Ang Bibliya

 

Esodo 34

pag-aaral

   

1 E IL Signore disse a Mosè: Tagliati due tavole di pietra, simili alle primiere; e io scriverò in su quelle tavole la parole ch’erano in su le primiere che tu spezzasti.

2 E sii presto domattina, e sali la mattina in sul monte di Sinai, e presentati quivi davanti a me, in su la sommità del monte.

3 E non salga teco alcuno, nè anche si vegga alcuno in tutto il monte, nè anche pasturi alcun bestiame, minuto o grosso, dirincontro a questo monte.

4 Mosè adunque tagliò due tavole di pietra, simili alle primiere; e si levò la mattina seguente a buon’ora, e salì in sul monte di Sinai; come il Signore gli avea comandato; e prese in mano quelle due tavole di pietra.

5 E il Signore scese nella nuvola, e si fermò quivi con lui, e gridò: Il Nome del Signore.

6 Il Signore adunque passò davanti a lui, e gridò: Il Signore, il Signore, l’Iddio pietoso e misericordioso, lento all’ira, e grande in benignità e verità;

7 che osserva la benignità in mille generazioni; che perdona l’iniquità, il misfatto, e il peccato: il quale altresì non assolve punto il colpevole; anzi fa punizione della iniquità de’ padri sopra i figliuoli, e sopra i figliuoli de’ figliuoli, fino alla terza e alla quarta generazione.

8 E Mosè subito s’inchinò a terra, e adorò.

9 E disse: Deh! Signore; se io ho trovata grazia davanti agli occhi tuoi, venga ora il Signore nel mezzo di noi; questo popolo è veramente un popolo di collo duro; ma tu, perdonaci le nostre iniquità e il nostro peccato, e possedici.

10 E il Signore disse: Ecco, io fo patto nel cospetto di tutto il tuo popolo; io farò maraviglie, quali non furono mai create in tutta la terra, nè fra alcuna nazione; e tutto il popolo, nel mezzo del quale tu sei, vedrà l’opera del Signore; conciossiachè quello che io farò teco sia cosa tremenda.

11 Osserva quello che oggi ti comando. Ecco, io scaccerò d’innanzi a te gli Amorrei, e i Cananei, e gl’Hittei e i Ferezei, e gli Hivvei, e i Gebusei.

12 Guardati che tu non faccia lega con gli abitanti del paese, nel qual tu entrerai; che talora essi non ti sieno in laccio nel mezzo di te.

13 Anzi disfate i loro altari, e spezzate le loro statue, e tagliate i lor boschi.

14 Perciocchè tu non hai da adorare altro dio; conciossiachè il nome del Signore sia: Il Geloso; egli è un Dio geloso.

15 Guardati dunque che tu non faccia lega con gli abitanti di quel paese; che talora, quando essi fornicheranno dietro a’ lor dii, e sacrificheranno loro, non ti chiamino, e tu non mangi de’ lor sacrificii.

16 E non prenda delle lor figliuole per li tuoi figliuoli; e ch’esse, fornicando dietro a’ lor dii, non facciano parimente fornicare i tuoi figliuoli dietro agl’iddii loro.

17 Non farti alcun dio di getto.

18 Osserva la festa solenne degli Azzimi; mangia Azzimi sette giorni, come io ti ho comandato, nel tempo ordinato del mese di Abib; conciossiachè nel mese di Abib tu sii uscito di Egitto.

19 Tutto quello che apre la matrice è mio; e di tutto il tuo bestiame sarà fatta offerta per ricordanza, cioè: dei primi parti del tuo minuto e del tuo grosso bestiame.

20 Ma riscatta con un agnello, o con un capretto, il primogenito dell’asino; e se pur tu non lo riscatti, fiaccagli il collo; riscatta ogni primogenito d’infra i tuoi figliuoli; e non comparisca alcuno davanti a me vuoto.

21 Lavora sei giorni, e riposati al settimo giorno; riposati eziandio nel tempo dell’arare e del mietere.

22 Celebra ancora la festa solenne delle Settimane, ch’è la festa delle primizie della mietitura del grano; e parimente la festa solenne della ricolta de’ frutti, all’uscita dell’anno.

