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ယေဇကျေလ第12章

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1 တဖန်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ နှုတ်ကပတ်တော်သည် ငါ့ဆီသို့ရောက်လာ၍၊

2 အချင်းလူသား၊ သင်သည်ပုန်ကန်တတ်သော အမျိုးထဲမှာနေ၏။ သူတို့သည် မြင်ရသော မျက်စိ ရှိသော်လည်း မမြင်တတ်။ ကြားရသော နားရှိသော် လည်း မကြားတတ်။ ပုန်ကန်တတ်သော အမျိုးဖြစ်ကြ၏။

3 သို့ဖြစ်၍၊ အချင်းလူသား၊ အခြားသို့ ပြောင်း သွားခြင်းငှါ ဥစ္စာပရိကံများကို ပြင်ဆင်၍၊ နေ့အချိန်၌ သူတို့မျက်မှောက်တွင် ပြောင်းသွားလော့။ သူတို့မျက် မှောက်တွင် အခြားတပါးသို့နေရာပြောင်းလော့။ ပုန်ကန် တတ်သော အမျိုးဖြစ်သော်လည်း၊ သတိရကောင်းရကြ လိမ့်မည်။

4 နေရာပြောင်းစရာဘို့ ပြင်ဆင်သော ဥစ္စာပရိကံ များကဲ့သို့၊ သင်၏ ဥစ္စာပရိကံများကို နေ့အချိန်၌ သူတို့ မျက်မှောက်တွင် ထုတ်ရမည်။ သိမ်းသွားခြင်းကို ခံရသော သူကဲ့သို့၊ ညအချိန်၌ သူတို့မျက်မှောက်တွင် ထွက်သွား ရမည်။

5 သူတို့မျက်မှောက်၌ အုတ်ရိုးကိုတူးဖောက်၍၊ ဥစ္စာ ပရိကံများကို ထုတ်သွားလော့။

6 ညဦးယံအချိန်၌ သူတို့မျက်မှောက်တွင် ပခုံး ပေါ်မှာထမ်း၍ ထုတ်ရမည်။ မြေကိုမမြင်ရအောင် မျက်နှာကိုဖုံးရမည်။ အကြောင်းမူကား၊ သင့်ကို ဣသရေလအမျိုးအား နိမိတ်လက္ခဏာဖြစ်စေခြင်းငှါ ငါခန့်ထားပြီဟု မိန့်တော်မူသည်အတိုင်း၊

7 ငါသည် သိမ်းသွားခြင်းကို ခံရသောသူ၏ ဥစ္စာပရိကံများကဲ့သို့၊ ငါ၏ဥစ္စာပရိကံများကို နေ့အချိန်၌ ထုတ်၍၊ ညအချိန်၌အုတ်ရိုးကို ကိုယ်လက်နှင့် တူးဖော် ပြီးမှ၊ ညဦးယံအချိန်၌သူတို့မျက်မှောက်တွင် ပခုံးပေါ်မှာ ထမ်းသွား၏။

8 နံနက်အချိန်၌ ထာဝရဘုရား၏ နှုတ်ကပတ် တော်သည် ငါ့ဆီသို့ရောက်လာ၍၊

9 အချင်းလူသား၊ ပုန်ကန်တတ်သော ဣသရေလ အမျိုးက၊ သင်သည်အဘယ်သို့ပြုသနည်းဟု သင့်အား မေးသည်ရှိသော်၊

10 အရှင်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ အမိန့်တော်ကို ဆင့်ဆိုရ မည်။ ဤဗျာဒိတ်တော်သည် ယေရုရှလင်မြို့ကို အစိုးရ သော မင်းမှစ၍၊ ထိုမြို့၌ရှိသော ဣသရေလအမျိုးသား အပေါင်းတို့နှင့်ဆိုင်ပေ၏။

