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2 Maccabees

2 Maccabees,[note 1] also known as the Second Book of Maccabees, Second Maccabees, and abbreviated as 2 Macc., is a deuterocanonical book which recounts the persecution of Jews under King Antiochus IV Epiphanes and the Maccabean Revolt against him. It concludes with the defeat of the Seleucid Empire general Nicanor in 161 BC by Judas Maccabeus, the leader of the Maccabees.

2 Maccabees was originally written in Koine Greek by an unknown diaspora Jew living in Hellenistic Egypt. It was likely written some time between 150 and 120 BC. Together with the book 1 Maccabees, it is one of the most important sources on the Maccabean Revolt. The work is not a sequel to 1 Maccabees but rather its own independent rendition of the historical events of the Maccabean Revolt. It both starts and ends its history earlier than 1 Maccabees, starting with an incident with the Seleucid official Heliodorus attempting to tax the Second Temple in 178 BC, and ending with the Battle of Adasa in 161 BC. Some scholars believe the book to be influenced by the Pharisaic tradition, with sections that include an endorsement of prayer for the dead and a resurrection of the dead.

The book, like the other Books of the Maccabees, was included in the Septuagint, a prominent Greek collection of Jewish scripture. It was not promptly translated to Hebrew nor included in the Masoretic Hebrew canon, the Tanakh. While possibly read by Greek-speaking Jews in the two centuries after its creation, later Jews did not consider the work canonical nor important. Early Christians did honor the work, and it was included as a deuterocanonical work of the Old Testament. Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Oriental Orthodox Christians still consider the work deuterocanonical; Protestant Christians do not regard 2 Maccabees as canonical, although many include 2 Maccabees as part of the biblical apocrypha, noncanonical books useful for the purpose of edification.

Authorship and composition date

The author of 2 Maccabees is not identified, but he claims to be abridging a 5-volume work by Jason of Cyrene.[1][note 2] This longer work is not preserved, and it is uncertain how much of the present text of 2 Maccabees is copied from Jason's work. The author wrote in Greek, as there is no particular evidence of an earlier Hebrew version. A few sections of the book, such as the Preface, Epilogue, and some reflections on morality are generally assumed to come from the author, not from Jason. Scholars disagree on both when Jason's work was written and when 2 Maccabees was written. Many scholars argue that Jason's work was likely published by a contemporary of the Maccabean Revolt, around 160–140 BCE, although all that is known for sure is that it was before 2 Maccabees.[2] Scholars suggest 2 Maccabees was composed at some point from 150–100 BC.[note 3] It is generally considered that the work must have been written no later than the 70s BC, given that the author seems unaware that Pompey would defeat the Hasmonean kingdom and make Judea a Roman protectorate in 63 BC.[2] The work was possibly modified some after creation, but reached its final form in the Septuagint, the Greek Jewish scriptures. The Septuagint version also gave the work its title of "2 Maccabees" to distinguish it from the other books of the Maccabees in it; the original title of the work, if any, is unknown.

The author appears to be an Egyptian Jew, possibly writing from the capital in Alexandria, addressing other diaspora Jews.[6][2] The Greek style of the writer is educated and erudite, and he is familiar with the forms of rhetoric and argument of the era. The beginning of the book includes two letters sent by Jews in Jerusalem to Jews of the diaspora in Hellenistic Egypt concerning the feast day set up to celebrate the purification of the temple (Hanukkah) and the feast to celebrate the defeat of Nicanor. If the author of the book inserted these letters, the book would have to have been written after 188 SE (~124 BC), the date of the second letter. Some commentators hold that these letters were a later addition, while others consider them the basis for the work.[note 4]

Contents

 
Vision of Judas Maccabee, 1860 woodcut by Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld

Summary

2 Maccabees both starts and ends its history earlier than 1 Maccabees does, instead covering the period from the high priest Onias III and King Seleucus IV (180 BC) to the defeat of Nicanor in 161. The exact focus of the work is debated. All agree that the work has a moralistic tenor, showing the triumph of Judaism, the supremacy of God, and the just punishment of villains. Some see it as a paean to Judas Maccabeus personally, describing the background of the Revolt to write a biography praising him; some see its focus as the Second Temple, showing its gradual corruption by Antiochus IV and how it was saved and purified;[8] others see the focus as the city of Jerusalem and how it was saved;[9] and others disagree with all of the above, seeing it as written strictly for literary and entertainment value.

The author is interested in providing a theological interpretation of the events; in this book God's interventions direct the course of events, punishing the wicked and restoring the Temple to his people. Some events appear to be presented out of strict chronological order to make theological points, such as the occasional "flash forward" to a villain's later death. The numbers cited for sizes of armies may also appear exaggerated, though not all of the manuscripts of this book agree.

After the introductory stories of the controversies at the Temple and the persecutions of Antiochus IV, the story switches to its narrative of the Revolt itself. After the death of Antiochus IV Epiphanes, the Feast of the Dedication of the Temple is instituted. The newly dedicated Temple is threatened by the Seleucid general Nicanor. After his death, the festivities for the dedication are concluded. A special day is dedicated to commemorate the Jewish victory in the month of Adar,[10] on the day before "Mordecai's Day" (Purim).[11] The work explicitly urges diaspora Jews to celebrate both Hanukkah and Nicanor's Day.

Structure

2 Maccabees consists of 15 chapters.

  • 1:1–2:18: Two letters to the Jews of Egypt.
  • 2:19–32: Epitomist's preface.
  • 3: Heliodorus attempts to tax the Temple of Jerusalem's treasury, but is repelled. (~178 BC)
  • 4: High Priest Onias III of the Temple of Jerusalem is succeeded by his brother Jason; Jason is then succeeded by the corrupt Menelaus; Onias III is murdered. (~175–170 BC)
  • 5: Jason attempts to overthrow Menelaus. King Antiochus IV Epiphanes returns from the second expedition of the Sixth Syrian War in Egypt, defeats Jason's supporters, sacks Jerusalem, loots the Temple treasury, and kills and enslaves local Jews as retribution for the perceived revolt. Jason is forced into exile. (168 BC)
  • 6: The Temple is converted into syncretic Greek-Jewish worship site. Antiochus IV issues decrees forbidding traditional Jewish practices, such as circumcision, keeping kosher, and keeping the Sabbath. Eleazar the scribe is tortured and killed after refusing to eat pork. (168–167 BC)
  • 7: Martyrdom of the woman and her seven sons after torture by Antiochus IV.
  • 8: Start of the Maccabean Revolt. Judas Maccabeus defeats Nicanor, Gorgias, and Ptolemy son of Dorymenes at the Battle of Emmaus. (~166–165 BC)
  • 9:1–10:9: Antiochus IV is stricken with disease by God. He belatedly repents and writes a letter attempting to make peace before dying in Persia. Judas conquers Jerusalem, cleanses the Temple, and establishes the festival of Hanukkah. (~164 BC)
  • 10:10–38: Lysias becomes regent. Governor Ptolemy Macron attempts to cement peace with the Jews, but is undermined by anti-Jewish nobles and commits suicide. The Maccabees campaign in outlying regions against Timothy of Ammon and others. (~163 BC)
  • 11: Lysias leads a military expedition to Judea. Judas defeats him at the Battle of Beth Zur. Four documents detailing negotiations with Lysias and the Roman Republic. (~160s BC)
  • 12: More accounts of the campaigns in outlying regions against Timothy, Gorgias, and others. (~163 BC)
  • 13: Lysias orders the execution of unpopular High Priest Menelaus. Judas harries Lysias's expedition with minor victories. Lysias leaves and returns to the capital of Antioch to face the usurper Philip. (~163–162 BC, likely near in time to the Battle of Beth Zechariah described in 1 Maccabees)
  • 14:1–15:36: Demetrius I becomes King. Alcimus, who had replaced Menelaus as High Priest, is affirmed by Demetrius I. Nicanor is appointed governor of Judea. Nicanor and Judas enter negotiations for peace, but are subverted by Alcimus, who complains to the king; Judas's arrest is ordered. Nicanor threatens to destroy the Temple. In a dream vision, Onias III and the prophet Jeremiah give Judas a divine golden sword. At the Battle of Adasa, Judas defeats and kills Nicanor, preserving the sanctity of the Temple. The Day of Nicanor festival is established. (~161 BC)
  • 15:37–39: Epitomist's epilogue.

Canonicity and theology

 
Rider on the Horse with golden armour, who appears in Chapter 3 to fight Heliodorus, from Die Bibel in Bildern

The Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church, and Oriental Orthodox Churches regard 2 Maccabees as canonical. Jews and Protestants do not.

