4 Maccabees
Chapter 1
1: The subject that I am about to discuss is most
philosophical, that is, whether devout reason is sovereign over the emotions. So
it is right for me to advise you to pay earnest attention to philosophy.
2: For the subject is essential to everyone who is seeking knowledge,
and in addition it includes the praise of the highest virtue -- I mean, of
course, rational judgment.
3: If, then, it is evident that reason
rules over those emotions that hinder self-control, namely, gluttony and lust,
4: it is also clear that it masters the emotions that hinder one from
justice, such as malice, and those that stand in the way of courage, namely
anger, fear, and pain.
5: Some might perhaps ask, "If reason rules
the emotions, why is it not sovereign over forgetfulness and ignorance?" Their
attempt at argument is ridiculous!
6: For reason does not rule its
own emotions, but those that are opposed to justice, courage, and self-control;
and it is not for the purpose of destroying them, but so that one may not give
way to them.
7: I could prove to you from many and various examples
that reason is dominant over the emotions,
8: but I can demonstrate
it best from the noble bravery of those who died for the sake of virtue, Eleazar
and the seven brothers and their mother.
9: All of these, by
despising sufferings that bring death, demonstrated that reason controls the
emotions.
10: On this anniversary it is fitting for me to praise for
their virtues those who, with their mother, died for the sake of nobility and
goodness, but I would also call them blessed for the honor in which they are
held.
11: For all people, even their torturers, marveled at their
courage and endurance, and they became the cause of the downfall of tyranny over
their nation. By their endurance they conquered the tyrant, and thus their
native land was purified through them.
12: I shall shortly have an
opportunity to speak of this; but, as my custom is, I shall begin by stating my
main principle, and then I shall turn to their story, giving glory to the
all-wise God.
13: Our inquiry, accordingly, is whether reason is
sovereign over the emotions.
14: We shall decide just what reason is
and what emotion is, how many kinds of emotions there are, and whether reason
rules over all these.
15: Now reason is the mind that with sound
logic prefers the life of wisdom.
16: Wisdom, next, is the knowledge
of divine and human matters and the causes of these.
17: This, in
turn, is education in the law, by which we learn divine matters reverently and
human affairs to our advantage.
18: Now the kinds of wisdom are
rational judgment, justice, courage, and self-control.
19: Rational
judgment is supreme over all of these, since by means of it reason rules over
the emotions.
20: The two most comprehensive types of the emotions
are pleasure and pain; and each of these is by nature concerned with both body
and soul.
21: The emotions of both pleasure and pain have many
consequences.
22: Thus desire precedes pleasure and delight follows
it.
23: Fear precedes pain and sorrow comes after.
24:
Anger, as a man will see if he reflects on this experience, is an emotion
embracing pleasure and pain.
25: In pleasure there exists even a
malevolent tendency, which is the most complex of all the emotions.
26: In the soul it is boastfulness, covetousness, thirst for honor,
rivalry, and malice;
27: in the body, indiscriminate eating,
gluttony, and solitary gormandizing.
28: Just as pleasure and pain
are two plants growing from the body and the soul, so there are many offshoots
of these plants,
29: each of which the master cultivator, reason,
weeds and prunes and ties up and waters and thoroughly irrigates, and so tames
the jungle of habits and emotions.
30: For reason is the guide of the
virtues, but over the emotions it is sovereign. Observe now first of all that
rational judgment is sovereign over the emotions by virtue of the restraining
power of self-control.
31: Self-control, then, is dominance over the
desires.
32: Some desires are mental, others are physical, and reason
obviously rules over both.
33: Otherwise how is it that when we are
attracted to forbidden foods we abstain from the pleasure to be had from them?
Is it not because reason is able to rule over appetites? I for one think so.
34: Therefore when we crave seafood and fowl and animals and all
sorts of foods that are forbidden to us by the law, we abstain because of
domination by reason.
35: For the emotions of the appetites are
restrained, checked by the temperate mind, and all the impulses of the body are
bridled by reason.
Chapter 2
1: And why is it amazing that the desires of the
mind for the enjoyment of beauty are rendered powerless?
2: It is for
this reason, certainly, that the temperate Joseph is praised, because by mental
effort he overcame sexual desire.
3: For when he was young and in his
prime for intercourse, by his reason he nullified the frenzy of the passions.
4: Not only is reason proved to rule over the frenzied urge of sexual
desire, but also over every desire.
5: Thus the law says, "You shall
not covet your neighbor's wife...or anything that is your neighbor's."
6: In fact, since the law has told us not to covet, I could prove to
you all the more that reason is able to control desires. Just so it is with the
emotions that hinder one from justice.
7: Otherwise how could it be
that someone who is habitually a solitary gormandizer, a glutton, or even a
drunkard can learn a better way, unless reason is clearly lord of the emotions?
8: Thus, as soon as a man adopts a way of life in accordance with the
law, even though he is a lover of money, he is forced to act contrary to his
natural ways and to lend without interest to the needy and to cancel the debt
when the seventh year arrives.
9: If one is greedy, he is ruled by
the law through his reason so that he neither gleans his harvest nor gathers the
last grapes from the vineyard. In all other matters we can recognize that reason
rules the emotions.
10: For the law prevails even over affection for
parents, so that virtue is not abandoned for their sakes.
11: It is
superior to love for one's wife, so that one rebukes her when she breaks the
law.
12: It takes precedence over love for children, so that one
punishes them for misdeeds.
13: It is sovereign over the relationship
of friends, so that one rebukes friends when they act wickedly.
14:
Do not consider it paradoxical when reason, through the law, can prevail even
over enmity. The fruit trees of the enemy are not cut down, but one preserves
the property of enemies from the destroyers and helps raise up what has fallen.
15: It is evident that reason rules even the more violent emotions:
lust for power, vainglory, boasting, arrogance, and malice.
16: For
the temperate mind repels all these malicious emotions, just as it repels anger
-- for it is sovereign over even this.
17: When Moses was angry with
Dathan and Abiram he did nothing against them in anger, but controlled his anger
by reason.
18: For, as I have said, the temperate mind is able to get
the better of the emotions, to correct some, and to render others powerless.
19: Why else did Jacob, our most wise father, censure the households
of Simeon and Levi for their irrational slaughter of the entire tribe of the
Shechemites, saying, "Cursed be their anger"?
20: For if reason could
not control anger, he would not have spoken thus.