11 ငါသည်သင်တို့၏ နိမိတ်လက္ခဏာဖြစ်၏။ ငါပြု သကဲ့သို့ သင်တို့သည် ပြုရကြလိမ့်မည်။ နေရာပြောင်း၍ သိမ်းသွားခြင်းကို ခံရကြလိမ့်မည်။

12 သင်တို့၏ မင်းသည်လည်း၊ မိမိပခုံး၌ထမ်း၍ ညဦးယံအချိန်၌ ထုတ်သွားရလိမ့်မည်။ ထုတ်သွားစရာဘို့ အုတ်ရိုးကိုတူးဖော်ရလိမ့်မည်။ မြေကိုမမြင်ရအောင် မျက်နှာကိုဖုံးရလိမ့်မည်။

13 ထိုမင်းကိုလည်း ငါ၏ပိုက်ကွန်နှင့်အုပ်၍၊ ငါ၏ ကျော့ကွင်း၌ ကျော့မိစေသည်။ ခါလဒဲပြည်ဗာဗုလုန်မြို့သို့ ဆောင်သွားမည်။ ထိုမြို့၌ သေရသော်လည်း မြို့ကို မမြင်ရ။

14 သူ့ကိုမစခြင်းငှါ ဝိုင်းသောသူတို့နှင့် တပ်သား အပေါင်းတို့ကို အရပ်ရပ်သို့ဖြန့်ကြဲမည်။ သူတို့နောက်၌ လည်း ထားကို လွှတ်လိုက်မည်။

15 လူအမျိုးမျိုးတို့တွင် ကွဲပြားစေ၍၊ အတိုင်းတိုင်း အပြည်ပြည်သို့ ဖြန့်ကြဲသောအခါ၊ ငါသည် ထာဝရ ဘုရားဖြစ်ကြောင်းကို သူတို့သိရကြလိမ့်မည်။

16 သို့ရာတွင်၊ ထားဘေး၊မွတ်သိပ်ခြင်းဘေး၊ ကာလနာဘေးတို့နှင့် လွတ်၍၊ ငါကျန်ကြွင်းစေသော သူအချို့တို့သည် မိမိတို့ပြုဘူးသော စက်ဆုပ်ရွံ့ရှာဘွယ် အမှုရှိသမျှတို့ကို၊ နောက်ရောက်သော တပါးအမျိုးသား နေရာပြည်တို့၌ ဘော်ပြကြလိမ့်မည်။ ငါသည် ထာဝရ ဘုရားဖြစ်ကြောင်းကို သူတို့သိရကြလိမ့်မည်ဟု မိန့်တော် မူ၏။

17 တဖန်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ နှုတ်ကပတ်တော်သည် ငါ့ဆီသို့ ရောက်လာ၍၊

18 အချင်းလူသား၊ တုန်လှုပ်လျက်အစာကို စား လော့။ တုန်လှုပ်လျက်၊ သတိပြုလျက် ရေကိုသောက် လော့။

19 အရှင်ထာဝရဘုရားသည် ဣသရေပြည်ယေရုရှလင်မြို့သားတို့ကို ရည်မှတ်၍ မိန့်တော်မူသော စကားကို ဆင့်ဆိုရမည်မှာ၊ သူတို့သည် သတိပြုလျက် အစာကို စားရကြမည်။ မိန်းမောတွေဝေလျက်ရေကို သောက်ရကြမည်။ ထိုသို့သောအားဖြင့်၊ ပြည်သူပြည်သား အပေါင်းတို့ပြုသော အဓမ္မအမှုကြောင့်၊ ဣသရေပြည် သည် မိမိပြည့်စုံခြင်းနှင့် ကင်းလွတ်ရလိမ့်မည်။

20 လူနေသောမြို့တို့သည်လည်း ပျက်စီး၍၊ တပြည်လုံးဆိတ်ညံလျက် ရှိရလိမ့်မည်။ ငါသည် ထာဝရ ဘုရားဖြစ်ကြောင်းကို သင်တို့သိရကြလိမ့်မည်ဟု မိန့်တော် မူ၏။

