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Geremia 15

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1 Ma l’Eterno mi disse: "Quand’anche Mosè e Samuele si presentassero davanti a me, l’anima mia non si piegherebbe verso questo popolo; caccialo via dalla mia presenza, e ch’ei se ne vada!

2 E se pur ti dicono: Dove ce ne andremo? tu risponderai loro: Così dice l’Eterno: Alla morte, i destinati alla morte; alla spada, i destinati alla spada; alla fame, i destinati alla fame; alla cattività, i destinati alla cattività.

3 Io manderò contro di loro quattro specie di flagelli, dice l’Eterno: la spada, per ucciderli; i cani, per trascinarli; gli uccelli del cielo e le bestie della terra, per divorarli e per distruggerli.

4 E farò sì che saranno agitati per tutti i regni della terra, a cagione di Manasse, figliuolo di Ezechia, re di Giuda, e di tutto quello ch’egli ha fatto in Gerusalemme.

5 Poiché chi avrebbe pietà di te, o Gerusalemme? Chi ti compiangerebbe? Chi s’incomoderebbe per domandarti come stai?

6 Tu m’hai respinto, dice l’Eterno; ti sei tirata indietro; perciò io stendo la mano contro di te, e ti distruggo; sono stanco di pentirmi.

7 Io ti ventolo col ventilabro alle porte del paese, privo di figli il mio popolo, e lo faccio perire, poiché non si converte dalle sue vie.

8 Le sue vedove son più numerose della rena del mare; io faccio venire contro di loro, contro la madre de’ giovani, un nemico che devasta in pien mezzodì; faccio piombar su lei, a un tratto, angoscia e terrore.

9 Colei che avea partorito sette figliuoli è languente, esala lo spirito; il suo sole tramonta mentr’è giorno ancora; è coperta di vergogna, di confusione; e il rimanente di loro io lo do in balìa della spada de’ loro nemici, dice l’Eterno".

10 Me infelice! o madre mia, poiché m’hai fatto nascere uomo di lite e di contesa per tutto il paese! Io non do né prendo in imprestito, e nondimeno tutti mi maledicono.

11 L’Eterno dice: Per certo, io ti riserbo un avvenire felice; io farò che il nemico ti rivolga supplicazioni nel tempo dell’avversità, nel tempo dell’angoscia.

12 Il ferro potrà esso spezzare il ferro del settentrione ed il rame?

13 Le tue facoltà e i tuoi tesori io li darò gratuitamente come preda, a cagione di tutti i tuoi peccati, e dentro tutti i tuoi confini.

14 E li farò passare coi tuoi nemici in un paese che non conosci; perché un fuoco s’è acceso nella mia ira, che arderà contro di voi.

15 Tu sai tutto, o Eterno; ricordati di me, visitami, e vendicami de’ miei persecutori; nella tua longanimità, non mi portar via! riconosci che per amor tuo io porto l’obbrobrio.

16 Tosto che ho trovato le tue parole, io le ho divorate; e le tue parole sono state la mia gioia, l’allegrezza del mio cuore, perché il tuo nome è invocato su me, o Eterno, Dio degli eserciti.

17 Io non mi son seduto nell’assemblea di quelli che ridono, e non mi son rallegrato, ma per cagion della tua mano mi son seduto solitario, perché tu mi riempivi d’indignazione.

18 Perché il mio dolore è desso perpetuo, e la mia piaga, incurabile, ricusa di guarire? Vuoi tu essere per me come una sorgente fallace, come un’acqua che non dura?

19 Perciò, così parla l’Eterno: Se tu torni a me, io ti ricondurrò, e tu ti terrai dinanzi a me; e se tu separi ciò ch’è prezioso da ciò ch’è vile, tu sarai come la mia bocca; ritorneranno essi a te, ma tu non tornerai a loro.

20 Io ti farò essere per questo popolo un forte muro di rame; essi combatteranno contro di te, ma non potranno vincerti, perché io sarò teco per salvarti e per liberarti, dice l’Eterno.

21 (H15-20) E ti libererò dalla mano de’ malvagi, e ti redimerò dalla mano de’ violenti.

