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Book of Sirach

The Book of Sirach (/ˈsræk/)[a] or Ecclesiasticus (/ɪˌklziˈæstɪkəs/; abbreviated Ecclus.)[3] is a Jewish work, originally in Hebrew, of ethical teachings, from approximately 200 to 175 BCE, written by the Judahite scribe Ben Sira of Jerusalem, on the inspiration of his father Joshua son of Sirach, sometimes called Jesus son of Sirach or Yeshua ben Eliezer ben Sira.

In Egypt, it was translated into Greek by the author's unnamed grandson, who added a prologue. This prologue is generally considered the earliest witness to a canon of the books of the prophets, and thus the date of the text is the subject of intense scrutiny. The book itself is the largest wisdom book from antiquity to have survived.[4]

Canonical status

 
"Alle Weiſsheit ist bey Gott dem Herren..." (modern spelling: Alle Weisheit ist bei Gott dem Herrn) (Sirach, first chapter, German translation), anonymous artist 1654

Sirach is accepted as part of the canon by Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, and most Oriental Orthodox Christians. The Anglican tradition considers Sirach (which was published with other Greek Jewish books in a separate section of the King James Bible) among the apocryphal books, and reads them "for example of life and instruction of manners; but yet [do] not apply them to establish any doctrine."[5] The Lutheran Churches take a similar position. It was cited in some writings in early Christianity. There are claims that it is cited in the Epistle of James, and also the non-canonical Didache (iv. 5) and Epistle of Barnabas (xix. 9). Clement of Alexandria and Origen quote from it repeatedly, as from a γραφή (Scripture).[1] The Catalogue of Cheltenham,[b] Pope Damasus I,[6] the Councils of Hippo (393) and Third Council of Carthage (397), Pope Innocent I, the second Council of Carthage (419), the Council of Florence (1442)[7] and Augustine all regarded it as canonical, although Jerome, Rufinus of Aquileia and the Council of Laodicea ranked it instead as an ecclesiastical book.[1] The Apostolic Canons (not recognized by the Catholic Church) stated as venerable and sacred the Wisdom of Sirach.[8] Pope Innocent I officially confirmed the canon of the Bible shortly after the Third Council of Carthage.[6] The Catholic Church then reaffirmed Sirach and the other deuterocanonical books in 1546 during the fourth session of the Council of Trent, and attached an excommunication to the denial of their scriptural status.[9][1]

Sirach is not part of the Jewish canon, once thought to have been established at the hypothetical Council of Jamnia, perhaps due to its late authorship,[10] although it is not clear that the canon was completely closed at the time of Ben Sira.[11] Others have suggested that Ben Sira's self-identification as the author precluded it from attaining canonical status, which was reserved for works that were attributed (or could be attributed) to the prophets,[12] or that it was denied entry to the canon as a rabbinical counter-reaction to its embrace by the nascent Christian community.[13]

Some Jews in the diaspora considered Sirach scripture. For instance, the Greek translation made by Ben Sira's grandson was included in the Septuagint, the 2nd-century BCE Greek version of the Hebrew scriptures used by Diaspora Jews, through which it became part of the Greek canon. The multiplicity of manuscript fragments uncovered in the Cairo Genizah evince its authoritative status among Egyptian Jewry until the Middle Ages.[14]

Because it was excluded from the Jewish canon, Sirach was not counted as being canonical in Churches originating from the Reformation, although some retained the book in an appendix to the Bible called Apocrypha.

Structure

As with other wisdom books, there is no easily recognizable structure in Sirach; in many parts it is difficult to discover a logical progression of thought or to discern the principles of arrangement.[4] However, a series of six poems about the search for and attainment of wisdom (1:1–10, 4:11–19; 6:18–37; 14:20–15:10; 24:1–33; and 38:24–39:11) divide the book into something resembling chapters, although the divisions are not thematically based.[4] The exceptions are the first two chapters, whose reflections on wisdom and fear of God provide the theological framework for what follows, and the last nine chapters, which function as a sort of climax, first in an extended praise of God's glory as manifested through creation (42:15–43:33) and second in the celebration of the heroes of ancient Israel's history dating back to before the Great Flood through contemporary times (see previous section).[4]

Despite the lack of structure, there are certain themes running through the book which reappear at various points. The New Oxford Annotated Apocrypha identifies ten major recurring topics:

  1. The Creation: 16:24–17:24; 18:1–14; 33:7–15; 39:12–35; and 42:15–43:33
  2. Death: 11:26–28; 22:11–12; 38:16–23; and 41:1–13
  3. Friendship: 6:5–17; 9:10–16; 19:13–17; 22:19–26; 27:16–21; and 36:23–37:15
  4. Happiness: 25:1–11; 30:14–25; and 40:1–30
  5. Honor and shame: 4:20–6:4; 10:19–11:6; and 41:14–42:8
  6. Money matters: 3:30–4:10; 11:7–28; 13:1–14:19; 29:1–28; and 31:1–11
  7. Sin: 7:1–17; 15:11–20; 16:1–17:32; 18:30–19:3; 21:1–10; 22:27–23:27; and 26:28–28:7
  8. Social justice: 4:1–10; 34:21–27; and 35:14–26
  9. Speech: 5:6, 9–15; 18:15–29; 19:4–17; 20:1–31; 23:7–15; 27:4–7, 11–15; and 28:8–26
  10. Women: (9:1–9; 23:22–27; 25:13–26:27; 36:26–31; and 42:9–14.[4][15]

Contents

 
Illustration for Sirach, c. 1751

The Wisdom of Sirach is a collection of ethical teachings. Thus Sirach, sometimes called Ecclesiasticus, closely resembles Proverbs, except that, unlike the latter, it is presented as the work of a single author, not an anthology of maxims drawn from various sources, presented in verse form. The question of which apothegms actually originated with Sirach is open to debate, although scholars tend to regard him as a compiler or anthologist.[4]

The teachings are applicable to all conditions of life: to parents and children, to husbands and wives, to the young, to masters, to friends, to the rich, and to the poor. Many of them are rules of courtesy and politeness; and a still greater number contain advice and instruction as to the duties of man toward himself and others, especially the poor, as well as toward society and the state, and most of all toward God.

Wisdom, in Ben Sira's view, is synonymous with the fear of God, and sometimes is identified in the text with adherence to the Mosaic law. The maxims are expressed in exact formulas, and are illustrated by striking images. They show a profound knowledge of the human heart, the disillusionment of experience, a fraternal sympathy with the poor and the oppressed.

By contrast some feel Sirach exhibits little compassion for either women or slaves. He advocates distrust and possessiveness over women,[16] and the harsh treatment of slaves (which presupposes the validity of slavery as an institution),[17] positions which are not only difficult for modern readers, but cannot be completely reconciled with the social milieu at the time of its composition.[18]

The book contains the only instance in Biblical teaching of an explicit recommendation of physicians. This is a direct challenge against the traditional idea that illness and disease was seen as penalty for sin.[19]

As in Ecclesiastes, two opposing tendencies war in the author: the faith and the morality of olden times, which are stronger than all argument, and an Epicureanism of modern date. Occasionally Sirach digresses to attack theories which he considers dangerous; for example, that man has no freedom of will, and that God is indifferent to the actions of mankind and does not reward virtue. Some of the refutations of these views are developed at considerable length.