21 တဖန်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ နှုတ်ကပတ်တော်သည် ငါ့ဆီသို့ ရောက်လာ၍၊

22 အချင်းလူသားနေ့ရက်ကာလရွေ့လျက်ရှိ၍၊ ခပ်သိမ်းသော ဗျာဒိတ်ရူပါရုံလည်း ပျက်ကြပြီဟု၊ ဣသ ရေလပြည်၌ သုံးတတ်သော စကားပုံကား အဘယ်သို့ နည်း။

23 သို့ဖြစ်၍၊ အရှင်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ အမိန့်တော်ကို ဆင့်ဆိုရမည်မှာ၊ ထိုစကားပုံကို ငါပျောက်စေမည်။ နောက်တဖန် ဣသရေလအမျိုး၌ မသုံးရကြ။ နေ့ရက် ကာလနီးပြီ။ ခပ်သိမ်းသော ဗျာဒိတ်ရူပါရုံလည်း ပြည့် စုံကြလိမ့်မည်ဟု ပြောလော့။

24 နောက်တဖန် ဣသရေလအမျိုး၌ အချည်းနှီး သောရူပါရုံမရှိရ။ ချော့မော့စွာ ပရောဖက်ပြုခြင်းလည်း မရှိရ။

25 ငါသည် ထာဝရဘုရားဖြစ်၏။ ငါပြောလျှင်၊ ပြောသည်အတိုင်း ပြည့်စုံလိမ့်မည်။ ပြည့်စုံချိန်လည်း မရွေ့ရ။ အချင်းပုန်ကန်တတ်သောအမျိုး၊ သင်တို့ လက်ထက်၌ ငါပြောမည်။ ပြောသည်အတိုင်းလည်း ပြည့်စုံစေမည်ဟု အရှင်ထာဝရဘုရားမိန့်တော်မူ၏။

26 တဖန်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ နှုတ်ကပတ်တော်သည် ငါ့ဆီသို့ ရောက်လာ၍၊

27 အချင်းလူသား၊ ဣသရေလအမျိုးသားတို့က၊ သူမြင်သော ဗျာဒိတ်ရူပါရုံသည် ဝေးသေး၏။ ဝေးသေး သောကာလကို ရည်မှတ်၍ ဟောတတ်သည်ဟု ပြောဆို ကြ၏။

28 သို့ဖြစ်၍ အရှင်ထာဝရဘုရား၏ အမိန့်တော်ကို ဆင့်ဆိုရမည်မှာ၊ ငါ၏စကားပြည့်စုံချိန်မရွှေ့ရ။ ငါပြော သည်၊ အတိုင်းလည်း ပြည့်စုံစေမည်ဟု အရှင်ထာဝရ ဘုရားမိန့်တော်မူ၏။

   

来自斯威登堡的著作

 

Arcana Coelestia#3863

学习本章节

  
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3863. 'For she said, Because Jehovah has seen' in the highest sense means foresight, in the internal sense faith, in the interior sense understanding, and in the external sense sight - faith received from the Lord being meant here. This is clear from the meaning of 'seeing', dealt with below. What has been presented above shows that the twelve tribes, named after the twelve sons of Jacob, meant all things forming part of truth and good, or of faith and love, and so all aspects of the Church. It also shows that each tribe meant some universal division, and so the twelve tribes the twelve universal divisions which embrace and include within themselves every specific thing which is part of the Church, and in the universal sense everything that is part of the Lord's kingdom. The universal division meant by 'Reuben' is faith. The reason faith is the first universal division is that when a person is being regenerated, or becoming the Church, he must first learn and absorb aspects of faith, that is, of spiritual truth, for it is by means of doctrine about faith or truth that he is led into regeneration. For man is such that of himself he does not know what heavenly good is but has to learn about it from doctrine, which is called the doctrine of faith. Every doctrine of faith has life as the end in view, and because it has life it also has good in view, for good is the sum and substance of life.

