3 Maccabees 1
1. When Philopator learned from those who returned that the regions
that he had controlled had been seized by Antiochus, he gave orders to
all his forces, both infantry and cavalry, took with him his sister ArsinoUe,
and marched out to the region near Raphia, where the army of Antiochus
was encamped.
2 But a certain Theodotus, determined to carry out the plot he
had devised, took with him the best of the Ptolemaic arms that had been
previously issued to him, and crossed over by night to the tent of Ptolemy,
intending single-handed to kill him and thereby end the war.
3 But Dositheus, known as the son of Drimylus, a Jew by birth
who later changed his religion and apostatized from the ancestral traditions,
had led the king away and arranged that a certain insignificant man should
sleep in the tent; and so it turned out that this man incurred the vengeance
meant for the king.
4 When a bitter fight resulted, and matters were turning out
rather in favor of Antiochus, ArsinoUe went to the troops with wailing
and tears, her locks all disheveled, and exhorted them to defend themselves
and their children and wives bravely, promising to give them each two minas
of gold if they won the battle.
5 And so it came about that the enemy was routed in the action,
and many captives also were taken.
6 Now that he had foiled the plot, Ptolemy decided to visit the
neighboring cities and encourage them.
7 By doing this, and by endowing their sacred enclosures with
gifts, he strengthened the morale of his subjects.
8. Since the Jews had sent some of their council and elders to greet
him, to bring him gifts of welcome, and to congratulate him on what had
happened, he was all the more eager to visit them as soon as possible.
9 After he had arrived in Jerusalem, he offered sacrifice to
the supreme God and made thank offerings and did what was fitting for the
holy place. Then, upon entering the place and being impressed by its excellence
and its beauty,
10 he marveled at the good order of the temple, and conceived
a desire to enter the sanctuary.
11 When they said that this was not permitted, because not even
members of their own nation were allowed to enter, not even all of the
priests, but only the high priest who was pre-eminent over all -- and he
only once a year -- the king was by no means persuaded.
12 Even after the law had been read to him, he did not cease
to maintain that he ought to enter, saying, "Even if those men are deprived
of this honor, I ought not to be."
13 And he inquired why, when he entered every other temple, no
one there had stopped him.
14 And someone answered thoughtlessly that it was wrong to take
that as a portent.
15 "But since this has happened," the king said, "why should
not I at least enter, whether they wish it or not?"
16. Then the priests in all their vestments prostrated themselves and
entreated the supreme God to aid in the present situation and to avert
the violence of this evil design, and they filled the temple with cries
and tears;
17 those who remained behind in the city were agitated and hurried
out, supposing that something mysterious was occurring.
18 Young women who had been secluded in their chambers rushed
out with their mothers, sprinkled their hair with dust, and filled the
streets with groans and lamentations.
19 Those women who had recently been arrayed for marriage abandoned
the bridal chambers prepared for wedded union, and, neglecting proper modesty,
in a disorderly rush flocked together in the city.
20 Mothers and nurses abandoned even newborn children here and
there, some in houses and some in the streets, and without a backward look
they crowded together at the most high temple.
21 Various were the supplications of those gathered there because
of what the king was profanely plotting.
22 In addition, the bolder of the citizens would not tolerate
the completion of his plans or the fulfillment of his intended purpose.
23 They shouted to their compatriots to take arms and die courageously
for the ancestral law, and created a considerable disturbance in the holy
place; and being barely restrained by the old men and the elders, they
resorted to the same posture of supplication as the others.
24 Meanwhile the crowd, as before, was engaged in prayer,
25 while the elders near the king tried in various ways to change
his arrogant mind from the plan that he had conceived.
26 But he, in his arrogance, took heed of nothing, and began
now to approach, determined to bring the aforesaid plan to a conclusion.
27 When those who were around him observed this, they turned,
together with our people, to call upon him who has all power to defend
them in the present trouble and not to overlook this unlawful and haughty
deed.
28 The continuous, vehement, and concerted cry of the crowds
resulted in an immense uproar;
29 for it seemed that not only the people but also the walls
and the whole earth around echoed, because indeed all at that time preferred
death to the profanation of the place.