Through these ethical chapters runs the prayer of Israel imploring God to gather together his scattered children, to bring to fulfilment the predictions of the Prophets, and to have mercy upon his Temple and his people. The book concludes with a justification of God, whose wisdom and greatness are said to be revealed in all God's works as well as in the history of Israel. These chapters are completed by the author's signature, and are followed by two hymns, the latter apparently a sort of alphabetical acrostic.

Of particular interest to biblical scholars are Chapters 44–50, in which Ben Sira praises "men of renown, and our fathers in their generation", starting from the antediluvian Enoch and continuing through to "Simon, the high priest, son of Onias" (300–270 BCE). Within this recitation, Ben Sira identifies, either directly or indirectly, each of the books of the Old Testament that would eventually become canonical, with the apparent exception of only Ezra, Daniel, Ruth, Esther, and perhaps Chronicles.[20] The ability to date the composition of Sirach within a few years given the autobiographical hints of Ben Sira and his grandson (author of the introduction to the work) provides great insight regarding the historical development and evolution of the Jewish canon.[21]

Authorship and translation

 
Illustration of the high priest Jesus Sirach in the Secret Book of Honour of the Fugger by Jörg Breu the Younger, 1545–1549

Joshua ben Sirach, or, according to the Greek text "Jesus the son of Sirach of Jerusalem", was a Judahite scribe who had been living in Jerusalem, and may have authored the work in Alexandria, Egypt c. 180–175 BCE, where he is thought to have established a school.[4] Ben Sirach is unique among all Old Testament and Apocryphal writers in that he signed his work.[1]

The Prologue, attributed to Ben Sira's grandson and dated to 132 BCE, is generally considered the earliest witness to a canon of the books of the prophets. Thus the date of the text, has been the subject of intense scrutiny by biblical scholars.[22][23][24]

Joshua ben Sirach's grandson was in Egypt, translating and editing after the usurping Hasmonean line had definitively ousted Simon's heirs in long struggles and was finally in control of the High Priesthood in Jerusalem. Comparing the Hebrew and Greek versions shows that he altered the prayer for Simon and broadened its application ("may He entrust to us his mercy"), in order to avoid closing a work praising God's covenanted faithfulness on an unanswered prayer.[24]

The Greek translator states in his preface that he was the grandson of the author, and that he came to Egypt in the thirty-eighth year of the reign of "Euergetes". This epithet was borne by only two of the Ptolemies. Of these, Ptolemy III Euergetes reigned only twenty-five years (247–222 BCE) and thus Ptolemy VIII Euergetes must be intended; he ascended the throne in the year 170 BCE, together with his brother Ptolemy VI Philometor, but he soon became sole ruler of Cyrene, and from 146 to 117 BCE held sway over all Egypt. He dated his reign from the year in which he received the crown (i.e., from 170 BCE). The translator must therefore have gone to Egypt in 132 BCE.[25]

The translation into Greek is believed to have been done after 117 BCE.[26]

Language and alternative titles

The "Book of ben Sirach" (ספר בן סירא, Sefer ben Sira') was originally written in Hebrew, and was also known in Hebrew as the "Proverbs of ben Sirach" (משלי בן סירא, Mišley ben Sira') or the "Wisdom of ben Sirach" (חכמת בן סירא, Ḥokhmat ben Sira'). The book was not accepted into the Hebrew Bible and the original Hebrew text was not preserved in the Jewish canon. However, various original Hebrew versions have since been recovered, including fragments recovered within the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Cairo Genizah, the latter of which includes fragments from six separate manuscripts.[27]

The Greek translation was accepted in the Septuagint under the (abbreviated) name of the author: Sirakh (Σιραχ). Some Greek manuscripts give as the title the "Wisdom of Iēsous Son of Sirakh" or in short the "Wisdom of Sirakh". The older Latin versions were based on the Septuagint, and simply transliterated the Greek title in Latin letters: Sirach. In the Vulgate the book is called Liber Iesu filii Sirach ("Book of Joshua Son of Sirach").

The Greek Church Fathers also called it the "All-Virtuous Wisdom", while the Latin Church Fathers, beginning with Cyprian,[28] termed it Ecclesiasticus because it was frequently read in churches, leading the early Latin Fathers to call it liber ecclesiasticus (Latin and Latinised Greek for "church book"). Similarly, the Nova Vulgata and many modern English translations of the Apocrypha use the title Ecclesiasticus, literally "of the Church" because of its frequent use in Christian teaching and worship.

The Babylonian Talmud occasionally cites Ben-Sira (Sanhedrin 100b; Hagigah 13a, Baba Bathra 98b, etc.), but even so, it only paraphrases his citations, without quoting from him verbatim. This is shown by comparing fragmented texts of the original Hebrew "Book of Wisdom" (Ecclesiasticus) discovered in Qumran with the same quotes as given in the Babylonian Talmud.

Date and historical significance

Considering the average length of two generations, Sirach's date must fall in the first third of the 2nd century BCE. Furthermore, Sirach contains a eulogy of "Simon the High Priest, the son of Onias, who in his life repaired the House" (50:1). Festschrift M. Gilbert and other scholars[who?] posit that this seems to have formed the original ending of the text, and that Chapters 50 (from verse 2) and 51 are later interpolations.[29] Under this theory, the second High Priest Simon (died 196 BCE) would have been intended, and the composition would have concluded shortly thereafter, given that struggles between Simon's successors (175–172 BCE) are not alluded to in the book, nor is the persecution of the Jews by Antiochus IV Epiphanes (168 BCE).[30][31]

Manuscripts

The work of Sirach is presently known through various versions, which scholars still struggle to disentangle.[32]

The Greek version of Sirach is found in many codices of the Septuagint.[32]

As early as 1896, several substantial Hebrew texts of Sirach, copied in the 11th and 12th centuries, were found in the Cairo Geniza (a synagogue storage room for damaged manuscripts). Although none of these manuscripts is complete, together they provide the text for about two-thirds of the Wisdom of Sirach. According to scholars including Solomon Schechter and Frederic Kenyon, this shows that the book was originally written in Hebrew.[33][34]

 
Masada room 1109: Discovery site of Ben Sira scroll (MasSir)

In the 1950s and 1960s various of portions of Sirach were found in Dead Sea-area excavations. Two such discoveries were among the Qumran scrolls, both fragmentary parchment scrolls from the Early Roman (Herodian) period (40 BCE – 70 CE): 2Q18 (2QSir) containing Sir 6:14–15, 20–31and 11Q5 (11QPsa) containing about one-fourth of the Masoratic psalms plus others, including one found in Sir 51. The largest and oldest scroll, Mas1H (MasSir), also a fragmentary parchment scroll but dated in the Late Hellenistic (Hasmonean) period (167–40 BCE)[35] containing most of Sir 39:27–44:17,[36] was discovered at Masada, the Jewish fortress destroyed by the Romans in 73 CE. These early Hebrew texts are in substantial agreement with the Hebrew texts discovered in Cairo, although there are numerous minor textual variants. With these findings, scholars are now more confident that the Cairo texts are reliable witnesses to the Hebrew original.[37][38]

Theological significance

Influence in Jewish doctrine and liturgy

 
Hebrew translation of Sirach, 1814

Although excluded from the Jewish canon, Sirach was read and quoted as authoritative from the beginning of the rabbinic period. There are numerous citations to Sirach in the Talmud and works of rabbinic literature (as "ספר בן סירא", e.g., Hagigah 13a, Niddah 16b; Ber. 11b). Some of those (Sanhedrin 100b) record an unresolved debate between R'Joseph and Abaye as to whether it is forbidden to read the book of Sirach, wherein Abaye repeatedly draws parallels between statements in Sirach cited by R'Joseph as objectionable and similar statements appearing in canonical books.[39]

