圣经文本

 

创世记第46章

学习

   

1 以色列带着一切所有的,起身到别是巴,就献祭给他父亲以撒的

2 夜间,在异象中对以色列雅各雅各!他:我在这里。

3 :我是,就是你父亲。你埃及去不要害怕,因为我必使你在那里成为族。

4 我要和你同埃及去,也必定带你上来;约瑟必给你送终(原文作将按在你的眼睛上)。

5 雅各就从别是巴起行。以色列的儿子们使他们的父亲雅各和他们的妻子、儿女都坐在法老雅各送来的车上。

6 他们又带着迦南所得的牲畜、货财埃及雅各和他的一切子孙都一同来了

7 雅各把他的儿子、孙子、女儿、孙女,并他的子子孙孙,一同带到埃及

8 埃及以色列人名字记在下面。雅各和他的儿孙:雅各长子是流便。

9 流便的儿子是哈诺、法路、希斯伦、迦米。

10 西缅儿子是耶母利、雅悯、阿辖、雅斤、琐辖,还有迦南女子所生的扫罗

11 利未的儿子是革顺、哥辖、米拉利。

12 犹大的儿子是珥、俄南、示拉、法勒斯、谢拉;惟有珥与俄南迦南。法勒斯的儿子是希斯伦、哈母勒。

13 以萨迦的儿子是陀拉、普瓦、约伯、伸仑。

14 西布伦的儿子是西烈、以伦、雅利。

15 这是利亚在巴旦亚兰给雅各所生的儿子,还在女儿底拿。儿孙共三十三人。

16 迦得的儿子是洗非芸、哈基、书尼、以斯本、以利、亚罗底、亚列利。

17 亚设的儿子是音拿、亦施瓦、亦施韦、比利亚,还有他们的妹子西拉。比利亚的儿子是希别、玛结。

18 这是拉班给他女儿利亚的婢女悉帕从雅各所生的儿孙,共有十六人。

19 雅各之妻拉结的儿子是约瑟和便雅悯。

20 约瑟在埃及生了玛拿西以法莲,就是安城的祭司波提非拉的女儿亚西纳给约瑟生的。

21 便雅悯的儿子是比拉、比结、亚实别、基拉、乃幔、以希、罗实、母平、户平、亚勒。

22 这是拉结给雅各所生的儿孙,共有十四人。

23 但的儿子是户伸。

24 拿弗他利的儿子是雅薛、沽尼、耶色、示冷。

25 这是拉班给他女儿拉结的婢女辟拉从雅各所生的儿孙,共有人。

26 那与雅各同到埃及的,除了他儿妇之外,凡从他所生的,共有六十六人。

27 还有约瑟在埃及所生的两个儿子。雅各埃及的共有七十人。

28 雅各打发犹大先去见约瑟,请派人引歌珊去;於是他们歌珊

29 约瑟套车往歌珊去,迎接他父亲以色列,及至见了面,就伏在父亲的颈项,哭了许久。

30 以色列对约瑟:我既得见你的面,知道你还在,就是我也甘心。

31 约瑟对他的弟兄和他父的全家:我要上去告诉法老,对他:我的弟兄和我父的全家从前在迦南,现今都到我这里来了

32 他们本是牧的人,以养牲畜为业;他们把羊群牛群和一切所有的都带来了。

33 法老召你们的时候,问你们:你们以何事为业?

34 你们要:你的仆人,从幼年直到如今,都以养牲畜为业,连我们的祖宗也都以此为业。这样,你们可以歌珊,因为凡牧的都被埃及人所厌恶。

   

来自斯威登堡的著作

 

Arcana Coelestia#6023

学习本章节

  
/10837  
  

6023. 'He brought with him to Egypt' means that they were gathered into the Church's factual knowledge. This is clear from the meaning of 'coming (or going down) into Egypt' as introducing and gathering truths into the Church's factual knowledge, dealt with above in 6004, 6018; and the same thing is meant by 'bringing with him to Egypt', see 5373, 6004. They are introduced and gathered into it when factual knowledge is ruled by truths, and it is ruled by truths when truth is acknowledged because it is what the Lord has said in the Word; after that, factual knowledge which endorses it can be accepted, and that which refutes it can be banished. In this way truth becomes master of the facts that endorse it, while those that do not are cast aside. When this is the situation a person is not carried away into falsities when he bases his thought on factual knowledge, as happens when truths are not contained in that knowledge. For in themselves facts are not truths; they are such only by virtue of the truths they hold within them. And according to the nature of the truths they hold within them, so is the nature of the truth in general which presents itself as factual knowledge. For factual knowledge is merely a vessel, 1469, 1496, which can receive either truths or falsities, and in vastly differing ways.

[2] Take for example the Church's knowledge that the neighbour is every person. A vast quantity of truths can be introduced and gathered into this known fact, such as the truth that every person is indeed the neighbour, but that any one individual is so in a different way from another; also that in a supreme sense the neighbour is someone who is governed by good, but again in a different way from others, according to the essential nature of that good. Then there is the truth that neighbourship has its origin in the Lord Himself, so that the nearer people are to Him, that is, the more they are governed by good, the more they are the neighbour; and the further away they are from Him, the less they are the neighbour. Besides these there is the truth that a community is the neighbour more than an individual person, and one's country as a whole more than a community, though one's country comes before other kingdoms; and that the Church is more the neighbour than one's country, and the Lord's kingdom even more than that. Then there is the further truth that the neighbour is loved when a person discharges his duties correctly for the good of other people, or of his country, or of the Church, and so on. From this one can see how numerous are the truths that can be gathered into that one fact known to the Church. Indeed they are so numerous that it is difficult to divide them into separate categories, assigning specific truths to each category in such a way that one can distinguish and recognize it. This was something that people in the Ancient Churches were keen to do.

[3] The same known fact can also be filled with a vast quantity of falsities, as may also be recognized when people turn those truths upside down by saying that everyone is neighbour to himself, and that each person should trace the origin of the neighbour back to himself; and by saying that therefore he is especially your neighbour who shows you the greatest favour, identifies himself with you, and thereby presents himself in you as a reflection of you. Indeed people say that your country is not your neighbour either, apart from what you can get out of it for yourself. And there are countless other truths turned upside down by them besides these. Yet the known fact is still the same, which is that every person is the neighbour; but it is filled by one person with truths, by another with falsities. The same is so with all other factual knowledge.

  
/10837  
  

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