3 Maccabees 2
1. Then the high priest Simon, facing the sanctuary, bending his knees
and extending his hands with calm dignity, prayed as follows:
2 "Lord, Lord, king of the heavens, and sovereign of all creation,
holy among the holy ones, the only ruler, almighty, give attention to us
who are suffering grievously from an impious and profane man, puffed up
in his audacity and power.
3 For you, the creator of all things and the governor of all,
are a just Ruler, and you judge those who have done anything in insolence
and arrogance.
4 You destroyed those who in the past committed injustice, among
whom were even giants who trusted in their strength and boldness, whom
you destroyed by bringing on them a boundless flood.
5 You consumed with fire and sulfur the people of Sodom who acted
arrogantly, who were notorious for their vices; and you made them an example
to those who should come afterward.
6 You made known your mighty power by inflicting many and varied
punishments on the audacious Pharaoh who had enslaved your holy people
Israel.
7 And when he pursued them with chariots and a mass of troops,
you overwhelmed him in the depths of the sea, but carried through safely
those who had put their confidence in you, the Ruler over the whole creation.
8 And when they had seen works of your hands, they praised you,
the Almighty.
9 You, O King, when you had created the boundless and immeasurable
earth, chose this city and sanctified this place for your name, though
you have no need of anything; and when you had glorified it by your magnificent
manifestation, you made it a firm foundation for the glory of your great
and honored name.
10 And because you love the house of Israel, you promised that
if we should have reverses and tribulation should overtake us, you would
listen to our petition when we come to this place and pray.
11 And indeed you are faithful and true.
12 And because oftentimes when our fathers were oppressed you
helped them in their humiliation, and rescued them from great evils,
13 see now, O holy King, that because of our many and great sins
we are crushed with suffering, subjected to our enemies, and overtaken
by helplessness.
14 In our downfall this audacious and profane man undertakes
to violate the holy place on earth dedicated to your glorious name.
15 For your dwelling is the heaven of heavens, unapproachable
by human beings.
16 But because you graciously bestowed your glory on your people
Israel, you sanctified this place.
17 Do not punish us for the defilement committed by these men,
or call us to account for this profanation, otherwise the transgressors
will boast in their wrath and exult in the arrogance of their tongue, saying,
18 'We have trampled down the house of the sanctuary as the houses
of the abominations are trampled down.'
19 Wipe away our sins and disperse our errors, and reveal your
mercy at this hour.
20 Speedily let your mercies overtake us, and put praises in
the mouth of those who are downcast and broken in spirit, and give us peace."
21. Thereupon God, who oversees all things, the first Father of all,
holy among the holy ones, having heard the lawful supplication, scourged
him who had exalted himself in insolence and audacity.
22 He shook him on this side and that as a reed is shaken by
the wind, so that he lay helpless on the ground and, besides being paralyzed
in his limbs, was unable even to speak, since he was smitten by a righteous
judgment.
23 Then both friends and bodyguards, seeing the severe punishment
that had overtaken him, and fearing that he would lose his life, quickly
dragged him out, panic-stricken in their exceedingly great fear.
24 After a while he recovered, and though he had been punished,
he by no means repented, but went away uttering bitter threats.
25. When he arrived in Egypt, he increased in his deeds of malice,
abetted by the previously mentioned drinking companions and comrades, who
were strangers to everything just.
26 He was not content with his uncounted licentious deeds, but
even continued with such audacity that he framed evil reports in the various
localities; and many of his friends, intently observing the king's purpose,
themselves also followed his will.
27 He proposed to inflict public disgrace on the Jewish community,
and he set up a stone on the tower in the courtyard with this inscription:
28 "None of those who do not sacrifice shall enter their sanctuaries,
and all Jews shall be subjected to a registration involving poll tax and
to the status of slaves. Those who object to this are to be taken by force
and put to death;
29 those who are registered are also to be branded on their bodies
by fire with the ivy-leaf symbol of Dionysus, and they shall also be reduced
to their former limited status."
30 In order that he might not appear to be an enemy of all, he
inscribed below: "But if any of them prefer to join those who have been
initiated into the mysteries, they shall have equal citizenship with the
Alexandrians."
31. Now some, however, with an obvious abhorrence of the price to be
exacted for maintaining the religion of their city, readily gave themselves
up, since they expected to enhance their reputation by their future association
with the king.
