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ဝတ်ပြုရာကျမ်း第2章

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1 ထာဝရဘုရားအား ဘောဇဉ် ပူဇော်သက္ကာပြုလိုလျှင်၊ မုန့်ညက်ကို ဆက်ရမည်။ မုန့်ညက်အပေါ်မှာ ဆီကိုလောင်း၍၊ လောဗန်ကိုလည်း ထည့်ပြီးမှ၊

2 အာရုန်၏သားယဇ်ပုရောဟိတ်ထံသို့ ဆောင်ခဲ့၍၊ ယဇ်ပုရောဟိတ်သည် မုန့်ညက်တလက်ဆွန်း၊ ဆီအချို့၊ လောဗန်ရှိသမျှကို ယူ၍၊ ထိုအတွက် အတာကို ယဇ်ပလ္လင်ပေါ်မှာ မီးရှို့ရမည်။ ထာဝရဘုရားအား မီးဖြင့် ဆက်ကပ်၍၊ မွှေးကြိုင်သော ပူဇော်သက္ကာ ဖြစ်သတည်း။

3 ကျန်ကြွင်းသော ဘောဇဉ် ပူဇော်သက္ကာမူကား၊ အာရုန်နှင့် သူ၏သားတို့အဘို့ ဖြစ်ရမည်။ ထာဝရ ဘုရားအား မီးဖြင့် ပြုသော ပူဇော်သက္ကာထဲက အလွန်သန့်ရှင်းသော အရာဖြစ်၏။

4 မီးဖို၌ ဖုတ်သောမုန့်ကို ဘောဇဉ် ပူဇော်သက္ကာပြုလိုလျှင်၊ ဆီနှင့် မုန့်ညက်ဖြင့် လုပ်သော တဆေးမဲ့ မုန့်ပြားသော်၎င်း၊ ဆီလူးသော တဆေးမဲ့ မုန့်ကြွပ်သော်၎င်း ဖြစ်ရမည်။

5 သံပြားပူနှင့်လုပ်သောမုန့်ကို ဘောဇဉ် ပူဇော်သက္ကာပြုလိုလျှင်၊ ဆီရော၍ တဆေးမပါသော မုန့်ညက် နှင့် လုပ်ရမည်။

6 ထိုမုန့်ကို ချိုးဖဲ့၍ ဆီကို လောင်းရမည်။ ဘောဇဉ် ပူဇော်သက္ကာ ဖြစ်သတည်း။

7 အိုးကင်းနှင့် ကြော်သောမုန့်ကို ဘောဇဉ်ပူဇော်သက္ကာပြုလိုလျှင်၊ ဆီရောသော မုန့်ညက်နှင့် လုပ်ရမည်။

8 ထိုဘောဇဉ် ပူဇော်သက္ကာအမျိုးမျိုးတို့ကို၊ ထာဝရဘုရား အထံတော်သို့ ဆောင်ခဲ့၍၊ ယဇ်ပုရောဟိတ် အား ဆက်ပြီးမှ၊ သူသည် ယဇ်ပလ္လင်သို့ ဆောင်ခဲ့ရမည်။

9 ထိုဘောဇဉ် ပူဇော်သက္ကာထဲက အတွက်အတာကို နှိုက်ယူ၍ ယဇ်ပလ္လင်ပေါ်မှာ မီးရှို့ရမည်။ ထာဝရဘုရားအား မီးဖြင့် ဆက်ကပ်၍ မွှေးကြိုင်သော ပူဇော်သက္ကာဖြစ်သတည်း။

10 ကျန်ကြွင်းသော ဘောဇဉ်ပူဇော်သက္ကာမူကား၊ အာရုန်နှင့် သူ၏သားတို့အဘို့ ဖြစ်ရမည်။ ထာဝရ ဘုရားအား မီးဖြင့်ပြုသော ပူဇော်သက္ကာထဲက အလွန်သန့်ရှင်းသော အရာဖြစ်၏။

11 ထာဝရဘုရားအား ဆက်သော ဘောဇဉ်ပူဇော်သက္ကာ၌ တဆေးမပါရ။ ထာဝရဘုရားအား မီးဖြင့် ပူဇော်သက္ကာပြုသောအခါ၊ တဆေးကို မီးမရှို့ရ။ ပျားရည်ကိုလည်း မရှို့ရ။