Sirach may have been used as a basis for two important parts of the Jewish liturgy. In the Mahzor (High Holiday prayer book), a medieval Jewish poet may have used Sirach as the basis for a poem, Mar'e Kohen, in the Yom Kippur musaf ("additional") service for the High Holidays.[40] Yosef Tabori questioned whether this passage in Sirach is referring at all to Yom Kippur, and thus argued it cannot form the basis of this poem.[41] Some early 20th-century scholars also argued that the vocabulary and framework used by Sirach formed the basis of the most important of all Jewish prayers, the Amidah, but that conclusion is disputed as well.[42]

Current scholarship takes a more conservative approach. On one hand, scholars find that "Ben Sira links Torah and wisdom with prayer in a manner that calls to mind the later views of the Rabbis", and that the Jewish liturgy echoes Sirach in the "use of hymns of praise, supplicatory prayers and benedictions, as well as the occurrence of [Biblical] words and phrases [that] take on special forms and meanings."[43] However, they stop short of concluding a direct relationship existed; rather, what "seems likely is that the Rabbis ultimately borrowed extensively from the kinds of circles which produced Ben Sira and the Dead Sea Scrolls ...."[43]

New Testament

Some scholars, such as Dr. Clayton N. Jefford, have argued that there are several allusions to the Wisdom of Sirach in the New Testament. These include the Virgin Mary's Magnificat in Luke 1:52 following Sirach 10:14; the description of the seed in Mark 4:5, 16–17 following Sirach 40:15; the statement by Jesus in Matthew 7:16, 20 following Sirach 27:6;[44] and James 1:19 quoting Sirach 5:11.[45]

The distinguished patristic scholar Henry Chadwick has said that in Matthew 11:28 Jesus was directly quoting Sirach 51:27,[46] however, it appears that Chadwick cited these verses incorrectly because Jesus quotes Sirach 51:34 at Matthew 11:29. Additionally, compare Matthew 6:12 – "And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors" – with Sirach 28:2; "Forgive your neighbor a wrong, and then, when you petition, your sins will be pardoned."[46]

Messianic interpretation by Christians

 
Jesus Ben Sirach, 1860 woodcut by Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld, a Lutheran

Some Christians[who?] regard the catalogue of famous men in Sirach as containing several messianic references. The first occurs during the verses on David. Sirach 47:11 reads "The Lord took away his sins, and exalted his power for ever; he gave him the covenant of kings and a throne of glory in Israel." This references the covenant of 2 Samuel 7, which pointed toward the Messiah. "Power" (Hebrew qeren) is literally translated as 'horn'. This word is often used in a messianic and Davidic sense (e.g. Ezekiel 29:21, Psalms 132:17, Zechariah 6:12, Jeremiah 33:15). It is also used in the Benedictus to refer to Jesus ("and has raised up a horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David").[47]

Another verse (47:22) that Christians interpret messianically begins by again referencing 2 Samuel 7. This verse speaks of Solomon and goes on to say that David's line will continue forever. The verse ends stating that "he gave a remnant to Jacob, and to David a root of his stock." This references Isaiah's prophecy of the Messiah: "There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots"; and "In that day the root of Jesse shall stand as an ensign to the peoples; him shall the nations seek…" (Isaiah 11:1, 10).[48]

References in Sirach and pre-modern texts

Note: verse numbers may vary slightly between versions.