32 But the majority acted firmly with a courageous spirit and
did not abandon their religion; and by paying money in exchange for life
they confidently attempted to save themselves from the registration.
33 They remained resolutely hopeful of obtaining help, and they
abhorred those who separated themselves from them, considering them to
be enemies of the Jewish nation, and depriving them of companionship and
mutual help.
3 Maccabees 3
1. When the impious king comprehended this situation, he became so infuriated
that not only was he enraged against those Jews who lived in Alexandria,
but was still more bitterly hostile toward those in the countryside; and
he ordered that all should promptly be gathered into one place, and put
to death by the most cruel means.
2 While these matters were being arranged, a hostile rumor was
circulated against the Jewish nation by some who conspired to do them ill,
a pretext being given by a report that they hindered others from the observance
of their customs.
3 The Jews, however, continued to maintain goodwill and unswerving
loyalty toward the dynasty;
4 but because they worshiped God and conducted themselves by
his law, they kept their separateness with respect to foods. For this reason
they appeared hateful to some;
5 but since they adorned their style of life with the good deeds
of upright people, they were established in good repute with everyone.
6 Nevertheless those of other races paid no heed to their good
service to their nation, which was common talk among all;
7 instead they gossiped about the differences in worship and
foods, alleging that these people were loyal neither to the king nor to
his authorities, but were hostile and greatly opposed to his government.
So they attached no ordinary reproach to them.
8. The Greeks in the city, though wronged in no way, when they saw
an unexpected tumult around these people and the crowds that suddenly were
forming, were not strong enough to help them, for they lived under tyranny.
They did try to console them, being grieved at the situation, and expected
that matters would change;
9 for such a great community ought not be left to its fate when
it had committed no offense.
10 And already some of their neighbors and friends and business
associates had taken some of them aside privately and were pledging to
protect them and to exert more earnest efforts for their assistance.
11. Then the king, boastful of his present good fortune, and not considering
the might of the supreme God, but assuming that he would persevere constantly
in his same purpose, wrote this letter against them:
12. "King Ptolemy Philopator to his generals and soldiers in Egypt
and all its districts, greetings and good health:
13. "I myself and our government are faring well.
14 When our expedition took place in Asia, as you yourselves
know, it was brought to conclusion, according to plan, by the gods' deliberate
alliance with us in battle,
15 and we considered that we should not rule the nations inhabiting
Coelesyria and Phoenicia by the power of the spear, but should cherish
them with clemency and great benevolence, gladly treating them well.
16 And when we had granted very great revenues to the temples
in the cities, we came on to Jerusalem also, and went up to honor the temple
of those wicked people, who never cease from their folly.
17 They accepted our presence by word, but insincerely by deed,
because when we proposed to enter their inner temple and honor it with
magnificent and most beautiful offerings,
18 they were carried away by their traditional arrogance, and
excluded us from entering; but they were spared the exercise of our power
because of the benevolence that we have toward all.
19 By maintaining their manifest ill-will toward us, they become
the only people among all nations who hold their heads high in defiance
of kings and their own benefactors, and are unwilling to regard any action
as sincere.
20. "But we, when we arrived in Egypt victorious, accommodated ourselves
to their folly and did as was proper, since we treat all nations with benevolence.
21 Among other things, we made known to all our amnesty toward
their compatriots here, both because of their alliance with us and the
myriad affairs liberally entrusted to them from the beginning; and we ventured
to make a change, by deciding both to deem them worthy of Alexandrian citizenship
and to make them participants in our regular religious rites.
22 But in their innate malice they took this in a contrary spirit,
and disdained what is good. Since they incline constantly to evil,
23 they not only spurn the priceless citizenship, but also both
by speech and by silence they abominate those few among them who are sincerely
disposed toward us; in every situation, in accordance with their infamous
way of life, they secretly suspect that we may soon alter our policy.
24 Therefore, fully convinced by these indications that they
are ill-disposed toward us in every way, we have taken precautions so that,
if a sudden disorder later arises against us, we shall not have these impious
people behind our backs as traitors and barbarous enemies.