[2] Controversy existed among the ancients over which was the firstborn of the Church, whether it was the truth of faith or whether it was the good of love. Those who said that the truth of faith was the firstborn based their conclusions on the outward appearance and decided that such truth was the firstborn because it is and must be learned first and because a person is led by means of it into good. But they did not know that good is essentially the firstborn and that it is instilled by the Lord through the internal man so that he may adopt and accept the truth which is brought in by way of the external. They did not know that good holds life from the Lord within it, or that truth does not possess any life except that which comes through good, so that good is the soul of truth by making truth its own and clothing itself with it as the soul does the body. From this it may be seen that to outward appearance truth occupies first place and is so to speak the firstborn while a person is being regenerated, though essentially good occupies first place and is the firstborn, and does actually come to occupy it once he has been regenerated. For the truth of this, see 3539, 3548, 3556, 3563, 3570, 3576, 3603, 3701.

[3] The subject in this and previous chapters being the regeneration of the natural - at this point its first state, which is a state of being led by means of truth into good - the first son of Jacob, who was Reuben, was so named from the phrase Jehovah seeing, which in the internal sense means faith originating in the Lord. Regarded in itself faith consists in faith in the understanding and faith in the will. Knowledge and understanding of the truth of faith is called faith in the understanding, but willing the truth of faith is called faith in the will. The former - faith in the understanding - is the faith meant by 'Reuben', but the latter - faith in the will - is that meant by 'Simeon'. It may be seen by anyone that faith existing in the understanding, or the ability to understand truth, comes before faith existing in the will, or the actual willing of it. For when a person does not know of something, such as heavenly good, he must first come to know of its existence and then to understand what it is before he is able to will it.

[4] 'Seeing' in the external sense means sight, as is clear without explanation. 'Seeing' in the interior sense means the understanding, as is likewise clear, for the sight that the internal man has is nothing else than the understanding, which also is why in everyday speech the understanding is called internal sight, and the word light is used in reference to it as well as to external sight and is called the light of the understanding. 'Seeing' in the internal sense means faith received from the Lord, as is clear from the consideration that interior understanding has no other objects than those of truth and good, for these are the objects of faith. This interior understanding, or internal sight, which has truths of faith as its objects, does not show itself so plainly as the understanding does which has truths to do with public and private life as its objects, the reason being that it exists inside this latter understanding and dwells in the light of heaven, which light is in obscurity as long as a person dwells in the light of the world. Nevertheless it does reveal itself with those who are regenerate, in particular by means of conscience. 'Seeing' in the highest sense clearly means foresight, for the intelligence spoken of in reference to the Lord is an infinite intelligence, which is nothing else than foresight.

[5] That 'seeing' after which Reuben was named means in the internal sense faith received from the Lord is evident from very many places in the Word, of which let the following be brought forward: In Moses,

Jehovah said to Moses, Make a serpent and set it on a standard, and it will be that everyone who has been bitten, when he sees it, will live. And Moses made a serpent of bronze and set it on a standard. And so it was, if a serpent had bitten a man, when he looked at the serpent of bronze, that he was restored to life again. Numbers 21:8-9.

'The bronze serpent' represented the Lord's external sensory perception, which is natural, see 197 - 'bronze' meaning that which is natural, 425, 1551. Faith in Him was represented by the restoration to life again of those who saw it, that is, looked at it, as the Lord Himself teaches in John,

As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so must the Son of Man be lifted up, that everyone who believes in Him may not perish but have eternal life. John 3:14-15.

[6] In Isaiah,

The Lord said, Go and say to this people, Hearing, hear - but do not understand; and seeing, see - but do not comprehend. Make the heart of this people fat and their ears heavy, and plaster over their eyes, lest they see with their eyes and hear with their ears, and their heart understands. Isaiah 6:9-10.

Here it is quite evident that 'seeing, see - but do not comprehend' means understanding what is true and yet not acknowledging. The words 'plastering over their eyes, lest they see with their eyes' means depriving them of the understanding of truth, faith in the Lord being meant in this case by 'seeing', as is clear from the Lord's words in Matthew 13:13-14, and in John 12:36-37, 39-40.

