Archive for the ‘Daniel 11’ Category

Above: The Angel in the Tomb
Image in the Public Domain
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According to the Inter-Lutheran Commission on Worship (ILCW) Lectionary (1973), as contained in the Lutheran Book of Worship (1978) and Lutheran Worship (1982)
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Isaiah 25:6-9
Psalm 118:1-2, 15-24
1 Corinthians 15:19-28
John 20:1-9 (10-18) or Mark 16:1-8
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O God, you gave your only Son
to suffer death on the cross for our redemption,
and by his glorious resurrection
you delivered us from the power of death.
Make us die every day to sin,
so that we may live with him forever in the joy of the resurrection;
through Jesus Christ our Lord,
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and forever. Amen.
—Lutheran Book of Worship (1978), 20-21
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Almighty God the Father, through your only-begotten Son Jesus Christ,
you have overcome death and opened the gate of everlasting life to us.
Grant that we,
who celebrate with joy the day of our Lord’s resurrection,
may be raised from the death of sin by your life-giving Spirit;
through Jesus Christ our Lord,
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and forever. Amen.
—Lutheran Worship (1982), 47
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Isaiah 24-27, part of Third Isaiah, is a proto-apocalypse. Daniel contains a fully fully-developed apocalypse in chapters 7-12, which date to the Hasmonean period. Revelation (the Apocalypse of John) and some pseudepigraphal works are fully-developed apocalypses, too. Isaiah 24-27 contains many of the features of those later writings.
The apocalyptic genre is optimistic, for it proclaims that God will win in the end. The proto-apocalypse in Isaiah 24-27 is optimistic in so far as it speaks of the metaphorical resurrection of Judah while using the language of destroying death and reviving corpses.
The assigned readings, taken together, speak of an illness. A conquered people may move into a better future. And the resurrection of Jesus makes renewed individual and collective life in God possible.
As I write these words, I live in troubled, cynical times. Anti-democratic forces, competing in elections around the world, have much popular support. Sometimes they win elections. Many candidates who speak favorably of family values engage in political bullying and celebrate cruelty and insensitivity. Many such candidates frequently win elections, too. The great web of mutuality that protects members of society–the most vulnerable ones, especially–continues to fray under the assault by a selfish variety of individualism. The morally neutral act of remaining informed regarding current events becomes an occasion of inviting excessive stress into one’s life. Hope seems to be in short supply. Positive statements about the Kingdom of God may ring hollow. One may feel like the women at the empty tomb of Jesus–afraid. I do.
And, when we turn our attention to death itself, we may experience the depths of despair and the harsh reality of someone’s loss. The light may go out of our lives, as it did for Theodore Roosevelt on February 12, 1884, when his mother and first wife died.
I understand my grief well enough to know not to resort to platitudes. I comprehend that death stings. I know from the past and from current events that the world has long been and continues to be rife with delusion and injustice. I, as a student of history, grasp that history does not repeat itself, but that history rhymes. It rhymes because many people fail to learn the lessons of the past.
Yet the Christian hope teaches me that the Reverend Doctor Maltbie Davenport Babcock (1858-1901) was correct:
This is my Father’s world,
O let me ne’er forget
That though the wrong seems oft so strong,
God is the ruler yet.
This is my Father’s world:
The battle is not done,
Jesus who died shall be satisfied,
And earth and heaven be one.
–Quoted in The Hymnal (1933), #70
Happy Easter!
