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Levitico 7

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1 Or quest’è la legge del sacrificio per la colpa; è cosa santissima:

2 Scannisi il sacrificio per la colpa nello stesso luogo dove si scannano gli olocausti; e spargasene il sangue sopra l’Altare, attorno attorno.

3 E offeriscasene tutto il grasso, la coda, e il grasso che copre l’interiora;

4 e i due arnioni, e il grasso che è sopra essi, che è sopra i fianchi; e levisi la rete che è in sul fegato, insieme co’ due arnioni.

5 E faccia il sacerdote bruciar quelle cose sopra l’Altare, per offerta fatta per fuoco al Signore; è sacrificio per la colpa.

6 Ogni maschio d’intra i sacerdoti ne potrà mangiare; mangisi in luogo santo: è cosa santissima.

7 Facciasi al sacrificio per la colpa, come al sacrificio per lo peccato; siavi una stessa legge per l’uno e per l’altro; sia quel sacrificio del sacerdote, il qual con esso avrà fatto il purgamento del peccato.

8 Parimente abbia per sè il sacerdote, che avrà offerto l’olocausto di alcuno, la pelle dell’olocausto ch’egli avrà offerto.

9 Così ancora ogni offerta di panatica che si cuocerà al forno, o si apparecchierà nella padella, o in su la teglia sia del sacerdote che l’offerirà.

10 Ma ogni offerta di panatica, intrisa con olio, o asciutta, sia di tutti i figliuoli di Aaronne indifferentemente.

11 E quest’è la legge del sacrificio da render grazie, che si offerirà al Signore.

12 Se alcuno l’offerisce per sacrificio di laude, offerisca, oltre ad esso sacrificio di laude, delle focacce azzime, intrise con olio, e delle schiacciate azzime, unte con olio; e del fior di farina, cotta in su la teglia, in focacce intrise con olio.

13 Offerisca ancora per sua offerta, oltre a quelle focacce, del pan lievitato, insieme col suo sacrificio di laude, da render grazie.

14 E di quel pane lievitato, presentine uno di tutta l’offerta, in offerta elevata al Signore; ed esso sia del sacerdote che avrà sparso il sangue del sacrificio da render grazie.

15 E mangisi la carne del suo sacrificio di laude da render grazie, nel giorno stesso ch’egli avrà fatta la sua offerta; non lascisene nulla di avanzo fino alla mattina.

16 E se il sacrificio ch’egli offerirà è votato, o volontario, mangisi nel giorno stesso ch’egli l’avrà offerto; e se ne rimane alcuna cosa, mangisi il giorno seguente.

17 E brucisi col fuoco quello che sarà rimasto della carne di esso sacrificio fino al terzo giorno.

18 E se pure al terzo giorno si mangia della carne del sacrificio di colui da render grazie, colui che l’avrà offerto non sarà gradito; quello non gli sarà imputato; sarà fracidume; e la persona che ne avrà mangiato porterà la sua iniquità.

19 E di questa carne ciò che avrà toccata qualunque cosa immonda, non mangisi; brucisi col fuoco; quant’è a questa carne, mangine chiunque è mondo.

20 Ma la persona che avrà mangiata della carne del sacrificio da render grazie, offerto al Signore, avendo la sua immondizia addosso, sia ricisa da’ suoi popoli.

21 Parimente la persona, la quale, avendo toccata qualunque cosa immonda, come immondizia d’uomo, o alcun animale immondo, o alcun rettile immondo, mangerà della carne del sacrificio da render grazie, offerta al Signore, sia ricisa da’ suoi popoli.

22 Il Signore parlò ancora a Mosè, dicendo: Parla a’ figliuoli d’Israele, dicendo:

23 Non mangiate alcun grasso, nè di bue, nè di pecora, nè di capra.

24 Ben potrassi adoperare in qualunque altro uso il grasso di una bestia morta da sè, o il grasso di una bestia lacerata dalle fiere; ma non mangiatelo per niuna maniera.