25 Therefore we have given orders that, as soon as this letter
arrives, you are to send to us those who live among you, together with
their wives and children, with insulting and harsh treatment, and bound
securely with iron fetters, to suffer the sure and shameful death that
befits enemies.
26 For when all of these have been punished, we are sure that
for the remaining time the government will be established for ourselves
in good order and in the best state.
27 But those who shelter any of the Jews, whether old people
or children or even infants, will be tortured to death with the most hateful
torments, together with their families.
28 Any who are willing to give information will receive the property
of those who incur the punishment, and also two thousand drachmas from
the royal treasury, and will be awarded their freedom.
29 Every place detected sheltering a Jew is to be made unapproachable
and burned with fire, and shall become useless for all time to any mortal
creature."
30 The letter was written in the above form.
3 Maccabees 4
1. In every place, then, where this decree arrived, a feast at public
expense was arranged for the Gentiles with shouts and gladness, for the
inveterate enmity that had long ago been in their minds was now made evident
and outspoken.
2 But among the Jews there was incessant mourning, lamentation,
and tearful cries; everywhere their hearts were burning, and they groaned
because of the unexpected destruction that had suddenly been decreed for
them.
3 What district or city, or what habitable place at all, or what
streets were not filled with mourning and wailing for them?
4 For with such a harsh and ruthless spirit were they being sent
off, all together, by the generals in the several cities, that at the sight
of their unusual punishments, even some of their enemies, perceiving the
common object of pity before their eyes, reflected on the uncertainty of
life and shed tears at the most miserable expulsion of these people.
5 For a multitude of gray-headed old men, sluggish and bent with
age, was being led away, forced to march at a swift pace by the violence
with which they were driven in such a shameful manner.
6 And young women who had just entered the bridal chamber to
share married life exchanged joy for wailing, their myrrh-perfumed hair
sprinkled with ashes, and were carried away unveiled, all together raising
a lament instead of a wedding song, as they were torn by the harsh treatment
of the heathen.
7 In bonds and in public view they were violently dragged along
as far as the place of embarkation.
8 Their husbands, in the prime of youth, their necks encircled
with ropes instead of garlands, spent the remaining days of their marriage
festival in lamentations instead of good cheer and youthful revelry, seeing
death immediately before them.
9 They were brought on board like wild animals, driven under
the constraint of iron bonds; some were fastened by the neck to the benches
of the boats, others had their feet secured by unbreakable fetters,
10 and in addition they were confined under a solid deck, so
that, with their eyes in total darkness, they would undergo treatment befitting
traitors during the whole voyage.
11. When these people had been brought to the place called Schedia,
and the voyage was concluded as the king had decreed, he commanded that
they should be enclosed in the hippodrome that had been built with a monstrous
perimeter wall in front of the city, and that was well suited to make them
an obvious spectacle to all coming back into the city and to those from
the city going out into the country, so that they could neither communicate
with the king's forces nor in any way claim to be inside the circuit of
the city.
12 And when this had happened, the king, hearing that the Jews'
compatriots from the city frequently went out in secret to lament bitterly
the ignoble misfortune of their kindred,
13 ordered in his rage that these people be dealt with in precisely
the same fashion as the others, not omitting any detail of their punishment.
14 The entire race was to be registered individually, not for
the hard labor that has been briefly mentioned before, but to be tortured
with the outrages that he had ordered, and at the end to be destroyed in
the space of a single day.
15 The registration of these people was therefore conducted with
bitter haste and zealous intensity from the rising of the sun until its
setting, coming to an end after forty days but still uncompleted.
16. The king was greatly and continually filled with joy, organizing
feasts in honor of all his idols, with a mind alienated from truth and
with a profane mouth, praising speechless things that are not able even
to communicate or to come to one's help, and uttering improper words against
the supreme God.
17 But after the previously mentioned interval of time the scribes
declared to the king that they were no longer able to take the census of
the Jews because of their immense number,
18 though most of them were still in the country, some still
residing in their homes, and some at the place; the task was impossible
for all the generals in Egypt.
19 After he had threatened them severely, charging that they
had been bribed to contrive a means of escape, he was clearly convinced
about the matter
20 when they said and proved that both the paper and the pens
they used for writing had already given out.
21 But this was an act of the invincible providence of him who
was aiding the Jews from heaven.