References in culture

 
Quotation from Sirach (Ecclesiasticus) on Old St. Mary's Cathedral, San Francisco.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Hebrew: ספר בן-סירא, romanizedSēper ben-Sîrāʾ; also The Wisdom of Jesus the Son of Sirach,[1] The Wisdom of Sirach, or simply Ben Sira[2] or Sirach.
  2. ^ This list gives the number of Solomonic lines as 5,500, which is more than can be explained by Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Canticles.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Sirach, The Wisdom of Jesus the Son of". Jewish Encyclopedia. 1906. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  2. ^ "Book of Ben Sira". BibleStudyTools.com. Salem Communications Corporation. Retrieved 2013-10-25.
  3. ^ Gigot, Francis (1909). Ecclesiasticus. The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 5. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Harrington, Daniel J. (2001). Michael Coogan (ed.). Ecclesiasticus, or the Wisdom of Jesus, Son of Sirach. The New Oxford Annotated Bible: With the Apocryphal/Deuterocanonical Books (4th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 99–101. ISBN 019528478X.
  5. ^ "Canon VI. Of the Sufficiency of the Holy Scriptures for salvation. The Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion". Church Society. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  6. ^ a b Westcott, Brooke Foss (2005). A general survey of the history of the canon of the New Testament Page 570 (6th ed.). Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock. ISBN 1597522392.
  7. ^ "Session 11–4 February 1442".
  8. ^ in Trullo, Council. The Apostolic Canons. Canon 85. newadvent. Retrieved 12 October 2016.
  9. ^ Council of Trent, Session IV, 1546
  10. ^ Manhardt,Laurie, Ph.D., Come and See Wisdom: Wisdom of the Bible, p. 173 (Emmaus Road Publishing 2009), ISBN 978-1931018555.
  11. ^ Ska, Jean Louis, The Exegesis of the Pentateuch: Exegetical Studies and Basic Questions, pp. 184–195 (Mohr Siebeck Tübingen 2009), ISBN 978-3161499050.
  12. ^ Mulder, Otto, Simon the High Priest in Sirach 50, p. 3 fn. 8 (Koninkliijke Brill nv 2003), ISBN 978-9004123168 ("The highly esteemed book of Ben Sira is not sacred Scripture [because] 'the author was known to have lived in comparatively recent times, in an age when, with the death of the last prophets, the holy spirit had departed from Israel.").
  13. ^ Sulmasy, Daniel P., M.D. The Rebirth of the Clinic: An Introduction to Spirituality in Health Care, p. 45 (Georgetown Univ. Press 2006), ISBN 978-1589010956.
  14. ^ Harrington, Daniel J. (1999). Invitation to the Apocrypha. Grand Rapids, Mich. [u.a.]: Eerdmans. p. 90. ISBN 0802846335.
  15. ^ Trenchard, Warren C. (1982). Ben Sira's View of Woman: A Literary Analysis. Chico, CA: Scholars Press.
  16. ^ See, e.g, Sir 42:12–14, especially v. 14a ("Better the wickedness of a man than the goodness of a woman."); Sir 22:3 ("A father is disgraced by producing an ignorant son, But a daughter is born to his loss."). For these translations, see Trenchard, Ben Sira's View of Women, pp. 147, 135 respectively. Sirach also has some neutral and positive remarks about women, e.g., 7:27; 36:24–25.
  17. ^ See: Sirach 33:24–28 ("Fodder and a stick and burdens for an ass;bread and discipline and work for a servant.[25] Set your slave to work, and you will find rest; leave his hands idle, and he will seek liberty. [26] Yoke and thong will bow the neck, and for a wicked servant there are racks and tortures ... Set him to work, as is fitting for him, and if he does not obey, make his fetters heavy."). But see: Sir. 33:30–31 ("If you have a servant, let him be as yourself,because you have bought him with blood.[31] If you have a servant, treat him as a brother,for as your own soul you will need him.")
  18. ^ Harrington, pp. 89–90.
  19. ^ Eccleciasticus, The Cambridge Bible Commentary on the New English Bible, commentary by John G. Snaith, Cambridge University Press (1974)[ISBN missing][page needed]
  20. ^ Marttila, Marko. Foreign Nations in the Wisdom of Ben Sira: A Jewish Sage between Opposition and Assimilation, pp. 196–199 (Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. 2012), ISBN 978-3110270105.
  21. ^ Perspectives on Hebrew Scriptures II, Volume 5, Ehud Ben Zvi ed., pp. 179–190 (Gorgias Press LLC 2007), ISBN 978-1593336127.
  22. ^ Williams, David Salter (1994) "The Date of Ecclesiasticus" Vetus Testamentum 44(4): pp. 563–566
  23. ^ DeSilva, David Arthur (2002) "Wisdom of Ben Sira" Introducing the Apocrypha: Message, Context, and Significance Baker Academic, Grand Rapids, p. 158, ISBN 080102319X
  24. ^ a b Guillaume, Philippe (2004). "New Light on the Nebiim from Alexandria: A Chronography to Replace the Deuteronomistic History" (PDF). Journal of Hebrew Scriptures (5: Section: 3. The Date of Ben Sira).
  25. ^ Baxter, J. Sidlow (1968). The Strategic Grasp of the Bible. Zondervan. p. 46.
  26. ^ Sirach, Introduction – United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Bible
  27. ^ See generally The Hebrew of the Dead Sea Scrolls and Ben Sira: Proceedings of a Symposium Held at Leiden University, 11–14 December 1995, Volume 26 (T. Muraoka & J.F. Elwolde eds.), ISBN 9004108203.
  28. ^ Testimonia, ii. 1; iii. 1, 35, 51, 95, et passim
  29. ^ Mulder, p. 11. However, other scholars take the position that Sirach started with chapters 1–23 and 51, with the intermediate sections being inserted thereafter. Mulder, pp. 30–31.
  30. ^ 1 Maccabees 1:20–25, see "Polyglot Bible. 1 Maccabees". Retrieved 2009-08-05.
  31. ^ Flavius Josephus. "How the City Jerusalem Was Taken, and the Temple Pillaged. As Also Concerning the Actions of the Maccabees, Matthias and Judas; and Concerning the Death of Judas". In William Whiston (ed.). The Wars of the Jews – via Perseus Project.
  32. ^ a b Stone, Michael E., ed. (1984). Jewish Writings of the Second Temple Period: Apocrypha, Pseudepigrapha, Qumran, sectarian writings, Philo, Josephus. Van Gorcum, Assen, Netherlands, p. 290, ISBN 0800606035
  33. ^ See for example the account of Schechter's work on the Geniza manuscripts in Soskice, Janet (2010) Sisters of Sinai: How Two Lady Adventurers Found the Hidden Gospels. London: Vintage, 240–249
  34. ^ Adams, A.W (1958) Our Bible and the Ancient Manuscripts. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 83
  35. ^ Crawford, Sidnie White (2000). "Review of Masada VI: Yigael Yadin Excavations 1963–1965. Final Reports". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. 319: 81. doi:10.2307/1357566. JSTOR 1357566.
  36. ^ "Full Masada Scroll". The Book of Ben Sira.
  37. ^ Elizur, Shulamit, "A New Fragment from the Hebrew Text of the Book of Ben Sira", Tarbiẕ 76 (2008) 17–28 (in Hebrew)
  38. ^ Egger-Wenzel, Renate "Ein neues Sira – Fragment des MS C", Biblische Notizen 138 (2008) 107–114.
  39. ^ "Sanhedrin 100b Shas Soncino dTorah.com". dtorah.com.
  40. ^ Lehmann, M.R. (2000). "The Writings of Ben Sira, the Dead Sea Scrolls and Temple Worship in the Liturgy of Yom Kippur", in Piyyut in Tradition, vol. 2 (eds. B. Bar-Tikva and E. Hazan [Hebrew]; Ramat Gan: Bar-Ilan University), pp. 13–18.
  41. ^ Tabori, Yosef (1996). Mo'ade Yiśra'el bi-teḳufat ha-Mishnah ṿeha-Talmud (in Hebrew) (Mahad. 2. metuḳenet u-murḥevet. ed.). Hebrew University, Jerusalem: Hotsa'at sefarim 'a. sh. Y.L. Magnes. p. 260 n. 4. ISBN 9652238880.
  42. ^ Reif, Stefan C. Prayer in Ben Sira, Qumran and Second Temple Judaism: A Comparative Overview, in Ben Sira's God: Proceedings of the International Ben Sira Conference, Durham, Renate Egger-Wenzel ed., p. 322 (Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. 2002), ISBN 3110175592.
  43. ^ a b Reif, p. 338.
  44. ^ intertextual.bible/text/sirach-27.6-matthew-7.16
  45. ^ "Deuteroccanonical Books in the New Testament". August 7, 2017.
  46. ^ a b Chadwick, Henry.(2001) The Church in Ancient Society: From Galilee to Gregory the Great Clarendon Press, Oxford, England, p. 28, ISBN 0199246955
  47. ^ Skehan, Patrick (1987). The Wisdom of Ben Sira: a new translation with notes. Series: The Anchor Bible. Vol. 39. New York: Doubleday. p. 524. ISBN 0385135173.
  48. ^ Skehan, p. 528
  49. ^ Sirach 13:2–3
  50. ^ See footnote to the Biblical passage in The Jerusalem Bible, Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, 1966
  51. ^ Rollston, Chris A. (April 2001). "Ben Sira 38:24–39:11 and The Egyptian Satire of the Trades". Journal of Biblical Literature. 120 (Spring): 131–139. doi:10.2307/3268597. JSTOR 3268597.
  52. ^ Sirach 38:24–39:11
  53. ^ Zärˀa Yaˁəqob. 1992. "Revelation of the Miracle of Mary according to John Son of Thunder (Raˀəyä Täˀammər)", in The Mariology of Emperor Zära Yaˁqob of Ethiopia: Texts and Translations, edited by Getatchew Haile, 70–145. Rome, Italy: Pontificium Institutum Studiorum Orientalium.
  54. ^ Colin Welland (July 17, 2015). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2015.