25 Perciocchè, se alcuno mangia del grasso di alcun animale, del quale si offerisce sacrificio fatto per fuoco al Signore, la persona che ne mangerà sarà ricisa da’ suoi popoli.

26 Parimente, non mangiate, in niuna delle vostre abitazioni, alcun sangue, nè di uccelli, nè di bestie.

27 Qualunque persona avrà mangiato alcun sangue, sia ricisa da’ suoi popoli.

28 Il Signore parlò, oltre a ciò, a Mosè, dicendo:

29 Parla a’ figliuoli d’Israele, dicendo: Se alcuno offerisce al Signore un suo sacrificio da render grazie, porti egli stesso al Signore la sua offerta del sacrificio da render grazie.

30 Portino le sue mani stesse quelle cose che si hanno da ardere al Signore; porti il grasso, insieme col petto; il petto, per esser dimenato per offerta dimenata, nel cospetto del Signore.

31 E faccia il sacerdote bruciare il grasso sopra l’Altare; e il petto sia di Aaronne e de’ suoi figliuoli.

32 Date ancora al sacerdote, per offerta elevata, la spalla destra de’ vostri sacrificii da render grazie.

33 Sia quella spalla destra di colui de’ figliuoli di Aaronne che avrà offerto il sangue, e il grasso de’ sacrificii da render grazie, per sua parte.

34 Perciocchè io ho preso dai figliuoli d’Israele il petto dell’offerta dimenata, e la spalla dell’offerta elevata, de’ lor sacrificii da render grazie; e ho date al Sacerdote Aaronne, e a’ suoi figliuoli, per istatuto perpetuo, quelle cose che si devono prendere da’ figliuoli d’Israele.

35 Quest’è il diritto dell’Unzione di Aaronne, e dell’Unzione dei figliuoli suoi, che si deve torre dell’offerte fatte per fuoco al Signore, il quale è stato loro assegnato nel giorno che il Signore li ha fatti accostare, per esercitargli il sacerdozio.

36 Il quale il Signore ha comandato che sia loro dato da’ figliuoli d’Israele, nel giorno che li ha unti, per istatuto perpetuo, per le lor generazioni.

37 Quest’è la legge dell’olocausto, dell’offerta di panatica, e del sacrificio per lo peccato, e del sacrificio per la colpa, e del sacrificio delle consacrazioni, e del sacrificio da render grazie;

38 la quale il Signore diede a Mosè, in sul monte di Sinai, nel giorno ch’egli comandò nel deserto di Sinai, a’ figliuoli d’Israele, d’offerir le loro offerte al 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.

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Arcana Coelestia #3818

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3818. And Laban had two daughters. That this signifies the affections of truth from the good which is from a common stock, is evident from the representation of Laban, as being the good of a common stock, but collaterally descended (see n. 3612, 3665, 3778); and from the signification of “daughters,” as being affections (n. 2362), in the present case the affections of truth from the good which is “Laban” (n. 3793).

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

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Arcana Coelestia #3665

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3665. To the house of Bethuel, thy mother’s father, and take thee from thence a woman of the daughters of Laban, thy mother’s brother. That this signifies collateral external good, and the derivative truth that was to be conjoined, is evident from the representation of Bethuel, as being the good of the Gentiles of the first class (see n. 2865); from the representation of Laban, as being the affection of good in the natural man, that is the affection of external good, and properly the collateral good of a common stock (n. 3129, 3130, 3160, 3612); and from the signification of “taking a woman of his daughters,” as being to be associated to or conjoined with the derivative affections of truth. That “taking a woman” denotes to be conjoined, is manifest, and that “daughters” are affections, may be seen above (n. 568, 2362, 3024). Hence it is evident what these words signify, namely, that the good of the natural, here represented by Jacob, was to be conjoined with the truths derived from collateral external good.

