圣经文本

 

Genesis第42章

学习

   

2 «Nak əsleɣ as Masar ih'et alkama, ərəsat tat, zanzat ana du daɣ-as a dana wər anɣu laz.»

3 Ərasan ṃaraw məqqaran ən Yusəf sas Masar ad d azzanzin daɣ-as alkama.

4 Yaqub wər dər-san iššedaw Benyamin wa n amaḍray ən Yusəf fəlas iṇṇa iksud a tu təgrəw təkma iyyat əntada.

5 Əglan maddanəs n Israyil əddewan d aytedan wiyyaḍ əntanay da əgmaynen alkama fəlas akal ən Kanan əntada ewad t'in laz.

6 Yusəf ənta azzaran y akal, ənta a innəṭṭafan əd taɣawšay ta n nazzan n alkama y aytedan kul win n akal. Iməqqaran-net as t'in oṣan əssəjadan dat-əs daɣ aṃadal.

7 Inay Yusəf iməqqaran-net ɣas izday tan mišan iṣṣəkn'en as wər tan izday, iharaššat tan iṇṇ'aṣan: «Məni du təfalam?» Əjjəwwaban as, əṇṇan as: «Akal wa n Kanan a du nəfal fəl a du nəzzanzu isudar.»

8 Yusəf izday iməqqaran-net mišan əntanay wər t'əzdayan.

9 Iktad du Yusəf targəten ši ṇad itag sər-san, təzzar iṇṇ'aṣan: «Kawanay inaṣṣasaman a təṃosam, toṣam du fəl ad tənəyam idaggan win ərkamnen daɣ akal.»

10 Əṇṇan as: «Kala kala əmizwar, eklan nak nakkanay, aṣṣa ɣas a du nəga ad nazzanzu isudar.

11 Nakkanay ket nana abba nnana iyyanda, nakkanay aytedan ən təfləst a nəṃos, wər nəṃos inaṣṣasaman.»

12 «Kala, kala, iṇṇ-asan, toṣam du fəl ad tənəyam idaggan win ərkamnen daɣ akal!»

13 Əjjəwwaban as: «Nakkanay eklan nak ṃaraw-ena d əššin eraw ana aləs iyyanda ən Kanan. Amaḍray nnana wa ənḍərran noyyay in ɣur abba nnana, aṃaran wa das waššaran aba tu.»

14 Iṇṇ-assan Yusəf: «Nak adi da a dawan əṇṇe kawanay inaṣṣasaman a təṃosam.

15 Aṃaran a kawan ajjarraba: " Əhadaɣ awan s eṣəm ən Firɣawna kud təfalam da iket wər di d oṣa amaḍray nnawan.

16 Saglat iyyan daɣ wan a t'id'awəy, kawanay aṃaran at takkim kasaw, a kawan ajjarraba har əṣṣəna kud a wa di təgannam tidət wala bahu, as wər iga di əhada s eṣəm ən Firɣawna as kawanay inaṣṣasaman.»

17 Ig'en daɣ kasaw har əgan karad aḍan.

18 As ig'əzəl wa n karad, iṇṇ'asan Yusəf: «Agat a wa dawan z aṇṇa, a kawan ayya təddaram, fəlas Məššina a əksuda.

19 Kud tidət as təṃosam aytedan ən təfləst ayyaq qawan, aqqam du iyyan daɣ wan daɣ kasaw, kawanay taglim tawəyam alkama y aɣaywan nawan iha laz.

20 Təzzar tawəyam i du amaḍray nnawan ad əṣṣənaɣ as tidət a di təgam aṃaran wər za taṃṃatim.» Ərdan s a wen da.

21 Ad ətinəməṇṇin gar-essan, tidət as nətawaddab fəl əddəlil n amaḍray nnana. Tərəmmeq ta iga as daɣ-na igammay a tu nayyu mišan wər das nəṣṣəsam, tərəmmeq tədi da a nəga azal a.

22 Iššewal Ruben iṇṇ-asan: «Wərge əmalaɣ awan as dawan əṇṇeɣ ad wər tagim abakkaḍ iṃosan təkma ən barar di? Mišan wər di təṣṣəsamam. Əmərədda azni-net a daɣ-na itawaran.»

23 Iməqqaran-net wər əṣṣenan as Yusəf igra a wa əgannan, fəlas əməššewəl a illan gar-es dər-san.

24 Igguk kan in ad ihallu. adi iqqal du fəl ad asan iššiwəl, obaz daɣ-san Šimehon issəɣfal tu dat šiṭṭawen nasan.

25 Omar Yusəf y a dasan təwəṭkəran sumad nasan alkama, itəwəssuɣəl tan əzrəf nasan, akk iyyan itəwəgget as əzrəf-net daɣ əsaməd-net. Omar tolas a tan itəwəkfu allaw. Itawagg'asan a wen da.