Sources

  • Askin, Lindsey A. (2018) Scribal Culture in Ben Sira E.J. Brill, Leiden ISBN 978-9004372863
  • Beentjes, Pancratius C. (1997) The Book of Ben Sira in Hebrew: A Text Edition of All Extant Hebrew Manuscripts and a Synopsis of All Parallel Hebrew Ben Sira Texts E.J. Brill, Leiden, ISBN 9004107673
  • Toy, Crawford Howell and Lévi, Israel (1906) "Sirach, The Wisdom of Jesus the Son of" entry in the Jewish Encyclopedia
  • Amidah, entry in (1972) Encyclopedia Judaica Jerusalem, Keter Publishing, Jerusalem, OCLC 10955972

External links

  • Sirach (Ecclesiasticus) – Latin Vulgate with Douay-Rheims version side-by-side
  • BenSira.org, original Hebrew manuscripts
  • "Ecclesiasticus" Catholic Encyclopedia
  • Sirach – Bibledex video overview
  • Sirach 2012 Translation with Audio
  • The Wisdom of Jesus the Son of Sirach, Jewish Encyclopedia (1906 ed.).
  •   Sirach public domain audiobook at LibriVox
Preceded by Roman Catholic Old Testament Succeeded by
Eastern Orthodox Old Testament
see Deuterocanon