21: Now when God
fashioned man, he planted in him emotions and inclinations,
22: but
at the same time he enthroned the mind among the senses as a sacred governor
over them all.
23: To the mind he gave the law; and one who lives
subject to this will rule a kingdom that is temperate, just, good, and
courageous.
24: How is it then, one might say, that if reason is
master of the emotions, it does not control forgetfulness and ignorance?
Chapter 3
1: This notion is entirely ridiculous; for it is
evident that reason rules not over its own emotions, but over those of the body.
2: No one of us can eradicate that kind of desire, but reason can
provide a way for us not to be enslaved by desire.
3: No one of us
can eradicate anger from the mind, but reason can help to deal with anger.
4: No one of us can eradicate malice, but reason can fight at our
side so that we are not overcome by malice.
5: For reason does not
uproot the emotions but is their antagonist.
6: Now this can be
explained more clearly by the story of King David's thirst.
7: David
had been attacking the Philistines all day long, and together with the soldiers
of his nation had slain many of them.
8: Then when evening fell, he
came, sweating and quite exhausted, to the royal tent, around which the whole
army of our ancestors had encamped.
9: Now all the rest were at
supper,
10: but the king was extremely thirsty, and although springs
were plentiful there, he could not satisfy his thirst from them.
11:
But a certain irrational desire for the water in the enemy's territory tormented
and inflamed him, undid and consumed him.
12: When his guards
complained bitterly because of the king's craving, two staunch young soldiers,
respecting the king's desire, armed themselves fully, and taking a pitcher
climbed over the enemy's ramparts.
13: Eluding the sentinels at the
gates, they went searching throughout the enemy camp
14: and found
the spring, and from it boldly brought the king a drink.
15: But
David, although he was burning with thirst, considered it an altogether fearful
danger to his soul to drink what was regarded as equivalent to blood.
16: Therefore, opposing reason to desire, he poured out the drink as
an offering to God.
17: For the temperate mind can conquer the drives
of the emotions and quench the flames of frenzied desires;
18: it can
overthrow bodily agonies even when they are extreme, and by nobility of reason
spurn all domination by the emotions.
19: The present occasion now
invites us to a narrative demonstration of temperate reason.
20: At a
time when our fathers were enjoying profound peace because of their observance
of the law and were prospering, so that even Seleucus Nicanor, king of Asia, had
both appropriated money to them for the temple service and recognized their
commonwealth --
21: just at that time certain men attempted a
revolution against the public harmony and caused many and various disasters.
Chapter 4
1: Now there was a certain Simon, a political
opponent of the noble and good man, Onias, who then held the high priesthood for
life. When despite all manner of slander he was unable to injure Onias in the
eyes of the nation, he fled the country with the purpose of betraying it.
2: So he came to Apollonius, governor of Syria, Phoenicia, and
Cilicia, and said,
3: "I have come here because I am loyal to the
king's government, to report that in the Jerusalem treasuries there are
deposited tens of thousands in private funds, which are not the property of the
temple but belong to King Seleucus."
4: When Apollonius learned the
details of these things, he praised Simon for his service to the king and went
up to Seleucus to inform him of the rich treasure.
5: On receiving
authority to deal with this matter, he proceeded quickly to our country
accompanied by the accursed Simon and a very strong military force.
6: He said that he had come with the king's authority to seize the
private funds in the treasury.
7: The people indignantly protested
his words, considering it outrageous that those who had committed deposits to
the sacred treasury should be deprived of them, and did all that they could to
prevent it.
8: But, uttering threats, Apollonius went on to the
temple.
9: While the priests together with women and children were
imploring God in the temple to shield the holy place that was being treated so
contemptuously,
10: and while Apollonius was going up with his armed
forces to seize the money, angels on horseback with lightning flashing from
their weapons appeared from heaven, instilling in them great fear and trembling.
11: Then Apollonius fell down half dead in the temple area that was
open to all, stretched out his hands toward heaven, and with tears besought the
Hebrews to pray for him and propitiate the wrath of the heavenly army.
12: For he said that he had committed a sin deserving of death, and
that if he were delivered he would praise the blessedness of the holy place
before all people.
13: Moved by these words, Onias the high priest,
although otherwise he had scruples about doing so, prayed for him lest King
Seleucus suppose that Apollonius had been overcome by human treachery and not by
divine justice.
14: So Apollonius, having been preserved beyond all
expectations, went away to report to the king what had happened to him.
15: When King Seleucus died, his son Antiochus Epiphanes succeeded to
the throne, an arrogant and terrible man,
16: who removed Onias from
the priesthood and appointed Onias's brother Jason as high priest.
17: Jason agreed that if the office were conferred upon him he would
pay the king three thousand six hundred and sixty talents annually.
18: So the king appointed him high priest and ruler of the nation.
19: Jason changed the nation's way of life and altered its form of
government in complete violation of the law,
20: so that not only was
a gymnasium constructed at the very citadel of our native land, but also the
temple service was abolished.
21: The divine justice was angered by
these acts and caused Antiochus himself to make war on them.
22: For
when he was warring against Ptolemy in Egypt, he heard that a rumor of his death
had spread and that the people of Jerusalem had rejoiced greatly. He speedily
marched against them,
23: and after he had plundered them he issued a
decree that if any of them should be found observing the ancestral law they
should die.
24: When, by means of his decrees, he had not been able
in any way to put an end to the people's observance of the law, but saw that all
his threats and punishments were being disregarded,
25: even to the
point that women, because they had circumcised their sons, were thrown headlong
from heights along with their infants, though they had known beforehand that
they would suffer this --
26: when, then, his decrees were despised
by the people, he himself, through torture, tried to compel everyone in the
nation to eat defiling foods and to renounce Judaism.
Chapter 5
1: The tyrant Antiochus, sitting in state with his
counselors on a certain high place, and with his armed soldiers standing about
him,
2: ordered the guards to seize each and every Hebrew and to
compel them to eat pork and food sacrificed to idols.
3: If any were
not willing to eat defiling food, they were to be broken on the wheel and
killed.
4: And when many persons had been rounded up, one man,
Eleazar by name, leader of the flock, was brought before the king. He was a man
of priestly family, learned in the law, advanced in age, and known to many in
the tyrant's court because of his philosophy.
5: When Antiochus saw
him he said,
6: "Before I begin to torture you, old man, I would
advise you to save yourself by eating pork,
7: for I respect your age
and your gray hairs. Although you have had them for so long a time, it does not
seem to me that you are a philosopher when you observe the religion of the Jews.
