{"id":439,"date":"2018-11-08T22:36:43","date_gmt":"2018-11-09T04:36:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/?p=439"},"modified":"2018-11-08T22:36:43","modified_gmt":"2018-11-09T04:36:43","slug":"4-maccabees-martyrdom-and-reason","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/11\/08\/4-maccabees-martyrdom-and-reason\/","title":{"rendered":"4 Maccabees: Martyrdom and Reason"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-444\" src=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/37\/2018\/11\/7macabees.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"434\" height=\"246\" \/>As is the case with <a href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/09\/26\/4-ezra-a-biblical-book-youve-probably-never-read\/\">4 Ezra<\/a>, 4 Maccabees is a Biblical text that lies at the very edges of the Old Testament canon in the Orthodox Church. \u00a0 In later Greek manuscripts, 4 Maccabees is included in an appendix.\u00a0 In older Greek manuscripts no such distinction is made, though 4 Maccabees is often found at the end of these manuscripts rather than following 3 Maccabees, along with Psalm 151 and the Prayer of Manasseh, two liturgical fragments.\u00a0 It is present in Old Georgian Old Testaments and was for a time, though no longer, in the Romanian Old Testament.\u00a0 Due to their relegation to the &#8216;apocrypha&#8217; in most English Bibles, 1-3 Maccabees are not well known to most English readers.\u00a0 4 Maccabees is therefore even less so.<\/p>\n<p>The four books of the Maccabees differ in genre, type, and contents though they stem from events in the same general era.\u00a0 Following the death of Alexander the Great, his successors, known in Greek as the &#8216;diadochoi&#8217;, went to war to carve up his empire amongst themselves.\u00a0 The Greek imperial powers who therefore ruled portions of the world were by nature hostile to the Jews, who at this point in history, the 3rd through the 1st centuries BC, had major centers in Judea, Alexandria in Egypt, Antioch in Syria, Mesopotamia, and were scattered throughout the known world in smaller communities.\u00a0 Because the Jews refused to worship the gods of the Greeks, they were seen as traitors.\u00a0 The sacrificial rituals of the Greeks were civic acts in which the entire polis participated.\u00a0 They bound the community together and bound them all together with their gods.\u00a0 When misfortune befell a pagan Greek community, therefore, and it intuited that they had the gods&#8217; disfavor, those who refused to perform the rites due to the gods were an obvious target for blame.\u00a0 The books of the Maccabees describe this persecution and its results.<\/p>\n<p>3 Maccabees is the odd man out among the books of the Maccabees in being set in Egypt under the Ptolemaic dynasty, the Greek dynasty which ruled Egypt until Cleopatra.\u00a0 It describes persecution faced by faithful Jews living in Egypt, particularly in and around Alexandria, during the late 3rd century BC.\u00a0 These events take place a few decades before the events of the other books of the Maccabees.\u00a0 1, 2, and 4 Maccabees all deal with the oppression of Judea itself by the Seleucid dynasty in the early 2nd century BC.\u00a0 This Greek dynasty which ruled from their newly established capital, Antioch on the Orontes.\u00a0 Following a disastrous battle against the Ptolemies in an attempt to expand his empire south and west, Antiochus IV Epiphanes returned to Jerusalem.\u00a0 He blamed his military failure on the failure of the Jews to honor the gods and so entered the temple in Jerusalem, rebuilt after the return from exile, and sacrificed a pig there to Zeus.\u00a0 This was known to the Jews as &#8216;the abomination which causes desolation&#8217; and is mentioned and alluded to frequently in the latter parts of the Old Testament and in the New Testament.\u00a0 This act defiled the temple and made it unfit for its intended use in worshipping Yahweh the God of Israel.\u00a0 There had already been incredible pressure upon the Jewish people to conform to Greek culture and religion, to which many had given in.\u00a0 This persecution intensified at the hands of Antiochus after the desecration of the temple.<\/p>\n<p>1 Maccabees describes, in a straightforward historical account, the revolution that proceeded to unfold.\u00a0 Judas Maccabeus, which means &#8216;Judah the Hammer&#8217;, and his brothers took the atrocity in the temple as the last straw and raised up a revolutionary army to overthrow the Greeks.\u00a0 They were successful and established an independent Judea, making treaties with Sparta and Rome for defense to prevent the Seleucid&#8217;s potential counter-attack.\u00a0 Judah and his brothers established a new monarchy, the Hasmonean dynasty, with a family member also made a high priest.