7191. 'And God spoke to Moses' means something that is new yet continues what has gone before. This is clear from the fact that one often reads in the continuous thread of the narrative 'Jehovah said' and 'Jehovah spoke', as in the present chapter also. The expression 'Jehovah said to Moses' occurs in verse 1, then 'God spoke to Moses' in the present verse, and in like manner in verses 10, 13, 28, 29. And the same use of these expressions may be seen elsewhere. Nothing else is meant by the repetition than something new beginning at that point, which however is to be taken in conjunction with what goes before it. (For the meaning of 'Jehovah said' as a new phase of perception, see 2061, 2238, 2260.) It should be realized that in its original language the Word lacks punctuation marks to indicate pauses, and therefore such expressions as those in this chapter have been used instead. And instead of marks to indicate minor pauses or divisions 'And' has been used, which is why that conjunction occurs so frequently. Angelic speech is likewise continuous, with pauses, to be sure, but every prior matter presented there links up in a remarkable manner with the one that follows it. For angels' ideas are extremely full of things, countless and indescribable, that go beyond a person's understanding while he is in the world. Consequently the ends of foregoing sentences can be fully linked up to the beginnings of ensuing sentences, and in this way a single series can be formed out of many. What is astounding and unbelievable, angelic speech exhibits within itself the form which heaven takes. For this reason all angelic speech possesses a song-like harmony in which each phrase ends with a monosyllable, and so in unison. And I have been told that this happens because every single thing in heaven looks to the one God as its end. From all this it has also become clear to me that every element of thought and therefore of speech flows in from the Lord by way of heaven, and that this accounts for the song-like harmony in speech ending in unison.