A Bíblia

 

2 Mózes 21

Estude

   

1 Ezek pedig azok a rendeletek, a melyeket eleikbe kell terjesztened:

2 Ha héber szolgát vásárolsz, hat esztendeig szolgáljon, a hetedikben pedig szabaduljon fel ingyen.

3 Ha egyedûl jött, egyedûl menjen el; ha feleséges ember, menjen el vele a felesége is.

4 Ha az õ ura adott néki feleséget, és [ez] fiakat vagy leányokat szûlt néki: az asszony, gyermekeivel együtt legyen az õ uráé; õ pedig egyedûl menjen el.

5 De ha a szolga azt mondaná: Szeretem az én uramat, az én feleségemet és fiaimat, nem akarok felszabadulni:

6 Akkor vigye õt az õ ura a bírák elé, és állítsa az ajtóhoz vagy az ajtófélhez, és az õ ura fúrja által az õ fülét árral; és szolgálja õt mindörökké.

7 És ha valaki az õ leányát szolgálóul adja el, ne úgy menjen el, mint a szolgák mennek.

8 Ha nem tetszik az õ urának, hogy eljegyezze õt magának, akkor váltassa ki; arra, hogy idegen népnek eladja, nincs hatalma, mivel hûtelen volt hozzá.

9 Ha pedig a fiának jegyzi el õt: a leányok törvénye szerint cselekedjék vele.

10 Ha mást vesz magának: [ennek] ételét, ruházatát és házasságbeli igazát alább ne szállítsa.

11 Ha ezt a hármat nem cselekszi vele: akkor menjen az el ingyen, fizetés nélkûl.

12 A ki úgy megver valakit, hogy meghal, halállal lakoljon.

13 De ha nem leselkedett, hanem Isten ejtette kezébe: úgy helyet rendelek néked, a hova meneküljön.

14 Ha pedig valaki szándékosan tör felebarátja ellen, hogy azt orvúl megölje, oltáromtól is elvidd azt a halálra.

15 A ki megveri az õ atyját vagy anyját, halállal lakoljon.

16 A ki embert lop, és eladja azt, vagy kezében kapják, halállal lakoljon.

17 A ki szidalmazza az õ atyját vagy anyját, halállal lakoljon.

18 És ha férfiak összevesznek, és megüti valaki az õ felebarátját kõvel vagy öklével, és nem hal meg, hanem ágyba esik:

19 Ha felkél, és mankóján kinn jár: ne legyen büntetve az, a ki megütötte; csupán fekvéséért fizessen és gyógyíttassa meg.

20 Ha pedig valaki úgy üti meg szolgáját vagy szolgálóját bottal, hogy az meghal keze alatt, büntettessék meg.

21 De ha egy vagy két nap életben marad, ne büntettessék meg, mert pénze [ára] az.

22 Ha férfiak veszekednek és meglöknek valamely terhes asszonyt, úgy hogy idõ elõtt szûl, de [egyéb] veszedelem nem történik: bírságot fizessen a szerint, a mint az asszony férje azt reá kiveti, de bírák elõtt fizessen.

23 De ha veszedelem történik: akkor életért életet adj.

24 Szemet szemért, fogat fogért, kezet kézért, lábat lábért;

25 Égetést égetésért, sebet sebért, kéket kékért.

26 Ha valaki az õ szolgájának szemét, vagy szolgálójának szemét úgy üti meg, hogy elpusztul, bocsássa azt szabadon az õ szeméért.

27 Ha pedig szolgájának fogát, vagy szolgálójának fogát üti ki, bocsássa azt szabadon az õ fogáért.

28 Ha férfit vagy asszonyt öklel meg egy ökör, úgy hogy meghal: kõvel köveztessék meg az ökör, és húsát meg ne egyék; de az ökörnek ura ártatlan.

29 De ha az ökör azelõtt is öklelõs volt, és annak urát megintették, és még sem õrizte azt, és férfit vagy asszonyt ölt meg: az ökör köveztessék meg, és az ura is halállal lakoljon.

