Those who might be expected to be weak show themselves strong in holding fast to the teachings of the Torah. Vengeance and vindication belong to God alone-not the earthly king, Antiochus.Ģ Maccabees, like 4 Maccabees, shows that eusebes logismos, “reason adhering to the law,” triumphs over human emotions (see 4 Macc 1:16–19). Which sins merit martyrdom is a question left unanswered. Resurrection cancels fears of earthly death for faithful Jews.
Death has lost its power in the face of obedience to the laws of the ancestors and belief in God’s mercy and resurrection of the dead. With only this brief statement the mother’s death is recorded.Īntiochus’s brutal efforts are completely ineffective. “Last of all, the mother died, after her sons” (7:41). “So he died in his integrity, putting his whole trust in the Lord” (7:40). Antiochus falls into a rage and treats the youngest brother worse than the others (7:39). Repeating much of what his brothers said as they faced their deaths, the seventh brother claims that the king will not go unpunished, that suffering is discipline for human sinfulness, and that reconciliation with God is at hand (7:31–36). While his mother was still speaking, her youngest says to the king, “What are you waiting for? I will not obey the king’s command, but I obey the command of the law that was given to our ancestors through Moses” (7:30). Three matters in her words merit notice: (1) the mother speaks only to her family members, never the king (2) the mother remarks in passing that she had nursed her son for three years (3) God creates out of nothing, which may reflect the philosophical argument creatio ex nihilo, or more likely, with 7:11, 22–23, belief that life comes from the Creator of the world. The mother leans close to her remaining child and, speaking only to him, urges him to take pity on her and accept death (7:27–29). When the youngest will not listen, Antiochus calls the mother and urges her to persuade her son (7:25). What mother, beholding the brutal deaths of six sons, could speak such words?Īntiochus interprets her words, which he cannot understand since they are not in his language, as reproach, and so appeals to her seventh and youngest son that he will make him rich and will befriend him if he will but turn away from the ways of his ancestors (7:24). Addressing these sons-not Antiochus-she claims not to comprehend how life came to them in her womb, even as she expresses confidence in the Creator, who “will in his mercy give life and breath back to you again, since you now forget yourselves for the sake of his laws” (7:23). “Filled with a noble spirit, she reinforced her woman’s reasoning with a man’s courage” (7:21). Because her hope was in the Lord, she had encouraged each of her sons, in Aramaic or Hebrew, to persevere. God, not the gentile king, is in charge of the happenings.Īttention then turns to the mother (7:20–23), “especially admirable and worthy of honorable memory” (7:20). The six brothers’ exchanges with Antiochus IV, the king (7:2–19), build a coherent argument, which is arranged chiastically (three elements and their reverse): (A) Jewish refusal of the king’s command results in suffering and death (B) Jewish hope in eternal life is born of serving the King (C) Jewish belief in bodily resurrection makes mortal life meaningless (C') for the gentile king there will be no resurrection to life (B') for this mortal king and his descendants there is no hope (A') the king’s “fight against God” (7:19) will not go unpunished. The first six sons each defy the king and are cruelly tortured. The 2 Maccabees 7 version of the martyr family story opens with the arrest of the seven brothers and their mother, who are beaten in an effort to force them to eat swine’s flesh (prohibited by Lev 11:7–8). 7 since the king seems so thoroughly on his own turf. No scene other than Jerusalem and Judea is ever established in the narrative, yet Antioch is a possible setting for chap. Exactly where the martyrdoms in 2 Maccabees take place is debated. Her family story appears here in 7:1–42 and in a considerably expanded version in 4 Maccabees. The last martyr is the unnamed mother who dies after witnessing each of her seven sons cruelly tortured. The martyrology in 2 Macc 6:7–7:42 (the first of its kind in the Bible) lists stories of those who choose death over apostasy. "the written Torah." The Bible the Pentateuch Tanakh (the Pentateuch, Prophets and Hagiographia) Torah), and rules that the Jews who will not adopt Greek customs are to die (2 Macc 6:9). the Seleucid king Antiochus IV outlaws temple worship, observance of Sabbaths and holy days, circumcision, and the keeping of ( Torah she-bi-khetav: Lit. According to 2 Maccabees, in the second century B.C.E.