- 4 Maccabees
The book of 4 Maccabees is a
homily or philosophic discourse praising the supremacy of pious reason over passion. It is not in the Bible for most churches, but is an appendix to the Greek Bible, and in the canon of the Georgian Bible.ynopsis
The work consists of a prologue and two main sections; the first advances the philosophical thesis while the second illustrates the points made using examples drawn from
2 Maccabees (principally, themartyr dom of Eleazer and the Maccabeean youths) underAntiochus IV Epiphanes. The last chapters concern the author's impressions drawn from these martyrdoms. The work thus appears to be an independent composition to1 Maccabees and2 Maccabees , merely drawing on their descriptions to support its thesis.Authorship and criticism
According to some scholars, the last chapter shows signs of later addition to the work, though this was disputed by the 19th century authors of the
Jewish Encyclopedia . The dispute is based on the weak ending the book would have without the "added" chapter, as well as arguments based on style. The change of direction with chapter 27 supports the view of the work as a homily held before a Greek-speaking audience on the feast ofHanukkah , as advanced by Ewald and Freudenthal, where this would be a rhetorical element to draw the listeners into the discourse. Others hold that a homily would have to be based on scriptural texts, which this work is only loosely.In style, the book is oratorical, but not so much as
3 Maccabees . A good amount of Stoic philosophy is cited by the author, though there is little original philosophical insight in the text. The writer appears to be anAlexandria nJew who used the philosophical ideas of the time to clothe his religious ideas. This characterization is practically without parallel in Jewish literature, and it is cited as the best example ofsyncretism between Jewish and Hellenistic thought. Perhaps the closest match in theNew Testament is the (anonymous)Epistle to the Hebrews .The book is ascribed to
Josephus byEusebius andJerome , and this opinion was accepted for many years, leading to its inclusion in many editions of Josephus' works. More modern critical scholarship points to great differences of language and style, so that this identification is largely abandoned today. The book is generally dated between thefirst century BCE and the first century CE, due to its reliance on 2 Maccabees and use by Christians. It was probably written before the persecution of the Jews underCaligula , and certainly before the fall ofJerusalem in70 CE.Doctrinal content
The writer believes in the
immortality of thesoul , but denies the Pharisaic belief in the resurrection of the body. Good souls are said to live forever in happiness with thepatriarchs andGod , but even the evil souls are held to be immortal. The suffering and martyrdom of the Maccabees is seen by the author to be vicarious for the Jewish nation, and the author portrays martyrdom in general as bringing atonement for the past sins of the Jews. [ [http://www.tentmaker.org/books/DoctrineOfRetribution.html "History of opinions on the scriptural doctrine of retribution"] , Edward Beecher, D. Appleton & Company, 1878 (original), Tentmaker publications, 2000.]References
External links
* [http://ocp.acadiau.ca/index.html?4Macc Greek text from "Septuaginta: Id est Vetus Testamentum graece iuxta LXX interpretes" (Stuttgart: Privilegierte württembergische Biblelanstalt, 1935), via The Online Pseudepigrapha.]
* [http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/r/rsv/rsv-idx?type=DIV1&byte=4496061 English text from "The Apocrypha, New Revised Standard Version" (NRSV).]
* [http://jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=18&letter=M&search=Books%20of%20Maccabees#59 Jewish Encyclopedia: IV Maccabees]
* [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Books_of_Maccabees Encyclopedia Britannica: Books of the Maccabees]
* [http://rosetta.reltech.org/cgi-bin/Ebind2html/TC/SweteIntro?seq=294 "An Introduction to the Old Testament in Greek"] ,Henry Barclay Swete , Cambridge University Press, 1914, page 280
* [http://www.bombaxo.com/allusions.html New Testament Allusions to Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha (including 4 Macc.)]
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