30 Ha pénzváltságot vetnek reá, fizessen lelke váltságáért annyit, a mennyit reá kivetnek.

31 Akár fiút ökleljen meg, akár leányt ökleljen meg: e szerint a rendelet szerint kell cselekedni.

32 Ha szolgát öklel meg az ökör vagy szolgálót: adassék azok urának harmincz ezüst siklus, az ökör pedig köveztessék meg.

33 Ha pedig valaki vermet nyit meg, vagy ha valaki vermet ás, és nem fedi azt be, és ökör vagy szamár esik bele:

34 A verem ura fizessen; pénzül térítse meg azok urának, a hulla pedig legyen az övé.

35 És ha valakinek ökre megdöfi az õ felebarátja ökrét, úgy hogy az elpusztul: adják el az eleven ökröt, és az árát osszák meg, és a hullát is osszák el.

36 Vagy ha tudták, hogy az ökör már azelõtt öklelõs volt, és nem õrizte azt annak ura: fizessen ökröt az ökörért, a hulla pedig az övé legyen.

   

Das Obras de Swedenborg

 

Arcana Coelestia # 8988

Estudar Esta Passagem

  
/ 10837  
  

8988. '[His] master shall bring him to God' means the state he then enters in keeping with Divine order. This is clear from the meaning of 'bringing to God', when the subject is those who are imbued with truths and cannot be imbued with good, as causing them to enter a state in keeping with Divine order; for 'bringing to' means entering, and 'God' means Divine order, which is dealt with below. The fact that these things are meant is evident from the details contained in the rest of this verse. These describe the state of those imbued with truths and not with complementary good, that is to say, a state of everlasting obedience. For those living in this condition are in servitude compared with those imbued with good complementing truths. For being governed by good the latter's actions spring from affection; and those who act from affection do so from the will, thus from themselves since whatever forms part of a person's will is part of his true self; for indeed the essence (esse) of a person's life is his will. But those whose actions spring from obedience act not from their own will, but from their master's, thus not from themselves, but from another; therefore in comparison they are in servitude. Actions that spring from truths and not from good spring solely from the understanding, for truths have connection with the understanding and forms of good with the will; and actions that spring from the understanding and not from the will spring from that which stands outside and serves. The understanding has been given to a person in order that he may receive truths and introduce them into his will to become forms of good; for when truths become part of the will they are called forms of good.

[2] The condition however of one who serves the Lord by doing according to His commandments, and by being obedient in that kind of way, is not that of a slave; rather, it is that of one who is free. For perfect freedom consists for a person in being led by the Lord, 892, 905, 2870, 2872. The Lord breathes the good into the person's will from which his actions spring; and although that good comes from the Lord, the person nevertheless has the feeling that his actions are from himself, that is, he does them in freedom. This freedom exists with all who abide in the Lord; and coupled with it there is indescribable happiness.

[3] The reason why 'God' here means Divine order is that in the Word the name 'God' is used where truth is referred to, and 'Jehovah' where good is referred to, 2769, 2807, 2822, 3921 (end), 4402, 7010, 7268, 8867. Therefore Divine Truth emanating from the Lord's Divine Good is meant in the highest sense by 'God', and His Divine Good from which Divine Truth emanates is meant by 'Jehovah'. The reason for this is that Divine Good is Essential Being (Esse), and Divine Truth is the Coming-into-Being (Existere) from it, since what emanates from something comes into being from it. The situation with good and truth in heaven or among angels is similar, and that in the Church among men is similar. Good there is the essential being, and truth is the coming-into-being from it. Or what amounts to the same thing love to the Lord and love towards the neighbour is the essential being of heaven and the Church, while faith is the coming-into-being from it. All this makes plain why it is that 'God' can also mean Divine order; for Divine Truth emanating from the Lord is what constitutes order in heaven, so completely that it is order itself. For more about Divine Truth's being order, see 1728, 1919, 7995, 8700.

Therefore when man or angel receives Divine Truth from the Lord within good, there resides with him that order which exists in the heavens. As a consequence he is a heaven or kingdom of the Lord in particular; he is such in the measure that he is imbued with good from truths, and after this in the measure that he is endowed with truths from good. And - what is an arcanum - angels themselves appear in heaven in a human form that accords exactly with the truths present with them within good, together with beauty and brilliance which accord with the character of the good from truths. The souls of members of the Church present a similar appearance in heaven. The Divine Truth itself emanating from the Lord brings this about, as may be recognized from what has been shown at the ends of a number of chapters regarding heaven as the Grand Man, and its correspondence with individual aspects of a human being.

