Біблія

 

ヨシュア記 24

Дослідження

   

1 ヨシュアは、イスラエルのすべての部族をシケムに集め、イスラエルの長老、かしら、さばきびと、つかさたちを召し寄せて、共に神のに進み出た。

2 そしてヨシュアはすべての民に言った、「イスラエルのは、こう仰せられる、『あなたがたの先祖たち、すなわちアブラハムの父、ナホルの父テラは、昔、ユフラテの向こうに住み、みな、ほかの神々に仕えていたが、

3 わたしは、あなたがたの先祖アブラハムを、の向こうから連れ出して、カナンの全地を導き通り、その子孫を増した。わたしは彼にイサクを与え、

4 イサクにヤコブとエサウを与え、エサウにはセイル地を与えて、所有とさせたが、ヤコブとその供たちはエジプトに下った。

5 わたしはモーセとアロンをつかわし、またエジプトのうちに不思議をおこなって、これに災を下し、そのあなたがたを導き出した。

6 わたしはあなたがたの父たちを、エジプトから導き出し、あなたがたがにきたとき、エジプトびとは、戦車と騎兵とをもって、あなたがたの父たちを紅に追ってきた。

7 そのとき、あなたがたの父たちがに呼ばわったので、は暗やみをあなたがたとエジプトびととの間に置き、を彼らの上に傾けて彼らをおおわれた。あなたがたは、わたしがエジプトでしたことを見た。そして長い間、荒野住んでいた

8 わたしはまたヨルダンの向こう側に住んでいたアモリびとの地に、あなたがたを導き入れた。彼らはあなたがたと戦ったので、わたしは彼らをあなたがたのに渡して、彼らの地を獲させ、彼らをあなたがたのから滅ぼし去った。

9 ついで、モアブの王チッポルのバラクが立って、イスラエルに敵し、人をつかわし、ベオルのバラムを招き、あなたがたをのろわせようとしたが、

10 わたしがバラムに聞こうとしなかったので、彼は、かえって、あなたがたを祝福した。こうしてわたしは彼のからあなたがたを救い出した。

11 そしてあなたがたは、ヨルダンを渡って、エリコにきたが、エリコの人々はあなたがたと戦い、アモリびと、ペリジびと、カナンびと、ヘテびと、ギルガシびと、ヒビびと、およびエブスびとも、あなたがたと戦ったが、わたしは彼らをあなたがたのに渡した。

12 わたしは、あなたがたのに、くまばちを送って、あのアモリびとのふたりの王を、あなたがたのから追い払った。これはあなたがたのつるぎ、または、あなたがたのによってではなかった。

13 そしてわたしは、あなたがたが自分で労しなかった地を、あなたがたに与え、あなたがたが建てなかったを、あなたがたに与えた。そしてあなたがたはいまその所に住んでいる。あなたがたはまた自分で作らなかったぶどう畑と、オリブ畑の実を食べている』。

14 それゆえ、いま、あなたがたは恐れ、まことと、まごころと、真実とをもって、に仕え、あなたがたの先祖が、の向こう、およびエジプトで仕えた他の神々を除き去って、に仕えなさい。

15 もしあなたがたが仕えることを、こころよしとしないのならば、あなたがたの先祖が、の向こうで仕えた神々でも、または、いまあなたがたの住む地のアモリびとの神々でも、あなたがたの仕える者を、きょう、選びなさい。ただし、わたしとわたしのとは共にに仕えます」。

16 その時、民は答えて言った、「を捨てて、他の神々仕えるなど、われわれは決していたしません。

17 われわれのがみずからわれわれと、われわれの先祖とを、エジプトの地、奴隷のから導き上り、またわれわれのの前で、あの大いなるしるしを行い、われわれの行くすべての道で守り、われわれが通ったすべての民の中でわれわれを守られたからです。

18 はまた、この地に住んでいたアモリびとなど、すべての民を、われわれのから追い払われました。それゆえ、われわれもに仕えます。はわれわれのだからです」。

19 しかし、ヨシュアは民に言った、「あなたがたは仕えることはできないであろう。は聖なるであり、ねたむであって、あなたがたの、あなたがたのとがを、ゆるされないからである。

20 もしあなたがたがを捨てて、異なる神々仕えるならば、あなたがたにさいわいを下されたのちにも、ひるがえってあなたがたに災をくだし、あなたがたを滅ぼしつくされるであろう」。

