Erev
Chanukah One: 1 Candle (Festival of Lights).
Erev
Chanukah 1:
Numbers
7:1-17.
1 \Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. Offerings of the Leaders. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
It happened on the day that Moses
had finished setting up the tabernacle, and had anointed it and sanctified it,
with all its furniture, and the altar with all its vessels, and had anointed
and sanctified them;
2 that the princes of Israel, the heads of
their fathers’ houses, offered. These were the princes of the tribes. These are
they who were over those who were numbered:
3 and they brought their offering before
YAHWEH, six covered wagons, and twelve oxen; a wagon for every two of the
princes, and for each one an ox: and they presented them before the tabernacle.
4 YAHWEH spoke to Moses, saying,
5 “Accept these from them, that they may be
used in doing the service of the Tent of Meeting; and you shall give them to
the Levites, to every man according to his service.”
6 Moses took the wagons and the oxen, and gave
them to the Levites.
7 He gave two wagons and four oxen to the sons
of Gershon, according to their service:
8 and he gave four wagons and eight oxen to the
sons of Merari, according to their service, under the direction of Ithamar the
son of Aaron the priest.
9 But to the sons of Kohath he gave none,
because the service of the sanctuary belonged to them; they carried it on their
shoulders.
10 The princes gave offerings for the
dedication of the altar in the day that it was anointed, even the princes gave
their offerings before the altar.
11 YAHWEH said to Moses, “They shall offer
their offering, each prince on his day, for the dedication of the altar.”
12 He who offered his offering the first day
was Nahshon the son of Amminadab, of the tribe of Judah,
13 and his offering was: one silver platter,
the weight of which was one hundred thirty shekels, one silver bowl of seventy
shekels, after the shekel of the sanctuary; both of them full of fine flour
mixed with oil for a meal offering;
14 one golden ladle of ten shekels, full of
incense;
15 one young bull, one ram, one male lamb a
year old, for a burnt offering;
16 one male goat for a sin offering;
17 and for the sacrifice of peace offerings,
two head of cattle, five rams, five male goats, and five male lambs a year old.
This was the offering of Nahshon the son of Amminadab.
BOOKS OF MACCABEES!. .
1 MACCABEES!:
(1 Maccabees 1:1-63
NAB-A) :
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. Alexander the Great. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
After Alexander the
Macedonian, Philip's son, who came from the land of Kittim, had defeated
Darius, king of the Persians and Medes, he became king in his place, having
first ruled in Greece.
He fought many campaigns, captured fortresses, and put
kings to death. He advanced to the ends of the
earth, gathering plunder from many nations; the earth fell silent before him,
and his heart became proud and arrogant. He
collected a very strong army and conquered provinces, nations, and rulers, and
they became his tributaries. But after all this
he took to his bed, realizing that he was going to die. He therefore summoned his officers, the nobles, who had been
brought up with him from his youth, to divide his kingdom among them while he
was still alive. Alexander had reigned twelve
years when he died. So his officers took over
his kingdom, each in his own territory, and
after his death they all put on royal crowns, and so did their sons after them
for many years, causing much distress over the earth.
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. Antiochus Epiphanes and Renegade Jews. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
There sprang from these
a sinful offshoot, Antiochus Epiphanes, son of King Antiochus, once a hostage
at Rome. He became king in the year one hundred and thirty-seven of the kingdom
of the Greeks. In those days there appeared in Israel men who were breakers
of the Torah, and they seduced many people, saying: "Let us go and make an
alliance with the Gentiles all around us; since we separated from them, many
evils have come upon us." The proposal was
agreeable; some from among the people promptly
went to the king, and he authorized them to introduce the way of living of the
Gentiles. Thereupon they built a gymnasium in
Jerusalem according to the Gentile custom. They
covered over the mark of their circumcision and abandoned the holy covenant;
they allied themselves with the Gentiles and sold themselves to wrongdoing.
