The Bible

 

Ô-sê 10

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1 Y-sơ-ra-ên là một cây nho tươi tốt, sanh ra trái nó. Trái nó càng sai tríu chừng nào, nó càng thêm nhiều bàn thờ ra chừng nấy; đất nó càng tốt bao nhiêu, những trụ tượng nó lập lên càng đẹp bấy nhiêu.

2 Lòng chúng nó phân hai; bây giờ chúng nó sẽ bị định tội. Ðức Chúa Trời sẽ đánh bàn thờ chúng nó; sẽ phá trụ tượng chúng nó.

3 Chắc bây giờ chúng nó sẽ nói rằng: Chúng ta không có vua, vì Chúng ta không kính sợ Ðức Giê-hô-va; và vua, vua có thể làm gì cho Chúng ta?

4 Chúng nó nói những lời hư không và thề dối khi lập giao ước; cho nên sự đoán phạt sẽ nứt mầm, nhạy như có độc mọc lên trong luống cày nơi ruộng.

5 Dân cư Sa-ma-ri sẽ kinh hãi vì những bò con của Bết-a-ven; dân sự sẽ vì nó than khóc, các thầy tế lễ nó vốn ưa thích nó cũng vậy, vì sự vinh hiển nó đã biến mất khỏi nó.

6 Nó cũng được bị dời qua A-si-ri lảm lễ vật dâng cho vua Gia-rép. Bấy giờ Ép-ra-im sẽ mang xấu hổ, Y-sơ-ra-ên sẽ hổ thẹn về mưu kế mình.

7 Về phần Sa-ma-ri, vua nó bị trừ đi giống như bọt trên mặt nước.

8 Các nơi cao của A-ven, tức là tội lỗi của Y-sơ-ra-ên, sẽ bị phá hủy; gai gốc và chà chuôm sẽ mọc trên các bàn thờ chúng nó. Bấy giờ người ta sẽ nói cùng các núi rằng: Hãy bao bọc lấy chúng ta! và nói với các đồi rằng: Hãy đổ xuống trên chúng ta!

9 Hỡi Y-sơ-ra-ên, từ ngày Ghi-bê-a, ngươi đã phạm tội rồi! Chúng nó đều đứng đó; sự tranh chiến nghịch cùng con cái sự gian ác chẳng theo kịp chúng nó trong Ghi-bê-a.

10 Ta sẽ sửa phạt chúng nó khi ta muốn, và các dân sẽ nhóm lại nghịch cùng chúng nó, khi chúng nó bị buộc vào hai tội mình.

11 Ép-ra-im như bò cái tơ khéo dạy, ưa thích đạp lúa; nhưng ta đã qua trên cổ béo tốt nó. Ta sẽ đặt người cỡi trên Ép-ra-im; Giu-đa sẽ cày, và Gia-cốp sẽ đập vỡ cục đất.

12 Hãy gieo cho mình trong sự công bình, hãy gặt theo sự nhơn từ; hãy vỡ đất mới! Vì là kỳ tìm kiếm Ðức Giê-hô-va, cho đến chừng nào Ngài đến và sa mưa công bình trên các ngươi.

13 Các ngươi đã cày sự gian ác, gặt sự gian ác, ăn trái của sự nói dối; vì ngươi đã nhờ cậy trong đường lối ngươi, trong muôn vàn người mạnh bạo của ngươi.

14 Vậy nên sự rối loạn sẽ sanh ra trong dân ngươi: người ta sẽ hủy phá mọi đồn lũy của ngươi, như San-man đã hủy phá Bết-Aït-bên, trong ngày có trận đánh mà mẹ bị nghiền nát với các con cái.

15 Bê-tên cũng sẽ làm cho các ngươi như vậy, vì sự gian ác lớn lắm của các ngươi. Vua Y-sơ-ra-ên sẽ bị diệt cả trong khi hừng sáng.

   

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Apocalypse Explained #623

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623. Verse 11. And he said to me, Thou must again prophesy upon peoples and nations and tongues and many kings.

11. "And he said to me, Thou must again prophesy," signifies Divine command to still teach the Word n. 624; "upon peoples and nations and tongues and many kings," signifies with all who are in truths and goods in respect to life, and at the same time in goods and truths in respect to doctrine, consequently to teach the Word in respect to the goods of life and the truths of doctrine n. 625.

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Foundation for their permission to use this translation.

