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synty 23

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1 Ja Saaran elinaika oli sata ja seitsemänkolmattakymmentä ajastaikaa: ne olivat Saaran ikävuodet.

2 Ja Saara kuoli Arban kaupungissa, joka (on) Hebron Kanaanin maalla. Niin tuli Abraham murehtimaan Saaraa ja itkemään häntä.

3 Sitte nousi hän kuolleensa tyköä; ja puhui Hetin lapsille sanoen:

4 Minä olen muukalainen ja kuitenkin asuvainen teidän tykönänne, antakaat minulle perintöhauta teidän tykönänne, haudatakseni minun kuolleeni, joka on minun edessäni.

5 Niin vastasivat Hetin lapset Abrahamia, sanoen hänelle:

6 Kuule meitä, rakas herra: sinä olet Jumalan ruhtinas meidän seassamme, hautaa sinun kuollees meidän parhaisiin hautoihimme: ei yksikään meistä sinua kiellä hautaamasta kuolluttas hänen hautaansa.

7 Niin Abraham nousi ja kumarsi itsensä maan kansan edessä, (nimittäin) Hetin lasten edessä.

8 Ja hän puhui heille, sanoen: jos teidän mielenne on, että minä hautaan minun kuolleeni, joka minun edessäni on; niin kuulkaat minua, ja rukoilkaat minun edestäni Ephronia Zoarin poikaa.

9 Että hän antais minulle Makpelan luolan, joka hänellä on, vainionsa perällä: täyden hinnan edestä antakaan sen minulle teidän keskellänne perintöhaudaksi.

10 Sillä Ephron asui Hetin lasten seassa. Niin vastasi Ephron Hetiläinen Abrahamia, Hetin poikain kuullen, kaikkein sisälle ja ulos käyväisten hänen kaupunkinsa portista, sanoen:

11 Ei, minun herrani, vaan kuule minua; vainion minä annan sinulle, ja luolan, joka siinä on, annan minä sinulle: minun kansani lasten nähden annan minä sen sinulle; hautaa kuollees.

12 Abraham kumarsi maan kansan edessä.

13 Ja puhui Ephronille maan kansan kuullen, sanoen: jos sinä minua kuulet: minä annan rahan vainion edestä, ota se minulta, ja minä hautaan minun kuolleeni siihen.

14 Ephron vastasi Abrahamia, sanoen hänelle:

15 Minun herrani, kuule minua: maa maksaa neljäsataa sikliä hopiaa; vaan mitä se on minun ja sinun välilläs? hautaa sinun kuollees.

16 Abraham kuuli Ephronia, ja punnitsi hänelle rahan, jonka hän nimittänyt oli Hetin lasten kuullen: neljäsataa sikliä hopiaa, käypää rahaa.

17 Ja niin vahvistettiin Ephronin vainio, joka Makpelassa on Mamren kohdalla, sekä pelto että luola joka siinä on, ja kaikki puut siinä vainiossa, jotka ympäri kaikissa sen rajoissa ovat.

18 (Kaikki ne tulivat) Abrahamille omaisuudeksi Hetin lasten nähden: kaikkein (nähden), jotka sisällekävivät hänen kaupunkinsa portista.

19 Ja sitte hautasi Abraham emäntänsä Saaran siihen luolaan, joka oli Makpelan vainiossa Mamren kohdalla; se on Hebron Kanaanin maalla:

20 Niin vahvistettiin siis vainio ja luola, joka siinä oli, Abrahamille perintöhaudaksi, Hetin lapsilta.

   


SWORD version by Tero Favorin (tero at favorin dot com)

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Arcana Coelestia # 2917

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2917. 'I will bury my dead from before me' means that He would emerge and rise up out of the night prevailing among them. This is clear from the meaning of 'burying' as rising again, dealt with immediately above in 2916, and from the meaning of 'one who is dead' as a state when shadow or night, which is the lack of knowledge, has fallen, also dealt with above in 2908, 2912, from which the Lord emerges and rises again with man when He is acknowledged. Previously He is enveloped in night because He does not appear. He rises again with every person who is being regenerated.