book, sirach, ecclesiasticus, redirects, here, confused, with, ecclesiastes, medieval, text, alphabet, sirach, scholar, sira, ecclesiasticus, abbreviated, ecclus, jewish, work, originally, hebrew, ethical, teachings, from, approximately, written, judahite, scr. Ecclesiasticus redirects here Not to be confused with Ecclesiastes For the medieval text see Alphabet of Sirach For the scholar see Ben Sira The Book of Sirach ˈ s aɪ r ae k a or Ecclesiasticus ɪ ˌ k l iː z i ˈ ae s t ɪ k e s abbreviated Ecclus 3 is a Jewish work originally in Hebrew of ethical teachings from approximately 200 to 175 BCE written by the Judahite scribe Ben Sira of Jerusalem on the inspiration of his father Joshua son of Sirach sometimes called Jesus son of Sirach or Yeshua ben Eliezer ben Sira In Egypt it was translated into Greek by the author s unnamed grandson who added a prologue This prologue is generally considered the earliest witness to a canon of the books of the prophets and thus the date of the text is the subject of intense scrutiny The book itself is the largest wisdom book from antiquity to have survived 4 Contents 1 Canonical status 2 Structure 3 Contents 4 Authorship and translation 5 Language and alternative titles 6 Date and historical significance 7 Manuscripts 8 Theological significance 8 1 Influence in Jewish doctrine and liturgy 8 2 New Testament 8 3 Messianic interpretation by Christians 9 References in Sirach and pre modern texts 10 References in culture 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Sources 15 External linksCanonical status EditSee also Development of the Old Testament canon Alle Weiſsheit ist bey Gott dem Herren modern spelling Alle Weisheit ist bei Gott dem Herrn Sirach first chapter German translation anonymous artist 1654 Sirach is accepted as part of the canon by Catholics Eastern Orthodox and most Oriental Orthodox Christians The Anglican tradition considers Sirach which was published with other Greek Jewish books in a separate section of the King James Bible among the apocryphal books and reads them for example of life and instruction of manners but yet do not apply them to establish any doctrine 5 The Lutheran Churches take a similar position It was cited in some writings in early Christianity There are claims that it is cited in the Epistle of James and also the non canonical Didache iv 5 and Epistle of Barnabas xix 9 Clement of Alexandria and Origen quote from it repeatedly as from a grafh Scripture 1 The Catalogue of Cheltenham b Pope Damasus I 6 the Councils of Hippo 393 and Third Council of Carthage 397 Pope Innocent I the second Council of Carthage 419 the Council of Florence 1442 7 and Augustine all regarded it as canonical although Jerome Rufinus of Aquileia and the Council of Laodicea ranked it instead as an ecclesiastical book 1 The Apostolic Canons not recognized by the Catholic Church stated as venerable and sacred the Wisdom of Sirach 8 Pope Innocent I officially confirmed the canon of the Bible shortly after the Third Council of Carthage 6 The Catholic Church then reaffirmed Sirach and the other deuterocanonical books in 1546 during the fourth session of the Council of Trent and attached an excommunication to the denial of their scriptural status 9 1 Sirach is not part of the Jewish canon once thought to have been established at the hypothetical Council of Jamnia perhaps due to its late authorship 10 although it is not clear that the canon was completely closed at the time of Ben Sira 11 Others have suggested that Ben Sira s self identification as the author precluded it from attaining canonical status which was reserved for works that were attributed or could be attributed to the prophets 12 or that it was denied entry to the canon as a rabbinical counter reaction to its embrace by the nascent Christian community 13 Some Jews in the diaspora considered Sirach scripture For instance the Greek translation made by Ben Sira s grandson was included in the Septuagint the 2nd century BCE Greek version of the Hebrew scriptures used by Diaspora Jews through which it became part of the Greek canon The multiplicity of manuscript fragments uncovered in the Cairo Genizah evince its authoritative status among Egyptian Jewry until the Middle Ages 14 Because it was excluded from the Jewish canon Sirach was not counted as being canonical in Churches originating from the Reformation although some retained the book in an appendix to the Bible called Apocrypha Structure EditAs with other wisdom books there is no easily recognizable structure in Sirach in many parts it is difficult to discover a logical progression of thought or to discern the principles of arrangement 4 However a series of six poems about the search for and attainment of wisdom 1 1 10 4 11 19 6 18 37 14 20 15 10 24 1 33 and 38 24 39 11 divide the book into something resembling chapters although the divisions are not thematically based 4 The exceptions are the first two chapters whose reflections on wisdom and fear of God provide the theological framework for what follows and the last nine chapters which function as a sort of climax first in an extended praise of God s glory as manifested through creation 42 15 43 33 and second in the celebration of the heroes of ancient Israel s history dating back to before the Great Flood through contemporary times see previous section 4 Despite the lack of structure there are certain themes running through the book which reappear at various points The New Oxford Annotated Apocrypha identifies ten major recurring topics The Creation 16 24 17 24 18 1 14 33 7 15 39 12 35 and 42 15 43 33 Death 11 26 28 22 11 12 38 16 23 and 41 1 13 Friendship 6 5 17 9 10 16 19 13 17 22 19 26 27 16 21 and 36 23 37 15 Happiness 25 1 11 30 14 25 and 40 1 30 Honor and shame 4 20 6 4 10 19 11 6 and 41 14 42 8 Money matters 3 30 4 10 11 7 28 13 1 14 19 29 1 28 and 31 1 11 Sin 7 1 17 15 11 20 16 1 17 32 18 30 19 3 21 1 10 22 27 23 27 and 26 28 28 7 Social justice 4 1 10 34 21 27 and 35 14 26 Speech 5 6 9 15 18 15 29 19 4 17 20 1 31 23 7 15 27 4 7 11 15 and 28 8 26 Women 9 1 9 23 22 27 25 13 26 27 36 26 31 and 42 9 14 4 15 Contents Edit Illustration for Sirach c 1751 The Wisdom of Sirach is a collection of ethical teachings Thus Sirach sometimes called Ecclesiasticus closely resembles Proverbs except that unlike the latter it is presented as the work of a single author not an anthology of maxims drawn from various sources presented in verse form The question of which apothegms actually originated with Sirach is open to debate although scholars tend to regard him as a compiler or anthologist 4 The teachings are applicable to all conditions of life to parents and children to husbands and wives to the young to masters to friends to the rich and to the poor Many of them are rules of courtesy and politeness and a still greater number contain advice and instruction as to the duties of man toward himself and others especially the poor as well as toward society and the state and most of all toward God Wisdom in Ben Sira s view is synonymous with the fear of God and sometimes is identified in the text with adherence to the Mosaic law The maxims are expressed in exact formulas and are illustrated by striking images They show a profound knowledge of the human heart the disillusionment of experience a fraternal sympathy with the poor and the oppressed By contrast some feel Sirach exhibits little compassion for either women or slaves He advocates distrust and possessiveness over women 16 and the harsh treatment of slaves which presupposes the validity of slavery as an institution 17 positions which are not only difficult for modern readers but cannot be completely reconciled with the social milieu at the time of its composition 18 The book contains the only instance in Biblical teaching of an explicit recommendation of physicians This is a direct challenge against the traditional idea that illness and disease was seen as penalty for sin 19 As in Ecclesiastes two opposing tendencies war in the author the faith and the morality of olden times which are stronger than all argument and an Epicureanism of modern date Occasionally Sirach digresses to attack theories which he considers dangerous for example that man has no freedom of will and that God is indifferent to the actions of mankind and does not reward virtue Some of the refutations of these views are developed at considerable length Through these ethical chapters runs the prayer of Israel imploring God to gather together his scattered children to bring to fulfilment the predictions of the Prophets and to have mercy upon his Temple and his people The book concludes with a justification of God whose wisdom and greatness are said to be revealed in all God s works as well as in the history of Israel These chapters are completed by the author s signature and are followed by two hymns the latter apparently a sort of alphabetical acrostic Of particular interest to biblical scholars are Chapters 44 50 in which Ben Sira praises men of renown and our fathers in their generation starting from the antediluvian Enoch and continuing through to Simon the high priest son of Onias 300 270 BCE Within this recitation Ben Sira identifies either directly or indirectly each of the books of the Old Testament that would eventually become canonical with the apparent exception of only Ezra Daniel Ruth Esther and perhaps Chronicles 20 The ability to date the composition of Sirach within a few years given the autobiographical hints of Ben Sira and his grandson author of the introduction to the work provides great insight regarding the historical development and evolution of the Jewish canon 21 Authorship and translation EditMain article Ben Sira Illustration of the high priest Jesus Sirach in the Secret Book of Honour of the Fugger by Jorg Breu the Younger 1545 1549 Joshua ben Sirach or according to the Greek text Jesus the son of Sirach of Jerusalem was a Judahite scribe who had been living in Jerusalem and may have authored the work in Alexandria Egypt c 180 175 BCE where he is thought to have established a school 4 Ben Sirach is unique among all Old Testament and Apocryphal writers in that he signed his work 1 The Prologue attributed to Ben Sira s grandson and dated to 132 BCE is