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出埃及記第21章

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1 你在百姓面前所要立的典章是這樣:

2 你若買希伯來人作奴僕,他必服事你年;第七年他可以自由,白白的出去。

3 他若孤身就可以孤身去;他若有妻,他的妻就可以同他出去。

4 人若妻子妻子他生了兒子女兒妻子和兒女要歸人,他要獨自出去。

5 倘或奴僕明:我我的人和我的妻子兒女,不願意自由出去。

6 他的人就要帶他到審判官(審判官或作:;下同)那裡,又要帶他到前,靠框,用錐子穿他的耳朵,他就永遠服事人。

7 女兒作婢女,婢女不可像僕那樣出去。

8 人選定他歸自己,若不喜歡他,就要許他贖身;人既然用詭詐待他,就沒有權柄給外邦人。

9 主人若選定他給自己的兒子,就當待他如同女兒

10 若另娶一個,那女子的吃食、衣服,並好合的事,仍不可減少。

11 若不向他行這樣,他就可以不用贖,白白的出去。

12 以致打的,必要把他治

13 人若不是埋伏著殺人,乃是交在他中,我就設下一個地方,他可以往那裡逃跑

14 若任意用詭計殺了他的鄰舍,就是逃到我的那裡,也當捉去把他治

15 打父母的,必要把他治

16 拐帶口,或是把了,或是留在他下,必要把他治

17 咒罵父母的,必要把他治

18 若彼此相爭,這個用石頭或是拳頭打那個,尚且不至於,不過躺臥在

19 若再能起來扶杖而出,那打他的可算無罪;但要將他耽誤的工夫用錢賠補,並要將他全然醫好。

20 若用棍子打奴僕或婢女,立時在他的,他必要受刑。

21 若過一兩才死,就可以不受刑,因為是用買的。

22 人若彼此爭鬥,傷害有孕的婦人,甚至墜胎,隨後卻無別害,那傷害他的,總要按婦人的丈夫所要的,照審判官所斷的,受罰。

23 若有別害,就要以命償命,

24 以眼還眼,以,以,以

25 以烙還烙,以傷還傷,以打還打。

26 若打壞了他奴僕或是婢女的一隻眼,就要因他的眼放他去得以自由。

27 若打掉了他奴僕或是婢女的一個,就要因他的放他去得以自由。

28 牛若觸男人或是女人,總要用石頭打那牛,卻不可他的;牛的主可算無罪。

29 倘若那牛素來是觸的,有報告了牛主,他竟不把牛拴著,以致把男人或是女人,就要用石頭打那牛,牛主也必治

30 若罰他贖命的價銀,他必照所罰的贖他的命。

31 牛無論觸了人的兒子或是女兒,必照這例辦理。

32 牛若觸了奴僕或是婢女,必將三十舍客勒他們的人,也要用石頭把牛打死。

33 若敞著井口,或井不遮蓋,有牛或掉在裡頭,

34 井主要拿賠還本主人,牲畜要歸自己。

35 的牛若傷了那的牛,以至於,他們要了活牛,平分價值,也要平分牛。

36 人若知道這牛素來是觸人的,主人竟不把牛拴著,他必要以牛還牛,牛要歸自己。

   

来自斯威登堡的著作

 

Arcana Coelestia#4113

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4113. 'By not giving him any indication that he was fleeing' means through the separation. This becomes clear without explanation. The statement that 'Jacob stole the heart of Laban the Aramean by not giving any indication that he was fleeing' is used in the historical sense to mean that Jacob deprived Laban of the hope of gaining possession of everything that was his and drove him into a state of dismay. For Laban believed that because Jacob served him everything belonging to Jacob would become his - not only his own daughters, who were Jacob's wives, and his daughters' sons, but also Jacob's flocks, according to the law known and accepted in those times, which is recorded in Moses,

If you buy a Hebrew slave he shall serve you six years; and in the seventh he shall go out free, for nothing. If his master has given him a wife and she has borne him sons and daughters, the wife and her children shall belong to her master, and he shall go out by himself. 1 Exodus 21:2, 4.

The fact that Laban had this law in mind is evident from Jacob's words later on in this chapter,

Unless the God of my father, the God of Abraham and the Dread of Isaac, had been with me, you would now have sent me away empty-handed. Genesis 31:42.

And from Laban's words,

Laban answered and said to Jacob, The daughters are my daughters, and the sons are my sons, and the flock is my flock, and all that you see is mine. Genesis 31:43.

Laban was not taking into consideration the fact that Jacob had not been bought as a slave, nor indeed was a slave, or that he belonged to a more illustrious family than he himself did, or also that Jacob had received his wives as well as the flock as wages. All this being so, that law did not apply to Jacob. Because by his fleeing Jacob now deprived Laban of that hope and as a consequence drove him into a state of dismay it is said that 'he stole the heart of Laban the Aramean by not giving any indication that he was fleeing'. In the internal sense however these words mean a change as regards good of the state meant by 'Laban' through separation. Concerning a change of state effected through separation, see what has been stated just above in 4111.

脚注:

1. literally, with his own body

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