\u00a0 The Sadducean high priestly families encountered in the gospels are descendants of these men, and not of Aaron or Levi.\u00a0 After their victory at the battle of Emmaus, the temple was rededicated and brought back into service.\u00a0 The anniversary of that rededication became an annual feast, now celebrated as Hanukkah by Jewish communities.\u00a0 2 Maccabees covers the same time period, but gives a more personal portrait of individuals who suffered for their faith at the hands of the Seleucids.\u00a0 The most celebrated of these, whose story is told in some detail in 2 Maccabees, are the 7 Maccabean martyrs, their mother, and their teacher St. Eleazar.\u00a0 These martyred saints are celebrated in the Orthodox Church on August 1.<\/p>\n<p>4 Maccabees is another genre entirely, following the form of a philosophical treatise or Old Testament wisdom literature.\u00a0 In reality, it is most likely a melding of the two, written by a Jewish person of Hellenistic background at the end of the 1st century AD.\u00a0 The text also has features of a homily or oration, focusing on the lessons in virtue to be learned from the example of the Maccabean martyrs.\u00a0 Due to some of the details contained within the book and the traditions reflected there, it was likely written in the city of Antioch in Syria.\u00a0 The relics of the Maccabean martyrs were kept in a shrine, first Jewish and later Christian, in the city of Antioch from the time of their deaths until the collapse of the ancient city at the turn of the 15th century.\u00a0 Before their commemoration as Christian saints, these martyrs were commemorated in Jewish synagogues with a day of fast in the 9th of Av.\u00a0 The composition of 4 Maccabees was likely related to the prominence of the martyrs in the Jewish community of Antioch in the first century.\u00a0 There was a belief for a considerable period that it was written by Josephus, the Jewish historian.\u00a0 In fact, during the period in which this text was included in Romanian Bibles, it appeared there under his name.\u00a0 It has, however, since been thoroughly disproven that the works of Josephus and this text were by the same author because of contradictions not only in grammar, style, and vocabulary but also conceptual contradictions.<\/p>\n<p>The book of 4 Maccabees can be roughly divided into two halves.\u00a0 The first half takes the form of a treatise on reason or wisdom.\u00a0 The central theme of this introductory portion is on the superiority of reason (logos or logismos) to the passions (pathe).\u00a0 Reason exists as an overarching category and is a power of the soul that allows it to resist, overcome, and tame the passions which express themselves through particular desires.\u00a0 Reason is an overarching category which has a real presence in the world and is described by the Torah.\u00a0 Within the lives of individual people, reason takes the form of wisdom which produces virtues.\u00a0 These virtues are continually assailed by desires which themselves ultimately stem from the passions.\u00a0 For the author of 4 Maccabees, wisdom and understanding of the creation in which we live, and the creation which we are, reinforced the truth of what is communicated in the Torah and produces the virtues that allow persons to resist temptations and overcome the passions.\u00a0 He gives many Old Testament examples throughout this portion of the text, such as Joseph&#8217;s flight from Potiphar&#8217;s wife.<\/p>\n<p>There are clear and direct lines of continuity from the first portion of this text to Orthodox monastic literature.\u00a0 The understanding of sin as passions and passions expressing themselves as desires which give rise to temptations is present in both.\u00a0 The necessity of cultivating particular virtue through the keeping of commandments which are themselves reinforced by spiritual insight is described here clearly.\u00a0 The author of 4 Maccabees discusses the need to sift one&#8217;s thoughts.\u00a0 Thought cannot be prevented from entering the mind, but can be cut off before they are able to take root.\u00a0 Here also are found the beginning, in the understanding of the &#8216;logos&#8217;, of the connective tissue between the Word of God in the Old and New Testaments and the understanding of the &#8216;Logos&#8217; and the &#8216;logia&#8217; in St. Maximus the Confessor.\u00a0 4 Maccabees therefore represents an important link in the chain connecting the wisdom literature of the Old Testament to the monastic wisdom which has come to so characterize the mind of the Orthodox Church.<\/p>\n<p>The second major section of 4 Maccabees is an extended meditation on these themes from the example of Eleazar, the seven Maccabean martyrs, and their mother.