8: Why, when nature has granted it to us, should you abhor eating the
very excellent meat of this animal?
9: It is senseless not to enjoy
delicious things that are not shameful, and wrong to spurn the gifts of nature.
10: It seems to me that you will do something even more senseless if,
by holding a vain opinion concerning the truth, you continue to despise me to
your own hurt.
11: Will you not awaken from your foolish philosophy,
dispel your futile reasonings, adopt a mind appropriate to your years,
philosophize according to the truth of what is beneficial,
12: and
have compassion on your old age by honoring my humane advice?
13: For
consider this, that if there is some power watching over this religion of yours,
it will excuse you from any transgression that arises out of compulsion."
14: When the tyrant urged him in this fashion to eat meat unlawfully,
Eleazar asked to have a word.
15: When he had received permission to
speak, he began to address the people as follows:
16: "We, O
Antiochus, who have been persuaded to govern our lives by the divine law, think
that there is no compulsion more powerful than our obedience to the law.
17: Therefore we consider that we should not transgress it in any
respect.
18: Even if, as you suppose, our law were not truly divine
and we had wrongly held it to be divine, not even so would it be right for us to
invalidate our reputation for piety.
19: Therefore do not suppose
that it would be a petty sin if we were to eat defiling food;
20: to
transgress the law in matters either small or great is of equal seriousness,
21: for in either case the law is equally despised.
22:
You scoff at our philosophy as though living by it were irrational,
23: but it teaches us self-control, so that we master all pleasures
and desires, and it also trains us in courage, so that we endure any suffering
willingly;
24: it instructs us in justice, so that in all our
dealings we act impartially, and it teaches us piety, so that with proper
reverence we worship the only real God.
25: "Therefore we do not eat
defiling food; for since we believe that the law was established by God, we know
that in the nature of things the Creator of the world in giving us the law has
shown sympathy toward us.
26: He has permitted us to eat what will be
most suitable for our lives, but he has forbidden us to eat meats that would be
contrary to this.
27: It would be tyrannical for you to compel us not
only to transgress the law, but also to eat in such a way that you may deride us
for eating defiling foods, which are most hateful to us.
28: But you
shall have no such occasion to laugh at me,
29: nor will I transgress
the sacred oaths of my ancestors concerning the keeping of the law,
30: not even if you gouge out my eyes and burn my entrails.
31: I am not so old and cowardly as not to be young in reason on
behalf of piety.
32: Therefore get your torture wheels ready and fan
the fire more vehemently!
33: I do not so pity my old age as to break
the ancestral law by my own act.
34: I will not play false to you, O
law that trained me, nor will I renounce you, beloved self-control.
35: I will not put you to shame, philosophical reason, nor will I
reject you, honored priesthood and knowledge of the law.
36: You, O
king, shall not stain the honorable mouth of my old age, nor my long life lived
lawfully.
37: The fathers will receive me as pure, as one who does
not fear your violence even to death.
38: You may tyrannize the
ungodly, but you shall not dominate my religious principles either by word or by
deed."
Chapter 6
1: When Eleazar in this manner had made eloquent
response to the exhortations of the tyrant, the guards who were standing by
dragged him violently to the instruments of torture.
2: First they
stripped the old man, who remained adorned with the gracefulness of his piety.
3: And after they had tied his arms on each side they scourged him,
4: while a herald opposite him cried out, "Obey the king's commands!"
5: But the courageous and noble man, as a true Eleazar, was unmoved,
as though being tortured in a dream;
6: yet while the old man's eyes
were raised to heaven, his flesh was being torn by scourges, his blood flowing,
and his sides were being cut to pieces.
7: And though he fell to the
ground because his body could not endure the agonies, he kept his reason upright
and unswerving.
8: One of the cruel guards rushed at him and began to
kick him in the side to make him get up again after he fell.
9: But
he bore the pains and scorned the punishment and endured the tortures.
10: And like a noble athlete the old man, while being beaten, was
victorious over his torturers;
11: in fact, with his face bathed in
sweat, and gasping heavily for breath, he amazed even his torturers by his
courageous spirit.
12: At that point, partly out of pity for his old
age,
13: partly out of sympathy from their acquaintance with him,
partly out of admiration for his endurance, some of the king's retinue came to
him and said,
14: "Eleazar, why are you so irrationally destroying
yourself through these evil things?
15: We will set before you some
cooked meat; save yourself by pretending to eat pork."
16: But
Eleazar, as though more bitterly tormented by this counsel, cried out:
17: "May we, the children of Abraham, never think so basely that out
of cowardice we feign a role unbecoming to us!
18: For it would be
irrational if we, who have lived in accordance with truth to old age and have
maintained in accordance with law the reputation of such a life, should now
change our course
19: become a pattern of impiety to the young, in
becoming an example of the eating of defiling food.
20: It would be
shameful if we should survive for a little while and during that time be a
laughing stock to all for our cowardice,
21: and if we should be
despised by the tyrant as unmanly, and not protect our divine law even to death.
22: Therefore, O children of Abraham, die nobly for your religion!
23: And you, guards of the tyrant, why do you delay?"
24:
When they saw that he was so courageous in the face of the afflictions, and that
he had not been changed by their compassion, the guards brought him to the fire.
25: There they burned him with maliciously contrived instruments,
threw him down, and poured stinking liquids into his nostrils.
26:
When he was now burned to his very bones and about to expire, he lifted up his
eyes to God and said,
27: "You know, O God, that though I might have
saved myself, I am dying in burning torments for the sake of the law.
28: Be merciful to your people, and let our punishment suffice for
them.
29: Make my blood their purification, and take my life in
exchange for theirs."
30: And after he said this, the holy man died
nobly in his tortures, and by reason he resisted even to the very tortures of
death for the sake of the law.
31: Admittedly, then, devout reason is
sovereign over the emotions.
32: For if the emotions had prevailed
over reason, we would have testified to their domination.
33: But now
that reason has conquered the emotions, we properly attribute to it the power to
govern.
34: And it is right for us to acknowledge the dominance of
reason when it masters even external agonies. It would be ridiculous to deny it.
35: And I have proved not only that reason has mastered agonies, but
also that it masters pleasures and in no respect yields to them.
Chapter 7
1: For like a most skilful pilot, the reason of our
father Eleazar steered the ship of religion over the sea of the emotions,
2: and though buffeted by the stormings of the tyrant and overwhelmed
by the mighty waves of tortures,
3: in no way did he turn the rudder
of religion until he sailed into the haven of immortal victory.