26 Əṭṭərken isumad nasan fəl əzdan nasan, əglan.

27 As oṣan edag iyyan a daɣ z aṇsin ora iyyan daɣ-san əsaməd wa-net fəl ad d'ikkəs y ajad-net a itša təzzar inay azrəf-net daɣ əmi n əsaməd.

28 Iṇṇa i midawan-net: «Ənəyat azrəf in itawasaɣal i du, ənta da ihan əsaməd in da,» təzzar təggaz tan ṭasa, təṇdaw tan taysəst, ad ətinəməṇṇin gar-essan: «Ma dana itag Məššina da?»

29 As din oṣan abba nnasan Yaqub daɣ Kanan əmalan as arat wa tan igrawan kul, əṇṇan as:

30 «Aləs wa iṃosan əmizwar ən Masar as din noṣa iharaššat ana, iṇṇa:" Kawanay inaṣṣasaman a təṃosam. "

31 Nəṇṇ'as nakkanay aytedan ən təfləst, wər nəṃos inaṣṣasaman.

32 Nakkanay ṃaraw-ena d əššin nədraw abba, iyyan daɣ-na aba tu, wa daɣ-na ənḍarran iqqim in ɣur abba nnana daɣ akal ən Kanan. Təzzar iṇṇ-ana əmizwar ən Masar: " Arat w'as z əṣṣəna kud aytedan ən təfləst a təṃosam,

33 wədi a du tayyim ɣur-i iyyan daɣ-wan tətkəlam alkama tawəyam tu y iɣawnatan nawan a əlluznen.

34 As din toṣam tawəyam i du aṃadray nnawan wa n alallawa ad əṣṣənaɣ as wər təṃosam inaṣṣasaman mišan aytedan ən təfləst, amaran əssuɣəlaq qawan amaḍray nnawan, akfaq qawan turagat ad təssəɣləyam i təɣawšiwen nawan daɣ akal."»

35 As əggazan šin n ikus n alkama akk iyyan oṣ'in daɣ əsaməd-net əsəkməs n əzrəf-net. As ənnayan isəkmas n əzrəf nasan təggaz tan ṭasa əntanay əd ši-ssan.

36 Iṇṇ'asan abba nnaṣan Yaqub: «Bararan in a dər-i təzammazzayam, Yusəf abas t'illa, ilkam as Šimehon, amaran taram ad tawəyam Benyamin. Adi kul nak ad d iqqal.»

37 Iṇṇ'as Ruben: «As dak du wər ewaya Benyamin tanɣa bararan in ann əššin. Əfləs i sər-əs, a dak k'id'əssuɣəla.»

38 Iṇṇ'as Yaqub: «Barar in wər dər-wan iddew, fəlas amaqqar-net aba tu iqqim du ɣas-net. As tu təgraw təkma daɣ əšikəl nawan nak a waššaran a a di tawəyam s alaxirat fəl tayyant-net.»

   

来自斯威登堡的著作

 

Arcana Coelestia#5433

学习本章节

  
/10837  
  

5433. 'You have come to see the nakedness of the land' means that nothing would please them more than to know for themselves that they are not truths. This is clear from the meaning of 'coming to see' as wishing to know that a thing is so, and therefore as nothing would give greater pleasure than to know it; from the meaning of 'the nakedness' as a lack of truths, thus that they are not truths, dealt with below; and from the meaning of 'the land' as the Church (see 566, 662, 1067, 1262, 1733, 1850, 2117, 2118 (end), 3355, 4447, 4535). So that 'the nakedness of the land' here means a lack of truths known to the Church. The reason 'the nakedness' means a deprivation or lack of truths is that 'clothes' in general means truths, while each specific type of garment means some particular kind of truth, see 2576, 3301, 4545, 4677, 4741, 4742, 4763, 5248, 5319, and therefore 'the nakedness' means a lack of truths, as will also be seen from the places below that are quoted from the Word.