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. Antiochus in Egypt. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
When his kingdom seemed
secure, Antiochus proposed to become king of Egypt, so as to rule over both
kingdoms. He invaded Egypt with a strong force, with chariots and
elephants, and with a large fleet, to make war
on Ptolemy, king of Egypt. Ptolemy was frightened at his presence and fled,
leaving many casualties. The fortified cities
in the land of Egypt were captured, and Antiochus plundered the land of Egypt.
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. Persecution of the Jews. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
After Antiochus had
defeated Egypt in the year one hundred and forty-three, he returned and went up
to Israel and to Jerusalem with a strong force. He insolently invaded the
sanctuary and took away the golden altar, the lampstand for the light with all
its fixtures, the offering table, the cups and
the bowls, the golden censers, the curtain, the crowns, and the golden ornament
on the facade of the temple. He stripped off everything, and took away the gold and silver and the precious vessels;
he also took all the hidden treasures he could find. Taking all this, he went back to his own country, after he
had spoken with great arrogance and shed much blood. And there was great mourning for Israel, in every place
where they dwelt, and the rulers and the elders
groaned. Virgins and young men languished, and the beauty of the women was
disfigured. Every bridegroom took up
lamentation, she who sat in the bridal chamber mourned, And the land was shaken on account of its inhabitants, and
all the house of Jacob was covered with shame.
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. The Occupation of Jerusalem. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
Two years later, the
king sent the Mysian commander to the cities of Judah, and he came to Jerusalem
with a strong force. He spoke to them deceitfully in peaceful terms, and won
their trust. Then he attacked the city suddenly, in a great onslaught, and
destroyed many of the people in Israel. He
plundered the city and set fire to it, demolished its houses and its
surrounding walls, took captive the women and
children, and seized the cattle. Then they
built up the City of David with a high, massive wall and strong towers, and it
became their citadel. There they installed a
sinful race, perverse men, who fortified themselves inside it, storing up weapons and provisions, and depositing there the
plunder they had collected from Jerusalem. And they became a great threat.
The citadel became an ambush against the sanctuary,
and a wicked adversary to Israel at all times. And
they shed innocent blood around the sanctuary; they defiled the sanctuary.
Because of them the inhabitants of Jerusalem fled
away, and she became the abode of strangers. She became a stranger to her own
offspring, and her children forsook her. Her
sanctuary was as desolate as a wilderness; her feasts were turned into
mourning, Her sabbaths to shame, her honor to contempt. Her dishonor was as great as her glory had been, and her
exalation was turned into mourning.
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. Installation of Gentile Cults. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
Then the king wrote to
his whole kingdom that all should be one people, each abandoning his
particular customs. All the Gentiles conformed to the command of the king,
and many Israelites were in favor of his religion;
they sacrificed to idols and profaned the sabbath. The king sent messengers with letters to Jerusalem and to
the cities of Judah, ordering them to follow customs foreign to their land;
to prohibit holocausts, sacrifices, and libations in
the sanctuary, to profane the sabbaths and feast days, to desecrate the sanctuary and the sacred ministers, to build pagan altars and temples and shrines, to sacrifice
swine and unclean animals, to leave their sons
uncircumcised, and to let themselves be defiled with every kind of impurity and
abomination, so that they might forget the
Torah and change all their observances. Whoever
refused to act according to the command of the king should be put to death.
Such were the orders he published throughout his
kingdom. He appointed inspectors over all the people, and he ordered the cities
of Judah to offer sacrifices, each city in turn. Many of the people, those who abandoned the Torah, joined them and
committed evil in the land. Israel was driven
into hiding, wherever places of refuge could be found. On the fifteenth day of the month Chislev, in the year one
hundred and forty-five, the king erected the horrible abomination upon the
altar of holocausts, and in the surrounding cities of Judah they built pagan
altars. They also burnt incense at the doors of
houses and in the streets. Any scrolls of the
Torah which they found they tore up and burnt. Whoever
was found with a scroll of the covenant, and whoever observed the Torah, was
condemned to death by royal decree. So they
used their power against Israel, against those who were caught, each month, in
the cities. On the twenty-fifth day of each
month they sacrificed on the altar erected over the altar of holocausts.