[7] In Ezekiel,

Son of man, you are dwelling in the midst of a rebellious house, who have eyes to see but they do not see, who have ears to hear but they do not hear. Ezekiel 12:2

'Eyes to see but they do not see' stands for their being able to understand the truths of faith but not willing them. They do not will them on account of evils, meant by 'a rebellious house', which bring an untrue light to falsities and darkness to truths, in accordance with the following in Isaiah,

They were a rebellious people, lying sons, sons who did not wish to hear the law of Jehovah, who said to the seers, Do not see; and to those who had visions, Do not see for us things that are right, tell us smooth things, see illusions. Isaiah 30:9-10.

In Isaiah,

This people walking in darkness have seen a great light; those dwelling in the land of the shadow of death, upon them has the light shone out. Isaiah 9:2.

'Seeing a great light' stands for receiving and believing the truths of faith. It is over those who have faith that heavenly 'light' is said 'to shine out', for the light which is shed in heaven is Divine Truth coming from Divine Good.

[8] In the same prophet,

Jehovah has poured out over you a spirit of slumber, and has closed your eyes, the prophets and your heads, the seers, He has covered. Isaiah 29:10.

'Closing the eyes' stands for closing the understanding of truth - 'the eye' meaning the understanding, see 2701. 'Covering the seers' stands for covering those who know and teach the truths of faith. 'Seers' in former times were called prophets, and prophets mean those who teach as well as meaning the truths of doctrine, see 2534. In the same prophet,

The priest and the prophet err through strong drink, they err among those who see, they are tottery in judgement. Isaiah 28:7.

Here the meaning is similar. 'The judgement in which they are tottery' means the truth of faith, see 2235. In the same prophet,

The eyes of those who see will not be closed, and the ears of those who hear will listen. Isaiah 32:3.

Here the meaning is similar.

[9] In the same prophet,

Your eyes will behold the king in his beauty, they will see a land stretching far. Isaiah 33:17.

'Beholding the king in his beauty' stands for beholding truths of faith which come from the Lord and are called beautiful by virtue of good. 'Seeing a land stretching far' stands for seeing the good of love. For 'the king' means the truth of faith, see 1672, 2015, 2069, 3009, 3670, this being called beautiful by virtue of good, 553, 3080, 3821; and 'a land' means the good of love, 620, 636, 3368, 3379. In Matthew,

Blessed are the pure in heart, for these will see God. Matthew 5:8.

Here it is quite evident that 'seeing God' means believing in Him, and so seeing Him by faith, for people who possess faith, from faith see God, since God is within faith and is that within faith which constitutes true faith.

[10] In the same gospel,

If your eye causes you to stumble pluck it out. It is better for you to enter into life one-eyed than having two eyes to be thrown into the Gehenna of fire. Matthew 18:9.

Here, as is quite evident, 'the eye' does not mean the eye. Nor does it mean that the eye has to be plucked out, for it is not the eye that causes the stumbling but the understanding of truth meant here by 'the eye', 2701. The law that it is better not to know and grasp the truths of faith than to know and grasp them and yet to lead a life of evil is what is meant by 'better to enter into life one-eyed than having two eyes to be thrown into the Gehenna of fire'.

[11] In the same gospel,

Blessed are your eyes, for they see, and your ears, for they hear. Truly, I say to you, many prophets and righteous men desired to see what you see, but did not see. Matthew 13:13-17; John 12:40.

'Seeing' stands for knowing and understanding the things that constitute faith in the Lord, and so stands for faith. For it was not their seeing the Lord and seeing His miracles that made them 'blessed' but their believing, as becomes clear from the following words in John,

I said to you that you have both seen Me and not believed. This is the will of Him who sent Me, that everyone who sees the Son and believes in Him may have eternal life. No one has seen the Father except Him who is with the Father; He has seen the Father. Truly, truly, I say to you, He who believes in Me has eternal life. John 6:36, 40, 46-47.