23 Tre volte l’anno comparisca ogni maschio tuo davanti alla faccia del Signore, dell’Eterno Signore Iddio d’Israele.

24 Perciocchè io scaccerò le genti d’innanzi a te, e allargherò i tuoi confini; e quando tu salirai per comparir davanti alla faccia del Signore Iddio tuo, tre volte l’anno, niuno sarà mosso da cupidità per assalire il tuo paese.

25 Scannando il mio sacrificio, non ispandere il sangue di esso con pan lievitato; e non sia il sacrificio della festa della Pasqua guardato la notte infino alla mattina.

26 Porta nella Casa del Signore Iddio tuo le primizie de’ primi frutti della tua terra. Non cuocere il capretto nel latte di sua madre.

27 Poi il Signore disse a Mosè: Scrivi queste parole, perciocchè su queste parole io ho fatto patto teco e con Israele.

28 E Mosè stette quivi col Signore quaranta giorni e quaranta notti; senza mangiar pane, nè bere acqua; e il Signore scrisse sopra quelle tavole le parole del patto, le dieci parole.

29 Ora, quando Mosè scese dal monte di Sinai, avendo le due Tavole della Testimonianza in mano, mentre scendeva dal monte, egli non sapeva che la pelle del suo viso era divenuta risplendente, mentre egli parlava col Signore.

30 Ed Aaronne e tutti i figliuoli d’Israele riguardarono Mosè; ed ecco, la pelle del suo viso risplendeva; onde temettero di accostarsi a lui.

31 Ma Mosè il chiamò; ed Aaronne e tutti i principali ritornarono a lui alla raunanza; e Mosè parlò loro.

32 E, dopo questo, tutti i figliuoli d’Israele si accostarono, ed egli comandò loro tutte le cose che il Signore gli avea dette nel monte di Sinai.

33 E quando ebbe finito di parlar con loro, egli si mise un velo in sul viso.

34 E quando Mosè veniva davanti alla faccia del Signore, per parlar con lui, si toglieva il velo, finchè uscisse fuori; poi, come era uscito, diceva a’ figliuoli d’Israele ciò che gli era comandato.

35 E i figliuoli d’Israele, riguardando la faccia di Mosè, vedevano che la pelle del suo viso risplendeva. Poi egli si rimetteva il velo in sul viso, finchè entrasse a parlar col Signore.

   


To many Protestant and Evangelical Italians, the Bibles translated by Giovanni Diodati are an important part of their history. Diodati’s first Italian Bible edition was printed in 1607, and his second in 1641. He died in 1649. Throughout the 1800s two editions of Diodati’s text were printed by the British Foreign Bible Society. This is the more recent 1894 edition, translated by Claudiana.

Mula sa Mga gawa ni Swedenborg

 

Arcana Coelestia # 10686

Pag-aralan ang Sipi na ito

  
/ 10837  
  

10686. 'He did not eat bread and he did not drink water' means during which the good of love and the truth of faith do not become a person's own. This is clear from the meaning of 'bread' as the good of love, dealt with in 2165, 2177, 3464, 3478, 3735, 3813, 4211, 4217, 4735, 4976, 8410, 9545; from the meaning of 'water' as the truth of faith, dealt with in the places referred to in 10238 (in the Word 'bread' and 'water' are used in general to mean all forms of good and truth, see 9323); from the meaning of 'eating' as having good joined to one and making it one's own, dealt with in 2187, 2343, 3168, 3513(end), 3596, 4745, 5643, 8001; and from the meaning of 'drinking' as receiving truth and making it one's own, dealt with in 3069, 3089, 3168, 8562. The implications of all this are that a person does not make forms of the good of love or the truths of faith his own during temptations but after them; for, as long as temptations last the evils and falsities of evil that reside with a person are stirred up on one side, and the forms of good and the truths of good on the other. As a result of this he experiences a state of turmoil. During this state the internal level is being opened up. But after the temptations have come to an end he experiences peace and calm, and in this state the Lord introduces forms of good and truths of good onto the internal level that has now been opened up. From all this it is evident what should be understood by the good of love and truth of faith not being made a person's own as long as temptations last, meant by the statement that for forty days and forty nights Moses did not eat bread and did not drink water.