   

Mula sa Mga gawa ni Swedenborg

 

Apocalypse Explained # 688

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688. Fell upon their faces and worshipped God, signifies the adoration of the Lord with them from a most humble heart. This is evident from the signification of "to fall upon the face," as being the deepest humiliation of heart, for it is a gesture of the body corresponding to humiliation of heart, thus a gesture that is representative of the humiliation of the whole man. Worship of God at such a time is what flows forth from such a heart, which varies according to the matter that engages the mind.

[2] To fall upon the face before God is a gesture representative of deepest humiliation, because the face is the form of man's affections and thus of the interiors that pertain to his mind and disposition, for the affections shine forth in the face as in their type, and this is why the face is called an index and image of the mind. When, therefore, a man acknowledges that all things in him are turned away from God, and are consequently damned, and that thus he is neither able nor dares to look to God, who is essential Holiness, and if he should look to Him from such a self he would spiritually die, then from such thought and acknowledgment man falls upon the face to the earth; and because what is man's own [proprium] is thus removed, he is then filled by the Lord and so raised up as to be able to look to Him.

[3] They are said to have "worshipped God," for the reason that "God" means in the Word the Divine proceeding which is called the Divine truth. And as this Divine is truth with the angels, for they are the recipients of it and it constitutes their wisdom, so in the Word angels are called "gods," and signify Divine truths. Moreover, in the Hebrew, God is called "Elohim," in the plural, therefore "God" means in the Word the Divine that is with the angels of heaven and the men of the church, which is the Divine proceeding. And as the higher heavens were now in enlightenment and power, because of the separation of the evil from the good in the lower parts, and because of the Last Judgment which was to come shortly, therefore they are said "to worship God," from which it is evident that the Lord was then with them; for from a more intense and powerful influx of the Divine truth that proceeds from the Lord they had enlightenment and power.

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

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Apocalypse Explained # 343

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343. Unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb, signifies the Lord in respect to Divine good and to Divine truth. This is evident from what has been said and shown above n. 297, namely, that "throne" signifies heaven; "Him that sitteth upon the throne" Divine good proceeding, and "the Lamb" Divine truth proceeding, both of these filling the heavens and constituting them. Because Divine good proceeding from the Lord as a sun is received by the angels in His celestial kingdom, and Divine truth by the angels in the spiritual kingdom, therefore two are mentioned, namely, "He that sitteth upon the throne" and "the Lamb;" but in the internal sense, the two mean the Divine Proceeding from the Lord's Divine Human, which is Divine good united to Divine truth, while in the sense of the letter it is distinguished into two for the sake of reception. The Divine that constitutes heaven and gives to angels and men love, faith, wisdom, and intelligence, proceeds not immediately from the Lord's Divine Itself, but through His Divine Human, and this Divine that proceeds is the Holy Spirit (See above, n. 183).

[2] In this way it is to be understood what the doctrine of the church teaches, that the Son proceeds from the Father, and the Holy Spirit through the Son, also that the Lord's Divine and His Human are not two, but a single person or one Christ; for the Lord's Divine is that which assumed the Human, and for that reason He called it His Father; thus He did not call Father another Divine which is at this day worshiped as His Father in place of His own Divine. And the Divine Proceeding is what is called the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of God, the Spirit of Truth, and the Paraclete; since this is the holy of the Spirit, or the holy Divine which the Spirit speaks, and not another Divine, which is worshiped as the third person of the Divinity. That this is so all can understand who are in any light of heaven. And yet it is declared in many places from the doctrine of the Trinity that was given by Athanasius, that the three are one. Let anyone examine himself when he says with the mouth that God is one, whether he does not think of three, when yet there is but one God, and the three names of the Divine are names of the one God. Athanasius, because he did not understand this, believed the three names to be three Gods, though one in essence.

[3] And yet they cannot be said to be one in essence when something is attributed to one and not to another, for thus the essence is divided; consequently a personal name is given to each essence. But they are one essence when the three are names of one person, namely, the Divine Itself, called the Father; the Divine Human, called the Son; and the Divine Proceeding, called the Holy Spirit (See The Doctrine of the New Jerusalem 280-310). These things have been said to show that "He that sitteth upon the throne," and "the Lamb," do not mean two but one, namely, the Lord in respect to the Divine Proceeding.

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