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
MARCH 18, 2023 COMMON ERA
THE TWENTY-SECOND DAY OF LENT
THE FEAST OF SAINT LEONIDES OF ALEXANDRIA, ROMAN CATHOLIC MARTYR, 202; ORIGEN, ROMAN CATHOLIC THEOLOGIAN; SAINT DEMETRIUS OF ALEXANDRIA, ROMAN CATHOLIC BISHOP; AND SAINT ALEXANDER OF JERUSALEM, ROMAN CATHOLIC BISHOP
THE FEAST OF SAINT CYRIL OF JERUSALEM, BISHOP, THEOLOGIAN, AND LITURGIST
THE FEAST OF ELIZA SIBBALD ALDERSON, POET AND HYMN WRITER; AND JOHN BACCHUS DYKES, ANGLICAN PRIEST AND HYMN WRITER
THE FEAST OF SAINT PAUL OF CYPRUS, EASTERN ORTHODOX MARTYR, 760
THE FEAST OF ROBERT WALMSLEY, ENGLISH CONGREGATIONALIST HYMN WRITER
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Adapted from this post
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Above: The Death of the Dragon, by Evelyn de Morgan
Image in the Public Domain
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READING REVELATION, PART XII
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Revelation 12:1-15:8
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THE SHADOW OF KING ANTIOCHUS IV EPIPHANES
Seleucid King Antiochus IV Epiphanes (reigned 175-164/163 B.C.E.) was notorious. He persecuted Jews and became the chief boogeyman of First, Second, and Fourth Maccabees. The Daniel apocalypse (chapters 7-12), composed in the first century B.C.E., referred to him. Revelation added more references to le roi terrible. For example, the three and a half years (forty-two months) before the fall of “Babylon” (Rome) called back to the time King Antiochus IV Epiphanes desecrated the Temple in Jerusalem and persecuted Jews.
Revelation 12 and 13 unfold during those symbolic forty-two months. The vivid accounts, replete with symbolism drawn from regional mythology, the Hebrew Bible, 2 Esdras/4 Ezra, 1 and 2 Enoch, and 2 Baruch, among other sources. For example, the following sources are germane to Revelation 12-15:
- 1 Enoch 40:7; 54:6
- 2 Enoch 7; 18; 29:5
- The Ascension of Isaiah 7:9; 10:29
- 2 Esdras/4 Ezra 6:49-42; 12:22-25
- The Sybilline Oracles 4:119-127, 137-139; and
- 2 Baruch 29:4.
THE EVOLVING THEOLOGY OF SATAN IN JUDAISM
Revelation 12:7-9 reflects a relatively late development in the theology of Satan. Careful study of the evolution of Jewish and Christian theology reveals that, until the Persian period, “the Satan”–“the Adversary”–worked for God, usually as a loyalty tester. Satan as a free agent is an idea imported from Zoroastrianism, in which Ahriman is the chief evil force, and the opposite number of Ahura-Mazda. One may conclude that Jewish and Christian theology finally arrived at the correct theology of Satan. Regardless of what one decides regarding this theological matter, the historical record remains objectively accurate and not subject to dispute.
HIGH TREASON
If the Roman censors had understood Revelation, they would have correctly identified chapters 12-15 as treasonous. The woman (12:1-6), resembling the goddess Isis, is the Church. The great, red dragon, with dominion in the known world, is Satan. The dragon pursues the woman, but she survives. The Archangel Michael defeats the dragon in Heaven and casts him down to the Earth. That is bad news for the Earth. Horns represented power. Ten horns represented complete power. So, in Revelation 13, the beast rising out of the sea had complete power. The horns were Emperors of Rome.
Can you say “treason,” O reader?
One emperor–Nero (d. 68)–received special attention in 13:3. He had supposedly not died–not really. He would supposedly return to life and lead an army out of Parthia and ravage the Roman Empire. Nero was the original figure of the Antichrist.
Revelation 13 labels the Roman Empire a force of evil. When civil authority becomes an expression of evil, the only proper Christian response, in Revelation, is to disobey it and to obey God.
666
The number “666” is symbolic. Seven is the number of perfection. Six, therefore, is less than perfect; it represents evil. “666” represents ultimate evil. “666” is, as Donald Richardson said:
godless political power allied with godless religion.
–Quoted in Ernest Lee Stoffel, The Dragon Bound: The Revelation Speaks to Our Time (1981), 75
Stoffel offered:
There is also a warning here for Christians and for any who would speak in the name of God. Any church or religion that allows itself to overlook injustice may have the number of the beast. This speaks to me as an individual Christian. In order to prosper I might be tempted to condone or overlook injustice, and so be wearing the “number” myself.
–76
We read in Revelation 14 that all who followed God in Christ will find redemption and that all who worshiped the Roman Empire and its value system will find damnation. Divine judgment and mercy remain in balance. Those damnable values include exploitation and militarism. These have no place in the Kingdom of God.