Hellenistic Judaism

Greek-speaking Jews were the original audience addressed by the work. Both 1 and 2 Maccabees appear in some manuscripts of the Septuagint.[12][13] Unlike most works in the Septuagint which were Greek translations of Hebrew originals, 2 Maccabees was a Greek work originally. While not a problem for Greek-speaking Hellenistic Jews nor Christians (whose scriptures were written in Greek), other Jews who kept to the Hebrew version of the Jewish Scriptures never included it. Hellenistic Judaism slowly waned as many of its adherents either converted to Christianity or switched to other languages, and 2 Maccabees thus did not become part of the Jewish canon.[14] Josephus, the most famous Jewish writer of the first century whose work was preserved, does not appear to have read 2 Maccabees, for example; neither does Philo of Alexandria.[15] Neither book of the Maccabees were found among the Dead Sea Scrolls of the Essenes, a Jewish sect hostile to the Hasmoneans and their memory.[16][17] Various works such as Seder Olam Rabbah (a 2nd century AD work) indicate that the age of prophecy ended with Alexander the Great, and 2 Maccabees, a work clearly written later, thus could not be prophetic.[18]

Traditionally, it was hypothesized that the author of 2 Maccabees might have been influenced by the Pharasaic tradition.[19][20] The Pharisees emphasized adherence to Jewish law and disputed with the rulers of the Hasmonean kingdom. They criticized how the Hasmoneans took a dual role of both Chief Priest and King, and demanded that they cede one of the titles (usually the kingship, which was expected to be held by one of the family lineage of King David). Hasmonean King Alexander Jannaeus is recorded as organizing a massacre of his political opponents, and many went into exile. The theory goes that 2 Maccabees praises Judas for saving the temple, but excludes mention of how his brothers and extended family later took the throne, and might have been written by a Pharisee from Judea writing in Egyptian exile. The work's emphasis on adherence to the Law even on pain of martyrdom, keeping the Sabbath, and the promise of a future resurrection seem to fit with the Pharisees' ideology.[6] Still, other scholars disagree that the author shows any signs of such inclinations, and belief in a future resurrection of the dead was not limited to only Pharisees; scholars since the 1980s have tended to be skeptical of the proposed connection.[21][22]

The theology of the work is an update to the "Deuteronomist" history seen in older Jewish works. The classical Deuteronomist view had been that when Israel is faithful and upholds the covenant, the Jews prosper; when Israel neglects the covenant, God withdraws his favor, and Israel suffers. The persecution of Antiochus IV stood in direct contradiction to this tradition: the most faithful Jews were the ones who suffered the most, while those who abandoned Jewish practices became wealthy and powerful. The author of 2 Maccabees attempts to make sense of this in several ways: he explains that the suffering was a swift and merciful corrective to set the Jews back on the right path. While God had revoked his protection of the Temple in anger at the impious High Priests, his wrath turns to mercy upon seeing the suffering of the martyrs. The work also takes pains to ensure that when setbacks occur, some sort of sin or error was at fault. For those truly blameless, such as the martyrs, the author invokes life after death: that post-mortem rewards and punishments would accomplish what might have been lacking in the mortal world.[23][24] These references to the resurrection of the dead despite suffering and torture were part of a new current in Judaism also seen in the Book of Daniel, a work the authors of 2 Maccabees were likely familiar with.[25] This would prove especially influential among Roman-era Jews who converted to Christianity.[26][23]

Christianity in the era of the Roman Empire

 
A Byzantine-style fresco at the Santa Maria Antiqua church in Rome, likely painted around 650 AD. It depicts the woman and her seven sons (here named Solomne) and Eleazar, their teacher. The story of their martyrdom is the most famous part of 2 Maccabees.[27]

In the early Christian tradition, the Septuagint was used as the basis for the Christian Old Testament. The inclusion of 2 Maccabees in some copies of the Septuagint saw it a part of various early canon lists and manuscripts, albeit sometimes as part of an appendix. Pope Damasus I's Council of Rome in 382, if the 6th century Gelasian Decree is a correct guide to its decision, issued a biblical canon which included both 1 and 2 Maccabees, but neither 3 nor 4.

Pope Innocent I (405 AD),[28][29] the Synod of Hippo (393 AD),[30] the Council of Carthage (397 AD),[31] the Council of Carthage (419 AD),[32] and the Apostolic Canons[33] all seemed to think that 2 Maccabees was canonical, either by explicitly saying so or citing it as scripture. Jerome and Augustine of Hippo (c. 397 AD) had seemingly inconsistent positions: they directly excluded 2 Maccabees from canon, but did say that the book was useful; yet in other works, both cited 2 Maccabees as if it was scripture, or lists it among scriptural works.[34][35]

Theologically, the major aspects of 2 Maccabees that resonated with Roman-era Christians and medieval Christians were its stories of martyrology and the resurrection of the dead in its stories of Eleazar and the woman with seven sons. Christians made sermons and comparisons of Christian martyrs to the Maccabean martyrs, along with the hope of an eventual salvation; Eusebius compared the persecuted Christians of Lyon to the Maccabean martyrs, for example.[36] Several churches were dedicated to the "Maccabean martyrs", and they are among the few pre-Christian figures to appear on the calendar of saints' days.[27] A cult to the Maccabean martyrs flourished in Antioch, the former capital of the Seleucids; Augustine of Hippo found it ironic and fitting that the city that named Antiochus IV now revered those he persecuted.[37] The one awkward aspect was that the martyrs had died upholding Jewish Law in an era when many Christians felt that the Law of Moses was not merely obsolete, but actively harmful. Christian authors generally downplayed the Jewishness of the martyrs, treating them as proto-Christians instead.[38][39][36]

Controversy in the Reformation era

 
The Triumph of Judas Maccabeus, a 1630s work by Peter Paul Rubens. The scene depicted is from 2 Maccabees: After a campaign in Idumea, some Jews fell against Gorgias's forces. According to the epitomist, these Jews died because they had idols on them; Judas makes a sin offering in recompense. This offering would become cited in the 1400s and 1500s as a defense of Catholic doctrine on purgatory and indulgences.[40]

2 Maccabees was in a position of being an official part of the canon, but as a deuterocanonical work and thus subtly lesser than the older scriptures during the early 1500s. Josse van Clichtove, in his work The Veneration of Saints, cited 2 Maccabees as support for the idea of dead saints interceding for the salvation of the living; in Chapter 15, during a dream vision, both the earlier high priest Onias III and the prophet Jeremiah are said to pray for whole of the people.[41][42] He also cited 2 Maccabees as support for prayers for the dead, the reverse case of the living praying for the salvation of souls suffering in purgatory.

The book became controversial due to opposition from Martin Luther and other reformers during the Protestant Reformation of the 1500s. Luther had a very high opinion of scripture, but precisely because of this, he wished for the canon to be strict. He would eventually demote the deuterocanonical works to "apocrypha"; still useful to read and part of the 1534 version of the Luther Bible, but set aside in their own separate section and not accepted as a sound basis for Christian doctrine.[43][44] Luther had several complaints. One was that it was an abridgment of another work, rather than a single divinely inspired author.[36] Another was a general preference for using the Hebrew Bible as the basis for the Old Testament, rather than the Latin Vulgate or the Greek Septuagint.[36] Another was with the prevailing Catholic interpretation and use of one story: that of Judas making a "sin offering" of silver after some of his troops were slain and found with idols, so that the dead might be delivered from their sin.[45] This passage was used as an example of the efficacy of monetary indulgences paid to the Catholic Church to free souls from purgatory by some Catholic authors of the period.[23] Luther disagreed with both indulgences and the concept of purgatory, and in his 1530 work Disavowl of Purgatory, he denied that 2 Maccabees was a valid source to cite.[41] Luther was reported as having said: "I am so great an enemy to the second book of the Maccabees, and to Esther, that I wish they had not come to us at all, for they have too many heathen unnaturalities."[46] The reformer Jean Calvin agreed with Luther's criticism of 2 Maccabees, and added his own criticism as well. Calvin propounded predestination, the doctrine that God has chosen the elect, and nothing can change this. Thus, the arguments from Clichtove and other Catholics that cited 2 Maccabees for the doctrine of the intercession of saints was suspect to him: for Calvin, salvation was strictly God's choice, and not a matter that dead saints could intervene on.[47] Another issue Calvin and other Protestants raised was the self-effacing epilogue to 2 Maccabees, which Calvin took as an admission from the epitomist that he was not divinely inspired.[47][48]

In response to this, the Catholic Church went the opposite direction. While earlier Church Fathers had considered the deuterocanonical books useful but lesser than the main scriptures, the Catholic Church now affirmed that 2 Maccabees (and other deuterocanonical works) were in fact fully reliable as scripture at the Council of Trent in 1546.[49][50][41][51]

Modern status

2 Maccabees is still used to endorse the doctrine of resurrection of the dead, intercession of saints, and prayers for the dead to be released from purgatory in the Catholic tradition.[52] The Latin Church Lectionary makes use of texts from 2 Maccabees 6 and 7, along with texts from 1 Maccabees 1 to 6, in the weekday readings for the 33rd week in Ordinary Time, in year 1 of the two-year cycle of readings, always in November, and as one of the options available for readings during a Mass for the Dead.[53]

The Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox Churches consider the book canonical. As in antiquity, the most notable section remains the martyrs, who are celebrated as saints by a variety of feast days. They are especially honored in Syriac Christianity, perhaps due to suffering persecution themselves; the mother of seven sons is known as Marth Shmouni in that tradition.[54][55]

In the Protestant tradition, the book remains non-canonical.[56] Many Protestant Bibles stopped including the apocrypha, leading to a loss of relevance for 2 Maccabees. Still, the book is treated at least somewhat respectfully. The twentieth century evangelical author James B. Jordan, for example, argues that while 1 Maccabees "was written to try and show the Maccabean usurpers as true heirs of David and as true High Priests" and is a "wicked book", a "far more accurate picture of the situation is given in 2 Maccabees."[57]

Article VI of the Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England and the wider Anglican Communion defines 2 Maccabees as useful but not the basis of doctrine.[58]

The texts regarding the martyrdoms under Antiochus IV in 2 Maccabees are held in high esteem by the Anabaptists, who faced persecution in their history.[59]

Literary influence

 
A 1517 German depiction of the crucified Jesus, the mother, and her seven sons in the boiling cauldron.