12 အဦးသီးသော အသီးအနှံကို ပူဇော်သော အမှုမှာ၊ တဆေးနှင့် ပျားရည်ကို၊ ထာဝရဘုရားအား ပူဇော်ရသော်လည်း၊ မွှေးကြိုင်ရာဘို့ ယဇ်ပလ္လင်ပေါ်မှာ မီးမရှို့ရ။

13 ဘောဇဉ် ပူဇော်သက္ကာပြုလေရာရာ၌ ဆားခပ်ရမည်။ သင်ပြုသော ဘောဇဉ် ပူဇော်သက္ကာ၌၊ သင်၏ ဘုရားသခင် ပဋိညာဉ်ဆားကို မခပ်ဘဲမနေရ။

14 အဦးသီးသော အသီးအနှံကို၊ ထာဝရဘုရားအား ဘောဇဉ်ပူဇော်သက္ကာပြုလိုလျှင်၊ စပါးနှံကို အရည်စစ် အောင် မီးနားမှာ ထား၍၊ စပါးစေ့ကို ပွတ်ယူပြီးမှ၊-

15 ဆီကိုလောင်း၍၊ လောဇန်ကိုတင်လျက်၊ ပူဇော်သက္ကာကို ပြုရမည်။ ဘောဇဉ် ပူဇော်သက္ကာ ဖြစ်သတည်း။

16 ပွတ်ယူသော စပါးစေ့အချို့၊ ဆီအချို့၊ လောဗန်ရှိသမျှတည်းဟူသော ထိုဘောဇဉ် ပူဇော်သက္ကာအတွက် အတာကို၊ ယဇ်ပုရောဟိတ်သည် မီးရှို့ရမည်။ ထာဝရဘုရားအား မီးဖြင့်ပြုသော ပူဇော်သက္ကာ ဖြစ်သတည်း။

   

来自斯威登堡的著作

 

Arcana Coelestia#2342

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2342. 'And he baked unleavened bread' means purification. This is clear from the meaning of 'unleavened' or without yeast. In the Word 'bread' means in general every celestial and spiritual food, and so in general everything celestial and spiritual, see 276, 680, 1798, 2165, 2177. The need for the latter to be free of all impurities or unholiness was represented by 'unleavened bread'; for 'yeast' means the evil and falsity by means of which celestial and spiritual things are rendered impure and profane. On account of this representation those who belonged to the representative Church were forbidden in sacrifices to offer any bread or minchah other than bread without yeast, that is, unleavened, as is clear in Moses,

Every minchah which you bring to Jehovah shall be made without yeast. Leviticus 2:11. In the same author,

You shall not sacrifice the blood of My sacrifice with that made with yeast. Exodus 23:18; 34:25.

[2] They were also forbidden therefore to eat any other bread during the seven days of the Passover than bread without yeast, that is, which was unleavened. This prohibition occurs in the following verses in Moses,

For seven days you shall eat unleavened bread; even on the first day you shall remove yeast from your houses, for anyone eating that made with yeast, that soul shall be cut off from Israel, from the first day until the seventh. In the first [month], on the fourteenth day of the month, in the evening, you shall eat unleavened bread until the twenty-first day of the month, in the evening. For seven days no yeast shall be found in your houses, for anyone eating that made with yeast, that soul shall be cut off from the congregation of Israel, whether a settler or one born in the land. Exodus 12:15, 19-20.

The same prohibition appears in other places as well, such as Exodus 13:6-7; 23:15; 34:18; Deuteronomy 16:3-4. Consequently the Passover is called the Feast of Unleavened Bread, Leviticus 23:6; Numbers 28:16-17; Matthew 26:17; Luke 22:1, 7.

[3] That the Passover represented the glorification of the Lord and so the conjunction of the Divine with the human race will in the Lord's Divine mercy be shown elsewhere. And because the conjunction of the Lord with the human race is effected by means of love and charity, and by means of the faith deriving from these, celestial and spiritual things were represented by the unleavened bread which they were to eat each day during the Passover. Consequently to prevent the defilement of those things by anything unholy they were strictly forbidden to eat anything made with yeast, so strictly that any who did so were to be cut off; for those who profane celestial and spiritual things inevitably perish. Anyone may see that but for this arcanum within it that observance, together with so harsh a penalty, would never have been introduced.