4: No
city besieged with many ingenious war machines has ever held out as did that
most holy man. Although his sacred life was consumed by tortures and racks, he
conquered the besiegers with the shield of his devout reason.
5: For
in setting his mind firm like a jutting cliff, our father Eleazar broke the
maddening waves of the emotions.
6: O priest, worthy of the
priesthood, you neither defiled your sacred teeth nor profaned your stomach,
which had room only for reverence and purity, by eating defiling foods.
7: O man in harmony with the law and philosopher of divine life!
8: Such should be those who are administrators of the law, shielding
it with their own blood and noble sweat in sufferings even to death.
9: You, father, strengthened our loyalty to the law through your
glorious endurance, and you did not abandon the holiness which you praised, but
by your deeds you made your words of divine philosophy credible.
10:
O aged man, more powerful than tortures; O elder, fiercer than fire; O supreme
king over the passions, Eleazar!
11: For just as our father Aaron,
armed with the censer, ran through the multitude of the people and conquered the
fiery angel,
12: so the descendant of Aaron, Eleazar, though being
consumed by the fire, remained unmoved in his reason.
13: Most
amazing, indeed, though he was an old man, his body no longer tense and firm,
his muscles flabby, his sinews feeble, he became young again
14: in
spirit through reason; and by reason like that of Isaac he rendered the
many-headed rack ineffective.
15: O man of blessed age and of
venerable gray hair and of law-abiding life, whom the faithful seal of death has
perfected!
16: If, therefore, because of piety an aged man despised
tortures even to death, most certainly devout reason is governor of the
emotions.
17: Some perhaps might say, "Not every one has full command
of his emotions, because not every one has prudent reason."
18: But
as many as attend to religion with a whole heart, these alone are able to
control the passions of the flesh,
19: since they believe that they,
like our patriarchs Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, do not die to God, but live in
God.
20: No contradiction therefore arises when some persons appear
to be dominated by their emotions because of the weakness of their reason.
21: What person who lives as a philosopher by the whole rule of
philosophy, and trusts in God,
22: and knows that it is blessed to
endure any suffering for the sake of virtue, would not be able to overcome the
emotions through godliness?
23: For only the wise and courageous man
is lord of his emotions.
Chapter 8
1: For this is why even the very young, by
following a philosophy in accordance with devout reason, have prevailed over the
most painful instruments of torture.
2: For when the tyrant was
conspicuously defeated in his first attempt, being unable to compel an aged man
to eat defiling foods, then in violent rage he commanded that others of the
Hebrew captives be brought, and that any who ate defiling food should be freed
after eating, but if any were to refuse, these should be tortured even more
cruelly.
3: When the tyrant had given these orders, seven brothers --
handsome, modest, noble, and accomplished in every way -- were brought before
him along with their aged mother.
4: When the tyrant saw them,
grouped about their mother as if in a chorus, he was pleased with them. And
struck by their appearance and nobility, he smiled at them, and summoned them
nearer and said,
5: "Young men, I admire each and every one of you in
a kindly manner, and greatly respect the beauty and the number of such brothers.
Not only do I advise you not to display the same madness as that of the old man
who has just been tortured, but I also exhort you to yield to me and enjoy my
friendship.
6: Just as I am able to punish those who disobey my
orders, so I can be a benefactor to those who obey me.
7: Trust me,
then, and you will have positions of authority in my government if you will
renounce the ancestral tradition of your national life.
8: And enjoy
your youth by adopting the Greek way of life and by changing your manner of
living.
9: But if by disobedience you rouse my anger, you will compel
me to destroy each and every one of you with dreadful punishments through
tortures.
10: Therefore take pity on yourselves. Even I, your enemy,
have compassion for your youth and handsome appearance.
11: Will you
not consider this, that if you disobey, nothing remains for you but to die on
the rack?"
12: When he had said these things, he ordered the
instruments of torture to be brought forward so as to persuade them out of fear
to eat the defiling food.
13: And when the guards had placed before
them wheels and joint-dislocators, rack and hooks and catapults and caldrons,
braziers and thumbscrews and iron claws and wedges and bellows, the tyrant
resumed speaking:
14: "Be afraid, young fellows, and whatever justice
you revere will be merciful to you when you transgress under compulsion."
15: But when they had heard the inducements and saw the dreadful
devices, not only were they not afraid, but they also opposed the tyrant with
their own philosophy, and by their right reasoning nullified his tyranny.
16: Let us consider, on the other hand, what arguments might have
been used if some of them had been cowardly and unmanly. Would they not have
been these?
17: "O wretches that we are and so senseless! Since the
king has summoned and exhorted us to accept kind treatment if we obey him,
18: why do we take pleasure in vain resolves and venture upon a
disobedience that brings death?
19: O men and brothers, should we not
fear the instruments of torture and consider the threats of torments, and give
up this vain opinion and this arrogance that threatens to destroy us?
20: Let us take pity on our youth and have compassion on our mother's
age;
21: and let us seriously consider that if we disobey we are
dead!
22: Also, divine justice will excuse us for fearing the king
when we are under compulsion.
23: Why do we banish ourselves from
this most pleasant life and deprive ourselves of this delightful world?
24: Let us not struggle against compulsion nor take hollow pride in
being put to the rack.
25: Not even the law itself would arbitrarily
slay us for fearing the instruments of torture.
26: Why does such
contentiousness excite us and such a fatal stubbornness please us, when we can
live in peace if we obey the king?"
27: But the youths, though about
to be tortured, neither said any of these things nor even seriously considered
them.
28: For they were contemptuous of the emotions and sovereign
over agonies,
29: so that as soon as the tyrant had ceased counseling
them to eat defiling food, all with one voice together, as from one mind, said:
Chapter 9
1: "Why do you delay, O tyrant? For we are ready to
die rather than transgress our ancestral commandments;
2: we are
obviously putting our forefathers to shame unless we should practice ready
obedience to the law and to Moses our counselor.
3: Tyrant and
counselor of lawlessness, in your hatred for us do not pity us more than we pity
ourselves.
4: For we consider this pity of yours which insures our
safety through transgression of the law to be more grievous than death itself.
5: You are trying to terrify us by threatening us with death by
torture, as though a short time ago you learned nothing from Eleazar.