The most influential part of 2 Maccabees was its stories of the martyrdom of Eleazar and the woman with seven sons; various works expanded the story to add more details such as the woman's name (variously called Hannah, Miriam, Shmouni, and other names) and their story. A prominent early example is the book of 4 Maccabees, written by a 1st-century Jewish author who used 2 Maccabees as a direct source (as well as the Book of Daniel). 4 Maccabees discusses in detail the martyrdoms described in 2 Maccabees, but provides a different interpretation of them. While 2 Maccabees attempts to arouse sympathy and emotions (pathos), 4 Maccabees was written by someone schooled in Stoic philosophy. As such, in its depiction, the martyred woman and Eleazar calmly discuss matters with their oppressors; they use reason and intellectual argument to stay calm and defy Antiochus IV. 4 Maccabees takes the idea of the resurrection of the dead even more directly than 2 Maccabees and Daniel: if God will revive those who suffer for obeying God's law, then it makes perfect sense to obey the greater ruler rather than the lesser ruler.[15][60]

To a lesser degree, the book 3 Maccabees evinces familiarity with 2 Maccabees; while the setting is different (it is set fifty years before the Maccabean Revolt in Egypt, not Judea), Eleazar the scribe appears in it, and the depictions of turmoil and suffering among Egyptian Jews are influenced by 2 Maccabees. The Christian Epistle to the Hebrews possibly makes a reference to 2 Maccabees as well.[61]

A later work that directly expanded 2 Maccabees was the Yosippon of the 10th century, which includes a paraphrase of parts of the Latin translation of 2 Maccabees.[62] Among Jews, there had been practically no interest in 2 Maccabees itself for a millennium;[63] the Yosippon was a rare exception of medieval Jews rediscovering the work.[64] Much like in Christian works, the story of the mother and her seven sons was the most retold and influential.[62]

Reliability as history

2 Maccabees has traditionally been considered a somewhat lesser source on the history of the Maccabean Revolt than 1 Maccabees by secular historians, especially in the 19th century. This is for a number of reasons: it wears its religious moralizing openly; it skips around in time and place at parts, rather than the chronological approach in 1 Maccabees; and it includes a number of implausible claims directly in contention with 1 Maccabees.[20] In general, most scholars continue to agree that 1 Maccabees is a superior source on the military history of the revolt: it was written by a Judean who names and describes locations accurately compared to the occasional geographic blunders of 2 Maccabees written by an Egyptian, includes far more details on maneuvers and tactics than the simple depictions of battle in 2 Maccabees, and its figures for elements such as troop counts and casualties are considered more reliable than the wildly inflated numbers in 2 Maccabees. (For example, 2 Maccabees implausibly claims that there were 35,000 Syrian casualties at the Battle of Adasa, a number likely far larger than the entire Seleucid force.[65]) 2 Maccabees was also written in a "pathetic" in the sense of pathos style, appealing to emotions and sentiment.[66] Skeptical historians considered this a sign that the epitomist was not interested in historical accuracy much, but merely telling a good story.[67]

In the 20th century, there was a renewed interest in rehabilitating 2 Maccabees as a source on par with 1 Maccabees by scholars. In particular, there was a growing recognition that a politically slanted history, as 1 Maccabees is, could be just as biased and unreliable as the religiously slanted history that 2 Maccabees is.[68] A deeply devout observer could still be describing true events, albeit with a religious interpretation of them. By the 1930s, historians generally came to the conclusion that the historical documents present in 2 Maccabees - while seemingly out of chronological order - were likely legitimate and matched what would be expected of such Seleucid negotiations. Archaeological evidence supported many of the references made to Seleucid leadership, causing historians to think that Jason and the epitomist must have had better knowledge of internal Seleucid affairs than the author of 1 Maccabees.[69] As an example, 2 Maccabees appears to be more reliable and honest on the date of the death of Antiochus IV. Archaeological evidence supports the claim in 2 Maccabees he died before the cleansing of the Temple, while 1 Maccabees moves his death later to hide the fact that Lysias abandoned his campaign in Judea not due to the efforts of the Maccabees at the Battle of Beth Zur, but rather to respond to political turmoil resulting from Antiochus's death. 2 Maccabees writes that Antiochus's decrees were targeted against Judea and Samaria, which historians find more likely than the claim in 1 Maccabees that he demanded religious standardization across the entire empire.[70]

Even to the extent that 2 Maccabees is still distrusted as history to a degree, the fact that it is a genuinely independent source is considered invaluable to historians. Many events in the Hellenistic and Roman periods have only passing mentions that they occurred; those that do have a detailed source often only have a single such detailed source, leaving it difficult to determine that author's biases or errors. For example, the Great Revolt against the Romans in 64–73 AD is only closely recorded by Josephus's The Jewish War. The Maccabean Revolt having two independent detailed contemporary histories is a rarity.

Manuscripts

Early manuscripts of the Septuagint were not uniform in their lists of books.[71] 2 Maccabees is found in the 5th century Codex Alexandrinus which includes all of 1, 2, 3, and 4 Maccabees, as well as the 8th century Codex Venetus. 2 Maccabees is missing from the Codex Vaticanus (which also lacks 1 Maccabees) and the Codex Sinaiticus (which also lacks 3 Maccabees). Additionally, other ancient fragments have been found, albeit with some attributed to Lucian of Antioch who is considered to have "improved" some of his renditions with unknown other material, leading to some variant readings. Robert Hanhart [de] created a critical edition of the Greek text in 1959 with a second edition published in 1976.[72]

Notes

  1. ^ Greek: Μακκαβαίων Β´, romanizedMakkabaíōn 2
  2. ^ Since 2 Maccabees is largely an abridgment of another's work, the person who wrote 2 Maccabees is often referred to as "epitomist" or "epitomator" rather than "author".
  3. ^ Scholarly estimates for the date of authorship include:
    • Daniel R. Schwartz argues for an "early" date of publication of around 150–140 BC.[3]
    • Stuckenbruck & Gurtner argue for between 150–120 BC.[4]
    • Jonathan A. Goldstein argues for Jason of Cyrene's history published at some time during the reign of Alexander Jannaeus (103 to 76 BC), and the abridged 2 Maccabees with the introductory letters by 76 AD.[5]
    • John R. Bartlett argues for "almost anywhere in the last 150 years B.C."[6]
  4. ^ Few scholars believe the introductory letters to be authentic, but some do suggest that they were compiled by the same epitomist who made the rest of the work. Some notable scholarly positions include: Benedikt Niese believed that the letters were integral to the work. Jonathan Goldstein considers the letters forgeries and later additions. Daniel R. Schwartz believes that they are a later addition, and further that the date was actually 148 SE, not 188 SE, and was a reference not to the date of the letter, but the date of the original cleansing of the Temple.[7]