21 民はヨシュアに言った、「いいえ、われわれはに仕えます」。

22 そこでヨシュアは民に言った、「あなたがたはを選んで、仕えると言った。あなたがたみずからその証人である」。彼らは言った、「われわれは証人です」。

23 ヨシュアはまた言った、「それならば、あなたがたのうちにある、異なる神々を除き去り、イスラエルのに、心を傾けなさい」。

24 民はヨシュアに言った、「われわれのに、われわれは仕え、その声に聞きしたがいます」。

25 こうしてヨシュアは、その、民と契約をむすび、シケムにおいて、定めと、おきてを、彼らのために設けた。

26 ヨシュアはこれらの言葉神の律法の書にしるし、大きなを取って、その所で、主の聖所にあるかしの木の下にそれを立て、

27 ヨシュアは、すべての民に言った、「見よ、このはわれわれのあかしとなるであろう。がわれわれに語られたすべての言葉を、聞いたからである。それゆえ、あなたがたが自分のを捨てることのないために、このが、あなたがたのあかしとなるであろう」。

28 こうしてヨシュアは民を、おのおのその嗣業の地に帰し去らせた。

29 これらの事の主のしもべ、ヌンのヨシュアは歳で死んだ、

30 人々は彼をその嗣業の地のうちのテムナテ・セラに葬った。テムナテ・セラは、エフライムの地で、ガアシにある。

31 イスラエルはヨシュアの世にあるの間、またイスラエルのために行われたもろもろのことを知っていて、ヨシュアのあとに生き残った長老たちが世にあるの間、つねにに仕えた。

32 イスラエルの人々が、エジプトから携え上ったヨセフのは、むかしヤコブが銀枚で、シケムの父ハモルのらから買い取ったシケムのうちの地所の一部に葬られた。これはヨセフの孫の嗣業となった。

33 アロンのエレアザルも死んだ。人々は彼を、そのピネハスに与えられた町で、エフライムの地にあるギベアに葬った。

   

З творів Сведенборга

 

Arcana Coelestia #4447

Вивчіть цей уривок

  
/ 10837  
  

4447. And Hamor spoke with them, saying. That this signifies the good of the Church among the Ancients, is evident from the representation of Hamor, as being what is from the ancients (see n. 4431), that is, the good of the church which was among them. For the good of the church is father, and the derivative truth (“Shechem”) is son; and therefore by “father” in the Word is signified good, and by “son” truth. It is here said “the good of the Church among the Ancients,” but not “the good of the Ancient Church,” for the reason that by the “Church among the Ancients” is meant the church that was derived from the Most Ancient Church which existed before the flood, and by the “Ancient Church” is meant the church that existed after the flood. These two churches have sometimes been treated of in the preceding pages, and it has been shown that the Most Ancient Church which was before the flood was celestial, but the Ancient Church which was after the flood was spiritual, and the difference between them has often been treated of.

[2] The remains of the Most Ancient Church which was celestial still existed in the land of Canaan, especially among those called Hittites and Hivites. The reason why these remains did not exist anywhere else was that the Most Ancient Church called “Man” or “Adam” (n. 478, 479) was in the land of Canaan, and therefore the “garden of Eden,” by which was signified the intelligence and wisdom of the men of that church (n. 100, 1588), and by the trees in it their perception, (n. 103, 2163, 2722, 2972), was in that land. And because intelligence and wisdom were signified by this “garden” or paradise, the church itself was meant by it; and because the church was meant, so also was heaven; and because heaven, so also in the supreme sense, was the Lord; and therefore in this sense the “land of Canaan” itself signifies the Lord, in the relative sense heaven and also the church, and in the individual sense the man of the church (n. 1413, 1437, 1607, 3038, 3481, 3705); and therefore also the term “land” or “earth” when mentioned alone in the Word has a like signification (n. 566, 662, 1066, 1067, 1413, 1607, 3355); the “new heaven and new earth” being a new church in respect to its internal and its external (n. 1733, 1850, 2117, 2118, 3355). That the Most Ancient Church was in the land of Canaan may be seen in n. 567; and the result of this was that the places there became representative, and for this reason Abram was commanded to go there, and the land was given to his descendants the sons of Jacob in order that the representatives of the places in accordance with which the Word was to be written, might be retained. (See n. 3686 and that for the same reason all the places there, as well as the mountains and rivers, and all the borders round about, became representative, n. 1585, 1866, 4240.)

[3] All this shows what is here meant by the “Church among the Ancients,” namely, remains from the Most Ancient Church. And as these remains existed among the Hittites and Hivites, therefore Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, together with their wives, obtained a place of burial with the Hittites in their land (Genesis 23:1-20; 49:29-32; 50:13); and Joseph with the Hivites (Josh. 24:32). Hamor the father of Shechem represented the remains of this Church, and therefore by him is signified the good of the Church among the Ancients, and consequently the origin of interior truth from a Divine stock (n. 4399). (What the distinction is between the Most Ancient Church which was before the flood, and the Ancient Church which was after the flood, may be seen above, n. 597, 607, 608, 640, 641, 765, 784, 895, 920, 1114-1128, 1238, 1327, 2896, 2897.)