  
/ 10837  
  

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

Mula sa Mga gawa ni Swedenborg

 

Arcana Coelestia # 2187

Pag-aralan ang Sipi na ito

  
/ 10837  
  

2187. 'And they ate' means communication in this manner. This becomes clear from the meaning of 'eating' as being communicated, and also being joined together, as is also evident from the Word. The injunction that Aaron, and his sons the Levites, and also the people were to eat the consecrated elements of the sacrifices in a holy place meant nothing other than the communication, conjunction, and making one's own, as stated above in 2177, at the point where Leviticus 6:16-17, is referred to. For it was celestial and spiritual food that was meant by the consecrated elements, and thus making that food their own by eating those elements. These consecrated elements were those parts of the sacrifices which were not burned on the altar but were eaten either by the priests or by the people who brought the offering, as becomes clear from very many places where the sacrifices are the subject. The consecrated elements that were to be eaten by the priests are referred to in Exodus 29:32-33; Leviticus 6:16, 26; 7:6, 15-16, 18; 8:31; 10:12-13; Numbers 18:9-11; and those to be eaten by the people, in Leviticus 19:5-6; Deuteronomy 12:27; 27:7; and elsewhere. And that those who were unclean were not to eat of them is referred to in Leviticus 7:19-21; 22:4-7. These ritual feasts took place in a holy place near the altar, either at the gate or in the court outside the tent. And they meant nothing else than the communication, conjunction, and making of celestial goods one's own, for those feasts represented celestial food. For what celestial food is, see 56-58, 680, 681, 1480, 1695. And all those consecrated elements were called 'bread', for the meaning of which see above in 2165. Something similar was represented by Aaron and his sons eating the loaves of the presence, or the shewbread, in a holy place, Leviticus 24:9.

[2] The reason for the law given to the Nazirite that during the days of his Naziriteship he was forbidden to eat anything that is produced from the grape - from which wine is made - from pips even to skin, Numbers 6:4, is that the Nazirite represented the celestial man, and the celestial man is such as is not willing even to mention spiritual things, see Volume One, in 202, 337, 880 (end), 1647. And because 'wine' and 'the grape', and also whatever came from the grape, meant that which is spiritual, the Nazirite was therefore forbidden to eat of them, that is, to have any communication with spiritual things, to join himself to them, or to make them his own.

[3] Something similar is meant by 'eating' in Isaiah,

Everyone who thirsts, come to the waters, and he who has no money, come, buy, and eat! Come, buy wine and milk without money and without price. Why do you spend money on that which is not bread, and your labour on that which does not satisfy? Hearken diligently to Me and eat what is good, and your soul will delight itself in fatness. Isaiah 55:1-2.

And also what is said in John,

To him who conquers I will grant to eat from the tree of life which is in the middle of the Paradise of God. Revelation 2:7.

'The tree of life' is the celestial itself, and in the highest sense it is the Lord Himself since He is the source of everything celestial, that is, of all love and charity. Thus 'eating from the tree of life' is the same as feeding on the Lord; and 'feeding on the Lord' is being endowed with love and charity, thus with those things that belong to heavenly life, as the Lord Himself declares in John,

I am the living bread which came down from heaven; if anyone eats of this bread he will live for ever. He who feeds on Me will live through Me. John 6:51, 57. But they said, This is a hard saying. Jesus said however, The words that I speak to you, they are spirit and they are life. John 6:60, 63.

From this it is evident what is meant by 'eating' in the Holy Supper, Matthew 26:26-28; Mark 14:22-23; Luke 22:19-20 - having communication, being joined together, and making one's own.

[4] From this it is also plain what is meant by the Lord's statement that

Many will come from the east and from the west and will recline with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Matthew 8:11.

The Lord did not mean that they were going to feast with these three in the kingdom of God but that they were to enjoy the celestial goods meant by Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. That is to say, they were to enjoy the inmost celestial goods of love, meant by -Abraham'; also a lower type of goods, which are intermediate, as those are which belong to the rational, meant by 'Isaac'; and a still lower type of goods which are celestial-natural, such as occur in the first heaven, meant by 'Jacob'. These are the things which constitute the internal sense of these words. That such things are meant by Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, see 1893, and wherever else they are the subject. For whether one speaks of enjoying those celestial things, or whether one speaks of enjoying the Lord, whom they represent, it amounts to the same since the Lord is the source of all those things, and the Lord is their All in all.

  
/ 10837  
  

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