References

  1. ^ 2 Maccabees 2:23
  2. ^ a b c Duggan, Michael W. (2021). "2 Maccabees". In Oegema, Gerbern S. (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Apocrypha. Oxford University Press. pp. 168–187. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190689643.013.10. ISBN 9780190689667.
  3. ^ Schwartz 2008, p. 8–15.
  4. ^ Stuckenbruck, Loren T.; Gurtner, Daniel M. (2019). T&T Clark Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism Volume One. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9780567658135. Retrieved 5 January 2021.
  5. ^ Goldstein 1983, p. 121–122.
  6. ^ a b c Bartlett 1973, p. 215–219.
  7. ^ Schwartz 2008, p. 519–525.
  8. ^ Harrington 2009, p. 36–38.
  9. ^ Schwartz 2008, pp. 3, 512.
  10. ^ 2 Maccabees 15:36
  11. ^ Koller, A., Purim, accessed 17 January 2021
  12. ^ Life after death: a history of the afterlife in the religions of the West (2004), Anchor Bible Reference Library, Alan F. Segal, p. 363
  13. ^ Ellis, E. Earle (2003). The Old Testament in early Christianity: Canon and interpretation in the light of modern research. Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock. pp. 34–35. ISBN 978-1592442560.
  14. ^ Goldstein 1983, p. 27.
  15. ^ a b Schwartz 2008, p. 86.
  16. ^ Freedman, David Noel; Allen C. Myers; Astrid B. Beck, eds. (2000). Eerdmans dictionary of the Bible ([Nachdr.] ed.). Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdman. p. 426. ISBN 978-0802824004.
  17. ^ VanderKam, James C.; Flint, Peter (2004). The meaning of the Dead Sea scrolls : their significance for understanding the Bible, Judaism, Jesus, and Christianity (1st paperback ed.). San Francisco, CA: HarperSanFrancisco. p. 99. ISBN 978-0060684655.
  18. ^ Schwartz 2008, p. 58-61.
  19. ^ Harris, Stephen L., Understanding the Bible. Palo Alto: Mayfield. 1985.
  20. ^ a b Oesterley, William O. E. (1935). An Introduction to the Books of the Apocrypha. New York: The Macmillan Company. p. 315–326.
  21. ^ Schwartz 2008, p. 168, 442.
  22. ^ Bar-Kochva 1989, p. 571–572.
  23. ^ a b c deSilva, David A. (2021). "Biblical Theology and the Apocrypha". In Oegema, Gerbern S. (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Apocrypha. Oxford University Press. pp. 534–550. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190689643.013.27. ISBN 9780190689667.
  24. ^ Ehrman, Bart (2020). Heaven and Hell: A History of the Afterlife. Simon & Schuster. p. 142–146; 151–158. ISBN 9781501136757.
  25. ^ Goldstein 1983, p. 63–70.
  26. ^ Harrington 2009, p. 129–130.
  27. ^ a b Berger, Albrecht (2012). "The Cult of the Maccabees in the Eastern Orthodox Church". In Signori, Gabriela (ed.). Dying for the Faith, Killing for the Faith: Old-Testament Faith-Warriors (1 and 2 Maccabees) in Historical Perspective. Brill. p. 107–111; 116–119. ISBN 978-90-04-21104-9.
  28. ^ "Letter of Innocent I on the Canon of Scripture". www.bible-researcher.com.
  29. ^ Westcott, Brooke Foss (2005). A general survey of the history of the canon of the New Testament (6th ed.). Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock. p. 570. ISBN 1597522392.
  30. ^ "Canon XXIV. (Greek xxvii.)", The Canons of the 217 Blessed Fathers who assembled at Carthage, Christian Classics Ethereal Library
  31. ^ B.F. Westcott, A General Survey of the History of the Canon of the New Testament (5th ed. Edinburgh, 1881), pp. 440, 541–42.
  32. ^ "CHURCH FATHERS: Council of Carthage (A.D. 419)". www.newadvent.org.
  33. ^ Council in Trullo. The Apostolic Canons. Canon 85. newadvent. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  34. ^ Augustine of Hippo. On Christian Doctrine Book II Chapter 8:2. newadvent. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  35. ^ Schwartz 2008, p. 59.
  36. ^ a b c d Signori, Gabriela (2012). "Introduction". Dying for the Faith, Killing for the Faith: Old-Testament Faith-Warriors (1 and 2 Maccabees) in Historical Perspective. Brill. p. 1–3. ISBN 978-90-04-21104-9.
  37. ^ Lapina, Elizabeth (2012). "The Maccabees and the Battle of Antioch". In Signori, Gabriela (ed.). Dying for the Faith, Killing for the Faith: Old-Testament Faith-Warriors (1 and 2 Maccabees) in Historical Perspective. Brill. p. 147–148. ISBN 978-90-04-21104-9.
  38. ^ Joslyn-Siemiatkoski, Daniel (2009). Christian Memories of the Maccabean Martyrs. New York: Palgrave Mcmillan. p. 1–10. ISBN 978-0-230-60279-3.
  39. ^ Schwartz 2008, p. 87-89.
  40. ^ RKD Netherlands Institute for Art History: Peter Paul Rubens and studio of Peter Paul Rubens. See 2 Maccabees 12:39–45.
  41. ^ a b c Pelikan, Jaroslav (1984) [1983]. Reformation of Church and Dogma (1300-1700). The Christian Tradition. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press. p. 136–137; 261; 266; 276. ISBN 0-226-65376-5.
  42. ^ 2 Maccabees 15:12–16
  43. ^ Hiers, Richard H. (2001). The Trinity Guide to the Bible (Pbk. ed.). Harrisburg, Penn.: Trinity Press International. p. 148. ISBN 978-1563383403.
  44. ^ McDonald, Lee Martin (2009). Forgotten scriptures: the selection and rejection of early religious writings (1st ed.). Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-0664233570.
  45. ^ 2 Maccabees 12:39–45
  46. ^ Luther, Martin (1893) [1566]. "Of God's Word: XXIV". The Table-Talk of Martin Luther. trans. William Hazlitt. Philadelphia: Lutheran Publication Society. LCC BR332.T4.
  47. ^ a b Schwartz 2008, p. 60–61.
  48. ^ Calvin, Jean (2008) [1559]. "Book 3, Chapter 5, Section 8–9". Institutes of the Christian Religion. Translated by Beveridge, Henry. Peabody, Massachusetts: Hendrickson Publishers. p. 440–441. ISBN 9781598561685.
  49. ^ New Catholic encyclopedia. Vol. 3. Washington, D.C: Catholic University of America. 2003. pp. 20, 26, 390.
  50. ^ Metzger, Bruce M. (March 13, 1997). The Canon of the New Testament: Its Origin, Development, and Significance. Oxford University Press. p. 246. ISBN 0-19-826954-4. Finally on 8 April 1546, by a vote of 24 to 15, with 16 abstensions, the Council issued a decree (De Canonicis Scripturis) in which, for the first time in the history of the Church, the question of the contents of the Bible was made an absolute article of faith and confirmed by an anathema.
  51. ^ Canons and Decrees of the Council of Trent/Session IV/Canonical Scriptures . Translated by Buckley, Theodore Alois. 1851 [1546] – via Wikisource. [scan  ]
  52. ^ Ellis, P. F. (2003). "Maccabees, Books of". New Catholic Encyclopedia (Second ed.). Washington, DC: Thomson Gale.
  53. ^ Roman Missal, Lectionary, Revised Edition approved for use in the dioceses of England and Wales, Scotland, Ireland, published by Collins, Geoffrey Chapman and Veritas, 1981, 1982, volumes 2 and 3
  54. ^ St Shmouni and her Seven Sons – Martyrs – 1 August
  55. ^ Synek, Eva; Murre-van den Berg, Heleen (2007). "Chapter 12: Syriac Christianity; Chapter 21: Eastern Christian Hagiographical Traditions, Oriental Orthodox: Syriac Hagiography". In Perry, Kenneth (ed.). The Blackwell Companion to Eastern Christianity. Book Publishers. pp. 266, 444–445. ISBN 9780631234234.
  56. ^ Ramsay, William M. (1 January 1994). Westminster Guide to the Books of the Bible. Westminster John Knox Press. p. 275. ISBN 978-0-664-25380-6. The Reformers countered by pointing out that 2 Maccabees was a book of the Apocrypha; Protestants would accept as authoritative Old Testament only the canon of the Hebrew scriptures. ... The Reformers did grant that the Apocrypha was valuable. ... these books, while useful "for edification," were not authoritative for doctrine.
  57. ^ Jordan, James B. (2007). The Handwriting on the Wall: A Commentary on the Book of Daniel. American Vision. p. 580.
  58. ^ "Articles of Religion". The Church of England. Retrieved March 5, 2022.
  59. ^ deSilva, David A. (2018). Introducing the Apocrypha: Message, Context, and Significance. Baker Books. ISBN 978-1-4934-1307-2.
  60. ^ Goldstein 1983, p. 26.
  61. ^ Schwartz 2008, p. 88. See Hebrews 11:35–36
  62. ^ a b Joslyn-Siemiatkoski, Daniel (2012). "The Mother And Seven Sons in Late Antique And Medieval Ashkenazi Judaism: Narrative Transformations and Communal Identity". In Signori, Gabriela (ed.). Dying for the Faith, Killing for the Faith: Old-Testament Faith-Warriors (1 and 2 Maccabees) in Historical Perspective. Brill. p. 129–134. ISBN 978-90-04-21104-9.
  63. ^ Stemberger, Günter (1992). "The Maccabees in Rabbinic Tradition". The Scriptures and the Scrolls: Studies in Honour of A.S. van der Woude on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday. E. J. Brill. p. 192–203.
  64. ^ Schwartz 2008, p. 90.
  65. ^ Bar-Kochva 1989, p. 360.
  66. ^ Schwartz 2008, p. 78–80.
  67. ^ Hongiman, Sylvie (2014). Tales of High Priests and Taxes: The Books of the Maccabees and the Judean Rebellion against Antiochos IV. Oakland, California: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520958180.
  68. ^ Doran 2012, p. 3; 519–520.
  69. ^ Schwartz 2008, p. 40–44.
  70. ^ Portier-Young, Anathea (2011). Apocalypse Against Empire: Theologies of Resistance in Early Judaism. Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. p. 191-192. ISBN 9780802870834.
  71. ^ Archer, Gleason Jr. (2007). A survey of Old Testament introduction ([Rev. and expanded]. ed.). Chicago, IL: Moody Press. p. 81, 82. ISBN 978-0802484345.
  72. ^ Doran 2012, p. 19.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Borchardt, Francis. 2016. "Reading Aid: 2 Maccabees and the History of Jason of Cyrene Reconsidered." Journal for the Study of Judaism 47, no. 1: 71–87.
  • Coetzer, Eugene. 2016. "Heroes and Villains in 2 Maccabees 8:1–36: A Rhetorical Analysis." Old Testament Essays: 419–33.
  • Doran, Robert. 1981. Temple Propaganda: The Purpose and Character of 2 Maccabees. Catholic Biblical Quarterly Monograph Series 12. Washington, DC: Catholic Biblical Association.
  • Habicht, C. 1976. "Royal Documents in II Maccabees." Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 80: 1–18.
  • Janowitz, Naomi. 2017. The Family Romance of Martyrdom In Second Maccabees. New York: Routledge.
  • Kosmin, P. 2016. "Indigenous Revolts in 2 Maccabees: The Persian Version." Classical Philology 111, no. 1: 32–53.
  • Stewart, Tyler A. 2017. "Jewish Paideia: Greek Education in the Letter of Aristeas and 2 Maccabees." Journal for the Study of Judaism 48, no. 2: 182–202.
  • Trotter, Jonathan R. 2017. "2 Maccabees 10:1–8: Who Wrote It and Where Does It Belong?" Journal of Biblical Literature 136, no. 1: 117–30.