'Seeing and not believing' stands for knowing the truths of faith and not accepting them, 'seeing and believing' for knowing them and accepting them. The words 'No one has seen the Father except Him who is with the Father' stands for not being able to acknowledge Divine Good except through Divine Truth - 'the Father' being Divine Good and 'the Son' Divine Truth, see 3704. Consequently the internal sense is that nobody is able to possess heavenly good unless he acknowledges the Lord.

[12] Similarly in the same gospel,

Nobody has ever seen God; the only begotten Son who is in the bosom of the Father, He has made Him known. John 1:18.

And in the same gospel,

Jesus said, He who sees Me sees Him who sent Me. I have come as Light into the world in order that everyone who believes in Me may not remain in darkness. John 12:45-46.

Here it is explicitly stated that 'seeing' means believing or possessing faith. And in the same gospel,

Jesus said, If you know Me you know My Father also. And from now you know Him and have seen Him. He who has seen Me has seen the Father. John 14:7, 9.

In the same gospel,

The Spirit of truth the world cannot receive because it neither sees Him nor knows Him. I will not leave you orphans, I am coming to you. Yet a little while, the world will see Me no longer, but you will see Me; because I live you will live also. John 14:17-19.

'Seeing' stands for possessing faith, for it is solely through faith that the Lord is seen. Actually faith is the eye of love, since it is from love through faith that the Lord is seen, love being the life of faith. Hence His statement, 'You will see Me; because I live you will live also'.

[13] In the same gospel,

Jesus said, For judgement I came into this world, that those who do not see may see, but that those who see may become blind. The Pharisees said, Are we also blind? Jesus said to them, If you were blind you would have no sin; but now you say, 'We see', therefore your sin remains. John 9:39-41.

'Those who see' stands for those who imagine themselves to be more intelligent than everybody else. Of them it is said that they will become blind, that is, will not acquire faith. 'Not seeing' or being blind is used in reference to those immersed in falsities, and also to those who have no knowledge [of the truth], see 2383. In Luke,

To you it has been given to know the mysteries of the kingdom of God, but for everyone else in parables, that seeing they may not see, and hearing they may not hear. Luke 8:10.

Here the meaning is similar. In the same gospel,

I tell you truly, There are some of those standing here who will not taste death until they see the kingdom of God. Luke 9:27; Mark 9:1.

'Seeing the kingdom of God' stands for believing. In the same gospel,

Jesus said to the disciples, The days will come when you will desire to see one of the days of the Son of Man, but you will not see. Luke 17:22.

This refers to the close of the age or last period of the Church when no faith exists any longer.

[14] In the same gospel,

It happened, when Jesus was at table with them, that He took the bread and said a blessing, and broke it and gave to them. Then their eyes were opened and they recognized Him. Luke 24:30-31.

The meaning of this event was that the Lord comes into sight through good, but not through truth devoid of good; for 'bread' means the good of love, 276, 680, 2165, 2177, 3478, 3735, 3813. From these and many other places it is clear that 'seeing' in the internal sense means faith received from the Lord, for no other faith exists which is truly faith except faith which comes from the Lord. This is also the faith that enables a person to see, that is, to believe. But faith originating in self or a person's proprium is not truly faith, for it causes him to see falsities as truths and truths as falsities; or if he does see truths as truths he does not truly see them because he does not believe them. For in them he sees himself and not the Lord.

[15] That 'seeing' means possessing faith in the Lord is quite evident from what has been stated often about the light of heaven, namely that because it flows from the Lord the light of heaven holds intelligence and wisdom within it, and so holds faith in Him since faith in the Lord is inwardly present in intelligence and wisdom. Consequently seeing by that light, as angels do, can mean nothing else than faith in the Lord. The Lord Himself too is within that light because it proceeds from Him. That light is also the light which shines within the conscience of those who possess faith in Him, though no one is directly conscious of its doing so as long as he lives in the body, for during that time the light of the world is obscuring that light.