\u00a0 In praise of these martyrs, the author of 4 Maccabees retells the story told in 2 Maccabees but in an even more dramatized form.\u00a0 Eleazar was tortured to death first by the Seleucids in an attempt to get him to violate the Torah, specifically by eating pork.\u00a0 Pork was a major part of the Greek staple diet, but pigs were also the animal that was most commonly sacrificed to the Greek gods, so the pork being offered here had presumably also been offered to idols, adding the sin of idolatry to ritual uncleanness.\u00a0 After his death by torture, the seven martyrs are tortured to death in turn in front of their mother, both to try to get them to reject the Torah, and their mother to do the same.\u00a0 Their mother, however, encourages them on to bravery and after her sons, she is also tortured to death.<\/p>\n<p>Reflected in this narrative in 4 Maccabees is the Second Temple Jewish understanding of martyrdom in its fullest form.\u00a0 All of the elements that will come to characterize the literature of early Christian martyrology at the beginning of the 2nd century are present here revealing another point of continuity.\u00a0 The heroic resistance of the martyrs to the denial of their faith, the characterization of their tortures as a struggle or contest over which they are victorious by being willing to go to their deaths, the urging of close family members and friends not to save themselves by denial but to endure even unto death are all present.\u00a0 The way this story is related also helps us understand the vehemence of St. Paul before the road to Damascus, and which he himself faced after that experience, regarding the provisions of the Torah down to the level of what should and should not be eaten.\u00a0 Within the living memory of the people to whom St. Paul was preaching, their forefathers and heroes in the faith had been willing to lay down their lives over these very issues.<\/p>\n<p>Even more importantly, however, within the Second Temple Jewish understanding of martyrdom as expressed here in 4 Maccabees we gain important information about how first century Jewish believers would have understood a sacrificial death.\u00a0 While human sacrifice was always expressly forbidden as an abomination, there was within Second Temple Judaism, largely developed concerning the martyrs of the Maccabean era, the idea that one could, through a faithful death, offer one&#8217;s life as a sacrifice to the God of Israel.\u00a0 In 4 Maccabees 6:27-29, Eleazar, as he dies, prays,\u00a0<span id=\"en-RSV-37302\" class=\"text 4Macc-6-27\">\u201cYou know, O God, that though I might have saved myself, I am dying in burning torments for the sake of the law. <\/span> <span id=\"en-RSV-37303\" class=\"text 4Macc-6-28\">Be merciful to your people, and let our righteousness suffice for them. <\/span> <span id=\"en-RSV-37304\" class=\"text 4Macc-6-29\">Make my blood their purification, and take my life in exchange for theirs.\u201d\u00a0 Both the element of sin offerings in the Old Testament, the idea that the sacrifice was offered as a ransom for the offerers life, and the idea of atonement, of purification from and the wiping away of sin, are present in this understanding of St. Eleazar&#8217;s death.\u00a0 When Jewish believers of this period were told of the sacrificial death of the Messiah, 4 Maccabees describes for us the lens through which they would have understood this.<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>As is the case with 4 Ezra, 4 Maccabees is a Biblical text that lies at the very edges of the Old Testament canon in the Orthodox Church. \u00a0 In later Greek manuscripts, 4 Maccabees is included in an appendix.\u00a0 In older Greek manuscripts no such distinction is made, though 4 Maccabees is often found at the end of these manuscripts rather than following 3 Maccabees, along with Psalm 151 and the Prayer of Manasseh, two liturgical fragments.\u00a0 It is present in Old Georgian Old Testaments and was for a time, though no longer, in the Romanian Old Testament.\u00a0 Due to their relegation to the &#8216;apocrypha&#8217; in most English Bibles, 1-3 Maccabees are not well known to most English readers.\u00a0\u2026 <a class=\"moretag\" href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/11\/08\/4-maccabees-martyrdom-and-reason\/\">  <i class=\"fa fa-arrow-circle-right\"><\/i> <\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":13,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-439","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"yoast_head":"<title>4 Maccabees: Martyrdom and Reason - The Whole Counsel Blog<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/blogs.ancientfaith.com\/wholecounsel\/2018\/11\/08\/4-maccabees-martyrdom-and-reason\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta 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