From Swedenborg's Works

 

Apocalypse Explained #625

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625. Upon peoples, and nations, and tongues, and many kings, signifies with all who are in truths and goods in respect to life, and at the same time in goods and truths in respect to doctrine according to each one's religion, consequently to teach the Word in respect to the goods of life and the truths of doctrine. This is evident from the signification of "peoples and nations," as being those who are of the spiritual church and those who are of the celestial church; those who are of the spiritual church are called in the Word "peoples," but those who are of the celestial church are called "nations." Those who are of the spiritual church, who are called "peoples," are they who are in truths in respect to doctrine and life; and they who are of the celestial church, who are called "nations," are they who are in the good of love to the Lord, and thus in good in respect to life. (But on this signification of "peoples and nations" in the Word, see above, n. 175, 331.) Also from the signification of "tongues and many kings," as being those who are in goods and truths in respect to life and doctrine, but according to each one's religion; for "tongues" signify the goods of truth and confession of these according to each one's religion (See above, n. 330, 455); and "kings" signify truths that are from good, and "many kings" various truths from good, but according to each one's religion. (That "kings" signify truths from good, see above, n. 31, 553)

[2] "Many kings" signify various truths that are from good, because the peoples and nations outside of the church were for the most part in falsities as to doctrine, and yet because they lived a life of love to God and of charity towards the neighbor the falsities of their religion were accepted by the Lord as truths, for the reason that there was inwardly in their falsities the good of love, and the good of love gives its quality to every truth, and in this case it gives its quality to the falsity that such accept as truth; and moreover, the good that lies concealed within causes such when they come into the other life to perceive genuine truths and accept them. Again there are truths that are only appearances of truth, like those truths that are in the sense of the letter of the Word; these appearances of truth are accepted by the Lord as genuine truths when there is in them the good of love to the Lord and the good of charity towards the neighbor; and with such in the other life the good that lies hidden within dissipates the appearances, and makes bare the spiritual truths which are genuine truths. From this it can be seen what is here meant by "many kings." (But respecting the falsities in which there is good that exist among the Gentiles, see in The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem 21.)

[3] From what has been said and shown in this and the preceding article, it can be seen that "he must again prophesy upon peoples, and nations, and tongues, and many kings" signifies that the Word must still be taught to those who are in goods and truths in respect to doctrine, and thence are in life; but as it is said "upon peoples, nations, tongues, and kings," these words signify also that the Word must be taught in respect to the goods of life and the truths of doctrine, for these two are what the Word in its whole complex contains.

[4] This is the sense of these words abstracted from persons, which is the truly spiritual sense. The sense of the letter in most places has regard to persons, and mentions persons, but the truly spiritual sense is without any regard whatever to persons. For angels who are in the spiritual sense of the Word have no idea of person or of place in any particular of what they think or speak, for the idea of person or of place limits and confines the thoughts, and thereby renders them natural; it is otherwise when the idea is abstracted from persons and places. It is from this that angels have intelligence and wisdom, and that thence angelic intelligence and wisdom are ineffable. While man lives in the world he is in natural thought, and natural thought derives its ideas from persons, places, times, and material things, and if these should be taken away from man, his thought which comes to perception would perish, for without these he comprehends nothing; but angelic thought is apart from ideas drawn from persons, places, times, and material things; and this is why angelic thought and speech are ineffable, and to man also incomprehensible.

[5] And yet a man who has lived in the world a life of love to the Lord and of charity towards the neighbor comes, after his departure from the world, into that ineffable intelligence and wisdom; for his interior mind, which is the very mind of his spirit, is then opened, and then the man, when he becomes an angel, thinks and speaks from that mind, and consequently thinks and speaks such things as he could not utter or comprehend in the world. Such a spiritual mind, which is like the angelic mind, every man has; but because man while in the world speaks, sees, hears, and feels, by means of a material body, that mind lies hidden within the natural mind, or lives above it; and what man thinks in that mind he is wholly ignorant of; for the thought of that mind then flows into the natural mind, and there limits, bounds, and so presents itself as to be seen and perceived. So long as man is in the body in the world, he does not know that he has within him this mind, and in it possesses angelic intelligence and wisdom, because, as has been said, all things that abide there flow into the natural mind, and thus become natural according to correspondences. This has been said to make known what the Word is in the spiritual sense, which sense is wholly abstracted from persons and places, that is, from such things as derive their quality from the material things of the body and the world.

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Foundation for their permission to use this translation.