Women who had had their children circumcised were put
to death, in keeping with the decree, with the
babies hung from their necks; their families also and those who had circumcised
them were killed. But many in Israel were
determined and resolved in their hearts not to eat anything unclean; they preferred to die rather than to be defiled with unclean
food or to profane the holy covenant; and they did die. Terrible affliction was
upon Israel.
! ! End of
The Chapter.
\Eng:[:phone arpa
SAMPA][_:<3333,0>]\
(1 Maccabees 2:1-70 NAB-A) :
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. Mattathias and His Sons. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
In those days
Mattathias, son of John, son of Simeon, a priest of the family of Joarib, left
Jerusalem and settled in Modein. He had five sons: John, who was
called Gaddi; Simon, who was called Thassi;
Judas, who was called Maccabeus; Eleazar, who was called Avaran; and Jonathan, who was called
Apphus. When he saw the sacrileges that were
being committed in Judah and in Jerusalem, he
said: "Woe is me! Why was I born to see the ruin of my people and the ruin
of the holy city, and to sit idle while it is given into the hands of enemies,
and the sanctuary into the hands of strangers? "Her
temple has become like a man disgraced, her
glorious ornaments have been carried off as spoils, Her infants have been
murdered in her streets, her young men by the sword of the enemy. What nation has not taken its share of her realm, and laid
its hand on her possessions? All her adornment
has been taken away. From being free, she has become a slave. We see our sanctuary and our beauty and our glory laid
waste, And the Gentiles have defiled them! Why
are we still alive?" Then Mattathias and
his sons tore their garments, put on sackcloth, and mourned bitterly.
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. Pagan Worship Refused. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
The officers of the
king in charge of enforcing the apostasy came to the city of Modein to organize
the sacrifices. Many of Israel joined them, but Mattathias and his sons
gathered in a group apart. Then the officers of
the king addressed Mattathias: "You are a leader, an honorable and great
man in this city, supported by sons and kinsmen. Come now, be the first to obey the king's command, as all the Gentiles
and the men of Judah and those who are left in Jerusalem have done. Then you
and your sons shall be numbered among the King's Friends, and shall be enriched
with silver and gold and many gifts." But
Mattathias answered in a loud voice: "Although all the Gentiles in the
king's realm obey him, so that each forsakes the religion of his fathers and
consents to the king's orders, yet I and my
sons and my kinsmen will keep to the covenant of our fathers. Elohim forbid that we should forsake the Torah and the
commandments. We will not obey the words of the
king nor depart from our religion in the slightest degree." As he finished saying these words, a certain Jew came
forward in the sight of all to offer sacrifice on the altar in Modein according
to the king's order. When Mattathias saw him,
he was filled with zeal; his heart was moved and his just fury was aroused; he
sprang forward and killed him upon the altar. At
the same time, he also killed the messenger of the king who was forcing them to
sacrifice, and he tore down the altar. Thus he
showed his zeal for the Torah, just as Phinehas did with Zimri, son of Salu.
Then Mattathias went through the city shouting,
"Let everyone who is zealous for the Torah and who stands by the covenant
follow after me!" Thereupon he fled to the
mountains with his sons, leaving behind in the city all their possessions.
Many who sought to live according to righteousness and
religious custom went out into the desert to settle there, they and their sons, their wives and their cattle, because
misfortunes pressed so hard on them. It was
reported to the officers and soldiers of the king who were in the City of
David, in Jerusalem, that certain men who had flouted the king's order had gone
out to the hiding places in the desert. Many
hurried out after them, and having caught up with them, camped opposite and
prepared to attack them on the sabbath. "Enough
of this!" the pursuers said to them. "Come out and obey the king's
command, and your lives_ will be spared." But they
replied, "We will not come out, nor will we obey the king's command to
profane the sabbath." Then the enemy
attacked them at once; but they did not
retaliate; they neither threw stones, nor blocked up their own hiding places.
