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Amos第8章

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1 IL Signore Iddio mi fece vedere una cotal visione: Ecco un canestro di frutti di state.

2 Ed egli mi disse: Che vedi, Amos? Ed io dissi: Un canestro di frutti di state. E il Signore mi disse: Lo statuito fine è giunto al mio popolo Israele; io non glielo passerò più.

3 E in quel giorno i canti del palazzo saranno urli, dice il Signore Iddio; vi sarà gran numero di corpi morti; in ogni luogo si udirà: Getta via, e taci.

4 Ascoltate questo, voi che tranghiottite il bisognoso, e fate venir meno i poveri del paese;

5 dicendo: Quando saranno passate le calendi, e noi venderemo la vittuaglia? e il sabato, e noi apriremo i granai del frumento? scemando l’efa, ed accrescendo il siclo, e falsando le bilance, per ingannare;

6 comperando i poveri per danari, e il bisognoso per un paio di scarpe; e noi venderemo la vagliatura del frumento?

7 Il Signore ha giurato per la gloria di Giacobbe: Se mai in perpetuo io dimentico tutte le loro opere.

8 La terra non sarà ella commossa per questo? ogni suo abitatore non ne farà egli cordoglio? e non salirà ella tutta come un fiume? e non ne sarà ella portata via, e sommersa, come per lo fiume di Egitto?

9 Ed avverrà in quel giorno, dice il Signore Iddio, che io farò tramontare il sole nel mezzodì, e spanderò le tenebre sopra la terra in giorno chiaro.

10 E cangerò le vostre feste in duolo, e tutti i vostri canti in lamento; e farò che si porrà il sacco sopra tutti i lombi, e che ogni testa sarà rasa; e metterò il paese in cordoglio, quale è quel che si fa per lo figluolo unico; e la sua fine sarà come un giorno amaro.

11 Ecco, i giorni vengono, dice il Signore Iddio, che io manderò la fame nel paese; non la fame di pane, nè la sete d’acqua; anzi d’udire le parole del Signore.

12 Ed essi si moveranno da un mare all’altro, e dal Settentrione fino all’Oriente; andranno attorno, cercando la parola del Signore, e non la troveranno.

13 In quel giorno le belle vergini, e i giovani verranno meno di sete;

14 i quali giurano per lo misfatto di Samaria, e dicono: Come l’Iddio tuo vive, o Dan; e: Come vive il rito di Beerseba; e caderanno, e non risorgeranno mai più.

   


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.

来自斯威登堡的著作

 

Arcana Coelestia#8541

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8541. SPIRITS AND INHABITANTS OF THE PLANET JUPITER - continued

As regards their worship of God, the most important aspect of it is their acknowledgement of our Lord as the Supreme One who governs heaven and earth. They call Him the one and only Lord; and because they acknowledge and worship Him during their lifetime they therefore seek Him after death, and find Him. He is none other than our Lord. When asked whether they know that the one and only Lord is a Person they replied that they all know Him to be a Person, because He has been seen as a Person by many on their planet; that He informs them of the truth, and keeps them in being; and that He imparts eternal life to those who believe in Him. They went on to say that He has revealed to them how they ought to live and how they ought to believe, and that what He has revealed is passed down from parents to children. In that way teachings are spread to all the families and so to an entire clan descended from the same father. They said in addition that those teachings seem to them to have been inscribed on their minds, a conclusion they come to because they can perceive instantly and recognize automatically whether what others say about the life of heaven with a person is true or not.

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

来自斯威登堡的著作

 

Arcana Coelestia#8468

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8468. 'An omer a head' means the amount for each individual. This is clear from the meaning of 'an omer' as the sufficient amount, dealt with below; and from the meaning of 'a head' as for each person. The reason why 'an omer' means the sufficient amount is that it was the tenth part of an ephah, as is evident from the final verse of the present chapter; and 'ten' means what is complete, 3107, so that 'a tenth part' means the sufficient amount, at this point for each individual, meant by 'a head'. 'An omer' is mentioned in the present chapter alone; the term used elsewhere is 'a homer', which was a measure that held ten ephahs, and therefore meant what was complete, as in Hosea,

I acquired an adulterous woman for fifteen [shekels] of silver, and a homer of barley and half a homer of barley. Hosea 3:2.

Here 'an adulterous woman' is used to mean the house of Israel, in the spiritual sense the Church there. Her being acquired for the full price is meant by 'fifteen [shekels] of silver' and 'a homer of barley' - 'fifteen [shekels] of silver' having reference to truth and 'a homer of barley' to good.

[2] In Ezekiel,

You shall have just balances, and a just ephah, and a just bath. The ephah and the bath shall be of one measure, so that a tenth of a homer is offered for a bath, and a tenth of a homer for an ephah; your measure shall be after the homer. This is the offering which you shall offer: A sixth of an ephah from a homer of wheat, ... from the barley. And the fixed portion of oil, the bath for oil, shall be a tenth of a bath from a cor, which is ten baths to the homer; for ten baths are a homer. Ezekiel 45:10-11, 13-14.

This refers to a new earth or land and new temple, meaning the Lord's spiritual kingdom. Anyone may see that there will be no homer, ephah, bath, or cor there, and no wheat, barley, or oil either. From this it is clear that these objects mean the kinds of things that belong to that spiritual kingdom, which things, it is evident, are spiritual realities, that is, they are connected with either the good of charity or the truth of faith. 'Homer' has reference to good because it is a measure of wheat or barley, and so does 'ephah'; but 'bath' has reference to truth because it is a measure of wine. Yet being also a measure of oil, by which the good of love is meant, it says that a bath shall be the same part of a homer as an ephah is, which means in the spiritual sense that everything there will have a connection with good, and also that truth there will be good. It will also exist in full measure, for 'a homer' means what is complete.

[3] In Isaiah,

Many houses will be a ruination, large and beautiful ones, so that there is no inhabitant; for ten acres of vineyard will yield but one bath, and the sowing of a homer will yield an ephah. Isaiah 5:9-10.

Here 'ten acres' stands for complete and also for much, and so does 'a homer'; but 'a bath' and 'an ephah' stand for little. For when 'ten' means much, 'a tenth part' means little. In Moses,

If a man sanctifies to Jehovah part of a field of his possession, your valuation shall be according to its sowing; the sowing of a homer of barley [shall be valued] at fifty shekels of silver. Leviticus 27:16.

Here 'the sowing of a homer' and also 'fifty shekels' stand for the full or complete valuation. Since 'a homer' means what is complete, ten homers means at Numbers 11:32 what is in excess and superfluous.

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