3 Maccabees 5
1. Then the king, completely inflexible, was filled with overpowering
anger and wrath; so he summoned Hermon, keeper of the elephants,
2 and ordered him on the following day to drug all the elephants
-- five hundred in number -- with large handfuls of frankincense and plenty
of unmixed wine, and to drive them in, maddened by the lavish abundance
of drink, so that the Jews might meet their doom.
3 When he had given these orders he returned to his feasting,
together with those of his Friends and of the army who were especially
hostile toward the Jews.
4 And Hermon, keeper of the elephants, proceeded faithfully to
carry out the orders.
5 The servants in charge of the Jews went out in the evening
and bound the hands of the wretched people and arranged for their continued
custody through the night, convinced that the whole nation would experience
its final destruction.
6 For to the Gentiles it appeared that the Jews were left without
any aid,
7 because in their bonds they were forcibly confined on every
side. But with tears and a voice hard to silence they all called upon the
Almighty Lord and Ruler of all power, their merciful God and Father, praying
8 that he avert with vengeance the evil plot against them and
in a glorious manifestation rescue them from the fate now prepared for
them.
9 So their entreaty ascended fervently to heaven.
10. Hermon, however, when he had drugged the pitiless elephants until
they had been filled with a great abundance of wine and satiated with frankincense,
presented himself at the courtyard early in the morning to report to the
king about these preparations.
11 But the Lord sent upon the king a portion of sleep, that beneficence
that from the beginning, night and day, is bestowed by him who grants it
to whomever he wishes.
12 And by the action of the Lord he was overcome by so pleasant
and deep a sleep that he quite failed in his lawless purpose and was completely
frustrated in his inflexible plan.
13 Then the Jews, since they had escaped the appointed hour,
praised their holy God and again implored him who is easily reconciled
to show the might of his all-powerful hand to the arrogant Gentiles.
14. But now, since it was nearly the middle of the tenth hour, the
person who was in charge of the invitations, seeing that the guests were
assembled, approached the king and nudged him.
15 And when he had with difficulty roused him, he pointed out
that the hour of the banquet was already slipping by, and he gave him an
account of the situation.
16 The king, after considering this, returned to his drinking,
and ordered those present for the banquet to recline opposite him.
17 When this was done he urged them to give themselves over to
revelry and to make the present portion of the banquet joyful by celebrating
all the more.
18 After the party had been going on for some time, the king
summoned Hermon and with sharp threats demanded to know why the Jews had
been allowed to remain alive through the present day.
19 But when he, with the corroboration of his Friends, pointed
out that while it was still night he had carried out completely the order
given him,
20 the king, possessed by a savagery worse than that of Phalaris,
said that the Jews were benefited by today's sleep, "but," he added, "tomorrow
without delay prepare the elephants in the same way for the destruction
of the lawless Jews!"
21 When the king had spoken, all those present readily and joyfully
with one accord gave their approval, and all went to their own homes.
22 But they did not so much employ the duration of the night
in sleep as in devising all sorts of insults for those they thought to
be doomed.
23. Then, as soon as the cock had crowed in the early morning, Hermon,
having equipped the animals, began to move them along in the great colonnade.
24 The crowds of the city had been assembled for this most pitiful
spectacle and they were eagerly waiting for daybreak.
25 But the Jews, at their last gasp -- since the time had run
out -- stretched their hands toward heaven and with most tearful supplication
and mournful dirges implored the supreme God to help them again at once.
26 The rays of the sun were not yet shed abroad, and while the
king was receiving his Friends, Hermon arrived and invited him to come
out, indicating that what the king desired was ready for action.
27 But he, on receiving the report and being struck by the unusual
invitation to come out -- since he had been completely overcome by incomprehension
-- inquired what the matter was for which this had been so zealously completed
for him.
28 This was the act of God who rules over all things, for he
had implanted in the king's mind a forgetfulness of the things he had previously
devised.
29 Then Hermon and all the king's Friends pointed out that the
animals and the armed forces were ready, "O king, according to your eager
purpose."