They said, "Let us all die without reproach;
heaven and earth are our witnesses that you destroy us unjustly." So the officers and soldiers attacked them on the sabbath,
and they died with their wives, their children and their cattle, to the number
of a thousand persons. When Mattathias and his
friends heard of it, they mourned deeply for them. "If we all do as our kinsmen have done," they said
to one another, "and do not fight against the Gentiles for our lives_ and our traditions, they will soon destroy us from the
earth." On that day they came to this decision: "Let us fight
against anyone who attacks us on the sabbath, so that we may not all die as our
kinsmen died in the hiding places."
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. Counter-Attack. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
Then they were joined
by a group of Hasideans, valiant Israelites, all of them devout followers of
the Torah. And all those who were fleeing from the disaster joined them
and supported them. They gathered an army and
struck down sinners in their anger and Torahbreakers in their wrath, and the
survivors fled to the Gentiles for safety. Mattathias
and his friends went about and tore down the pagan altars; they also enforced circumcision for any uncircumcised boys
whom they found in the territory of Israel. They
put to flight the arrogant, and the work prospered in their hands. They saved the Torah from the hands of the Gentiles and of
the kings and did not let the sinner triumph.
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. The Last Words of Mattathias. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
When the time came for
Mattathias to die, he said to his sons: "Arrogance and scorn have now
grown strong; it is a time of disaster and violent anger. Therefore,
my sons, be zealous for the Torah and give your lives_ for the covenant of our fathers. "Remember the deeds
that our fathers did in their times, and you shall win great glory and an
everlasting name. Was not Abraham found
faithful in trial, and it was reputed to him as uprightness? Joseph, when in distress, kept the commandment, and he
became master of Egypt. Phinehas our father,
for his burning zeal, received the covenant of an everlasting priesthood.
Joshua, for executing his commission, became a judge
in Israel. Caleb, for bearing witness before
the assembly, received an inheritance in the land. David, for his piety, received as a heritage a throne of
everlasting royalty. Elijah, for his burning
zeal for the Torah, was taken up to heaven. Hananiah,
Azariah and Mishael, for their faith, were saved from the fire. Daniel, for his innocence, was delivered from the jaws of
lions. And so, consider this from generation to
generation, that none who hope in him shall fail in strength. Do not fear the words of a sinful man, for his glory ends in
corruption and worms. Today he is exalted, and
tomorrow he is not to be found, because he has returned to his dust, and his
schemes have perished. Children! be courageous
and strong in keeping the Torah, for by it you shall be glorified. "Here is your brother Simeon who I know is a wise man;
listen to him always, and he will be a father to you. And Judas Maccabeus, a warrior from his youth, shall be the
leader of your army and direct the war against the nations. You shall also gather about you all who observe the Torah,
and you shall avenge the wrongs of your people. Pay
back the Gentiles what they deserve, and observe the precepts of the
Torah." Then he blessed them, and he was
united with his fathers. He died in the year
one hundred and forty-six, and was buried in the tombs of his fathers in
Modein, and all Israel mourned him greatly.
! ! End of
The Chapter.
\Eng:[:phone arpa
SAMPA][_:<3333,0>]\
(1 Maccabees 3:1-59 NAB-A) :
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. The Early Victories of Judas. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
Then his son Judas, who
was called Maccabeus, took his place. All his brothers and all who had
joined his father supported him, and they carried on Israel's war joyfully.