[2] The implications of this may be seen from what has been stated immediately above in 5472, where it is said that people who do not learn truths for truth's own sake and for their life's sake, but for the sake of material gain, inevitably think that the truths known to the Church are not truths. The reason for this is that the affection for gain is an earthly affection, whereas the affection for truth is a spiritual one. One or the other must have dominion, for no one can serve two masters. Consequently where one affection exists the other does not, so that where the affection for truth is present the affection for gain is absent, and where the affection for gain is present the affection for truth is absent. This being so, if the affection for material gain has dominion, then inevitably nothing pleases the person more than to know that truths are not truths. Yet nothing else pleases him more than when others believe that truths are truths. If the internal man looks downwards, that is to say, towards earthly things and makes these everything, he cannot possibly look upwards and have anything there since earthly things completely swallow up and smother everything. The reason for this is that the angels from heaven who are present with a person cannot dwell among earthly things; they therefore depart, in which case spirits from hell draw near who, while they are present with a person, cannot dwell among heavenly things. As a consequence he then thinks that heavenly things are of no importance, while earthly ones are everything. And when that person thinks that earthly things are everything, he believes himself to be more learned and wiser than everybody else, in that he himself does not accept the truths known to the Church, and at the same time says that they exist for those who are simple. The affection that moves a person is therefore either an earthly affection or else a heavenly one, for he cannot have his being simultaneously with angels from heaven and with spirits from hell; for if he did he would be left hanging between heaven and hell. But when he is moved by an affection for truth for truth's own sake, that is, for the sake of the Lord's kingdom (where Divine Truth is present) and so for the Lord's sake, he is among angels. He does not in this case despise material gain insofar as it enables him to lead his life in the world. But such gain is not his end in view, only the useful purposes it serves which are seen by him as intermediate ends leading on to an ultimate heavenly one. This being so, his heart is by no means at all set on material gain.

[3] The fact that 'the nakedness' means a lack of truths may also be seen from other places in the Word, as in John,

To the angel of the Church of the Laodiceans write, Because you say, I am rich and have become wealthy, so that I have need of nothing - when you do not know that you are wretched and miserable, and needy, and blind, and naked.... Revelation 3:17.

Here being 'naked' stands for suffering from a scarcity of truth. In the same place,

I counsel you to buy from Me gold purified in the fire, and white garments to clothe you, and do not let the shame of your nakedness be manifested. Revelation 3:18.

'Buying gold' stands for acquiring good and making this one's own, 'that you may become wealthy' for acquiring it to the end that celestial and spiritual good may be present; 'white garments' stands for spiritual truths, 'the shame of nakedness' for the lack of any goodness or truth. For 'buying' means acquiring and making one's own, see 5374; 'gold' celestial and spiritual good, 1551, 1552; 'garments' truths, 1073, 2576, 4545, 4763, 5248, 5319; while 'white' is attributed to truth because this comes from the light of heaven, 3301, 3993, 4007, 5319.

[4] In the same book,

Behold, I am coming like a thief. Blessed is he who is awake and keeps his garments, so that he may not walk naked. Revelation 16:15.

'He who keeps his garments' stands for the person who hangs on to truths. 'So that he may not walk naked' stands for so that he is not without truths. In Matthew,

The King will say to those at His right hand, I was naked and you clothed Me around, and to those at His left, I was naked and you did not clothe Me around. Matthew 25:36, 43.

'Naked' stands for the good who acknowledge that within themselves no good or truth at all exists, 4958.

[5] In Isaiah,

Is not this the fast, to break your bread for the hungry, and that you may bring afflicted outcasts to your house, when you see the naked and cover him? Isaiah 58:7.

Here the meaning is similar. In Jeremiah,

Jerusalem sinned grievously, therefore she became a menstruous woman; all who honoured her despised her, for they saw her nakedness. Lamentations 1:8.

Here 'nakedness' stands for a lack of truths. In Ezekiel,

You reached full beauty, your breasts were formed and your hair had grown; but you were naked and bare. I spread My wing over you and covered your nakedness. You did not remember the days of your youth, when you were naked and bare. Ezekiel 16:7-8, 22.

[6] This refers to Jerusalem, by which the Ancient Church is meant - what it was like when it was first established and what it came to be like after that. That is to say, initially it was lacking in truths, after which it was furnished with them, but finally it cast them aside. In the same prophet,

If a man is righteous, one who has executed judgement and righteousness, he gives his bread to the hungry and covers the naked with clothing. Ezekiel 18:5, 7.

'Covering the naked with clothing' stands for furnishing with truths those who desire truths. In Hosea,

Lest I strip her naked, present her as she was on the day she was born, and make her like a wilderness, and set her like a land of dryness, and slay her with thirst. Hosea 2:3.

'Stripping her naked' stands for leaving her without truths. In Nahum,

I will show the nations your nakedness, and the kingdoms your shame. Nahum 3:5.

'Showing the nations its nakedness' stands for its ugliness. All ugliness is a result of the absence of truths, all beauty a result of the presence of them, 4985, 5199.