[4] Everything that was commanded in that Church represented some arcanum, even the actual cooking, as with every instruction which the children of Israel carried out when they were leaving Egypt, namely that they were to eat that night flesh roasted by fire, and unleavened bread on bitter herbs; they were not to eat it raw or cooked in water; the head had to be on its legs; they were to let none of it remain until the morning; they were to burn what was left over with fire, Exodus 12:8-10. Every detail of these instructions was representative - eating it at night; flesh roasted by fire; unleavened bread on bitter herbs; the head on the legs; not raw; not cooked in water; not leaving any until the morning; and burning what was left with fire. But the arcana represented are in no way apparent unless they are disclosed by means of the internal sense. That sense alone shows that all these details are Divine.

[5] Something similar was done in the ritual for the taking of a Nazirite vow. The priest was to take the cooked shoulder of the ram, and one unleavened cake from the basket, and one unleavened wafer, and he was to place them on the palms of the Nazirite after he had shaved his consecrated head, Numbers 6:19. Anyone who does not know that a Nazirite represented the celestial man himself does not know either that every detail of these instructions embodies celestial things, and so arcana, which are not apparent in the letter, namely the instructions to take the cooked shoulder of a ram, an unleavened cake, an unleavened wafer, and to shave off his hair. This also shows what kind of opinion regarding the Word can be gained by people who do not believe in the existence of an internal sense, for without the internal sense such details are of no consequence at all. But when the ceremonial or ritualistic element has been stripped away everything becomes Divine and holy. Everything else has a deeper meaning, as does 'unleavened bread' which means the holiness of love, or what is most holy, as it is also called in Moses,

The unleavened bread that was left over was to be eaten by Aaron and his sons in a holy place, for it was most holy. Leviticus 6:16-17.

'Unleavened bread' therefore means pure love, and 'the baking of that which is unleavened' purification.

  
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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#2165

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2165. That 'I will take a piece of bread' means something heavenly or celestial to go with [that something natural] is clear from the meaning of 'bread' as that which is celestial, dealt with already in 276, 680, 681, 1798. The reason 'bread' here means that which is celestial is that bread means all food in general, and so in the internal sense all heavenly or celestial food. What celestial food is has been stated in Volume One, in 56-58, 680, 681, 1480, 1695. That 'bread' means all food in general becomes clear from the following places in the Word: One reads of Joseph telling the man in charge of his house to bring the men, that is, his brothers, into the house, and then to slaughter what needed to be slaughtered and made ready. And after that, when these things had been made ready and the men were to eat them, he said, Set on bread, Genesis 43:16, 31, by which he meant that the table was to be made ready by them. Thus 'bread' stood for all the food that made up the entire meal. Regarding Jethro one reads that Aaron came, and all the elders of Israel, to eat bread with Moses' father-in-law before God, Exodus 18:12. Here also 'bread' stands for all the food that made up the entire meal. And regarding Manoah, in the Book of Judges,

Manoah said to the angel of Jehovah, Let us now detain you, and let us make ready a kid before you. And the angel of Jehovah said to Manoah, If you detain me I will not eat your bread. Judges 13:15-16.

Here 'bread' stands for the kid. When Jonathan ate from the honeycomb the people told him that Saul had commanded the people with an oath, saying,

Cursed be the man who eats bread this day. 1 Samuel 14:27-28.

Here 'bread' stands for all food. Elsewhere, regarding Saul,

When Saul sat down to eat bread he said to Jonathan, Why has not the son of Jesse come either yesterday or today, to bread? 1 Samuel 20:24, 27.

This stands for coming to the table, where there was food of every kind. Regarding David who said to Mephibosheth, Jonathan's son,

You will eat bread at my table always. 2 Samuel 9:7, 10.

Similarly regarding Evil-Merodach who said that Jehoiachin the king of Judah was to eat bread with him always, all the days of his life, 2 Kings 25:29. Regarding Solomon the following is said,

Solomon's bread for each day was thirty cors 1 of fine flour, sixty cors of meal, ten fatted oxen, twenty pasture-fed oxen, and a hundred sheep, besides harts and wild she-goats and roebucks and fatted fowl. 1 Kings 4:22-23.

Here 'bread' plainly stands for all the provisions that are mentioned.

[2] Since then 'bread' means every kind of food in general it consequently means in the internal sense all those things that are called heavenly or celestial foods. This becomes even clearer still from the burnt offerings and sacrifices that were made of lambs, sheep, 2 she-goats, kids, he-goats, young bulls, and oxen, which are referred to by the single expression bread offered by fire to Jehovah, as is quite clear from the following places in Moses where the various sacrifices are dealt with and which, it says, the priest was to burn on the altar as the bread offered by fire to Jehovah for an odour of rest, Leviticus 3:11, 16. All those sacrifices and burnt offerings were called such. In the same book,

The sons of Aaron shall be holy to their God, and they shall not profane the name of their God, for it is the fire-offerings to Jehovah, the bread of their God, that they offer. You shall sanctify him, for it is the bread of your God that he offers. No man of Aaron's seed who has a blemish in himself shall approach to offer the bread of his God. Leviticus 21:6, 8, 17, 21.