6: And if the aged men of the Hebrews because of their religion lived
piously while enduring torture, it would be even more fitting that we young men
should die despising your coercive tortures, which our aged instructor also
overcame.
7: Therefore, tyrant, put us to the test; and if you take
our lives because of our religion, do not suppose that you can injure us by
torturing us.
8: For we, through this severe suffering and endurance,
shall have the prize of virtue and shall be with God, for whom we suffer;
9: but you, because of your bloodthirstiness toward us, will
deservedly undergo from the divine justice eternal torment by fire."
10: When they had said these things the tyrant not only was angry, as
at those who are disobedient, but also was enraged, as at those who are
ungrateful.
11: Then at his command the guards brought forward the
eldest, and having torn off his tunic, they bound his hands and arms with thongs
on each side.
12: When they had worn themselves out beating him with
scourges, without accomplishing anything, they placed him upon the wheel.
13: When the noble youth was stretched out around this, his limbs
were dislocated,
14: and though broken in every member he denounced
the tyrant, saying,
15: "Most abominable tyrant, enemy of heavenly
justice, savage of mind, you are mangling me in this manner, not because I am a
murderer, or as one who acts impiously, but because I protect the divine law."
16: And when the guards said, "Agree to eat so that you may be
released from the tortures,"
17: he replied, "You abominable lackeys,
your wheel is not so powerful as to strangle my reason. Cut my limbs, burn my
flesh, and twist my joints.
18: Through all these tortures I will
convince you that sons of the Hebrews alone are invincible where virtue is
concerned."
19: While he was saying these things, they spread fire
under him, and while fanning the flames they tightened the wheel further.
20: The wheel was completely smeared with blood, and the heap of
coals was being quenched by the drippings of gore, and pieces of flesh were
falling off the axles of the machine.
21: Although the ligaments
joining his bones were already severed, the courageous youth, worthy of Abraham,
did not groan,
22: but as though transformed by fire into immortality
he nobly endured the rackings.
23: "Imitate me, brothers," he said.
"Do not leave your post in my struggle or renounce our courageous brotherhood.
24: Fight the sacred and noble battle for religion. Thereby the just
Providence of our ancestors may become merciful to our nation and take vengeance
on the accursed tyrant."
25: When he had said this, the saintly youth
broke the thread of life.
26: While all were marveling at his
courageous spirit, the guards brought in the next eldest, and after fitting
themselves with iron gauntlets having sharp hooks, they bound him to the torture
machine and catapult.
27: Before torturing him, they inquired if he
were willing to eat, and they heard this noble decision.
28: These
leopard-like beasts tore out his sinews with the iron hands, flayed all his
flesh up to his chin, and tore away his scalp. But he steadfastly endured this
agony and said,
29: "How sweet is any kind of death for the religion
of our fathers!"
30: To the tyrant he said, "Do you not think, you
most savage tyrant, that you are being tortured more than I, as you see the
arrogant design of your tyranny being defeated by our endurance for the sake of
religion?
31: I lighten my pain by the joys that come from virtue,
32: but you suffer torture by the threats that come from impiety. You
will not escape, most abominable tyrant, the judgments of the divine wrath."
Chapter 10
1: When he too had endured a glorious death, the
third was led in, and many repeatedly urged him to save himself by tasting the
meat.
2: But he shouted, "Do you not know that the same father begot
me and those who died, and the same mother bore me, and that I was brought up on
the same teachings?
3: I do not renounce the noble kinship that binds
me to my brothers."
4:
5: Enraged by the man's boldness,
they disjointed his hands and feet with their instruments, dismembering him by
prying his limbs from their sockets,
6: and breaking his fingers and
arms and legs and elbows.
7: Since they were not able in any way to
break his spirit, they abandoned the instruments and scalped him with their
fingernails in a Scythian fashion.
8: They immediately brought him to
the wheel, and while his vertebrae were being dislocated upon it he saw his own
flesh torn all around and drops of blood flowing from his entrails.
9: When he was about to die, he said,
10: "We, most
abominable tyrant, are suffering because of our godly training and virtue,
11: but you, because of your impiety and bloodthirstiness, will
undergo unceasing torments."
12: When he also had died in a manner
worthy of his brothers, they dragged in the fourth, saying,
13: "As
for you, do not give way to the same insanity as your brothers, but obey the
king and save yourself."
14: But he said to them, "You do not have a
fire hot enough to make me play the coward.
15: No, by the blessed
death of my brothers, by the eternal destruction of the tyrant, and by the
everlasting life of the pious, I will not renounce our noble brotherhood.
16: Contrive tortures, tyrant, so that you may learn from them that I
am a brother to those who have just been tortured."
17: When he heard
this, the bloodthirsty, murderous, and utterly abominable Antiochus gave orders
to cut out his tongue.
18: But he said, "Even if you remove my organ
of speech, God hears also those who are mute.
19: See, here is my
tongue; cut it off, for in spite of this you will not make our reason
speechless.
20: Gladly, for the sake of God, we let our bodily
members be mutilated.
21: God will visit you swiftly, for you are
cutting out a tongue that has been melodious with divine hymns."
Chapter 11
1: When this one died also, after being cruelly
tortured, the fifth leaped up, saying,
2: "I will not refuse, tyrant,
to be tortured for the sake of virtue.
3: I have come of my own
accord, so that by murdering me you will incur punishment from the heavenly
justice for even more crimes.
4: Hater of virtue, hater of mankind,
for what act of ours are you destroying us in this way?
5: Is it
because we revere the Creator of all things and live according to his virtuous
law?
6: But these deeds deserve honors, not tortures."
7:
9: While he was saying these things, the guards bound him and dragged
him to the catapult;
10: they tied him to it on his knees, and
fitting iron clamps on them, they twisted his back around the wedge on the
wheel, so that he was completely curled back like a scorpion, and all his
members were disjointed.
11: In this condition, gasping for breath
and in anguish of body,
12: he said, "Tyrant, they are splendid
favors that you grant us against your will, because through these noble
sufferings you give us an opportunity to show our endurance for the law."
13: After he too had died, the sixth, a mere boy, was led in. When
the tyrant inquired whether he was willing to eat and be released, he said,
14: "I am younger in age than my brothers, but I am their equal in
mind.
15: Since to this end we were born and bred, we ought likewise
to die for the same principles.
16: So if you intend to torture me
for not eating defiling foods, go on torturing!"
17: When he had said
this, they led him to the wheel.