[4] This arcanum is what the following words are used to mean in John, in the Book of Revelation,

He measured the wall of the holy Jerusalem, a hundred and forty-four cubits, which is the measure of a man (homo), that is, of an angel. Revelation 21:17.

Will anyone ever understand these words if he does not know what the holy Jerusalem, its wall, measure, the number 144, and so 'a man, that is, an angel' all mean? By the new or holy Jerusalem is meant the Lord's New Church, which is going to take the place of the Christian Church existing at the present time, 2117; by 'the wall' is meant the truths of faith which will defend that Church, 6419; by 'measuring' and 'the measure' is meant its state in respect of truth, 3104; by the number 144 is meant much the same as by 12, since 144 is the number that is the product of 12 multiplied by itself, and by these numbers all truths in their entirety are meant, see 7973. These meanings make plain what is meant by 'the measure of a man, that is, of an angel', namely actual truth emanating from the Lord in the form it assumes, which is that of a man-angel in heaven, as stated above. All this reveals the arcanum which the words quoted above embody; it reveals that they describe the truths of that Church which is going to take the place of the Christian Church existing at the present time.

[5] The fact that they are truths from good is described in the very next verse, in these words,

The construction of its wall was jasper, but the city was pure gold, like pure glass. Revelation 21:18.

'Jasper' means truth such as that Church's will be, for truths are meant by 'stones' generally, 1298, 3720, 6426, and truths that come from the Lord by 'precious stones', 643; and 'gold' means the good of love and wisdom, 113, 1551, 1552, 5658. Would anyone ever discern that such meanings are embodied in those words? Yet who can fail to see from them that countless arcana lie concealed in the Word, which are not at all made apparent to anyone except by means of the internal sense, and that this sense, like a key, is the means of opening up God's truths as they exist in heaven, and therefore heaven and the Lord Himself, who is the All in all of the Word in its inmost sense?

  
/ 10837  
  

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

Das Obras de Swedenborg

 

Arcana Coelestia # 1551

Estudar Esta Passagem

  
/ 10837  
  

1551. That 'silver' means truths is clear from the meaning of 'silver' as truth. The most ancient people compared the goods and truths present in man to metals. Innermost or celestial goods which flow from love to the Lord they compared to gold, truths deriving from these to silver. Goods of a lower or natural kind however they compared to bronze, and truths of a lower kind to iron. Nor did they just compare them; they also called them such. This was the origin of periods of time being likened to those same metals and being called the golden, silver, bronze, and iron ages, for these followed in that order one after another. The golden age was the time of the Most Ancient Church, which was celestial man. The silver age was the time of the Ancient Church, which was spiritual man. The bronze age was the time of the Church that followed, and the iron age came after that. Similar things were also meant by the statue which Nebuchadnezzar saw in a dream, whose head was of fine gold, breast and arms of silver, belly and thighs of bronze, and shins of iron, Daniel 2:32-33. That periods of the Church were to follow one another in that order, and actually did so, is clear in that very chapter of the same prophet.

[2] That 'silver' in the internal sense of the Word wherever it is mentioned means truth, or in the contrary sense falsity, is clear from the following places: In Isaiah,

Instead of bronze I will bring gold, and instead of iron I will bring silver, and instead of wood, bronze, and instead of stones, iron. And I will make peace your assessment, and righteousness your tax-collectors. Isaiah 60:17.

Here it is evident what each metal means. The subject is the Lord's Coming, His kingdom, and the celestial Church. 'Instead of bronze, gold' is celestial good in place of natural good; 'instead of iron, silver' is spiritual truth in place of natural truth; 'instead of wood, bronze' is natural good in place of bodily good; 'instead of stone, iron' is natural truth in place of truth acquired through the senses. In the same prophet,

Ho, everyone who thirsts, come to the water, and he who has no money, 1 come, buy and eat! Isaiah 55:1.

'He who has no money' 1 is the person who does not know the truth but who nevertheless possesses the good that stems from charity, as is the case with many people inside the Church, and with gentiles outside it.