Here also sacrifices and burnt offerings are referred to as 'bread', as they are also in Leviticus 22:25. Elsewhere in the same author,

Command the children of Israel, and say to them, My gift, My bread, for fire-offerings of an odour of rest, you shall take care to offer to Me at their appointed times. Numbers 28:2.

Here also 'bread' stands for all the sacrifices that are mentioned in that chapter. In Malachi,

Offering polluted bread on My altar. Malachi 1:7.

This also has regard to sacrifices. The consecrated parts of the sacrifices which they ate were called 'bread' as well, as is clear from these words in Moses,

The person who has touched anything unclean shall not eat any of the consecrated offerings, but he shall surely bathe his flesh in water, and when the sun has set he will be clean. And afterwards he shall eat of the consecrated offerings, because it is his bread. Leviticus 22:6-7.

[3] Burnt offerings and sacrifices in the Jewish Church represented nothing else than the heavenly things of the Lord's kingdom in heaven, and of the Lord's kingdom on earth, which is the Church. They also represented the things of the Lord's kingdom or Church as it exists with every individual; and in general they represented all those things that are composed of love and charity, for those things are celestial or of heaven. In addition each type of sacrifice represented some specific thing. In those times all of the sacrifices were called 'bread', and therefore when the sacrifices were abolished and other things serving for external worship took their place, the use of bread and wine was commanded.

[4] From all this it is now clear what is meant by that 'bread', namely that it means all those things which were represented in the sacrifices, and thus in the internal sense means the Lord Himself. And because 'bread' there means the Lord Himself it means love itself towards the whole human race and what belongs to love. It also means man's reciprocal love to the Lord and towards the neighbour. Thus the bread now commanded means all celestial things, and wine accordingly all spiritual things, as the Lord also explicitly teaches in John,

They said, Our fathers ate the manna in the wilderness; as it is written, He gave them bread from heaven to eat. Jesus said to them, Truly, truly, I say to you, It was not Moses who gave you the bread from heaven, but My Father gives you the true bread from heaven. For the bread of God is He who comes down from heaven and gives life to the world. They said to Him, Lord, give us this bread always. Jesus said to them, I am the Bread of life he who comes to Me will not hunger, and he who believes in Me will never thirst. John 6:31-35.

And in the same chapter,

Truly I say to you, He who believes in Me has eternal life. I am the Bread of life. Your fathers ate the manna in the wilderness, and they died. This is the Bread which comes down from heaven, that a man may eat of it and not die. I am the living Bread which came down from heaven; if anyone eats of this Bread he will live for ever. John 6:47-51.

[5] Now because this 'Bread' is the Lord it exists within the celestial things of love which are the Lord's, for the Lord is the celestial itself, because He is love itself, that is, mercy itself. This being so, 'bread' also means everything celestial, that is, all the love and charity existing with a person, for these are derived from the Lord. People who are devoid of love and charity therefore do not have the Lord within them, and so are not endowed with the forms of good and of happiness which are meant in the internal sense by 'bread'. This external symbol [of love and charity] was commanded because the worship of the majority of the human race is external, and therefore without some external symbol scarcely anything holy would exist among them. Consequently when they lead lives of love to the Lord and of charity towards the neighbour, that which is internal exists with them even though they do not know that such love and charity constitute the inner core of worship. Thus in their external worship they are confirmed in the kinds of good which are meant by 'the bread'.

[6] In the Prophets as well 'bread' means the celestial things of love, as in Isaiah 3:1, 7; 30:23; 33:15-16; 55:2; 58:7-8; Lamentations 5:9; Ezekiel 4:16-17; 5:16; 14:13; Amos 4:6; 8:11; Psalms 105:16. Those things are in a similar way meant by 'the loaves of the Presence' on the table, referred to in Leviticus 24:5-9; Exodus 25:30; 40:23; Numbers 4:7; 1 Kings 7:48.

脚注:

1. A cor, or a homer, was a Hebrew measure of about 6 bushels or 220 litres.

2. The Latin has a word meaning oxen (boves), but comparison with other places where Swedenborg gives the same list of animals suggests that he intended sheep (oves).

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