  
/ 10837  
  

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

З творів Сведенборга

 

Arcana Coelestia #920

Вивчіть цей уривок

  
/ 10837  
  

920. In this verse there is described the worship of the Ancient Church in general, and this by the “altar” and the “burnt-offering” which were the principal things in all representative worship. In the first place, however, we will describe the worship that existed in the Most Ancient Church, and from that show how there originated the worship of the Lord by means of representatives. The men of the Most Ancient Church had no other than internal worship, such as there is in heaven; for with them heaven was in communication with man, so that they made a one; and this communication was perception, of which we have often spoken before. Thus being angelic they were internal men, and although they sensated the external things of the body and the world, they cared not for them; for in each object of sense they perceived something Divine and heavenly. For example, when they saw a high mountain, they perceived an idea, not of a mountain, but of elevation, and from elevation, of heaven and the Lord, from which it came to pass that the Lord was said to dwell in the highest, He himself being called the “Most High and Lofty One;” and that afterwards the worship of the Lord was held on mountains. So with other things; as when they observed the morning, they did not then perceive the morning of the day, but that which is heavenly, and which is like a morning and a dawn in human minds, and from which the Lord is called the “Morning” the “East” and the “Dawn” or “Day-spring.” So when they looked at a tree and its leaves and fruit, they cared not for these, but saw man as it were represented in them; in the fruit, love and charity, in the leaves faith; and from this the man of the church was not only compared to a tree, and to a paradise, and what is in him to leaves and fruit, but he was even called so. Such are they who are in a heavenly and angelic idea.

[2] Everyone may know that a general idea rules all the particulars, thus all the objects of the senses, as well those seen as those heard, so much so that the objects are not cared for except so far as they flow into the man’s general idea. Thus to him who is glad at heart, all things that he hears and sees appear smiling and joyful; but to him who is sad at heart, all things that he sees and hears appear sad and sorrowful; and so in other cases. For the general affection is in all the particulars, and causes them to be seen in the general affection; while all other things do not even appear, but are as if absent or of no account. And so it was with the man of the Most Ancient Church: whatever he saw with his eyes was heavenly to him; and thus with him everything seemed to be alive. And this shows the character of his Divine worship, that it was internal, and by no means external.

[3] But when the church declined, as in his posterity, and that perception or communication with heaven began to be lost, another state of things commenced. Then no longer did men perceive anything heavenly in the objects of the senses, as they had done before, but merely what is worldly, and this to an increasing extent in proportion to the loss of their perception; and at last, in the closing posterity which existed just before the flood, they apprehended in objects nothing but what is worldly, corporeal, and earthly. Thus was heaven separated from man, nor did they communicate except very remotely; and communication was then opened to man with hell, and from thence came his general idea, from which flow the ideas of all the particulars, as has been shown. Then when any heavenly idea presented itself, it was as nothing to them, so that at last they were not even willing to acknowledge that anything spiritual and celestial existed. Thus did the state of man become changed and inverted.

[4] As the Lord foresaw that such would be the state of man, He provided for the preservation of the doctrinal things of faith, in order that men might know what is celestial and what is spiritual. These doctrinal things were collected from the men of the Most Ancient Church by those called “Cain” and also by those called “Enoch” concerning whom above. Wherefore it is said of Cain that a mark was set upon him lest anyone should kill him (see Genesis 4:15, n. 393, 394); and of Enoch that he was taken by God (Genesis 5:24). These doctrinal things consisted only in significative, and thus as it were enigmatical things, that is, in the significations of various objects on the face of the earth; such as that mountains signify celestial things, and the Lord; that morning and the east have this same signification; that trees of various kinds and their fruits signify man and his heavenly things, and so on. In such things as these consisted their doctrinal things, all of which were collected from the significatives of the Most Ancient Church; and consequently their writings also were of the same nature. And as in these representatives they admired, and seemed to themselves even to behold, what is Divine and heavenly, and also because of the antiquity of the same, their worship from things like these was begun and was permitted, and this was the origin of their worship upon mountains, and in groves in the midst of trees, and also of their pillars or statues in the open air, and at last of the altars and burnt-offerings which afterwards became the principal things of all worship. This worship was begun by the Ancient Church, and passed thence to their posterity and to all nations round about, besides many other things, concerning which of the Lord’s Divine mercy hereafter.

  
/ 10837  
  

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