[3] In the same prophet,

The islands will wait for Me, the ships of Tarshish at their head, to bring your sons from afar, their silver and their gold with them, to the name of Jehovah your God, and to the Holy One of Israel. Isaiah 60:9.

This refers specifically to a new Church, or a Church among gentiles, and in general to the Lord's kingdom. 'Ships from Tarshish' stands for cognitions, 'silver' for truths, and 'gold' for goods, which are those things they 'will bring to the name of Jehovah'. In Ezekiel,

For your adornment you took vessels made of My gold and of My silver, which I had given you, and you made for yourselves figures of the male. Ezekiel 16:17.

Here 'gold' stands for cognitions of celestial things, 'silver' of spiritual things. In the same prophet,

You were adorned with gold and silver, and your raiment was fine linen and silk, and embroidered cloth. Ezekiel 16:13.

This refers to Jerusalem, by which the Lord's Church is meant, whose adornment is being described in this manner. In the same prophet,

Behold, you who are wise, there is no secret they have hidden from you; by your wisdom and by your intelligence you have acquired riches for yourself, and you have acquired gold and silver in your treasuries. Ezekiel 28:3-4.

Here, in what is said in reference to Tyre, 'gold' is plainly identified with the riches of wisdom, and 'silver' with the riches of intelligence.

[4] In Joel,

You have taken My silver and My gold, and My good and desirable treasures you have carried into your temples. Joel 3:5.

This refers to Tyre, Sidon, and Philistia, which mean cognitions, and these are 'the silver and the gold they took into their temples'. In Haggai,

The elect of all nations will come, and I will fill this house with glory. Mine is the silver, and Mine is the gold. The glory of this latter house will be greater than that of the former. Haggai 2:7-9.

This refers to the Lord's Church to which 'gold and silver' have reference. In Malachi,

He will sit as a refiner and purifier of silver, and He will purify the sons of Levi. Malachi 3:3.

This refers to the Coming of the Lord. In David,

The words of Jehovah are pure words, silver refined in an earthen crucible, poured seven times. Psalms 12:6.

'Silver purified seven times' stands for Divine truth. At the time of their exodus out of Egypt the children of Israel were commanded that every woman should ask of her neighbour, and of her who sojourned in her house, vessels of silver and vessels of gold and garments, and that they should put them on their sons and on their daughters, and so despoil the Egyptians, Exodus 3:22; 11:2-3; 12:35-36. Anyone may see from this that the children of Israel would never have been ordered to steal and despoil the Egyptians of those possessions in that way if these did not represent some arcana. But what those arcana are may become clear from the meaning of 'silver and gold, garments, and Egypt', and from the fact that what these possessions represented is similar to the words here 'rich in the silver and gold from Egypt', used in reference to Abram.

[5] Just as 'silver' means truth so in a contrary sense it means falsity, for people under the influence of falsity imagine falsity to be the truth, as is also clear in the Prophets. In Moses,

You shall not covet the silver and the gold of the nations, nor take it for yourself, lest you be ensnared by it, for it is an abomination to Jehovah your God. You shall utterly detest it. Deuteronomy 7:25-26.

'The gold of the nations' stands for evils, and 'their silver' for falsities. In the same author,

You shall not make gods of silver to be with Me, nor shall you make for yourselves gods of gold. Exodus 20:23.

In the internal sense these words mean nothing other than falsities and evil desires, falsities being meant by 'gods of silver', and evil desires by 'gods of gold'. In Isaiah,

On that day everyone will spurn his idols of silver, and his idols of gold, which your hands have made for you - a sin. Isaiah 31:7.

'Idols of silver and idols of gold' stands for similar things that are false and evil 'Which your hands have made' stands for what is a product of the proprium. In Jeremiah,

They are foolish and stupid; that wood is a way of learning vanities! Beaten silver is brought from Tarshish, and gold from Uphaz, the work of the smith and of the hands of the moulder. Their clothing is violet and purple These are all the work of the wise. Jeremiah 10:8-9.

Here 'silver' and 'gold' quite clearly stand for similar things that are false and evil.

Notas de rodapé:

1. or silver

  
/ 10837  
  

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