He spread abroad the glory of his people, and put on
his breastplate like a giant. He armed himself with weapons of war; he planned
battles and protected the camp with his sword. In
his actions he was like a lion, like a young lion roaring for prey. He pursued the wicked, hunting them out, and those who
troubled his people he destroyed by fire. The
Torahbreakers were cowed by fear of him, and all evildoers were dismayed. By
his hand redemption was happily achieved, and
he afflicted many kings; He made Jacob glad by his deeds, and his memory is
blessed forever. He went about the cities of
Judah destroying the impious there. He turned away wrath from Israel and was renowned to the ends of the earth; he gathered
together those who were perishing. Then
Apollonius gathered the Gentiles, together with a large army from Samaria, to
fight against Israel. When Judas learned of it,
he went out to meet him and defeated and killed him. Many fell wounded, and the
rest fled. Their possessions were seized and
the sword of Apollonius was taken by Judas, who fought with it the rest of his
life. But Seron, commander of the Syrian army,
heard that Judas had gathered many about him, an assembly of faithful men ready
for war. So he said, "I will make a name
for myself and win glory in the kingdom by defeating Judas and his followers,
who have despised the king's command." And
again a large company of renegades advanced with him to help him take revenge
on the Israelites. When he reached the ascent
of Beth-horon, Judas went out to meet him with a few men. But when they saw the army coming against them, they said to
Judas: "How can we, few as we are, fight such a mighty host as this?
Besides, we are weak today from fasting." But
Judas said: "It is easy for many to be overcome by a few; in the sight of
Heaven there is no difference between deliverance by many or by few; for victory in war does not depend upon the size of the
army, but on strength that comes from Heaven. With
great presumption and Torahlessness they come against us to destroy us and our
wives and children and to despoil us; but we
are fighting for our lives_ and our Torah. He
himself will crush them before us; so do not be afraid of them." When he finished speaking, he rushed suddenly upon Seron and
his army, who were crushed before him. He
pursued Seron down the descent of Beth-horon into the plain. About eight
hundred of their men fell, and the rest fled to the country of the Philistines.
Then Judas and his brothers began to be feared, and
dread fell upon the Gentiles about them. His
fame reached the king, and all the Gentiles talked about the battles of Judas.
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. The Policy of Antiochus. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
When Antiochus heard
about these events, he was angry; so he ordered a muster of all the forces of
his kingdom, a very strong army. He opened his treasure chests,
gave his soldiers a year's pay, and commanded them to be prepared for anything.
He then found that this exhausted the money in his
treasury; moreover the income from the province was small, because of the
dissension and distress he had brought upon the land by abolishing the Torah
which had been in effect from of old. He feared
that, as had happened more than once, he would not have enough for his expenses
and for the gifts that he had previously given with a more liberal hand than
the preceding kings. Greatly perplexed, he
decided to go to Persia and levy tribute on those provinces, and so raise a
large sum of money. He left Lysias, a nobleman
of royal blood, in charge of the king's affairs from the Euphrates River to the
frontier of Egypt, and commissioned him to take
care of his son Antiochus until his own return. He
entrusted to him half of the army, and the elephants, and gave him instructions
concerning everything he wanted done. As for the inhabitants of Judea and
Jerusalem, Lysias was to send an army against
them to crush and destroy the power of Israel and the remnant of Jerusalem and
efface their memory from the land. He was to
settle foreigners in all their territory and distribute their land by lot.
The king took the remaining half of the army and set
out from Antioch, his capital, in the year one hundred and forty-seven; he
crossed the Euphrates River and advanced inland.
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. Preparations for Battle. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
Lysias chose Ptolemy,
son of Dorymenes, and Nicanor and Gorgias, capable men among the King's
Friends, and with them he sent forty thousand men and seven thousand
cavalry to invade the land of Judah and ravage it according to the king's
orders. Setting out with all their forces, they
came and pitched their camp near Emmaus in the plain. When the merchants of the country heard of their fame, they
came to the camp, bringing fetters and a large sum of silver and gold, to buy
the Israelites as slaves. A force from Idumea and from Philistia joined with
them. Judas and his brothers saw that the
situation had become critical now that armies were encamped within their
territory; they knew of the orders which the king had given to destroy and
utterly wipe out the people. So they said to
one another, "Let us restore our people from their ruined estate, and
fight for our people and our sanctuary!" The
assembly gathered together to prepare for battle and to pray and implore mercy
and compassion. Jerusalem was uninhabited, like
a desert; not one of her children entered or came out. The sanctuary was
trampled on, and foreigners were in the citadel; it was a habitation of
Gentiles. Joy had disappeared from Jacob, and the flute and the harp were
silent. Thus they assembled and went to Mizpah
near Jerusalem, because there was formerly at Mizpah a place of prayer for
Israel. That day they fasted and wore
sackcloth; they sprinkled ashes on their heads and tore their clothes. They unrolled the scroll of the Torah, to learn about the
things for which the Gentiles consulted the images of their idols. They brought with them the priestly vestments, the first
fruits, and the tithes; and they brought forward the nazirites who had
completed the time of their vows. And they
cried aloud to Heaven: "What shall we do with these men, and where shall
we take them? For your sanctuary has been
trampled on and profaned, and your priests are in mourning and humiliation.