30 But at these words he was filled with an overpowering wrath,
because by the providence of God his whole mind had been deranged concerning
these matters; and with a threatening look he said,
31 "If your parents or children were present, I would have prepared
them to be a rich feast for the savage animals instead of the Jews, who
give me no ground for complaint and have exhibited to an extraordinary
degree a full and firm loyalty to my ancestors.
32 In fact you would have been deprived of life instead of these,
if it were not for an affection arising from our nurture in common and
your usefulness."
33 So Hermon suffered an unexpected and dangerous threat, and
his eyes wavered and his face fell.
34 The king's Friends one by one sullenly slipped away and dismissed
the assembled people to their own occupations.
35 Then the Jews, on hearing what the king had said, praised
the manifest Lord God, King of kings, since this also was his aid that
they had received.
36. The king, however, reconvened the party in the same manner and
urged the guests to return to their celebrating.
37 After summoning Hermon he said in a threatening tone, "How
many times, you poor wretch, must I give you orders about these things?
38 Equip the elephants now once more for the destruction of the
Jews tomorrow!"
39 But the officials who were at table with him, wondering at
his instability of mind, remonstrated as follows:
40 "O king, how long will you put us to the test, as though we
are idiots, ordering now for a third time that they be destroyed, and again
revoking your decree in the matter?
41 As a result the city is in a tumult because of its expectation;
it is crowded with masses of people, and also in constant danger of being
plundered."
42. At this the king, a Phalaris in everything and filled with madness,
took no account of the changes of mind that had come about within him for
the protection of the Jews, and he firmly swore an irrevocable oath that
he would send them to death without delay, mangled by the knees and feet
of the animals,
43 and would also march against Judea and rapidly level it to
the ground with fire and spear, and by burning to the ground the temple
inaccessible to him would quickly render it forever empty of those who
offered sacrifices there.
44 Then the Friends and officers departed with great joy, and
they confidently posted the armed forces at the places in the city most
favorable for keeping guard.
45. Now when the animals had been brought virtually to a state of madness,
so to speak, by the very fragrant draughts of wine mixed with frankincense
and had been equipped with frightful devices, the elephant keeper
46 entered at about dawn into the courtyard -- the city now being
filled with countless masses of people crowding their way into the hippodrome
-- and urged the king on to the matter at hand.
47 So he, when he had filled his impious mind with a deep rage,
rushed out in full force along with the animals, wishing to witness, with
invulnerable heart and with his own eyes, the grievous and pitiful destruction
of the aforementioned people.
48. When the Jews saw the dust raised by the elephants going out at
the gate and by the following armed forces, as well as by the trampling
of the crowd, and heard the loud and tumultuous noise,
49 they thought that this was their last moment of life, the
end of their most miserable suspense, and giving way to lamentation and
groans they kissed each other, embracing relatives and falling into one
another's arms -- parents and children, mothers and daughters, and others
with babies at their breasts who were drawing their last milk.
50 Not only this, but when they considered the help that they
had received before from heaven, they prostrated themselves with one accord
on the ground, removing the babies from their breasts,
51 and cried out in a very loud voice, imploring the Ruler over
every power to manifest himself and be merciful to them, as they stood
now at the gates of death.
3 Maccabees 6
1. Then a certain Eleazar, famous among the priests of the country,
who had attained a ripe old age and throughout his life had been adorned
with every virtue, directed the elders around him to stop calling upon
the holy God, and he prayed as follows:
2 "King of great power, Almighty God Most High, governing all
creation with mercy,
3 look upon the descendants of Abraham, O Father, upon the children
of the sainted Jacob, a people of your consecrated portion who are perishing
as foreigners in a foreign land.
4 Pharaoh with his abundance of chariots, the former ruler of
this Egypt, exalted with lawless insolence and boastful tongue, you destroyed
together with his arrogant army by drowning them in the sea, manifesting
the light of your mercy on the nation of Israel.
5 Sennacherib exulting in his countless forces, oppressive king
of the Assyrians, who had already gained control of the whole world by
the spear and was lifted up against your holy city, speaking grievous words
with boasting and insolence, you, O Lord, broke in pieces, showing your
power to many nations.
6 The three companions in Babylon who had voluntarily surrendered
their lives to the flames so as not to serve vain things, you rescued unharmed,
even to a hair, moistening the fiery furnace with dew and turning the flame
against all their enemies.