generally considered the earliest witness to a canon of the books of the prophets Thus the date of the text has been the subject of intense scrutiny by biblical scholars 22 23 24 Joshua ben Sirach s grandson was in Egypt translating and editing after the usurping Hasmonean line had definitively ousted Simon s heirs in long struggles and was finally in control of the High Priesthood in Jerusalem Comparing the Hebrew and Greek versions shows that he altered the prayer for Simon and broadened its application may He entrust to us his mercy in order to avoid closing a work praising God s covenanted faithfulness on an unanswered prayer 24 The Greek translator states in his preface that he was the grandson of the author and that he came to Egypt in the thirty eighth year of the reign of Euergetes This epithet was borne by only two of the Ptolemies Of these Ptolemy III Euergetes reigned only twenty five years 247 222 BCE and thus Ptolemy VIII Euergetes must be intended he ascended the throne in the year 170 BCE together with his brother Ptolemy VI Philometor but he soon became sole ruler of Cyrene and from 146 to 117 BCE held sway over all Egypt He dated his reign from the year in which he received the crown i e from 170 BCE The translator must therefore have gone to Egypt in 132 BCE 25 The translation into Greek is believed to have been done after 117 BCE 26 Language and alternative titles EditThe Book of ben Sirach ספר בן סירא Sefer ben Sira was originally written in Hebrew and was also known in Hebrew as the Proverbs of ben Sirach משלי בן סירא Misley ben Sira or the Wisdom of ben Sirach חכמת בן סירא Ḥokhmat ben Sira The book was not accepted into the Hebrew Bible and the original Hebrew text was not preserved in the Jewish canon However various original Hebrew versions have since been recovered including fragments recovered within the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Cairo Genizah the latter of which includes fragments from six separate manuscripts 27 The Greek translation was accepted in the Septuagint under the abbreviated name of the author Sirakh Sirax Some Greek manuscripts give as the title the Wisdom of Iesous Son of Sirakh or in short the Wisdom of Sirakh The older Latin versions were based on the Septuagint and simply transliterated the Greek title in Latin letters Sirach In the Vulgate the book is called Liber Iesu filii Sirach Book of Joshua Son of Sirach The Greek Church Fathers also called it the All Virtuous Wisdom while the Latin Church Fathers beginning with Cyprian 28 termed it Ecclesiasticus because it was frequently read in churches leading the early Latin Fathers to call it liber ecclesiasticus Latin and Latinised Greek for church book Similarly the Nova Vulgata and many modern English translations of the Apocrypha use the title Ecclesiasticus literally of the Church because of its frequent use in Christian teaching and worship The Babylonian Talmud occasionally cites Ben Sira Sanhedrin 100b Hagigah 13a Baba Bathra 98b etc but even so it only paraphrases his citations without quoting from him verbatim This is shown by comparing fragmented texts of the original Hebrew Book of Wisdom Ecclesiasticus discovered in Qumran with the same quotes as given in the Babylonian Talmud Date and historical significance EditConsidering the average length of two generations Sirach s date must fall in the first third of the 2nd century BCE Furthermore Sirach contains a eulogy of Simon the High Priest the son of Onias who in his life repaired the House 50 1 Festschrift M Gilbert and other scholars who posit that this seems to have formed the original ending of the text and that Chapters 50 from verse 2 and 51 are later interpolations 29 Under this theory the second High Priest Simon died 196 BCE would have been intended and the composition would have concluded shortly thereafter given that struggles between Simon s successors 175 172 BCE are not alluded to in the book nor is the persecution of the Jews by Antiochus IV Epiphanes 168 BCE 30 31 Manuscripts EditThe work of Sirach is presently known through various versions which scholars still struggle to disentangle 32 The Greek version of Sirach is found in many codices of the Septuagint 32 As early as 1896 several substantial Hebrew texts of Sirach copied in the 11th and 12th centuries were found in the Cairo Geniza a synagogue storage room for damaged manuscripts Although none of these manuscripts is complete together they provide the text for about two thirds of the Wisdom of Sirach According to scholars including Solomon Schechter and Frederic Kenyon this shows that the book was originally written in Hebrew 33 34 Masada room 1109 Discovery site of Ben Sira scroll MasSir In the 1950s and 1960s various of portions of Sirach were found in Dead Sea area excavations Two such discoveries were among the Qumran scrolls both fragmentary parchment scrolls from the Early Roman Herodian period 40 BCE 70 CE 2Q18 2QSir containing Sir 6 14 15 20 31and 11Q5 11QPsa containing about one fourth of the Masoratic psalms plus others including one found in Sir 51 The largest and oldest scroll Mas1H MasSir also a fragmentary parchment scroll but dated in the Late Hellenistic Hasmonean period 167 40 BCE 35 containing most of Sir 39 27 44 17 36 was discovered at Masada the Jewish fortress destroyed by the Romans in 73 CE These early Hebrew texts are in substantial agreement with the Hebrew texts discovered in Cairo although there are numerous minor textual variants With these findings scholars are now more confident that the Cairo texts are reliable witnesses to the Hebrew original 37 38 Theological significance EditInfluence in Jewish doctrine and liturgy Edit Hebrew translation of Sirach 1814 Although excluded from the Jewish canon Sirach was read and quoted as authoritative from the beginning of the rabbinic period There are numerous citations to Sirach in the Talmud and works of rabbinic literature as ספר בן סירא e g Hagigah 13a Niddah 16b Ber 11b Some of those Sanhedrin 100b record an unresolved debate between R Joseph and Abaye as to whether it is forbidden to read the book of Sirach wherein Abaye repeatedly draws parallels between statements in Sirach cited by R Joseph as objectionable and similar statements appearing in canonical books 39 Sirach may have been used as a basis for two important parts of the Jewish liturgy In the Mahzor High Holiday prayer book a medieval Jewish poet may have used Sirach as the basis for a poem Mar e Kohen in the Yom Kippur musaf additional service for the High Holidays 40 Yosef Tabori questioned whether this passage in Sirach is referring at all to Yom Kippur and thus argued it cannot form the basis of this poem 41 Some early 20th century scholars also argued that the vocabulary and framework used by Sirach formed the basis of the most important of all Jewish prayers the Amidah but that conclusion is disputed as well 42 Current scholarship takes a more conservative approach On one hand scholars find that Ben Sira links Torah and wisdom with prayer in a manner that calls to mind the later views of the Rabbis and that the Jewish liturgy echoes Sirach in the use of hymns of praise supplicatory prayers and benedictions as well as the occurrence of Biblical words and phrases that take on special forms and meanings 43 However they stop short of concluding a direct relationship existed rather what seems likely is that the Rabbis ultimately borrowed extensively from the kinds of circles which produced Ben Sira and the Dead Sea Scrolls 43 New Testament Edit Some scholars such as Dr Clayton N Jefford have argued that there are several allusions to the Wisdom of Sirach in the New Testament These include the Virgin Mary s Magnificat in Luke 1 52 following Sirach 10 14 the description of the seed in Mark 4 5 16 17 following Sirach 40 15 the statement by Jesus in Matthew 7 16 20 following Sirach 27 6 44 and James 1 19 quoting Sirach 5 11 45 The distinguished patristic scholar Henry Chadwick has said that in Matthew 11 28 Jesus was directly quoting Sirach 51 27 46 however it appears that Chadwick cited these verses incorrectly because Jesus quotes Sirach 51 34 at Matthew 11 29 Additionally compare Matthew 6 12 And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors with Sirach 28 2 Forgive your neighbor a wrong and then when you petition your sins will be pardoned 46 Messianic interpretation by Christians Edit Jesus Ben Sirach 1860 woodcut by Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld a Lutheran Some Christians who regard the catalogue of famous men in Sirach as containing several messianic references The first occurs during the verses on David Sirach 47 11 reads The Lord took away his sins and exalted his power for ever he gave him the covenant of kings and a throne of glory in Israel This references the covenant of 2 Samuel 7 which pointed toward the Messiah Power Hebrew qeren is literally translated as horn This word is often used in a messianic and Davidic sense e g Ezekiel 29 21 Psalms 132 17 Zechariah 6 12 Jeremiah 33 15 It is also used in the Benedictus to refer to Jesus and has raised up a horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David 47 Another verse 47 22 that Christians interpret messianically begins by again referencing 2 Samuel 7 This verse speaks of Solomon and goes on to say that David s line will continue forever The verse ends stating that he gave a remnant to Jacob and to David a root of his stock This references Isaiah s prophecy of the Messiah There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse and a branch shall grow out of his roots and In that day the root of Jesse shall stand as an ensign to the peoples him shall the nations seek Isaiah 11 1 10 48 References in Sirach and pre modern texts EditNote verse numbers may vary slightly between versions Aesop s fable of The Two Pots referenced at Sirach 13 2 3 49 50 The Egyptian Satire of the Trades written during the Middle Kingdom of Egypt between 2025 and 1700 BCE or another work in that tradition 51 referenced at Sirach 38 24 39 11 52 The treatises of Zara Yaqob Emperor of Ethiopia on the nature and power of the Virgin Mary quotes Sirach 3 30 Water extinguishes a burning fire and almsgiving atones for sin 53 The