  
/10837  
  

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

来自斯威登堡的著作

 

Arcana Coelestia#566

学习本章节

  
/10837  
  

566. 'The face 1 of the ground' means the whole of that area where the Church was. This is clear from the meaning of 'the ground', for in the Word a careful distinction is made between ground (humus) and land or earth (terra). Whenever 'ground' is used it means the Church or some aspect of the Church. This too is the derivation of the name Man or Adam, which means ground. But when 'land' or earth' occurs in the Word it frequently means where the Church or some aspect of the Church does not exist, as in Chapter 1 where the word 'land' alone is used, because the Church or regenerate person did not as yet exist. Not until Chapter 2 is the word 'ground' used because the Church has by now come into being. The same applies in the present verse and in verses 4, 23, of the next chapter, where it is said that every being was to be wiped off the face 1 of the ground, meaning within that area where the Church was; and in verse 7 of the next chapter, where the subject is the Church that is to be created, 'to keep their seed alive on the face 1 of the ground'. 2 The same applies elsewhere in the Word, as in Isaiah,

Jehovah will have compassion on Jacob, and will still choose Israel, and will set them on their own ground. And the peoples will take them and bring them to their place, and the house of Israel will inherit them on Jehovah's ground. Isaiah 14:1-2.

This refers to the Church once it has come into being; but when in the same chapter the Church does not exist it is called the land, verses 9, 12, 16, 20, 21, 25, 26.

[2] In the same prophet,

And the ground of Judah will be a terror to Egypt. On that day there will be five cities in the land of Egypt which speak the language 3 of Canaan. Isaiah 19:17-18.

Here 'the ground' means where the Church exists, and 'the land' where it does not. In the same prophet,

The land will surely stagger like a drunken man. Jehovah will visit the host of the height on high, and the kings of the ground on the ground. Isaiah 24:20-21.

Here the meaning is similar. In Jeremiah,

Because of the ground which was cracked since there was no rain on the land, the farmers were put to shame, and covered their heads. Even the hind in the field has calved. Jeremiah 14:4-5.

Here 'the land' stands for that which includes the ground, and 'the ground' for that which includes the field.

[3] In the same prophet,

He led the seed of the house of Israel out of the north land and out of all the lands to where I have driven them. And they will dwell on their own ground. Jeremiah 23:8.

Here 'land' and 'lands' mean where Churches do not exist, 'the ground' where the Church or true worship does exist. In the same prophet,

I will render the remnants of Jerusalem, those who are left in this land, and those who are dwelling in the land of Egypt, and I will render them as a horror for evil to all the kingdoms of the land. And I will send sword, famine, and pestilence upon them, until they are consumed from the ground which I gave to them and their fathers. Jeremiah 24:8-10.

'The ground' stands for doctrine and worship arising out of it. And something similar is found in 25:5 of the same book.

[4] In Ezekiel,

I will gather you out of the lands into which you have been scattered. And you will acknowledge that I am Jehovah when I bring you back to the ground of Israel, into the land which I lifted up My hand to give to your fathers. Ezekiel 20:41-42.

'The ground' stands for internal worship. It is called 'the land' when internal worship does not exist. In Malachi,

I will rebuke the devourer for you, and he will not ruin for you the fruit of the ground, nor will the vine in the field fail you. And all the nations will call you blessed, for you will be a land of that which is pleasing. Malachi 3:11-12.

Here 'land' stands for that which includes, and so plainly stands for man who is actually called 'the land', when 'ground' stands for the Church or doctrine.

[5] In Moses,

Sing, O Nations, His people. He will reconcile His ground, His people. Deuteronomy 32:43.

This clearly stands for the Church of the gentiles, which is called 'the ground'. In Isaiah,

Before the boy knows to refuse evil and to choose good, the ground will be deserted which you loathe in the presence of its two kings. Isaiah 7:16.

This refers to the Coming of the Lord. 'The ground will be deserted' stands for the Church or true doctrine of faith. The words 'ground 'and 'field' are clearly used in this way because they are places that are sown, as in Isaiah,

He will give rain for your seed with which you may sow the ground. Oxen and young asses tilling the ground . . . Isaiah 30:23-24.

And in Joel,

The field has been laid waste, and the ground has been mourning because the corn has been laid waste. Joel 1:10.

From these quotations it is now clear that 'man', who in Hebrew is called Adam from the word for ground, means the Church.

脚注:

1. literally, faces

2. The Hebrew in Genesis 7:3 in fact means earth or land. cf 722 below.

3. literally, lip.

  
/10837  
  

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