External links

  • NRSV text of 2 Maccabees: 2 Maccabees 1:1–7:42, 2 Maccabees 8:1–11:38, 2 Maccabees 12:1–15:39
  •   Works related to 2 Maccabees at Wikisource
  •   2 Maccabees public domain audiobook at LibriVox
2 Maccabees
Preceded by Catholic and Orthodox
Books of the Bible
Succeeded by

maccabees, note, also, known, second, book, maccabees, second, maccabees, abbreviated, macc, deuterocanonical, book, which, recounts, persecution, jews, under, king, antiochus, epiphanes, maccabean, revolt, against, concludes, with, defeat, seleucid, empire, g. 2 Maccabees note 1 also known as the Second Book of Maccabees Second Maccabees and abbreviated as 2 Macc is a deuterocanonical book which recounts the persecution of Jews under King Antiochus IV Epiphanes and the Maccabean Revolt against him It concludes with the defeat of the Seleucid Empire general Nicanor in 161 BC by Judas Maccabeus the leader of the Maccabees 2 Maccabees was originally written in Koine Greek by an unknown diaspora Jew living in Hellenistic Egypt It was likely written some time between 150 and 120 BC Together with the book 1 Maccabees it is one of the most important sources on the Maccabean Revolt The work is not a sequel to 1 Maccabees but rather its own independent rendition of the historical events of the Maccabean Revolt It both starts and ends its history earlier than 1 Maccabees starting with an incident with the Seleucid official Heliodorus attempting to tax the Second Temple in 178 BC and ending with the Battle of Adasa in 161 BC Some scholars believe the book to be influenced by the Pharisaic tradition with sections that include an endorsement of prayer for the dead and a resurrection of the dead The book like the other Books of the Maccabees was included in the Septuagint a prominent Greek collection of Jewish scripture It was not promptly translated to Hebrew nor included in the Masoretic Hebrew canon the Tanakh While possibly read by Greek speaking Jews in the two centuries after its creation later Jews did not consider the work canonical nor important Early Christians did honor the work and it was included as a deuterocanonical work of the Old Testament Catholic Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox Christians still consider the work deuterocanonical Protestant Christians do not regard 2 Maccabees as canonical although many include 2 Maccabees as part of the biblical apocrypha noncanonical books useful for the purpose of edification Contents 1 Authorship and composition date 2 Contents 2 1 Summary 2 2 Structure 3 Canonicity and theology 3 1 Hellenistic Judaism 3 2 Christianity in the era of the Roman Empire 3 3 Controversy in the Reformation era 3 4 Modern status 4 Literary influence 5 Reliability as history 6 Manuscripts 7 Notes 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksAuthorship and composition date EditThe author of 2 Maccabees is not identified but he claims to be abridging a 5 volume work by Jason of Cyrene 1 note 2 This longer work is not preserved and it is uncertain how much of the present text of 2 Maccabees is copied from Jason s work The author wrote in Greek as there is no particular evidence of an earlier Hebrew version A few sections of the book such as the Preface Epilogue and some reflections on morality are generally assumed to come from the author not from Jason Scholars disagree on both when Jason s work was written and when 2 Maccabees was written Many scholars argue that Jason s work was likely published by a contemporary of the Maccabean Revolt around 160 140 BCE although all that is known for sure is that it was before 2 Maccabees 2 Scholars suggest 2 Maccabees was composed at some point from 150 100 BC note 3 It is generally considered that the work must have been written no later than the 70s BC given that the author seems unaware that Pompey would defeat the Hasmonean kingdom and make Judea a Roman protectorate in 63 BC 2 The work was possibly modified some after creation but reached its final form in the Septuagint the Greek Jewish scriptures The Septuagint version also gave the work its title of 2 Maccabees to distinguish it from the other books of the Maccabees in it the original title of the work if any is unknown The author appears to be an Egyptian Jew possibly writing from the capital in Alexandria addressing other diaspora Jews 6 2 The Greek style of the writer is educated and erudite and he is familiar with the forms of rhetoric and argument of the era The beginning of the book includes two letters sent by Jews in Jerusalem to Jews of the diaspora in Hellenistic Egypt concerning the feast day set up to celebrate the purification of the temple Hanukkah and the feast to celebrate the defeat of Nicanor If the author of the book inserted these letters the book would have to have been written after 188 SE 124 BC the date of the second letter Some commentators hold that these letters were a later addition while others consider them the basis for the work note 4 Contents EditMain article Chapters of 2 Maccabees Vision of Judas Maccabee 1860 woodcut by Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld Summary Edit 2 Maccabees both starts and ends its history earlier than 1 Maccabees does instead covering the period from the high priest Onias III and King Seleucus IV 180 BC to the defeat of Nicanor in 161 The exact focus of the work is debated All agree that the work has a moralistic tenor showing the triumph of Judaism the supremacy of God and the just punishment of villains Some see it as a paean to Judas Maccabeus personally describing the background of the Revolt to write a biography praising him some see its focus as the Second Temple showing its gradual corruption by Antiochus IV and how it was saved and purified 8 others see the focus as the city of Jerusalem and how it was saved 9 and others disagree with all of the above seeing it as written strictly for literary and entertainment value The author is interested in providing a theological interpretation of the events in this book God s interventions direct the course of events punishing the wicked and restoring the Temple to his people Some events appear to be presented out of strict chronological order to make theological points such as the occasional flash forward to a villain s later death The numbers cited for sizes of armies may also appear exaggerated though not all of the manuscripts of this book agree After the introductory stories of the controversies at the Temple and the persecutions of Antiochus IV the story switches to its narrative of the Revolt itself After the death of Antiochus IV Epiphanes the Feast of the Dedication of the Temple is instituted The newly dedicated Temple is threatened by the Seleucid general Nicanor After his death the festivities for the dedication are concluded A special day is dedicated to commemorate the Jewish victory in the month of Adar 10 on the day before Mordecai s Day Purim 11 The work explicitly urges diaspora Jews to celebrate both Hanukkah and Nicanor s Day Structure Edit 2 Maccabees consists of 15 chapters 1 1 2 18 Two letters to the Jews of Egypt 2 19 32 Epitomist s preface 3 Heliodorus attempts to tax the Temple of Jerusalem s treasury but is repelled 178 BC 4 High Priest Onias III of the Temple of Jerusalem is succeeded by his brother Jason Jason is then succeeded by the corrupt Menelaus Onias III is murdered 175 170 BC 5 Jason attempts to overthrow Menelaus King Antiochus IV Epiphanes returns from the second expedition of the Sixth Syrian War in Egypt defeats Jason s supporters sacks Jerusalem loots the Temple treasury and kills and enslaves local Jews as retribution for the perceived revolt Jason is forced into exile 168 BC 6 The Temple is converted into syncretic Greek Jewish worship site Antiochus IV issues decrees forbidding traditional Jewish practices such as circumcision keeping kosher and keeping the Sabbath Eleazar the scribe is tortured and killed after refusing to eat pork 168 167 BC 7 Martyrdom of the woman and her seven sons after torture by Antiochus IV 8 Start of the Maccabean Revolt Judas Maccabeus defeats Nicanor Gorgias and Ptolemy son of Dorymenes at the Battle of Emmaus 166 165 BC 9 1 10 9 Antiochus IV is stricken with disease by God He belatedly repents and writes a letter attempting to make peace before dying in Persia Judas conquers Jerusalem cleanses the Temple and establishes the festival of Hanukkah 164 BC 10 10 38 Lysias becomes regent Governor Ptolemy Macron attempts to cement peace with the Jews but is undermined by anti Jewish nobles and commits suicide The Maccabees campaign in outlying regions against Timothy of Ammon and others 163 BC 11 Lysias leads a military expedition to Judea Judas defeats him at the Battle of Beth Zur Four documents detailing negotiations with Lysias and the Roman Republic 160s BC 12 More accounts of the campaigns in outlying regions against Timothy Gorgias and others 163 BC 13 Lysias orders the execution of unpopular High Priest Menelaus Judas harries Lysias s expedition with minor victories Lysias leaves and returns to the capital of Antioch to face the usurper Philip 163 162 BC likely near in time to the Battle of Beth Zechariah described in 1 Maccabees 14 1 15 36 Demetrius I becomes King Alcimus who had replaced Menelaus as High Priest is affirmed by Demetrius I Nicanor is appointed governor of Judea Nicanor and Judas enter negotiations for peace but are subverted by Alcimus who complains to the king Judas s arrest is ordered Nicanor threatens to destroy the Temple In a dream vision Onias III and the prophet Jeremiah give Judas a divine golden sword At the Battle of Adasa Judas defeats and kills Nicanor preserving the sanctity of the Temple The Day of Nicanor festival is established 161 BC 15 37 39 Epitomist s epilogue Canonicity and theology EditSee also Biblical canon Development of the Hebrew Bible canon and Development of the Old Testament canon Rider on the Horse with