  
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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#2177

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2177. That 'meal of fine flour' means the spiritual and celestial ingredients [of the rational] which were present at that time with the Lord, and 'cakes' the same when both had been joined together, is quite clear from the sacrifices of the representative Church and from the minchah presented at the same time, which consisted of fine flour mixed with oil and made into cakes. Representative worship consisted primarily in burnt offerings and sacrifices. What these represented has been stated above where 'bread' was the subject, in 2165, namely the celestial things of the Lord's kingdom in heaven and of the Lord's kingdom on earth, which is the Church, and also the things of the Lord's kingdom or Church as it exists with every individual, and in general everything that is in essence love and charity, since these are celestial entities. In those times all the sacrifices were called 'bread'. Along with those sacrifices a minchah was included - which, as has been stated, consisted of fine flour mixed with oil to which also incense was added - and also a wine-offering.

[2] What these latter represented becomes clear too, namely things similar to those represented by sacrifices but of a lower order, thus the things which belong to the spiritual Church, and also those which belong to the external Church. It may become clear to anyone that such things would never have been prescribed unless they had represented Divine things, and also that each one represented some specific thing. For unless they had represented Divine things they would have been no different from similar things found among gentiles, among whom also there were sacrifices, minchahs, libations, and incense, as well as perpetual fires and many other things which had come down to them from the Ancient Church, especially from the Hebrew Church. But because they were separated from the internal, that is, the Divine things represented by them, those external forms of worship were nothing but idolatrous, as they also came to be among the Jews, who likewise sank into all kinds of idolatry. From this it may become clear to anyone that heavenly arcana were present within every form of ritual, especially so within the sacrifices and every detail of them.

[3] As regards the minchah, the nature of it and how it was to be made into cakes is described in a whole chapter in Moses - in Leviticus 2; also Numbers 15, and elsewhere. The law regarding the minchah is described in Leviticus in the following words,

Fire shall be kept burning unceasingly on the altar; it shall not be put out. And this is the law of the minchah: Aaron's sons shall bring it before Jehovah to the front of the altar, and he shall take up from it a fistful of fine flour of the minchah and of the oil of it and all the frankincense which is on the minchah, and he shall burn it on the altar; it is an odour of rest for a memorial to Jehovah. And the rest of it Aaron and his sons shall eat. Unleavened bread shall be eaten in a holy place. In the court of the tent of meeting shall they eat it. It shall not be cooked leavened; I have given it as their portion from My fire-offerings; it is most holy. Leviticus 6:13-17.

[4] The fire which was to be kept burning unceasingly on the altar represented the Lord's love, that is, His mercy, which is constant and eternal. 'Fire' in the Word means love, see 934, and therefore 'the fire-offerings made for an odour of rest' means the good pleasure which the Lord takes in those things that belong to love and charity. That 'odour' means good pleasure, that is, that which is pleasing, see 925, 1519. Their 'taking a fistful' represented their being required to love with all their soul or strength, for 'the hand' or 'the palm' of the hand means power, as shown in 878, from which 'the fist' also means the same. 'The fine flour together with the oil and the frankincense' represented all things of charity - 'fine flour' the spiritual ingredient of it, 'oil' the celestial, and 'frankincense' that which was in this manner pleasing. That 'fine flour' represents the spiritual ingredient is evident from what has just been stated and from what is stated below. That 'oil' represents the celestial ingredient, or the good or charity, see 886, and that 'frankincense' on account of its odour represents that which is pleasing and acceptable, 925.

[5] Its being 'unleavened bread' or not fermented means that it was to be genuine, thus something offered from genuineness of heart and having no uncleanness. The eating of the rest by Aaron and his sons represented man's reciprocation and his making it his own, and thus represented conjunction by means of love and charity; and it is for this reason that they were commanded to eat it 'in a holy place'. Hence it is called something most holy. These were the things which were represented by the minchah. It was also the way in which the representatives themselves were perceived in heaven; and when the member of the Church understood them in the same way his ideas were like the perception which the angels possess, so that he was in the Lord's kingdom in heaven even though he was on earth.

