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1 Mose第40章

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1 Und es begab sich danach, daß sich der Schenke des Königs in Ägypten und der Bäcker versündigten an ihrem HERRN, dem Könige in Ägypten.

2 Und Pharao ward zornig über seine beiden Kämmerer, über den Amtmann über die Schenken und über den Amtmann über die Bäcker,

3 und ließ sie setzen in des Hofmeisters Haus ins Gefängnis, da Joseph gefangen lag.

4 Und der Hofmeister setzte Joseph über sie, daß er ihnen dienete; und saßen etliche Tage im Gefängnis.

5 Und es träumete ihnen beiden, dem Schenken und Bäcker des Königs zu Ägypten, in einer Nacht, einem jeglichen ein eigener Traum; und eines jeglichen Traum hatte seine Bedeutung.

6 Da nun des Morgens Joseph zu ihnen hinein kam und sah, daß sie traurig waren,

7 fragte er sie und sprach: Warum seid ihr heute so traurig?

8 Sie antworteten: Es hat uns geträumet, und haben niemand, der es uns auslege. Joseph sprach: Auslegen gehöret Gott zu, doch erzählet mir's.

9 Da erzählete der oberste Schenke seinen Traum Joseph und sprach zu ihm: Mir hat geträumet, daß ein Weinstock vor mir wäre,

10 der hatte drei Reben, und er grünete, wuchs und blühete, und seine Trauben wurden reif;

11 und ich hatte den Becher Pharaos in meiner Hand und nahm die Beeren und zerdrückte sie in den Becher und gab den Becher Pharao in die Hand.

12 Joseph sprach zu ihm: Das ist seine Deutung: Drei Reben sind Drei Tage.

13 Über drei Tage wird Pharao dein Haupt erheben und dich wieder an dein Amt stellen, daß du ihm den Becher in die Hand gebest nach der vorigen Weise, da du sein Schenke warst.

14 Aber gedenke meiner, wenn dir's wohlgehet, und tu Barmherzigkeit an mir, daß du Pharao erinnerst, daß er mich aus diesem Hause führe.

15 Denn ich bin aus dem Lande der Ebräer heimlich gestohlen; dazu habe ich auch allhie nichts getan, daß sie mich eingesetzt haben.

16 Da der oberste Bäcker sah, daß die Deutung gut war, sprach er zu Joseph: Mir hat auch geträumet, ich trüge drei weiße Körbe auf meinem Haupt,

17 und im obersten Korbe allerlei gebackene Speise dem Pharao; und die Vögel aßen aus dem Korbe auf meinem Haupt

18 Joseph antwortete und sprach: Das ist seine Deutung: Drei Körbe sind Drei Tage.

19 Und nach dreien Tagen wird dir Pharao dein Haupt erheben und dich an den Galgen henken, und die Vögel werden dein Fleisch von dir essen.

20 Und es geschah des dritten Tages, da beging Pharao seinen Jahrtag; und er machte eine Mahlzeit allen seinen Knechten und erhub das Haupt des obersten Schenken und das Haupt des obersten Bäckers unter seinen Knechten;

21 und setzte den obersten Schenken wieder zu seinem Schenkamt, daß er den Becher reichte in Pharaos Hand;

22 aber den obersten Bäcker ließ er henken, wie ihnen Joseph gedeutet hatte.

23 Aber der oberste Schenke gedachte nicht an Joseph, sondern vergaß sein.

   

来自斯威登堡的著作

 

Arcana Coelestia#4072

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4072. Verses 4-13 And Jacob sent and called Rachel and Leah to the field, to his flock. And he said to them, I see your father's face, that it is not at all friendly towards me as before; 1 and the God of my father has been with me. And you yourselves know that with all my strength I have served your father. And your father has deceived me, and has changed my wages in ten ways, and God has not allowed him to do evil to me. If he said thus: The speckled will be your wages, then all the flocks bore speckled. And if he said thus: The variegated will be your wages, then all the flocks bore variegated. And God has taken away your father's cattle and given them to me. And it happened, when the flock came on heat, that I lifted up my eyes and saw in a dream, and behold, the he-goats mounting the flock were variegated, speckled, and mottled. And the angel of God said to me in the dream, Jacob. And I said, Behold, here I am. And he said, Lift up now your eyes, and see all the he-goats mounting the flock, variegated, speckled, and mottled; for I have seen everything that Laban is doing to you. I am the God of Bethel, where you anointed a pillar, where you made a vow to Me; now rise up, go out of this land, and return to the land of your nativity.

'Jacob sent and called Rachel and Leah to the field, to his flock' means a linking of the affections for truth to the good now meant by 'Jacob' - achieved by that good itself; also the use to which those affections were applied when that good departed. 'And he said to them, I see your father's face, that it is not at all friendly towards me as before' means a change of state within the good meant by 'Laban'. 'And the God of my father has been with me' means that the Divine was the author of all that He had. 'And you yourselves know that with all my strength I have served your father' means that He acted by His own power. 'And your father has deceived me, and has changed my wages in ten ways' means the state of good in relation to Himself when, acting of Himself, He applied to Himself the things which constituted that good, and also a very great change in that good. 'And God has not allowed him to do evil to me' means that it was nevertheless unable to cause any hindrance. 'If he said thus: The speckled will be your wages, then all the flocks bore speckled' means His freedom, and that in His freedom the Lord adopted those things - even evils that were linked to the goods. 'And if he said thus: The variegated will be your wages, then all the flocks bore variegated' means even falsities that were linked to them. 'And God has taken away your father's cattle and given them to me' means that those things came from the Divine. 'And it happened, when the flock came on heat' means an intense desire to be joined together. 'That I lifted up my eyes and saw in a dream' means the perception of natural good when in obscurity. 'And behold, the he-goats mounting the flock were variegated, speckled, and mottled' means the effect that was produced when natural good meant by 'Jacob' was endowed with such things from this source. 'And the angel of God said to me in a dream, Jacob. And I said, Behold, here I am' means perception from the Divine, and presence within that state of obscurity. 'And he said, Lift up now your eyes' means observation from what was His own. 'And see all the he-goats mounting the flock, variegated, speckled, and mottled' means that such things were being introduced. 'For I have seen everything that Laban is doing to you' means that the proprium of the good meant by 'Laban' was not such as acted of itself. 'I am the God of Bethel' means the Divine within the Natural. 'Where you anointed a pillar' means where the good of truth exists, and the boundary of it. 'Where you made a vow to Me' means that which is holy. 'Now rise up' means a raising up. 'Go out of this land' means a separation from that good. 'And return to the land of your nativity' means becoming joined to the Divine Good of Truth.

脚注:

1. literally, not at all towards me as yesterday three days ago

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