Now the Gentiles are gathered together against us to
destroy us. You know what they plot against us. How
shall we be able to resist them unless you help us?" Then they blew the trumpets and cried out loudly. After this Judas appointed officers among the people, over
thousands, over hundreds, over fifties, and over tens. He proclaimed that those who were building houses, or were
just married, or were planting vineyards, and those who were afraid, could each
return to his home, according to the Torah. Then
the army moved off, and they camped to the south of Emmaus. Judas said: "Arm yourselves and be brave; in the
morning be ready to fight these Gentiles who have assembled against us to
destroy us and our sanctuary. It is better for
us to die in battle than to witness the ruin of our nation and our sanctuary.
Whatever Heaven wills, he will do."
! ! End of
The Chapter.
\Eng:[:phone arpa
SAMPA][_:<3333,0>]\
(1 Maccabees 4:1-61 NAB-A) :
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. The Battle at Emmaus. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
Now Gorgias took five
thousand infantry and a thousand picked cavalry, and this detachment set out at
night in order to attack the camp of the Jews and take them by
surprise. Some men from the citadel were their guides. Judas heard of it, and himself set out with his soldiers to
attack the king's army at Emmaus, while the
latter's forces were still scattered away from the camp. During the night Gorgias came into the camp of Judas, and
found no one there; so he began to hunt for them in the mountains, saying,
"They are fleeing from us." But at
daybreak Judas appeared in the plain with three thousand men, who lacked such
armor and swords as they would have wished. They
saw the army of the Gentiles, strong and breastplated, flanked with cavalry, and
made up of expert soldiers. Judas said to the
men with him: "Do not be afraid of their numbers or dread their attack.
Remember how our fathers were saved in the Red Sea,
when Pharaoh pursued them with an army. So now
let us cry to Heaven in the hope that he will favor us, remember his covenant
with our fathers, and destroy this army before us today. All the Gentiles shall know that there is One who redeems
and delivers Israel." When the foreigners
looked up and saw them marching toward them, they
came out of their camp for battle, and the men with Judas blew the trumpet.
The battle was joined and the Gentiles were defeated
and fled toward the plain. Their whole
rearguard fell by the sword, and they were pursued as far as Gazara and the
plains of Judea, to Azotus and Jamnia. About three thousand of their men fell.
When Judas and the army returned from the pursuit,
he said to the people: "Do not be greedy for the
plunder, for there is a fight ahead of us, and
Gorgias and his army are near us on the mountain. But now stand firm against
our enemies and overthrow them. Afterward you can freely take the
plunder." As Judas was finishing this
speech, a detachment appeared, looking down from the mountain. They saw that their army had been put to flight and their
camp was being burned. The smoke that could be seen indicated what had
happened. When they realized this, they were
terrified; and when they also saw the army of Judas in the plain ready to
attack, they all fled to Philistine territory.
Then Judas went back to plunder the camp, and his men
collected much gold and silver, violet and crimson cloth, and great treasure.
As they returned, they were singing hymns and
glorifying Heaven, "for he is good, for his mercy endures forever."
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. First Campaign of Lysias. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
Thus Israel had a great
deliverance that day.