[6] For more about the minchah - what it was to consist of in any particular kind of sacrifice; the way in which it was to be baked into cakes; what kind was to be offered by those who were being cleansed, and also what kinds on other occasions (all of which would take too long to introduce and explain here) - see what is said about it in Exodus 29:39-41; Leviticus 5:11-13; 6:16-17, 19-21; 10:12-13; 23:10-13, 6, 17; Numbers 5:15 and following verses; 6:15-17, 19-20; 7: in various places; 28:5, 8, 9, 12-13, 20-21, 28-29; 29:3-4, 9-10, 14-15, 18, 21, 24, 27, 30, 33, 37

[7] 'Fine flour made into cakes' had in general the same representation as bread, namely the celestial ingredient of love, while 'meals represented its spiritual ingredient, as becomes clear in the places indicated above. The loaves which were called 'the bread of the Presence' or 'the shewbread' consisted of fine flour, which was made into cakes and placed on the table to provide an unceasing representation of the Lord's love, that is, of His mercy, towards the whole human race, and man's reciprocation. These loaves are spoken of in Moses as follows,

You shall take fine pour and bake it into twelve cakes; two-tenths [of an ephah] shall there be in one cake And you shall place them in two rows, six in a row, on the clean table before Jehovah. And you shall put pure frankincense on each row, and it shall be bread serving as a memorial, a fire-offering to Jehovah. Every sabbath day [Aaron] shall set it out in order before Jehovah continually; it is from the children of Israel as an eternal covenant. And it shall be for Aaron and his sons, and they shall eat it in a holy place, for it is to him the most holy of fire-offerings to Jehovah, by an eternal statute. Leviticus 24:5-9.

Every item and smallest detail mentioned here represented the holiness of love and charity, 'fine flour' having the same representation as meal of fine flour, namely that which is celestial and that which is spiritual that goes with it, and 'cake' the two when joined together.

[8] From this it is clear what the holiness of the Word is to those who possess heavenly ideas, and indeed what holiness was present within this particular representative observance, on account of which it is called 'most holy'. It is also clear how devoid of holiness the Word is to those who imagine that it does not have anything heavenly within it and who keep solely to externals. Exemplifying the latter are those who in the present verse under consideration perceive 'the meal' to be merely meal, 'the fine flour' merely fine flour, and 'the cake' merely a cake, and who imagine that these things have been stated without each one that is mentioned embodying something of the Divine within it. Their attitude is similar to that of those who imagine that the bread and wine of the Holy Supper are no more than a certain religious observance that does not have anything holy within it. Yet in fact it possesses such holiness that the minds of men are linked by means of it to the minds of those in heaven, when from an internal affection they think that the bread and wine mean the Lord's love and man's reciprocation, and by virtue of that interior thought and affection they abide in holiness.

[9] Much the same was implied by the requirement that when the children of Israel entered the land they were to present as a heave-offering to Jehovah a cake made from the first of their dough, Numbers 15:20. The fact that such things are meant is also evident in the Prophets, from' among whom for the moment let this one place in Ezekiel be introduced here,

You were adorned with gold and silver, and your raiment was of fine linen and silk and embroidered cloth. You ate fine flour, honey, and oil. You became exceedingly beautiful, and attained to a kingdom. Ezekiel 16:13.

This refers to Jerusalem, by which is meant the Church, which Church in its earliest days bore an appearance such as this, that is to say, the Ancient Church, which is described by means of raiment and many other adornments. Its affections for truth and good are also described by 'the fine flour, honey, and oil'. It may become clear to anyone that all these details mean in the internal sense something altogether different from what they do in the sense of the letter. And the same applies to Abraham's saying to Sarah, 'Take quickly three measures of meal of fine flour, knead it, and make cakes'. That 'three' means things that are holy has been shown already in 720, 901.

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