golden armour who appears in Chapter 3 to fight Heliodorus from Die Bibel in Bildern The Catholic Church Eastern Orthodox Church and Oriental Orthodox Churches regard 2 Maccabees as canonical Jews and Protestants do not Hellenistic Judaism Edit Greek speaking Jews were the original audience addressed by the work Both 1 and 2 Maccabees appear in some manuscripts of the Septuagint 12 13 Unlike most works in the Septuagint which were Greek translations of Hebrew originals 2 Maccabees was a Greek work originally While not a problem for Greek speaking Hellenistic Jews nor Christians whose scriptures were written in Greek other Jews who kept to the Hebrew version of the Jewish Scriptures never included it Hellenistic Judaism slowly waned as many of its adherents either converted to Christianity or switched to other languages and 2 Maccabees thus did not become part of the Jewish canon 14 Josephus the most famous Jewish writer of the first century whose work was preserved does not appear to have read 2 Maccabees for example neither does Philo of Alexandria 15 Neither book of the Maccabees were found among the Dead Sea Scrolls of the Essenes a Jewish sect hostile to the Hasmoneans and their memory 16 17 Various works such as Seder Olam Rabbah a 2nd century AD work indicate that the age of prophecy ended with Alexander the Great and 2 Maccabees a work clearly written later thus could not be prophetic 18 Traditionally it was hypothesized that the author of 2 Maccabees might have been influenced by the Pharasaic tradition 19 20 The Pharisees emphasized adherence to Jewish law and disputed with the rulers of the Hasmonean kingdom They criticized how the Hasmoneans took a dual role of both Chief Priest and King and demanded that they cede one of the titles usually the kingship which was expected to be held by one of the family lineage of King David Hasmonean King Alexander Jannaeus is recorded as organizing a massacre of his political opponents and many went into exile The theory goes that 2 Maccabees praises Judas for saving the temple but excludes mention of how his brothers and extended family later took the throne and might have been written by a Pharisee from Judea writing in Egyptian exile The work s emphasis on adherence to the Law even on pain of martyrdom keeping the Sabbath and the promise of a future resurrection seem to fit with the Pharisees ideology 6 Still other scholars disagree that the author shows any signs of such inclinations and belief in a future resurrection of the dead was not limited to only Pharisees scholars since the 1980s have tended to be skeptical of the proposed connection 21 22 The theology of the work is an update to the Deuteronomist history seen in older Jewish works The classical Deuteronomist view had been that when Israel is faithful and upholds the covenant the Jews prosper when Israel neglects the covenant God withdraws his favor and Israel suffers The persecution of Antiochus IV stood in direct contradiction to this tradition the most faithful Jews were the ones who suffered the most while those who abandoned Jewish practices became wealthy and powerful The author of 2 Maccabees attempts to make sense of this in several ways he explains that the suffering was a swift and merciful corrective to set the Jews back on the right path While God had revoked his protection of the Temple in anger at the impious High Priests his wrath turns to mercy upon seeing the suffering of the martyrs The work also takes pains to ensure that when setbacks occur some sort of sin or error was at fault For those truly blameless such as the martyrs the author invokes life after death that post mortem rewards and punishments would accomplish what might have been lacking in the mortal world 23 24 These references to the resurrection of the dead despite suffering and torture were part of a new current in Judaism also seen in the Book of Daniel a work the authors of 2 Maccabees were likely familiar with 25 This would prove especially influential among Roman era Jews who converted to Christianity 26 23 Christianity in the era of the Roman Empire Edit A Byzantine style fresco at the Santa Maria Antiqua church in Rome likely painted around 650 AD It depicts the woman and her seven sons here named Solomne and Eleazar their teacher The story of their martyrdom is the most famous part of 2 Maccabees 27 In the early Christian tradition the Septuagint was used as the basis for the Christian Old Testament The inclusion of 2 Maccabees in some copies of the Septuagint saw it a part of various early canon lists and manuscripts albeit sometimes as part of an appendix Pope Damasus I s Council of Rome in 382 if the 6th century Gelasian Decree is a correct guide to its decision issued a biblical canon which included both 1 and 2 Maccabees but neither 3 nor 4 Pope Innocent I 405 AD 28 29 the Synod of Hippo 393 AD 30 the Council of Carthage 397 AD 31 the Council of Carthage 419 AD 32 and the Apostolic Canons 33 all seemed to think that 2 Maccabees was canonical either by explicitly saying so or citing it as scripture Jerome and Augustine of Hippo c 397 AD had seemingly inconsistent positions they directly excluded 2 Maccabees from canon but did say that the book was useful yet in other works both cited 2 Maccabees as if it was scripture or lists it among scriptural works 34 35 Theologically the major aspects of 2 Maccabees that resonated with Roman era Christians and medieval Christians were its stories of martyrology and the resurrection of the dead in its stories of Eleazar and the woman with seven sons Christians made sermons and comparisons of Christian martyrs to the Maccabean martyrs along with the hope of an eventual salvation Eusebius compared the persecuted Christians of Lyon to the Maccabean martyrs for example 36 Several churches were dedicated to the Maccabean martyrs and they are among the few pre Christian figures to appear on the calendar of saints days 27 A cult to the Maccabean martyrs flourished in Antioch the former capital of the Seleucids Augustine of Hippo found it ironic and fitting that the city that named Antiochus IV now revered those he persecuted 37 The one awkward aspect was that the martyrs had died upholding Jewish Law in an era when many Christians felt that the Law of Moses was not merely obsolete but actively harmful Christian authors generally downplayed the Jewishness of the martyrs treating them as proto Christians instead 38 39 36 Controversy in the Reformation era Edit The Triumph of Judas Maccabeus a 1630s work by Peter Paul Rubens The scene depicted is from 2 Maccabees After a campaign in Idumea some Jews fell against Gorgias s forces According to the epitomist these Jews died because they had idols on them Judas makes a sin offering in recompense This offering would become cited in the 1400s and 1500s as a defense of Catholic doctrine on purgatory and indulgences 40 2 Maccabees was in a position of being an official part of the canon but as a deuterocanonical work and thus subtly lesser than the older scriptures during the early 1500s Josse van Clichtove in his work The Veneration of Saints cited 2 Maccabees as support for the idea of dead saints interceding for the salvation of the living in Chapter 15 during a dream vision both the earlier high priest Onias III and the prophet Jeremiah are said to pray for whole of the people 41 42 He also cited 2 Maccabees as support for prayers for the dead the reverse case of the living praying for the salvation of souls suffering in purgatory The book became controversial due to opposition from Martin Luther and other reformers during the Protestant Reformation of the 1500s Luther had a very high opinion of scripture but precisely because of this he wished for the canon to be strict He would eventually demote the deuterocanonical works to apocrypha still useful to read and part of the 1534 version of the Luther Bible but set aside in their own separate section and not accepted as a sound basis for Christian doctrine 43 44 Luther had several complaints One was that it was an abridgment of another work rather than a single divinely inspired author 36 Another was a general preference for using the Hebrew Bible as the basis for the Old Testament rather than the Latin Vulgate or the Greek Septuagint 36 Another was with the prevailing Catholic interpretation and use of one story that of Judas making a sin offering of silver after some of his troops were slain and found with idols so that the dead might be delivered from their sin 45 This passage was used as an example of the efficacy of monetary indulgences paid to the Catholic Church to free souls from purgatory by some Catholic authors of the period 23 Luther disagreed with both indulgences and the concept of purgatory and in his 1530 work Disavowl of Purgatory he denied that 2 Maccabees was a valid source to cite 41 Luther was reported as having said I am so great an enemy to the second book of the Maccabees and to Esther that I wish they had not come to us at all for they have too many heathen unnaturalities 46 The reformer Jean Calvin agreed with Luther s criticism of 2 Maccabees and added his own criticism as well Calvin propounded predestination the doctrine that God has chosen the elect and nothing can change this Thus the arguments from Clichtove and other Catholics that cited 2 Maccabees for the doctrine of the intercession of saints was suspect to him for Calvin salvation was strictly God s choice and not a matter that dead saints could intervene on 47 Another issue Calvin and other Protestants raised was the self effacing epilogue to 2 Maccabees which Calvin took as an admission from the epitomist that he was not divinely inspired 47 48 In response to this the Catholic Church went the opposite direction While earlier Church Fathers had considered the deuterocanonical books useful but lesser than the main scriptures the Catholic Church now affirmed that 2 Maccabees