18: He was carefully stretched tight
upon it, his back was broken, and he was roasted from underneath.
19:
To his back they applied sharp spits that had been heated in the fire, and
pierced his ribs so that his entrails were burned through.
20: While
being tortured he said, "O contest befitting holiness, in which so many of us
brothers have been summoned to an arena of sufferings for religion, and in which
we have not been defeated!
21: For religious knowledge, O tyrant, is
invincible.
22: I also, equipped with nobility, will die with my
brothers,
23: and I myself will bring a great avenger upon you, you
inventor of tortures and enemy of those who are truly devout.
24: We
six boys have paralyzed your tyranny!
25: Since you have not been
able to persuade us to change our mind or to force us to eat defiling foods, is
not this your downfall?
26: Your fire is cold to us, and the
catapults painless, and your violence powerless.
27: For it is not
the guards of the tyrant but those of the divine law that are set over us;
therefore, unconquered, we hold fast to reason."
Chapter 12
1: When he also, thrown into the caldron, had died
a blessed death, the seventh and youngest of all came forward.
2:
Even though the tyrant had been fearfully reproached by the brothers, he felt
strong compassion for this child when he saw that he was already in fetters. He
summoned him to come nearer and tried to console him, saying,
3: "You
see the result of your brothers' stupidity, for they died in torments because of
their disobedience.
4: You too, if you do not obey, will be miserably
tortured and die before your time,
5: but if you yield to persuasion
you will be my friend and a leader in the government of the kingdom."
6: When he had so pleaded, he sent for the boy's mother to show
compassion on her who had been bereaved of so many sons and to influence her to
persuade the surviving son to obey and save himself.
7: But when his
mother had exhorted him in the Hebrew language, as we shall tell a little later,
8: he said, "Let me loose, let me speak to the king and to all his
friends that are with him."
9: Extremely pleased by the boy's
declaration, they freed him at once.
10: Running to the nearest of
the braziers,
11: he said, "You profane tyrant, most impious of all
the wicked, since you have received good things and also your kingdom from God,
were you not ashamed to murder his servants and torture on the wheel those who
practice religion?
12: Because of this, justice has laid up for you
intense and eternal fire and tortures, and these throughout all time will never
let you go.
13: As a man, were you not ashamed, you most savage
beast, to cut out the tongues of men who have feelings like yours and are made
of the same elements as you, and to maltreat and torture them in this way?
14: Surely they by dying nobly fulfilled their service to God, but
you will wail bitterly for having slain without cause the contestants for
virtue."
15: Then because he too was about to die, he said,
16: "I do not desert the excellent example of my brothers,
17: and I call on the God of our fathers to be merciful to our
nation;
18: but on you he will take vengeance both in this present
life and when you are dead."
19: After he had uttered these
imprecations, he flung himself into the braziers and so ended his life.
Chapter 13
1: Since, then, the seven brothers despised
sufferings even unto death, everyone must concede that devout reason is
sovereign over the emotions.
2: For if they had been slaves to their
emotions and had eaten defiling food, we would say that they had been conquered
by these emotions.
3: But in fact it was not so. Instead, by reason,
which is praised before God, they prevailed over their emotions.
4:
The supremacy of the mind over these cannot be overlooked, for the brothers
mastered both emotions and pains.
5: How then can one fail to confess
the sovereignty of right reason over emotion in those who were not turned back
by fiery agonies?
6: For just as towers jutting out over harbors hold
back the threatening waves and make it calm for those who sail into the inner
basin,
7: so the seven-towered right reason of the youths, by
fortifying the harbor of religion, conquered the tempest of the emotions.
8: For they constituted a holy chorus of religion and encouraged one
another, saying,
9: "Brothers, let us die like brothers for the sake
of the law; let us imitate the three youths in Assyria who despised the same
ordeal of the furnace.
10: Let us not be cowardly in the
demonstration of our piety."
11: While one said, "Courage, brother,"
another said, "Bear up nobly,"
12: and another reminded them,
"Remember whence you came, and the father by whose hand Isaac would have
submitted to being slain for the sake of religion."
13: Each of them
and all of them together looking at one another, cheerful and undaunted, said,
"Let us with all our hearts consecrate ourselves to God, who gave us our lives,
and let us use our bodies as a bulwark for the law.
14: Let us not
fear him who thinks he is killing us,
15: for great is the struggle
of the soul and the danger of eternal torment lying before those who transgress
the commandment of God.
16: Therefore let us put on the full armor of
self-control, which is divine reason.
17: For if we so die, Abraham
and Isaac and Jacob will welcome us, and all the fathers will praise us."
18: Those who were left behind said to each of the brothers who were
being dragged away, "Do not put us to shame, brother, or betray the brothers who
have died before us."
19: You are not ignorant of the affection of
brotherhood, which the divine and all-wise Providence has bequeathed through the
fathers to their descendants and which was implanted in the mother's womb.
20: There each of the brothers dwelt the same length of time and was
shaped during the same period of time; and growing from the same blood and
through the same life, they were brought to the light of day.
21:
When they were born after an equal time of gestation, they drank milk from the
same fountains. For such embraces brotherly-loving souls are nourished;
22: and they grow stronger from this common nurture and daily
companionship, and from both general education and our discipline in the law of
God.
23: Therefore, when sympathy and brotherly affection had been so
established, the brothers were the more sympathetic to one another.
24: Since they had been educated by the same law and trained in the
same virtues and brought up in right living, they loved one another all the
more.
25: A common zeal for nobility expanded their goodwill and
harmony toward one another,
26: because, with the aid of their
religion, they rendered their brotherly love more fervent.
27: But
although nature and companionship and virtuous habits had augmented the
affection of brotherhood, those who were left endured for the sake of religion,
while watching their brothers being maltreated and tortured to death.
Chapter 14
1: Furthermore, they encouraged them to face the
torture, so that they not only despised their agonies, but also mastered the
emotions of brotherly love.
2: O reason, more royal than kings and
freer than the free!
3: O sacred and harmonious concord of the seven
brothers on behalf of religion!
4: None of the seven youths proved
coward or shrank from death,
5: but all of them, as though running
the course toward immortality, hastened to death by torture.
6: Just
as the hands and feet are moved in harmony with the guidance of the mind, so
those holy youths, as though moved by an immortal spirit of devotion, agreed to
go to death for its sake.
7: O most holy seven, brothers in harmony!
