho đến sông Mê-ri-ba, tại Ca-đe, đến khe Ê-díp-tô, cho đến biển lớn; ấy là Phía nam.

20 Phía tây sẽ là biển lớn, từ bờ cõi phía nam cho đến lối vào Ha-mát; ấy là phía tây.

21 Các ngươi khá chia đất nầy cho nhau, theo chi phái Y-sơ-ra-ên;

22 các ngươi khá bắt thăm mà chia cho các ngươi và cho những người ngoại trú ngụ giữa các ngươi và sanh con cái giữa các ngươi. Các ngươi sẽ coi chúng nó như là kẻ bổn tộc giữa con cái Y-sơ-ra-ên.

23 Người ngoại sẽ trú ngụ trong chi phái nào, thì các ngươi sẽ lấy sản nghiệp ở đó mà cấp cho nó, Chúa Giê-hô-va phán vậy.

   

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Arcana Coelestia #994

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994. That 'every creeping thing that is living' means all pleasures containing good, which is living, is clear from the meaning of 'creeping thing' dealt with already. The fact that 'creeping thing' here means all clean beasts and birds is clear to everyone, for it is said that they are 'given for food'. In their proper sense 'creeping things' comprise those which were the basest of all, mentioned by name in Leviticus 11:27, 29-30, and were unclean. But in a broad sense, as here, they are the living creatures that have been given for food. They are called 'creeping things' here however because they mean pleasures. In the Word, human affections are meant by 'clean beasts', as has been stated. But because no one perceives those affections except within his pleasures, so much so that he refers to them as pleasures, they are for this reason called 'creeping things' here.

[2] There are two kinds of pleasures - those of the will and those of the understanding. In general there are the pleasures of possessing land and wealth; the pleasures of positions of honour and those of service to the state; the pleasures of conjugial love, and of love of infants and children; the pleasures of friendship and of social intercourse; the pleasures of reading, writing, having knowledge, being wise, and many others. Then there are the pleasures of the senses; such as that of hearing, which in general is the pleasure taken in the sweet sounds of music and song; that of seeing, which in general is the pleasure taken in various things of beauty, which are manifold; that of smell, which is that taken in pleasant odours; that of taste, which is that taken in all the delicious and nourishing qualities of food and drink; and that of touch, which arises from further joyous sensations. Because these different kinds of pleasures are experienced in the body, they are called pleasures of the body. But no pleasure ever arises in the body unless it arises from, and is sustained by, some interior affection. Nor does any interior affection ever do so unless this in turn stems from a still more interior affection in which use and the end in view reside.

[3] These areas of affection, which are interior and properly ordered, starting with the inmost, are not discerned by anyone during his lifetime. The majority scarcely know that they even exist, let alone that they are the source of pleasures. Yet nothing can possibly arise in things that are external except from those that are interior and in order. Pleasures are simply ultimate effects. Interior things are not evident during life in the body except to those who reflect. It is in the next life that they first manifest themselves, and indeed in the order in which the Lord raises them up towards heaven. Interior affections together with their joys manifest themselves in the world of spirits; still more interior ones together with their delights do so in the heaven of angelic spirits; and yet more interior ones together with all their happiness in the heaven of angels. For there are three heavens, one interior to and more perfect and happy than the next, see 459, 684. Such is the order in which these things unfold and enable themselves to be perceived in the next life. But so long as someone is living in the body, because his ideas and thought are constantly of bodily things, those that are interior are so to speak dormant because they are immersed in bodily things. All the same, to anyone who stops to reflect it becomes clear that the nature of all pleasures is such as are the affections ranged in order within them and that those pleasures derive their entire essence and character from those affections.

[4] Since the affections ranged in order within are experienced in outermost things, that is, in the body, as pleasures, they are therefore called 'creeping things'. But these are simply bodily feelings that are the products of things within, as may become clear to anyone merely from sight and its pleasures. If interior sight does not exist, the eye cannot possibly see. The sight of the eye comes from a more interior sight, and therefore also man has the gift of sight just as much after his life in the body as during it; indeed he sees far better than when he lived in the body, though now he does not see worldly and bodily things but things that exist in the next life. People who have been blind during their lifetime have the gift of sight in the next life just as much as those who have been sharp-sighted. This also is why when someone is asleep he sees in his dreams just as clearly as when awake. With my internal sight I have been allowed to see the things that exist in the next life more clearly than I see those which exist in the world. From these considerations it is clear that external sight comes from a more interior sight, which in turn comes from sight still more interior, and so on. The same applies to each one of the other senses and to every kind of pleasure.

[5] In other parts of the Word pleasures are in a similar way called 'creeping things'. In those places too a distinction is made between creeping things that are clean and those that are not, that is, between pleasures whose joys are living or heavenly, and pleasures whose joys are dead or hellish, as in Hosea,

I will make for them a covenant on that day with the wild animals of the field, and with the birds of the air, 1 and with the creeping things of the ground. Hosea 2:18.

Here 'wild animals of the field, birds of the air, 1 and creeping things' means the kind of things already mentioned that reside with man. This becomes clear for the reason that a new Church is the subject.

In David,

Let heaven and earth praise Jehovah, the seas and everything creeping in them. Psalms 69:34.

'Seas and creeping things in them' cannot praise Jehovah but the things with man which they mean and which are alive, and so from what is living within them.

In the same author,

Praise Jehovah, wild animal and every beast, creeping thing and winged bird. Psalms 148:10.

Here the meaning is similar. That 'creeping things' is used here to mean nothing other than good affections in which pleasures originate is clear also from the fact that creeping things among them were unclean, as will be evident from the following:

[6] In the same author,

O Jehovah, the earth is full of Your possessions; this sea, great and wide, containing creeping things and innumerable; they all look to You to give them their food in due season. You givest to them - they gather it up; You openest Your hand - they are satisfied with good. Psalms 104:24, 25, 27-28.

Here in the internal sense 'seas' means spiritual things, 'creeping things' all things that live from them. Fruitfulness is described by 'giving them food in due season and being satisfied with good'.

In Ezekiel,

It will be that every living creature 2 that creeps, in every place the [two] rivers come to, will live, and there will be very many fish, for these waters go there, and become fresh, and everything will live where the river goes. Ezekiel 47:9.

This refers to the waters flowing out of the New Jerusalem. 'Waters' stands for spiritual things from a celestial origin. 'Living creature that creeps' stands for affections for good and the pleasures deriving from these affections, both those of the body and those of the senses. The fact that the latter get their life from 'the waters' which are spiritual things from a celestial origin is quite clear.

[7] Filthy pleasures as well, which have their origin in the proprium and so in its foul desires, are also called 'creeping things'. This is clear in Ezekiel,

And I went and saw, and behold, every form of creeping thing and of beast, an abomination; and all the idols of the house of Israel, portrayed on the wall round about. Ezekiel 8:10.

Here 'the form of a creeping thing' means filthy pleasures in which evil desires exist interiorly, and hatred, revenge, cruelty, and adultery within these. Such is the nature of 'creeping things', that is, the delights inherent in pleasures which originate in self-love and love of the world, that is, in the proprium. They are people's idols because they consider them delightful, love them, hold them as gods, and in so doing worship them. Because those creeping things meant filthy things such as these, in the representative Church also they were so unclean that no one was even allowed to touch them. And anyone who did merely touch them was rendered unclean, as is clear from Leviticus 5:2; 11:31-33; 22:5-6.

Footnotes:

1. literally, bird of the heavens (or the skies)

2. literally, living soul

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