7 Daniel, who through envious slanders was thrown down into the
ground to lions as food for wild animals, you brought up to the light unharmed.
8 And Jonah, wasting away in the belly of a huge, sea-born monster,
you, Father, watched over and restored unharmed to all his family.
9 And now, you who hate insolence, all-merciful and protector
of all, reveal yourself quickly to those of the nation of Israel -- who
are being outrageously treated by the abominable and lawless Gentiles.
10. "Even if our lives have become entangled in impieties in our exile,
rescue us from the hand of the enemy, and destroy us, Lord, by whatever
fate you choose.
11 Let not the vain-minded praise their vanities at the destruction
of your beloved people, saying, 'Not even their god has rescued them.'
12 But you, O Eternal One, who have all might and all power,
watch over us now and have mercy on us who by the senseless insolence of
the lawless are being deprived of life in the manner of traitors.
13 And let the Gentiles cower today in fear of your invincible
might, O honored One, who have power to save the nation of Jacob.
14 The whole throng of infants and their parents entreat you
with tears.
15 Let it be shown to all the Gentiles that you are with us,
O Lord, and have not turned your face from us; but just as you have said,
'Not even when they were in the land of their enemies did I neglect them,'
so accomplish it, O Lord."
16. Just as Eleazar was ending his prayer, the king arrived at the
hippodrome with the animals and all the arrogance of his forces.
17 And when the Jews observed this they raised great cries to
heaven so that even the nearby valleys resounded with them and brought
an uncontrollable terror upon the army.
18 Then the most glorious, almighty, and true God revealed his
holy face and opened the heavenly gates, from which two glorious angels
of fearful aspect descended, visible to all but the Jews.
19 They opposed the forces of the enemy and filled them with
confusion and terror, binding them with immovable shackles.
20 Even the king began to shudder bodily, and he forgot his sullen
insolence.
21 The animals turned back upon the armed forces following them
and began trampling and destroying them.
22. Then the king's anger was turned to pity and tears because of the
things that he had devised beforehand.
23 For when he heard the shouting and saw them all fallen headlong
to destruction, he wept and angrily threatened his Friends, saying,
24 "You are committing treason and surpassing tyrants in cruelty;
and even me, your benefactor, you are now attempting to deprive of dominion
and life by secretly devising acts of no advantage to the kingdom.
25 Who has driven from their homes those who faithfully kept
our country's fortresses, and foolishly gathered every one of them here?
26 Who is it that has so lawlessly encompassed with outrageous
treatment those who from the beginning differed from all nations in their
goodwill toward us and often have accepted willingly the worst of human
dangers?
27 Loose and untie their unjust bonds! Send them back to their
homes in peace, begging pardon for your former actions!
28 Release the children of the almighty and living God of heaven,
who from the time of our ancestors until now has granted an unimpeded and
notable stability to our government."
29 These then were the things he said; and the Jews, immediately
released, praised their holy God and Savior, since they now had escaped
death.
30. Then the king, when he had returned to the city, summoned the official
in charge of the revenues and ordered him to provide to the Jews both wines
and everything else needed for a festival of seven days, deciding that
they should celebrate their rescue with all joyfulness in that same place
in which they had expected to meet their destruction.
31 Accordingly those disgracefully treated and near to death,
or rather, who stood at its gates, arranged for a banquet of deliverance
instead of a bitter and lamentable death, and full of joy they apportioned
to celebrants the place that had been prepared for their destruction and
burial.
32 They stopped their chanting of dirges and took up the song
of their ancestors, praising God, their Savior and worker of wonders. Putting
an end to all mourning and wailing, they formed choruses as a sign of peaceful
joy.
33 Likewise also the king, after convening a great banquet to
celebrate these events, gave thanks to heaven unceasingly and lavishly
for the unexpected rescue that he had experienced.
34 Those who had previously believed that the Jews would be destroyed
and become food for birds, and had joyfully registered them, groaned as
they themselves were overcome by disgrace, and their fire-breathing boldness
was ignominiously quenched.
35. The Jews, as we have said before, arranged the aforementioned choral
group and passed the time in feasting to the accompaniment of joyous thanksgiving
and psalms.