and other deuterocanonical works were in fact fully reliable as scripture at the Council of Trent in 1546 49 50 41 51 Modern status Edit 2 Maccabees is still used to endorse the doctrine of resurrection of the dead intercession of saints and prayers for the dead to be released from purgatory in the Catholic tradition 52 The Latin Church Lectionary makes use of texts from 2 Maccabees 6 and 7 along with texts from 1 Maccabees 1 to 6 in the weekday readings for the 33rd week in Ordinary Time in year 1 of the two year cycle of readings always in November and as one of the options available for readings during a Mass for the Dead 53 The Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox Churches consider the book canonical As in antiquity the most notable section remains the martyrs who are celebrated as saints by a variety of feast days They are especially honored in Syriac Christianity perhaps due to suffering persecution themselves the mother of seven sons is known as Marth Shmouni in that tradition 54 55 In the Protestant tradition the book remains non canonical 56 Many Protestant Bibles stopped including the apocrypha leading to a loss of relevance for 2 Maccabees Still the book is treated at least somewhat respectfully The twentieth century evangelical author James B Jordan for example argues that while 1 Maccabees was written to try and show the Maccabean usurpers as true heirs of David and as true High Priests and is a wicked book a far more accurate picture of the situation is given in 2 Maccabees 57 Article VI of the Thirty nine Articles of the Church of England and the wider Anglican Communion defines 2 Maccabees as useful but not the basis of doctrine 58 The texts regarding the martyrdoms under Antiochus IV in 2 Maccabees are held in high esteem by the Anabaptists who faced persecution in their history 59 Literary influence Edit A 1517 German depiction of the crucified Jesus the mother and her seven sons in the boiling cauldron The most influential part of 2 Maccabees was its stories of the martyrdom of Eleazar and the woman with seven sons various works expanded the story to add more details such as the woman s name variously called Hannah Miriam Shmouni and other names and their story A prominent early example is the book of 4 Maccabees written by a 1st century Jewish author who used 2 Maccabees as a direct source as well as the Book of Daniel 4 Maccabees discusses in detail the martyrdoms described in 2 Maccabees but provides a different interpretation of them While 2 Maccabees attempts to arouse sympathy and emotions pathos 4 Maccabees was written by someone schooled in Stoic philosophy As such in its depiction the martyred woman and Eleazar calmly discuss matters with their oppressors they use reason and intellectual argument to stay calm and defy Antiochus IV 4 Maccabees takes the idea of the resurrection of the dead even more directly than 2 Maccabees and Daniel if God will revive those who suffer for obeying God s law then it makes perfect sense to obey the greater ruler rather than the lesser ruler 15 60 To a lesser degree the book 3 Maccabees evinces familiarity with 2 Maccabees while the setting is different it is set fifty years before the Maccabean Revolt in Egypt not Judea Eleazar the scribe appears in it and the depictions of turmoil and suffering among Egyptian Jews are influenced by 2 Maccabees The Christian Epistle to the Hebrews possibly makes a reference to 2 Maccabees as well 61 A later work that directly expanded 2 Maccabees was the Yosippon of the 10th century which includes a paraphrase of parts of the Latin translation of 2 Maccabees 62 Among Jews there had been practically no interest in 2 Maccabees itself for a millennium 63 the Yosippon was a rare exception of medieval Jews rediscovering the work 64 Much like in Christian works the story of the mother and her seven sons was the most retold and influential 62 Reliability as history Edit2 Maccabees has traditionally been considered a somewhat lesser source on the history of the Maccabean Revolt than 1 Maccabees by secular historians especially in the 19th century This is for a number of reasons it wears its religious moralizing openly it skips around in time and place at parts rather than the chronological approach in 1 Maccabees and it includes a number of implausible claims directly in contention with 1 Maccabees 20 In general most scholars continue to agree that 1 Maccabees is a superior source on the military history of the revolt it was written by a Judean who names and describes locations accurately compared to the occasional geographic blunders of 2 Maccabees written by an Egyptian includes far more details on maneuvers and tactics than the simple depictions of battle in 2 Maccabees and its figures for elements such as troop counts and casualties are considered more reliable than the wildly inflated numbers in 2 Maccabees For example 2 Maccabees implausibly claims that there were 35 000 Syrian casualties at the Battle of Adasa a number likely far larger than the entire Seleucid force 65 2 Maccabees was also written in a pathetic in the sense of pathos style appealing to emotions and sentiment 66 Skeptical historians considered this a sign that the epitomist was not interested in historical accuracy much but merely telling a good story 67 In the 20th century there was a renewed interest in rehabilitating 2 Maccabees as a source on par with 1 Maccabees by scholars In particular there was a growing recognition that a politically slanted history as 1 Maccabees is could be just as biased and unreliable as the religiously slanted history that 2 Maccabees is 68 A deeply devout observer could still be describing true events albeit with a religious interpretation of them By the 1930s historians generally came to the conclusion that the historical documents present in 2 Maccabees while seemingly out of chronological order were likely legitimate and matched what would be expected of such Seleucid negotiations Archaeological evidence supported many of the references made to Seleucid leadership causing historians to think that Jason and the epitomist must have had better knowledge of internal Seleucid affairs than the author of 1 Maccabees 69 As an example 2 Maccabees appears to be more reliable and honest on the date of the death of Antiochus IV Archaeological evidence supports the claim in 2 Maccabees he died before the cleansing of the Temple while 1 Maccabees moves his death later to hide the fact that Lysias abandoned his campaign in Judea not due to the efforts of the Maccabees at the Battle of Beth Zur but rather to respond to political turmoil resulting from Antiochus s death 2 Maccabees writes that Antiochus s decrees were targeted against Judea and Samaria which historians find more likely than the claim in 1 Maccabees that he demanded religious standardization across the entire empire 70 Even to the extent that 2 Maccabees is still distrusted as history to a degree the fact that it is a genuinely independent source is considered invaluable to historians Many events in the Hellenistic and Roman periods have only passing mentions that they occurred those that do have a detailed source often only have a single such detailed source leaving it difficult to determine that author s biases or errors For example the Great Revolt against the Romans in 64 73 AD is only closely recorded by Josephus s The Jewish War The Maccabean Revolt having two independent detailed contemporary histories is a rarity Manuscripts EditEarly manuscripts of the Septuagint were not uniform in their lists of books 71 2 Maccabees is found in the 5th century Codex Alexandrinus which includes all of 1 2 3 and 4 Maccabees as well as the 8th century Codex Venetus 2 Maccabees is missing from the Codex Vaticanus which also lacks 1 Maccabees and the Codex Sinaiticus which also lacks 3 Maccabees Additionally other ancient fragments have been found albeit with some attributed to Lucian of Antioch who is considered to have improved some of his renditions with unknown other material leading to some variant readings Robert Hanhart de created a critical edition of the Greek text in 1959 with a second edition published in 1976 72 Notes Edit Greek Makkabaiwn B romanized Makkabaiōn 2 Since 2 Maccabees is largely an abridgment of another s work the person who wrote 2 Maccabees is often referred to as epitomist or epitomator rather than author Scholarly estimates for the date of authorship include Daniel R Schwartz argues for an early date of publication of around 150 140 BC 3 Stuckenbruck amp Gurtner argue for between 150 120 BC 4 Jonathan A Goldstein argues for Jason of Cyrene s history published at some time during the reign of Alexander Jannaeus 103 to 76 BC and the abridged 2 Maccabees with the introductory letters by 76 AD 5 John R Bartlett argues for almost anywhere in the last 150 years B C 6 Few scholars believe the introductory letters to be authentic but some do suggest that they were compiled by the same epitomist who made the rest of the work Some notable scholarly positions include Benedikt Niese believed that the letters were integral to the work Jonathan Goldstein considers the letters forgeries and later additions Daniel R Schwartz believes that they are a later addition and further that the date was actually 148 SE not 188 SE and was a reference not to the date of the letter but the date of the original cleansing of the Temple 7 References Edit 2 Maccabees 2 23 a b c Duggan Michael W 2021 2 Maccabees In Oegema Gerbern S ed The Oxford Handbook of the Apocrypha Oxford University Press pp 168 187 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780190689643 013 10 ISBN 9780190689667 Schwartz 2008 p 8 15 Stuckenbruck Loren T Gurtner Daniel M 2019 T amp T Clark Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism Volume One Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9780567658135 Retrieved 5 January 2021 Goldstein 