Iz Swedenborgovih djela

 

History of the Creation #2

  
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2. And God said, Let there be an expanse in the midst of the waters, and let it divide between the waters and the waters, (6) or, as Castellio renders it, [God commanded] that a Liquid should exist between the waters, to disjoin water from water. By this Liquid is denoted the air, which is stretched out between the water of the earth, or, between the globe, then aqueous but afterwards terrestrial, and that ethereal fluid which also is called water. This is more fully explained by the words that follow, especially in verse 20 of Schmidius' version compared with Castellio's.

And God made the expanse, and distinguished between the waters which were under the expanse and the waters which were above the expanse, (7) or, according to Castellio, He made the Liquid that should divide the water which was underneath the Liquid from, that which was above it. No words were as yet in use to designate with distinctness ether, air, and water; therefore they were named from their fluidity, that is to say, were called Waters, Liquids, Expanses, etc.; wherefore, on account of the lack of words a single expression was used throughout this whole verse.

When this was done, God called the expanse, or this Liquid, Heaven. (8) All that is above us is called Heaven, and what is below, or under our feet, Earth. Heaven, properly speaking, is the region where live spirits, angels, and the souls of the blessed; and this, in whatsoever place it be, even near to the earth, in the atmosphere, in whose interior or purer parts the heavenly life is lived. Things superior are also interior, and things inferior are also exterior. Wherefore, as to our minds, we are inhabitants of heaven, even though as to our body we are inhabitants of earth. And from the evening and the morning came the second day, or, the second space of time — the space within which the aerial atmosphere was made. Here, as also above in verse 5, this space is called a day; for with God, who spake these words by Moses, a thousand years, that is, an exceeding great space of time, is only as a single day [Psalm 90:4]. In order, however, that it may come to our understanding, this entire period is described as Evening and Morning.

  
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History of the Creation #16

  
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16. And God planted a garden eastward in Eden, and there he put the man whom he had formed; or, according to Castellio, he placed him in a fruit garden 1 which he had sown eastward in Eden. (8)

It appears from these words as if Adam had been created and born in some other place than the garden of Eden, and had afterwards been transferred thither by God. The same inference is also gathered from verse 15. But to believe that he was born in the garden itself, or born elsewhere, is not a matter of salvation.

Bilješke:

1. The Latin word thus translated is Pomerarium, which means a fruit garden or orchard containing all manner of fruit trees. But see The Worship and Love of God 39, where the central tree in this pomerarium or paradise is called pomus — literally, a fruit tree — and is identified with the "tree of life." See The Word Explained 893, where Swedenborg plainly identifies pomus with "apple," and pomerarium with "apple tree." See also The Word Explained 1008 and the note there.

  
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