36 And when they had ordained a public rite for these things
in their whole community and for their descendants, they instituted the
observance of the aforesaid days as a festival, not for drinking and gluttony,
but because of the deliverance that had come to them through God.
37 Then they petitioned the king, asking for dismissal to their
homes.
38 So their registration was carried out from the twenty-fifth
of Pachon to the fourth of Epeiph, for forty days; and their destruction
was set for the fifth to the seventh of Epeiph, the three days
39 on which the Lord of all most gloriously revealed his mercy
and rescued them all together and unharmed.
40 Then they feasted, being provided with everything by the king,
until the fourteenth day, on which also they made the petition for their
dismissal.
41 The king granted their request at once and wrote the following
letter for them to the generals in the cities, magnanimously expressing
his concern:
3 Maccabees 7
1. "King Ptolemy Philopator to the generals in Egypt and all in authority
in his government, greetings and good health:
2. "We ourselves and our children are faring well, the great God guiding
our affairs according to our desire.
3 Certain of our friends, frequently urging us with malicious
intent, persuaded us to gather together the Jews of the kingdom in a body
and to punish them with barbarous penalties as traitors;
4 for they declared that our government would never be firmly
established until this was accomplished, because of the ill-will that these
people had toward all nations.
5 They also led them out with harsh treatment as slaves, or rather
as traitors, and, girding themselves with a cruelty more savage than that
of Scythian custom, they tried without any inquiry or examination to put
them to death.
6 But we very severely threatened them for these acts, and in
accordance with the clemency that we have toward all people we barely spared
their lives. Since we have come to realize that the God of heaven surely
defends the Jews, always taking their part as a father does for his children,
7 and since we have taken into account the friendly and firm
goodwill that they had toward us and our ancestors, we justly have acquitted
them of every charge of whatever kind.
8 We also have ordered all people to return to their own homes,
with no one in any place doing them harm at all or reproaching them for
the irrational things that have happened.
9 For you should know that if we devise any evil against them
or cause them any grief at all, we always shall have not a mortal but the
Ruler over every power, the Most High God, in everything and inescapably
as an antagonist to avenge such acts. Farewell."
10. On receiving this letter the Jews did not immediately hurry to
make their departure, but they requested of the king that at their own
hands those of the Jewish nation who had willfully transgressed against
the holy God and the law of God should receive the punishment they deserved.
11 They declared that those who for the belly's sake had transgressed
the divine commandments would never be favorably disposed toward the king's
government.
12 The king then, admitting and approving the truth of what they
said, granted them a general license so that freely, and without royal
authority or supervision, they might destroy those everywhere in his kingdom
who had transgressed the law of God.
13 When they had applauded him in fitting manner, their priests
and the whole multitude shouted the Hallelujah and joyfully departed.
14 And so on their way they punished and put to a public and
shameful death any whom they met of their compatriots who had become defiled.
15 In that day they put to death more than three hundred men;
and they kept the day as a joyful festival, since they had destroyed the
profaners.
16 But those who had held fast to God even to death and had received
the full enjoyment of deliverance began their departure from the city,
crowned with all sorts of very fragrant flowers, joyfully and loudly giving
thanks to the one God of their ancestors, the eternal Savior of Israel,
in words of praise and all kinds of melodious songs.
17. When they had arrived at Ptolemais, called "rose-bearing" because
of a characteristic of the place, the fleet waited for them, in accordance
with the common desire, for seven days.
18 There they celebrated their deliverance, for the king had
generously provided all things to them for their journey until all of them
arrived at their own houses.
19 And when they had all landed in peace with appropriate thanksgiving,
there too in like manner they decided to observe these days as a joyous
festival during the time of their stay.
20 Then, after inscribing them as holy on a pillar and dedicating
a place of prayer at the site of the festival, they departed unharmed,
free, and overjoyed, since at the king's command they had all of them been
brought safely by land and sea and river to their own homes.
21 They also possessed greater prestige among their enemies,
being held in honor and awe; and they were not subject at all to confiscation
of their belongings by any one.
22 Besides, they all recovered all of their property, in accordance
with the registration, so that those who held any of it restored it to
them with extreme fear. So the supreme God perfectly performed great deeds
for their deliverance.
23 Blessed be the Deliverer of Israel through all times! Amen.