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

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Arcana Coelestia # 2916

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2916. That 'give me possession of a grave among you' means that they were able to be regenerated is clear from the meaning of 'a grave'. In the internal sense of the Word 'a grave' means life, which is heaven, and in the contrary sense death, which is hell. The reason it means life or heaven is that angels, who possess the internal sense of the Word, have no other concept of a grave, because they have no other concept of death. Consequently instead of a grave they perceive nothing else than the continuation of life, and so resurrection. For man rises again as to the spirit and is buried as to the body, see 1854. Now because 'burial' means resurrection, it also means regeneration, since regeneration is the primary resurrection of man, for when regenerated he dies as regards his former self and rises again as regards the new. It is through regeneration that from being a dead man he becomes a living man, and it is from this that the meaning of 'a grave' is derived in the internal sense. When the idea of a grave presents itself the idea of regeneration comes to mind with angels, as is also evident from what has been told about young children in 2299.

[2] The reason 'a grave' in the contrary sense means death or hell is that the evil do not rise again to life but to death. When therefore the evil are referred to and a grave is mentioned, no other idea comes to mind with angels than that of hell; and this also is the reason why hell in the Word is called the grave.

[3] That 'a grave' means resurrection and also regeneration is evident in Ezekiel,

Therefore prophesy and say to them, Thus says the Lord Jehovih, Behold, I will open your graves, and cause you to come up out of your graves, O My people, and I will bring you to the land of Israel, and you will know that I am Jehovah when I open your graves and cause you to come up out of your graves, O My people. And I will put My spirit within you and you will live, and I will place you on your own land. Ezekiel 37:12-14.

Here the prophet refers to bones that have been made to live, and in the internal sense to regeneration. Its being a reference to regeneration is quite evident, for it is said, 'when I will put My spirit within you and you will live, and I will place you on your own land'. Here 'graves' stands for the former self and its evils and falsities, while the opening of them and the coming up from them means being regenerated. Thus the idea of a grave perishes and so to speak is discarded when the idea of regeneration or new life enters instead.

[4] The description in Matthew 27:52-53, about graves being opened and many bodies of the saints who were sleeping being raised, coming out of their graves after the Lord's resurrection, entering the holy city, and appearing to many, embodies the same idea, that is to say, a resurrection taking place as a result of the Lord's resurrection, and in the inner sense every individual resurrection. The Lord's raising of Lazarus from the dead, John 11:1 and following verses, likewise embodies the re-establishment of the Church from among gentiles; for all the miracles that the Lord performed, because they were Divine, embodied the states of His Church. Something similar is also meant by the man who, having been cast into the grave of Elisha, came to life again on touching the prophet's bones, 2 Kings 13:20-21, for Elisha represented the Lord.

[5] As 'burial' meant resurrection in general and every individual resurrection, the ancients were therefore particularly concerned about their burials and about the places where they were to be buried - Abraham, for example, was to be buried in Hebron in the land of Canaan, as were Isaac and Jacob, together with their wives, Genesis 47:29-31; 49:30-32; Joseph's bones were to be carried up out of Egypt into the land of Canaan, Genesis 50:25; Exodus 13:19; Joshua 24:32; David and subsequent kings were to be buried in Zion, 1 Kings 2:10; 11:43; 14:31; 15:8, 24; 22:50; 2 Kings 8:24; 12:21; 14:20; 15:7, 38; 16:20, the reason being that the land of Canaan and also Zion represented and meant the Lord's kingdom, while burial meant resurrection. But it may become clear to anyone that the place itself does not contribute anything towards resurrection.

[6] The truth that 'burial' means resurrection to life is also evident from other representatives, such as the requirement that the wicked were not to be lamented or buried, but cast aside, Jeremiah 8:2; 14:16; 16:4, 6; 20:6; 22:19; 25:33; 2 Kings 9:10; Revelation 11:9; and that the wicked buried already were to be cast out of their graves, Jeremiah 8:1-2; 2 Kings 23:16-18. But as regards 'a grave' in the contrary sense meaning death or hell, see Isaiah 14:19-21; Ezekiel 32:21-23, 25-26; Psalms 88:4-5, 10-11; Numbers 19:16, 18-19.

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