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Esodo第1章

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1 OR questi sono i nomi de’ figliuoli d’Israele, che vennero in Egitto: essi vi vennero con Giacobbe, ciascuno con la sua famiglia.

2 Ruben, Simeone, Levi, e Giuda;

3 Issacar, Zabulon, e Beniamino;

4 Dan, Neftali, Gad, e Aser.

5 E tutte le persone, uscite dell’anca di Giacobbe, erano settanta. Or Giuseppe era già in Egitto.

6 E Giuseppe morì, e tutti i suoi fratelli, e tutta quella generazione.

7 E i figliuoli d’Israele fruttarono e moltiplicarono copiosamente, e crebbero, e divennero grandemente possenti, talchè il paese fu ripieno di essi.

8 Or sorse un nuovo re sopra l’Egitto, il qual non avea conosciuto Giuseppe.

9 Costui disse al suo popolo: Ecco, il popolo de’ figliuoli d’Israele è più grande e più possente di noi.

10 Ora procediamo saggiamente intorno ad esso; che talora non moltiplichi; onde, se alcuna guerra avvenisse, egli non si congiunga anche esso co’ nostri nemici, e non guerreggi contro a noi, o se ne vada via dal paese.

11 Furono adunque costituiti sopra il popolo d’Israele commissari d’angherie, per affliggerlo con le lor gravezze. E il popolo edificò a Faraone delle città da magazzini, cioè, Pitom e Raamses.

12 Ma quanto più l’affliggevano, tanto più cresceva, e tanto più moltiplicava fuor di modo; onde gli Egizj portavano gran noia de’ figliuoli d’Israele.

13 E gli Egizj facevano servire i figliuoli d’Israele con asprezza.

14 E li facevano vivere in amaritudine, con dura servitù, adoperandoli intorno all’argilla, e a’ mattoni, e ad ogni servigio de’ campi; tutta la servitù, nella quale li adoperavano, era con asprezza.

15 Il re di Egitto disse ancora alle levatrici delle donne Ebree, il nome dell’una delle quali era Sifra, e quel dell’altra Pua:

16 Quando voi ricoglierete i parti delle donne Ebree, e le vedrete in su la seggiola, se il parto è un figliuol maschio, uccidetelo; ma se è una figliuola femmina, lasciatela vivere.

17 Ma quelle levatrici temettero Iddio, e non fecero secondo che il re di Egitto avea loro detto; anzi lasciarono vivere i fanciulli.

18 E il re di Egitto chiamò le levatrici, e disse loro: Perchè avete voi fatto questo, di lasciar vivere i fanciulli?

19 E le levatrici dissero a Faraone: Le donne Ebree non sono come l’Egizie, perciocchè sono vigorose; avanti che la levatrice sia venuta a loro, hanno partorito.

20 E Iddio fece del bene a quelle levatrici; e il popolo crebbe, e divenne grandemente possente.

21 E perchè quelle levatrici temettero Iddio, egli edificò loro delle case.

22 Allora Faraone comandò a tutto il suo popolo, dicendo: Gittate nel fiume ogni figliuol maschio che nascerà, e lasciate vivere tutte le figliuole femmine.


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#4588

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4588. 'That the midwife said to her, Do not be afraid' means perception received from the natural. This is clear from the meaning of 'saying' in the historical narratives of the Word as perception, dealt with in 1791, 1815, 1819, 1822, 1898, 1919, 2080, 2619, 2862, 3395, 3509, and from the meaning of 'the midwife' as the natural. The reason 'the midwife' here means the natural is that when anyone undergoes interior temptations, that is, when the interior man undergoes temptations, the natural is like a midwife. For unless the natural assists no birth of interior truth is possible, since it is the natural that receives interior truths into its bosom once these are born; indeed it is the natural that enables them to push their way out. The same applies to instances of spiritual birth, in that reception must take place wholly within the natural. This is the reason why, when a person is being regenerated, the natural is first of all made ready to receive, and to the extent it is then able to receive, interior truths and goods are able to emerge and multiply. This also explains why, if the natural man has not been made ready during the life of the body to receive the truths and goods of faith, that person cannot receive them in the next life and so cannot be saved. This is the implication of the common saying 'As the tree falls, so it must lie', meaning, What a person is when he dies, so he comes to be. For a person has with him in the next life his whole natural memory, that is, the memory belonging to his external man, though he is not allowed to use it in that life, 2469-2494. In the next life therefore that memory serves as the groundwork on which interior truths and goods rest; but if that groundwork is not able to support the goods and truths which flow into it from within, interior goods and truths are either annihilated, or perverted, or cast aside. From all this it may be seen that the natural is like a midwife.

[2] The likeness of the natural to a midwife, inasmuch as it is a recipient when the interior man gives birth, becomes clear also from the internal sense of what is recorded concerning the midwives who, contrary to Pharaoh's orders, allowed the sons of the Hebrew women to live. This is described in Moses as follows,

The king of Egypt spoke to the midwives of the Hebrew women, and he said, When you act as midwives to the Hebrew women and see them on the stools, if it is a son you shall kill him, but if it is a daughter she shall be allowed to live. And the midwives feared God, and did not do as the king of Egypt told them, but allowed the sons to live. And the king of Egypt called the midwives and said to them Why have you done this thing and allowed the sons to live? And the midwives said to Pharaoh, Because the Hebrew women are not like the Egyptian women, for they are lively; before the midwife reaches them they have given birth. And God did well to the midwives; and the people multiplied and became extremely numerous. And it happened because the midwives feared God, that He made them houses. Exodus 1:15-21.

'The daughters and sons' to whom the Hebrew women gave birth represent the goods and truths of a new Church; 'the midwives' represent the natural, inasmuch as this is the recipient of goods and truths; 'the king of Egypt' represents factual knowledge in general, 1164, 1165, 1186, that wipes out truths, as happens when factual knowledge enters into matters of faith by a wrong path, which it does when nothing except that dictated by sensory experience and factual knowledge is believed. The fact that 'the midwives' in that passage means receptions of truth, within the natural, will in the Lord's Divine mercy be corroborated when the contents of that chapter in Exodus come up for explanation.

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