But those of the foreigners who had escaped went and
told Lysias all that had occurred. When he
heard it he was disturbed and discouraged, because things in Israel had not
turned out as he intended and as the king had ordered. So the following year he gathered together sixty thousand
picked men and five thousand cavalry, to subdue them. They came into Idumea and camped at Beth-zur, and Judas met
them with ten thousand men. Seeing that the
army was strong, he prayed thus: "Blessed are you, O Savior of Israel, who
broke the rush of the mighty one by the hand of your servant David and
delivered the camp of the Philistines into the hand of Jonathan, the son of
Saul, and his armor-bearer. Give this army into
the hands of your people Israel; make them ashamed of their troops and their
cavalry. Strike them with fear, weaken the
boldness of their strength, and let them tremble at their own destruction.
Strike them down by the sword of those who love you,
that all who know your name may hymn your praise." Then they engaged in battle, and about five thousand of
Lysias' men fell in hand-to-hand fighting. When
Lysias saw his ranks beginning to give way, and the increased boldness of
Judas, whose men were ready either to live or to die bravely, he withdrew to
Antioch and began to recruit mercenaries so as to return to Judea with greater
numbers.
\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. Cleansing and Dedication of the Temple. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\.
Then Judas and his
brothers said, "Now that our enemies have been crushed, let us go up to
purify the sanctuary and rededicate it." So the whole army
assembled, and went up to Mount Zion. They
found the sanctuary desolate, the altar desecrated, the gates burnt, weeds
growing in the courts as in a forest or on some mountain, and the priests'
chambers demolished. Then they tore their
clothes and made great lamentation; they sprinkled their heads with ashes
and fell with their faces to the ground. And when the
signal was given with trumpets, they cried out to Heaven. Judas appointed men to attack those in the citadel, while he
purified the sanctuary. He chose blameless
priests, devoted to the Torah; these purified
the sanctuary and carried away the stones of the Abomination to an unclean
place. They deliberated what ought to be done
with the altar of holocausts that had been desecrated. The happy thought came to them to tear it down, lest it be a
lasting shame to them that the Gentiles had defiled it; so they tore down the
altar. They stored the stones in a suitable
place on the temple hill, until a prophet should come and decide what to do
with them. Then they took uncut stones,
according to the Torah, and built a new altar like the former one. They also repaired the sanctuary and the interior of the
temple and purified the courts. They made new
sacred vessels and brought the lampstand, the altar of incense, and the table
into the temple. Then they burned incense on
the altar and lighted the lamps on the lampstand, and these illuminated the
temple. They also put loaves on the table and
hung up curtains. Thus they finished all the work they had undertaken. Early in the morning on the twenty-fifth day of the ninth
month, that is, the month of Chislev, in the year one hundred and forty-eight,
they arose and offered sacrifice according to the
Torah on the new altar of holocausts that they had made. On the anniversary of the day on which the Gentiles had
defiled it, on that very day it was reconsecrated with songs, harps, flutes,
and cymbals. All the people prostrated
themselves and adored and praised Heaven, who had given them success. For eight days they celebrated the dedication of the altar
and joyfully offered holocausts and sacrifices of deliverance and praise.
They ornamented the facade of the temple with gold
crowns and shields; they repaired the gates and the priests' chambers and
furnished them with doors. There was great joy
among the people now that the disgrace of the Gentiles was removed. Then Judas and his brothers and the entire congregation of
Israel decreed that the days of the dedication of the altar should be observed
with joy and gladness on the anniversary every year for eight days, from the
twenty-fifth day of the month Chislev. At that
time they built high walls and strong towers around Mount Zion, to prevent the
Gentiles from coming and trampling over it as they had done before. Judas also placed a garrison there to protect it, and
likewise fortified Beth-zur, that the people might have a stronghold facing
Idumea.
! ! End of
The Chapter.
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! ! End of Today’s FEAST and Related Scriptures! Praise Yah! (HNV-yet version, in the public domain.)