1983 p 121 122 a b c Bartlett 1973 p 215 219 Schwartz 2008 p 519 525 Harrington 2009 p 36 38 Schwartz 2008 pp 3 512 2 Maccabees 15 36 Koller A Purim accessed 17 January 2021 Life after death a history of the afterlife in the religions of the West 2004 Anchor Bible Reference Library Alan F Segal p 363 Ellis E Earle 2003 The Old Testament in early Christianity Canon and interpretation in the light of modern research Eugene OR Wipf amp Stock pp 34 35 ISBN 978 1592442560 Goldstein 1983 p 27 a b Schwartz 2008 p 86 Freedman David Noel Allen C Myers Astrid B Beck eds 2000 Eerdmans dictionary of the Bible Nachdr ed Grand Rapids Mich Eerdman p 426 ISBN 978 0802824004 VanderKam James C Flint Peter 2004 The meaning of the Dead Sea scrolls their significance for understanding the Bible Judaism Jesus and Christianity 1st paperback ed San Francisco CA HarperSanFrancisco p 99 ISBN 978 0060684655 Schwartz 2008 p 58 61 Harris Stephen L Understanding the Bible Palo Alto Mayfield 1985 a b Oesterley William O E 1935 An Introduction to the Books of the Apocrypha New York The Macmillan Company p 315 326 Schwartz 2008 p 168 442 Bar Kochva 1989 p 571 572 a b c deSilva David A 2021 Biblical Theology and the Apocrypha In Oegema Gerbern S ed The Oxford Handbook of the Apocrypha Oxford University Press pp 534 550 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780190689643 013 27 ISBN 9780190689667 Ehrman Bart 2020 Heaven and Hell A History of the Afterlife Simon amp Schuster p 142 146 151 158 ISBN 9781501136757 Goldstein 1983 p 63 70 Harrington 2009 p 129 130 a b Berger Albrecht 2012 The Cult of the Maccabees in the Eastern Orthodox Church In Signori Gabriela ed Dying for the Faith Killing for the Faith Old Testament Faith Warriors 1 and 2 Maccabees in Historical Perspective Brill p 107 111 116 119 ISBN 978 90 04 21104 9 Letter of Innocent I on the Canon of Scripture www bible researcher com Westcott Brooke Foss 2005 A general survey of the history of the canon of the New Testament 6th ed Eugene OR Wipf amp Stock p 570 ISBN 1597522392 Canon XXIV Greek xxvii The Canons of the 217 Blessed Fathers who assembled at Carthage Christian Classics Ethereal Library B F Westcott A General Survey of the History of the Canon of the New Testament 5th ed Edinburgh 1881 pp 440 541 42 CHURCH FATHERS Council of Carthage A D 419 www newadvent org Council in Trullo The Apostolic Canons Canon 85 newadvent Retrieved 12 October 2016 Augustine of Hippo On Christian Doctrine Book II Chapter 8 2 newadvent Retrieved 12 October 2016 Schwartz 2008 p 59 a b c d Signori Gabriela 2012 Introduction Dying for the Faith Killing for the Faith Old Testament Faith Warriors 1 and 2 Maccabees in Historical Perspective Brill p 1 3 ISBN 978 90 04 21104 9 Lapina Elizabeth 2012 The Maccabees and the Battle of Antioch In Signori Gabriela ed Dying for the Faith Killing for the Faith Old Testament Faith Warriors 1 and 2 Maccabees in Historical Perspective Brill p 147 148 ISBN 978 90 04 21104 9 Joslyn Siemiatkoski Daniel 2009 Christian Memories of the Maccabean Martyrs New York Palgrave Mcmillan p 1 10 ISBN 978 0 230 60279 3 Schwartz 2008 p 87 89 RKD Netherlands Institute for Art History Peter Paul Rubens and studio of Peter Paul Rubens See 2 Maccabees 12 39 45 a b c Pelikan Jaroslav 1984 1983 Reformation of Church and Dogma 1300 1700 The Christian Tradition Chicago and London The University of Chicago Press p 136 137 261 266 276 ISBN 0 226 65376 5 2 Maccabees 15 12 16 Hiers Richard H 2001 The Trinity Guide to the Bible Pbk ed Harrisburg Penn Trinity Press International p 148 ISBN 978 1563383403 McDonald Lee Martin 2009 Forgotten scriptures the selection and rejection of early religious writings 1st ed Louisville KY Westminster John Knox Press p 81 ISBN 978 0664233570 2 Maccabees 12 39 45 Luther Martin 1893 1566 Of God s Word XXIV The Table Talk of Martin Luther trans William Hazlitt Philadelphia Lutheran Publication Society LCC BR332 T4 a b Schwartz 2008 p 60 61 Calvin Jean 2008 1559 Book 3 Chapter 5 Section 8 9 Institutes of the Christian Religion Translated by Beveridge Henry Peabody Massachusetts Hendrickson Publishers p 440 441 ISBN 9781598561685 New Catholic encyclopedia Vol 3 Washington D C Catholic University of America 2003 pp 20 26 390 Metzger Bruce M March 13 1997 The Canon of the New Testament Its Origin Development and Significance Oxford University Press p 246 ISBN 0 19 826954 4 Finally on 8 April 1546 by a vote of 24 to 15 with 16 abstensions the Council issued a decree De Canonicis Scripturis in which for the first time in the history of the Church the question of the contents of the Bible was made an absolute article of faith and confirmed by an anathema Canons and Decrees of the Council of Trent Session IV Canonical Scriptures Translated by Buckley Theodore Alois 1851 1546 via Wikisource scan Ellis P F 2003 Maccabees Books of New Catholic Encyclopedia Second ed Washington DC Thomson Gale Roman Missal Lectionary Revised Edition approved for use in the dioceses of England and Wales Scotland Ireland published by Collins Geoffrey Chapman and Veritas 1981 1982 volumes 2 and 3 St Shmouni and her Seven Sons Martyrs 1 August Synek Eva Murre van den Berg Heleen 2007 Chapter 12 Syriac Christianity Chapter 21 Eastern Christian Hagiographical Traditions Oriental Orthodox Syriac Hagiography In Perry Kenneth ed The Blackwell Companion to Eastern Christianity Book Publishers pp 266 444 445 ISBN 9780631234234 Ramsay William M 1 January 1994 Westminster Guide to the Books of the Bible Westminster John Knox Press p 275 ISBN 978 0 664 25380 6 The Reformers countered by pointing out that 2 Maccabees was a book of the Apocrypha Protestants would accept as authoritative Old Testament only the canon of the Hebrew scriptures The Reformers did grant that the Apocrypha was valuable these books while useful for edification were not authoritative for doctrine Jordan James B 2007 The Handwriting on the Wall A Commentary on the Book of Daniel American Vision p 580 Articles of Religion The Church of England Retrieved March 5 2022 deSilva David A 2018 Introducing the Apocrypha Message Context and Significance Baker Books ISBN 978 1 4934 1307 2 Goldstein 1983 p 26 Schwartz 2008 p 88 See Hebrews 11 35 36 a b Joslyn Siemiatkoski Daniel 2012 The Mother And Seven Sons in Late Antique And Medieval Ashkenazi Judaism Narrative Transformations and Communal Identity In Signori Gabriela ed Dying for the Faith Killing for the Faith Old Testament Faith Warriors 1 and 2 Maccabees in Historical Perspective Brill p 129 134 ISBN 978 90 04 21104 9 Stemberger Gunter 1992 The Maccabees in Rabbinic Tradition The Scriptures and the Scrolls Studies in Honour of A S van der Woude on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday E J Brill p 192 203 Schwartz 2008 p 90 Bar Kochva 1989 p 360 Schwartz 2008 p 78 80 Hongiman Sylvie 2014 Tales of High Priests and Taxes The Books of the Maccabees and the Judean Rebellion against Antiochos IV Oakland California University of California Press ISBN 9780520958180 Doran 2012 p 3 519 520 Schwartz 2008 p 40 44 Portier Young Anathea 2011 Apocalypse Against Empire Theologies of Resistance in Early Judaism Grand Rapids Michigan William B Eerdmans Publishing Company p 191 192 ISBN 9780802870834 Archer Gleason Jr 2007 A survey of Old Testament introduction Rev and expanded ed Chicago IL Moody Press p 81 82 ISBN 978 0802484345 Doran 2012 p 19 Bibliography Edit Bar Kochva Bezalel 1989 Judas Maccabaeus The Jewish Struggle Against the Seleucids Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521323525 Bartlett John R 1973 The First and Second Books of the Maccabees Cambridge Cambridge University Press Doran Robert 2012 Attridge Harold W ed 2 Maccabees A Critical Commentary Hermeneia Minneapolis Augsburg Fortress Press ISBN 9780800660505 Harrington Daniel J 2009 1988 The Maccabean Revolt Anatomy of a Biblical Revolution Eugene Oregon Wipf and Stock ISBN 978 1 60899 113 6 Goldstein Jonathan A 1983 II Maccabees The Anchor Bible Series Garden City NY Doubleday ISBN 0 385 04864 5 Schwartz Daniel R 2008 2 Maccabees Commentaries on Early Jewish Literature Berlin Walter De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 019118 9 Further reading EditBorchardt Francis 2016 Reading Aid 2 Maccabees and the History of Jason of Cyrene Reconsidered Journal for the Study of Judaism 47 no 1 71 87 Coetzer Eugene 2016 Heroes and Villains in 2 Maccabees 8 1 36 A Rhetorical Analysis Old Testament Essays 419 33 Doran Robert 1981 Temple Propaganda The Purpose and Character of 2 Maccabees Catholic Biblical Quarterly Monograph Series 12 Washington DC Catholic Biblical Association Habicht C 1976 Royal Documents in II Maccabees Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 80 1 18 Janowitz Naomi 2017 The Family Romance of Martyrdom In Second Maccabees New York Routledge Kosmin P 2016 Indigenous Revolts in 2 Maccabees The Persian Version Classical Philology 111 no 1 32 53 Stewart Tyler A 2017 Jewish Paideia Greek Education in the Letter of Aristeas and 2 Maccabees Journal for the Study of Judaism 48 no 2 182 202 Trotter Jonathan R 2017 2 Maccabees 10 1 8 Who Wrote It and Where Does It Belong Journal of Biblical Literature 136 no 1 117 30 External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article 2 Maccabees Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2 Maccabees NRSV text of 2 Maccabees 2 Maccabees 1 1 7 42 2 Maccabees 8 1 11 38 2 Maccabees 12 1 15 39 Works related to 2 Maccabees at Wikisource 2 Maccabees public domain audiobook at LibriVox2 MaccabeesDeuterocanon ApocryphaPreceded by1 Maccabees Catholic and OrthodoxBooks of the Bible Succeeded by3 Maccabees in the Eastern Orthodox OT Job in the Current Roman Catholic OT Matthew in the Older Roman Catholic OT Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2 Maccabees amp oldid 1135014432, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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