For just as the seven days of creation move in choral dance around religion,
8: so these youths, forming a chorus, encircled the sevenfold fear of
tortures and dissolved it.
9: Even now, we ourselves shudder as we
hear of the tribulations of these young men; they not only saw what was
happening, yes, not only heard the direct word of threat, but also bore the
sufferings patiently, and in agonies of fire at that.
10: What could
be more excruciatingly painful than this? For the power of fire is intense and
swift, and it consumed their bodies quickly.
11: Do not consider it
amazing that reason had full command over these men in their tortures, since the
mind of woman despised even more diverse agonies,
12: for the mother
of the seven young men bore up under the rackings of each one of her children.
13: Observe how complex is a mother's love for her children, which
draws everything toward an emotion felt in her inmost parts.
14: Even
unreasoning animals, like mankind, have a sympathy and parental love for their
offspring.
15: For example, among birds, the ones that are tame
protect their young by building on the housetops,
16: and the others,
by building in precipitous chasms and in holes and tops of trees, hatch the
nestlings and ward off the intruder.
17: If they are not able to keep
him away, they do what they can to help their young by flying in circles around
them in the anguish of love, warning them with their own calls.
18:
And why is it necessary to demonstrate sympathy for children by the example of
unreasoning animals,
19: since even bees at the time for making
honeycombs defend themselves against intruders as though with an iron dart sting
those who approach their hive and defend it even to the death?
20:
But sympathy for her children did not sway the mother of the young men; she was
of the same mind as Abraham.
Chapter 15
1: O reason of the children, tyrant over the
emotions! O religion, more desirable to the mother than her children!
2: Two courses were open to this mother, that of religion, and that
of preserving her seven sons for a time, as the tyrant had promised.
3: She loved religion more, religion that preserves them for eternal
life according to God's promise.
4: In what manner might I express
the emotions of parents who love their children? We impress upon the character
of a small child a wondrous likeness both of mind and of form. Especially is
this true of mothers, who because of their birthpangs have a deeper sympathy
toward their offspring than do the fathers.
5: Considering that
mothers are the weaker sex and give birth to many, they are more devoted to
their children.
6: The mother of the seven boys, more than any other
mother, loved her children. In seven pregnancies she had implanted in herself
tender love toward them,
7: and because of the many pains she
suffered with each of them she had sympathy for them;
8: yet because
of the fear of God she disdained the temporary safety of her children.
9: Not only so, but also because of the nobility of her sons and
their ready obedience to the law she felt a greater tenderness toward them.
10: For they were righteous and self-controlled and brave and
magnanimous, and loved their brothers and their mother, so that they obeyed her
even to death in keeping the ordinances.
11: Nevertheless, though so
many factors influenced the mother to suffer with them out of love for her
children, in the case of none of them were the various tortures strong enough to
pervert her reason.
12: Instead, the mother urged them on, each child
singly and all together, to death for the sake of religion.
13: O
sacred nature and affection of parental love, yearning of parents toward
offspring, nurture and indomitable suffering by mothers!
14: This
mother, who saw them tortured and burned one by one, because of religion did not
change her attitude.
15: She watched the flesh of her children
consumed by fire, their toes and fingers scattered on the ground, and the flesh
of the head to the chin exposed like masks.
16: O mother, tried now
by more bitter pains than even the birth-pangs you suffered for them!
17: O woman, who alone gave birth to such complete devotion!
18: When the first-born breathed his last it did not turn you aside,
nor when the second in torments looked at you piteously nor when the third
expired;
19: nor did you weep when you looked at the eyes of each one
in his tortures gazing boldly at the same agonies, and saw in their nostrils the
signs of the approach of death.
20: When you saw the flesh of
children burned upon the flesh of other children, severed hands upon hands,
scalped heads upon heads, and corpses fallen on other corpses and when you saw
the place filled with many spectators of the torturings, you did not shed tears.
21: Neither the melodies of sirens nor the songs of swans attract the
attention of their hearers as did the voices of the children in torture calling
to their mother.
22: How great and how many torments the mother then
suffered as her sons were tortured on the wheel and with the hot irons!
23: But devout reason, giving her heart a man's courage in the very
midst of her emotions, strengthened her to disregard her temporal love for her
children.
24: Although she witnessed the destruction of seven
children and the ingenious and various rackings, this noble mother disregarded
all these because of faith in God.
25: For as in the council chamber
of her own soul she saw mighty advocates -- nature, family, parental love, and
the rackings of her children --
26: this mother held two ballots, one
bearing death and the other deliverance for her children.
27: She did
not approve the deliverance which would preserve the seven sons for a short
time,
28: but as the daughter of God-fearing Abraham she remembered
his fortitude.
29: O mother of the nation, vindicator of the law and
champion of religion, who carried away the prize of the contest in your heart!
30: O more noble than males in steadfastness, and more manly than men
in endurance!
31: Just as Noah's ark, carrying the world in the
universal flood, stoutly endured the waves,
32: so you, O guardian of
the law, overwhelmed from every side by the flood of your emotions and the
violent winds, the torture of your sons, endured nobly and withstood the wintry
storms that assail religion.
Chapter 16
1: If, then, a woman, advanced in years and mother
of seven sons, endured seeing her children tortured to death, it must be
admitted that devout reason is sovereign over the emotions.
2: Thus I
have demonstrated not only that men have ruled over the emotions, but also that
a woman has despised the fiercest tortures.
3: The lions surrounding
Daniel were not so savage, nor was the raging fiery furnace of Mishael so
intensely hot, as was her innate parental love, inflamed as she saw her seven
sons tortured in such varied ways.
4: But the mother quenched so many
and such great emotions by devout reason.
5: Consider this also. If
this woman, though a mother, had been fainthearted, she would have mourned over
them and perhaps spoken as follows:
6: "O how wretched am I and many
times unhappy! After bearing seven children, I am now the mother of none!
7: O seven childbirths all in vain, seven profitless pregnancies,
fruitless nurturings and wretched nursings!
8: In vain, my sons, I
endured many birth-pangs for you, and the more grievous anxieties of your
upbringing.
9: Alas for my children, some unmarried, others married
and without offspring. I shall not see your children or have the happiness of
being called grandmother.
10: Alas, I who had so many and beautiful
children am a widow and alone, with many sorrows.
11: Nor when I die,
shall I have any of my sons to bury me."