[2] The case herein is this: When man is being regenerated, he is at first led by the Lord as an infant, then as a child, afterwards as a youth, and at last as an adult. The truths he learns as an infant child are altogether external and corporeal, for as yet he is unable to apprehend interior truths. These truths are no other than knowledges of such things as contain, in their inmost, things Divine; for there are knowledges of things that do not contain anything Divine in their inmost; and there are knowledges that do contain it. The knowledges that do contain what is Divine are such that they can admit interior truths more and more, successively, and in order; whereas the knowledges which do not contain what is Divine are such that they do not admit, but reject these interior truths; for the knowledges of external and corporeal good and truth are like ground, which according to its quality admits seeds of one nature and not of another, bringing to maturity one kind of seeds, and suffocating another. Knowledges which contain in their inmost what is Divine, admit into them spiritual and celestial truth and good, possessing this capacity from the Divine which is within, and which disposes; but the knowledges which do not contain in them what is Divine, admit only what is false and evil, such being their nature. Those knowledges of external and corporeal truth which admit spiritual and celestial truth and good, are here signified by the “daughters of Laban of the house of Bethuel;” but those which do not thus admit them, are signified by the “daughters of Canaan.”

[3] The knowledges which are learned from infancy to childhood are like most general vessels, which are to be filled with goods, and in proportion as they are filled the man is enlightened. If the vessels are such as to admit into them genuine goods, then the man is enlightened from the Divine that is within them, and this successively more and more; but if they are such that genuine goods cannot be in them, then the man is not enlightened. It does appear that he is enlightened, but this is from a fatuous light, which is that of falsity and evil, whereby he is more and more darkened in respect to good and truth.

[4] Such knowledges are manifold, and so manifold that their genera can scarcely be counted; still less can their species be discriminated; for they are derived in many ways from the Divine through the rational into the natural. For some flow in immediately through the good of the rational, and thence into the good of the natural; and also into the truth of this good, and thence further into the external or corporeal natural, where also they divide into various streams. And some flow in mediately through the truth of the rational into the truth of the natural, and also into the good of this truth, and thence further into the external or corporeal natural (see n. 3573, 3616). They are like nations, families, and houses, and like the blood-relationships and the connections therein, there being in them some which descend in a direct line from the first father, and some which descend in a line more and more indirect or collateral. In the heavens these things are most distinct, for all the societies therein, and thus the proximities, are distinguished according to the genera and species of good and truth (n. 685, 2508, 2524, 2556, 2739, 3612). These societies and proximities were represented by the most ancient people, who were celestial men, by their dwelling together classified in this manner into nations, families, and houses (n. 470, 471, 483, 1159, 1246); and for this reason it was enjoined that they who were of the representative church should contract marriages within the families of their own nation; for in this way they could represent heaven, and the conjunction of its societies as to good and truth-as was the case here with Jacob, in that he was to go to the house of Bethuel, his mother’s father, and take him a woman of the daughters of Laban, his mother’s brother.

[5] With regard to these very knowledges of external or corporeal truth which are from collateral good, and which as before said contain in them what is Divine, and thus are capable of admitting genuine goods-such as are the knowledges with young children who are afterwards regenerated-they are in general such as are contained in the historicals of the Word, such as what is said therein concerning paradise, concerning the first man in it, concerning the tree of life in its midst, and concerning the tree of knowledge, where was the serpent that practiced the deception. These are the knowledges that contain within them what is Divine, and admit into them spiritual and celestial goods and truths, because they represent and signify these goods and truths. Such knowledges also are all other things in the historicals of the Word, as what is said concerning the tabernacle and the temple and concerning the construction of these; in like manner what is said concerning the garments of Aaron and of his sons; also concerning the feasts of tabernacles, of the firstfruits of harvest, of unleavened bread, and concerning other like things. When such knowledges as these are known and thought of by a young child, the angels who are with him think of the Divine things which they represent and signify; and because the angels are affected therewith, their affection is communicated, and causes the delight and pleasure which the child experiences therein; and prepares his mind to receive genuine truths and goods. Such and very many others are the knowledges of external and corporeal truth that are derived from collateral good.

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