Kebra Nagast chapter 88 quotes the Book of Sirach 15 16 17 Bede quotes Ecclesiasticus 32 1 in the Lives of the Abbots of Wearmouth and Jarrow citation needed The third song O Tod wie bitter bist du of Vier ernste Gesange quotes Sirach 41 1 3 References in culture Edit Quotation from Sirach Ecclesiasticus on Old St Mary s Cathedral San Francisco The opening lines of Chariots of Fire Best Picture at the 1982 Academy Awards is from Sirach 44 1 Let us now praise famous men and our fathers that begat us 54 In Canon Alberic s Scrap Book the first ghost story in his first published collection M R James has his protagonist Dennistoun quote lines from Ecclesiasticus 39 28 Some spirits there be that are created for vengeance and in their fury lay on sore strokes Their name liveth for evermore is a phrase from the King James Bible forming the second half of a line in Sirach 44 14 widely inscribed on war memorials The title of James Agee and Walker Evans s book Let Us Now Praise Famous Men is taken from Sirach 44 1 Ecclesiasticus 43 11 26 was recited at the 2021 funeral of Prince Philip by the Dean of Windsor See also EditRoy Kinneer Patteson Jr David Kohn Development of the Hebrew Bible canon The road to hell is paved with good intentionsNotes Edit Hebrew ספר בן סירא romanized Seper ben Siraʾ also The Wisdom of Jesus the Son of Sirach 1 The Wisdom of Sirach or simply Ben Sira 2 or Sirach This list gives the number of Solomonic lines as 5 500 which is more than can be explained by Proverbs Ecclesiastes and Canticles References Edit a b c d e Sirach The Wisdom of Jesus the Son of Jewish Encyclopedia 1906 Retrieved 22 January 2022 Book of Ben Sira BibleStudyTools com Salem Communications Corporation Retrieved 2013 10 25 Gigot Francis 1909 Ecclesiasticus The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 5 New York Robert Appleton Company a b c d e f g Harrington Daniel J 2001 Michael Coogan ed Ecclesiasticus or the Wisdom of Jesus Son of Sirach The New Oxford Annotated Bible With the Apocryphal Deuterocanonical Books 4th ed New York Oxford University Press pp 99 101 ISBN 019528478X Canon VI Of the Sufficiency of the Holy Scriptures for salvation The Thirty Nine Articles of Religion Church Society Retrieved 25 July 2014 a b Westcott Brooke Foss 2005 A general survey of the history of the canon of the New Testament Page 570 6th ed Eugene OR Wipf amp Stock ISBN 1597522392 Session 11 4 February 1442 in Trullo Council The Apostolic Canons Canon 85 newadvent Retrieved 12 October 2016 Council of Trent Session IV 1546 Manhardt Laurie Ph D Come and See Wisdom Wisdom of the Bible p 173 Emmaus Road Publishing 2009 ISBN 978 1931018555 Ska Jean Louis The Exegesis of the Pentateuch Exegetical Studies and Basic Questions pp 184 195 Mohr Siebeck Tubingen 2009 ISBN 978 3161499050 Mulder Otto Simon the High Priest in Sirach 50 p 3 fn 8 Koninkliijke Brill nv 2003 ISBN 978 9004123168 The highly esteemed book of Ben Sira is not sacred Scripture because the author was known to have lived in comparatively recent times in an age when with the death of the last prophets the holy spirit had departed from Israel Sulmasy Daniel P M D The Rebirth of the Clinic An Introduction to Spirituality in Health Care p 45 Georgetown Univ Press 2006 ISBN 978 1589010956 Harrington Daniel J 1999 Invitation to the Apocrypha Grand Rapids Mich u a Eerdmans p 90 ISBN 0802846335 Trenchard Warren C 1982 Ben Sira s View of Woman A Literary Analysis Chico CA Scholars Press See e g Sir 42 12 14 especially v 14a Better the wickedness of a man than the goodness of a woman Sir 22 3 A father is disgraced by producing an ignorant son But a daughter is born to his loss For these translations see Trenchard Ben Sira s View of Women pp 147 135 respectively Sirach also has some neutral and positive remarks about women e g 7 27 36 24 25 See Sirach 33 24 28 Fodder and a stick and burdens for an ass bread and discipline and work for a servant 25 Set your slave to work and you will find rest leave his hands idle and he will seek liberty 26 Yoke and thong will bow the neck and for a wicked servant there are racks and tortures Set him to work as is fitting for him and if he does not obey make his fetters heavy But see Sir 33 30 31 If you have a servant let him be as yourself because you have bought him with blood 31 If you have a servant treat him as a brother for as your own soul you will need him Harrington pp 89 90 Eccleciasticus The Cambridge Bible Commentary on the New English Bible commentary by John G Snaith Cambridge University Press 1974 ISBN missing page needed Marttila Marko Foreign Nations in the Wisdom of Ben Sira A Jewish Sage between Opposition and Assimilation pp 196 199 Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co 2012 ISBN 978 3110270105 Perspectives on Hebrew Scriptures II Volume 5 Ehud Ben Zvi ed pp 179 190 Gorgias Press LLC 2007 ISBN 978 1593336127 Williams David Salter 1994 The Date of Ecclesiasticus Vetus Testamentum 44 4 pp 563 566 DeSilva David Arthur 2002 Wisdom of Ben Sira Introducing the Apocrypha Message Context and Significance Baker Academic Grand Rapids p 158 ISBN 080102319X a b Guillaume Philippe 2004 New Light on the Nebiim from Alexandria A Chronography to Replace the Deuteronomistic History PDF Journal of Hebrew Scriptures 5 Section 3 The Date of Ben Sira Baxter J Sidlow 1968 The Strategic Grasp of the Bible Zondervan p 46 Sirach Introduction United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Bible See generally The Hebrew of the Dead Sea Scrolls and Ben Sira Proceedings of a Symposium Held at Leiden University 11 14 December 1995 Volume 26 T Muraoka amp J F Elwolde eds ISBN 9004108203 Testimonia ii 1 iii 1 35 51 95 et passim Mulder p 11 However other scholars take the position that Sirach started with chapters 1 23 and 51 with the intermediate sections being inserted thereafter Mulder pp 30 31 1 Maccabees 1 20 25 see Polyglot Bible 1 Maccabees Retrieved 2009 08 05 Flavius Josephus How the City Jerusalem Was Taken and the Temple Pillaged As Also Concerning the Actions of the Maccabees Matthias and Judas and Concerning the Death of Judas In William Whiston ed The Wars of the Jews via Perseus Project a b Stone Michael E ed 1984 Jewish Writings of the Second Temple Period Apocrypha Pseudepigrapha Qumran sectarian writings Philo Josephus Van Gorcum Assen Netherlands p 290 ISBN 0800606035 See for example the account of Schechter s work on the Geniza manuscripts in Soskice Janet 2010 Sisters of Sinai How Two Lady Adventurers Found the Hidden Gospels London Vintage 240 249 Adams A W 1958 Our Bible and the Ancient Manuscripts London Eyre amp Spottiswoode 83 Crawford Sidnie White 2000 Review of Masada VI Yigael Yadin Excavations 1963 1965 Final Reports Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 319 81 doi 10 2307 1357566 JSTOR 1357566 Full Masada Scroll The Book of Ben Sira Elizur Shulamit A New Fragment from the Hebrew Text of the Book of Ben Sira Tarbiẕ 76 2008 17 28 in Hebrew Egger Wenzel Renate Ein neues Sira Fragment des MS C Biblische Notizen 138 2008 107 114 Sanhedrin 100b Shas Soncino dTorah com dtorah com Lehmann M R 2000 The Writings of Ben Sira the Dead Sea Scrolls and Temple Worship in the Liturgy of Yom Kippur in Piyyut in Tradition vol 2 eds B Bar Tikva and E Hazan Hebrew Ramat Gan Bar Ilan University pp 13 18 Tabori Yosef 1996 Mo ade Yisra el bi teḳufat ha Mishnah ṿeha Talmud in Hebrew Mahad 2 metuḳenet u murḥevet ed Hebrew University Jerusalem Hotsa at sefarim a sh Y L Magnes p 260 n 4 ISBN 9652238880 Reif Stefan C Prayer in Ben Sira Qumran and Second Temple Judaism A Comparative Overview in Ben Sira s God Proceedings of the International Ben Sira Conference Durham Renate Egger Wenzel ed p 322 Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co 2002 ISBN 3110175592 a b Reif p 338 intertextual bible text sirach 27 6 matthew 7 16 Deuteroccanonical Books in the New Testament August 7 2017 a b Chadwick Henry 2001 The Church in Ancient Society From Galilee to Gregory the Great Clarendon Press Oxford England p 28 ISBN 0199246955 Skehan Patrick 1987 The Wisdom of Ben Sira a new translation with notes Series The Anchor Bible Vol 39 New York Doubleday p 524 ISBN 0385135173 Skehan p 528 Sirach 13 2 3 See footnote to the Biblical passage in The Jerusalem Bible Garden City New York Doubleday amp Company 1966 Rollston Chris A April 2001 Ben Sira 38 24 39 11 and The Egyptian Satire of the Trades Journal of Biblical Literature 120 Spring 131 139 doi 10 2307 3268597 JSTOR 3268597 Sirach 38 24 39 11 Zarˀa Yaˁeqob 1992 Revelation of the Miracle of Mary according to John Son of Thunder Raˀeya Taˀammer in The Mariology of Emperor Zara Yaˁqob of Ethiopia Texts and Translations edited by Getatchew Haile 70 145 Rome Italy Pontificium Institutum Studiorum Orientalium Colin Welland July 17 2015 Chariots of Fire Script PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved July 18 2015 Sources EditAskin Lindsey A 2018 Scribal Culture in Ben Sira E J Brill Leiden ISBN 978 9004372863 Beentjes Pancratius C 1997 The Book of Ben Sira in Hebrew A Text Edition of All Extant Hebrew Manuscripts and a Synopsis of All Parallel Hebrew Ben Sira Texts E J Brill Leiden ISBN 9004107673 Toy Crawford Howell and Levi Israel 1906 Sirach The Wisdom of Jesus the Son of entry in the Jewish Encyclopedia Amidah entry in 1972 Encyclopedia Judaica Jerusalem Keter Publishing Jerusalem OCLC 10955972External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ecclesiasticus Wikiquote has quotations related to Book of Sirach Wikisource has original text related to this article The King James Version of Wisdom of Sirach Sirach Ecclesiasticus Latin Vulgate with Douay Rheims version side by side BenSira org original Hebrew manuscripts Ecclesiasticus Catholic Encyclopedia Sirach Bibledex video overview Sirach 2012 Translation with Audio The Wisdom of Jesus the Son of Sirach Jewish Encyclopedia 1906 ed Sirach public domain audiobook at LibriVoxPreceded byBook of Wisdom Roman Catholic Old Testament Succeeded byIsaiahEastern Orthodox Old Testamentsee Deuterocanon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Book of Sirach amp oldid 1139320331, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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