12: Yet the sacred and
God-fearing mother did not wail with such a lament for any of them, nor did she
dissuade any of them from dying, nor did she grieve as they were dying,
13: but, as though having a mind like adamant and giving rebirth for
immortality to the whole number of her sons, she implored them and urged them on
to death for the sake of religion.
14: O mother, soldier of God in
the cause of religion, elder and woman! By steadfastness you have conquered even
a tyrant, and in word and deed you have proved more powerful than a man.
15: For when you and your sons were arrested together, you stood and
watched Eleazar being tortured, and said to your sons in the Hebrew language,
16: "My sons, noble is the contest to which you are called to bear
witness for the nation. Fight zealously for our ancestral law.
17:
For it would be shameful if, while an aged man endures such agonies for the sake
of religion, you young men were to be terrified by tortures.
18:
Remember that it is through God that you have had a share in the world and have
enjoyed life,
19: and therefore you ought to endure any suffering for
the sake of God.
20: For his sake also our father Abraham was zealous
to sacrifice his son Isaac, the ancestor of our nation; and when Isaac saw his
father's hand wielding a sword and descending upon him, he did not cower.
21: And Daniel the righteous was thrown to the lions, and Hananiah,
Azariah, and Mishael were hurled into the fiery furnace and endured it for the
sake of God.
22: You too must have the same faith in God and not be
grieved.
23: It is unreasonable for people who have religious
knowledge not to withstand pain."
24: By these words the mother of
the seven encouraged and persuaded each of her sons to die rather than violate
God's commandment.
25: They knew also that those who die for the sake
of God live in God, as do Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and all the patriarchs.
Chapter 17
1: Some of the guards said that when she also was
about to be seized and put to death she threw herself into the flames so that no
one might touch her body.
2: O mother, who with your seven sons
nullified the violence of the tyrant, frustrated his evil designs, and showed
the courage of your faith!
3: Nobly set like a roof on the pillars of
your sons, you held firm and unswerving against the earthquake of the tortures.
4: Take courage, therefore, O holy-minded mother, maintaining firm an
enduring hope in God.
5: The moon in heaven, with the stars, does not
stand so august as you, who, after lighting the way of your star-like seven sons
to piety, stand in honor before God and are firmly set in heaven with them.
6: For your children were true descendants of father Abraham.
7: If it were possible for us to paint the history of your piety as
an artist might, would not those who first beheld it have shuddered as they saw
the mother of the seven children enduring their varied tortures to death for the
sake of religion?
8: Indeed it would be proper to inscribe upon their
tomb these words as a reminder to the people of our nation:
9: "Here
lie buried an aged priest and an aged woman and seven sons, because of the
violence of the tyrant who wished to destroy the way of life of the Hebrews.
10: They vindicated their nation, looking to God and enduring torture
even to death."
11: Truly the contest in which they were engaged was
divine,
12: for on that day virtue gave the awards and tested them
for their endurance. The prize was immortality in endless life.
13:
Eleazar was the first contestant, the mother of the seven sons entered the
competition, and the brothers contended.
14: The tyrant was the
antagonist, and the world and the human race were the spectators.
15:
Reverence for God was victor and gave the crown to its own athletes.
16: Who did not admire the athletes of the divine legislation? Who
were not amazed?
17: The tyrant himself and all his council marveled
at their endurance,
18: because of which they now stand before the
divine throne and live through blessed eternity.
19: For Moses says,
"All who are consecrated are under your hands."
20: These, then, who
have been consecrated for the sake of God, are honored, not only with this
honor, but also by the fact that because of them our enemies did not rule over
our nation,
21: the tyrant was punished, and the homeland purified --
they having become, as it were, a ransom for the sin of our nation.
22: And through the blood of those devout ones and their death as an
expiation, divine Providence preserved Israel that previously had been
afflicted.
23: For the tyrant Antiochus, when he saw the courage of
their virtue and their endurance under the tortures, proclaimed them to his
soldiers as an example for their own endurance,
24: and this made
them brave and courageous for infantry battle and siege, and he ravaged and
conquered all his enemies.
Chapter 18
1: O Israelite children, offspring of the seed of
Abraham, obey this law and exercise piety in every way,
2: knowing
that devout reason is master of all emotions, not only of sufferings from
within, but also of those from without.
3: Therefore those who gave
over their bodies in suffering for the sake of religion were not only admired by
men, but also were deemed worthy to share in a divine inheritance.
4:
Because of them the nation gained peace, and by reviving observance of the law
in the homeland they ravaged the enemy.
5: The tyrant Antiochus was
both punished on earth and is being chastised after his death. Since in no way
whatever was he able to compel the Israelites to become pagans and to abandon
their ancestral customs, he left Jerusalem and marched against the Persians.
6: The mother of seven sons expressed also these principles to her
children:
7: "I was a pure virgin and did not go outside my father's
house; but I guarded the rib from which woman was made.
8: No seducer
corrupted me on a desert plain, nor did the destroyer, the deceitful serpent,
defile the purity of my virginity.
9: In the time of my maturity I
remained with my husband, and when these sons had grown up their father died. A
happy man was he, who lived out his life with good children, and did not have
the grief of bereavement.
10: While he was still with you, he taught
you the law and the prophets.
11: He read to you about Abel slain by
Cain, and Isaac who was offered as a burnt offering, and of Joseph in prison.
12: He told you of the zeal of Phineas, and he taught you about
Hananiah, Azariah, and Mishael in the fire.
13: He praised Daniel in
the den of the lions and blessed him.
14: He reminded you of the
scripture of Isaiah, which says, `Even though you go through the fire, the flame
shall not consume you.'
15: He sang to you songs of the psalmist
David, who said, `Many are the afflictions of the righteous.'
16: He
recounted to you Solomon's proverb, `There is a tree of life for those who do
his will.'
17: He confirmed the saying of Ezekiel, `Shall these dry
bones live?'
18: For he did not forget to teach you the song that
Moses taught, which says,
19: `I kill and I make alive: this is your
life and the length of your days.'"
20: O bitter was that day -- and
yet not bitter -- when that bitter tyrant of the Greeks quenched fire with fire
in his cruel caldrons, and in his burning rage brought those seven sons of the
daughter of Abraham to the catapult and back again to more tortures,
21: pierced the pupils of their eyes and cut out their tongues, and
put them to death with various tortures.
22: For these crimes divine
justice pursued and will pursue the accursed tyrant.
23: But the sons
of Abraham with their victorious mother are gathered together into the chorus of
the fathers, and have received pure and immortal souls from God,
24:
to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.