Revelation 15 includes praise of God. The chapter concludes by setting up the next few chapters with seven bowls of judgment.
What are our contemporary Roman Empires? To what extend to we buy into their erroneous value systems?
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
OCTOBER 17, 2021 COMMON ERA
PROPER 24: THE TWENTY-FIRST SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST, YEAR B
THE FEAST OF CHARLES GOUNOD, FRENCH ROMAN CATHOLIC COMPOSER
THE FEAST OF BIRGITTE KATERINE BOYE, DANISH LUTHERAN POET, PLAYWRIGHT, HYMN TRANSLATOR, AND HYMN WRITER
THE FEAST OF JOHN BOWRING, ENGLISH UNITARIAN HYMN WRITER, SOCIAL REFORMER, AND PHILANTHROPIST
THE FEAST OF RICHARD MCSORLEY, U.S. ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIEST, PROFESSOR, AND PEACE ACTIVIST
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Above: Revelation Title (French)
Scanned by Kenneth Randolph Taylor from a copy of the Louis Segond revised translation (1910) of the Bible
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READING REVELATION, PART I
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Revelation 1:1-20
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Rev[elation] is widely popular for the wrong reasons, for a great number of people read it as a guide to how the world will end, assuming that the author was given by Christ detailed knowledge of the future he communicated in coded symbols.
—Father Raymond E. Brown, An Introduction to the New Testament (1997), 773
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…Revelation does not speak about our time, it does speak to it.
–M. Eugene Boring, Revelation (1989), 62
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THE APOCALYPTIC GENRE
Reading a book within its genre matters.
Consider the apocalypse in Daniel 7-12, for example, O reader. The author wrote in the first century B.C.E. He mostly wrote history as prophecy. But when the author started writing about the future (relative to him), he got details wrong. This was par for the course, given the genre.
Apocalyptic literature, written in images and symbols, is politically subversive of tyranny. The genre offers hope during difficult times, encourages the faithful to remain faithful, and contrasts the world order with the divine order. Apocalyptic literature uses the future as away to address the present.
I lay my theological cards on the table at the beginning of this project, O reader.
- I am a left-of-center Episcopalian.
- I am a student of history.
- I am an intellectual.
- I know the historical record of failed predictions of Christ’s Second Coming and failed identifications of the Antichrist.
- I tell you, O reader, that the rapture is a fiction from the mind of John Nelson Darby (1800-1882).
- I know that Darby’s Dispensationalism, popularized further in C. I. Scofield‘s study Bible, the “manual of fundamentalism,” remains a widespread interpretive system.
- I affirm that Christ will eventually return, but only once. The rapture requires two Second Comings.
- I have no interest in prophecy conferences, but care deeply about loving like Jesus daily.
Apocalyptic literature has much to say about our present. This content remains politically subversive. That is fine. I approve of subverting injustice, tyranny, slavery, economic exploitation, and needless violence. They are antithetical to the Kingdom of God.
Apocalyptic literature is also optimistic. In the darkness, the genre proclaims hope that God and good will triumph in the end. Apocalyptic literature, therefore, stiffens the spines of discouraged, faithful people. Good news of the deliverance of oppressed people doubles as judgment of the oppressors. The genre invites us to ask ourselves:
Whose side am I on?
In summary, apocalyptic literature immediately moves past preaching and gets to meddling.
THE APOCALYPSE OF JOHN AND RESISTANCE TO TYRANNY
Certain passages of the Old and New Testaments, in their contexts, support submission to earthly authority. The Apocalypse of John has none of that. Revelation tells us that the Roman Empire was evil, antithetical to the Kingdom of God. This is the message that made the text treasonous long ago and still inspires many people to resist tyranny. One may read, for example, of Christian opponents of Apartheid (in South Africa) drawing inspiration from the Apocalypse of John, even as the national government prosecuted and persecuted them. Today, in dictatorships, certain Christians are reading Revelation as they emerge in their struggles for justice.
REVELATION IN THE BIBLE AND LECTIONARIES
Revelation is a liturgical hot potato. The major lectionaries include little of it. The Eastern Orthodox lectionary excludes the Apocalypse of John. The Orthodox Study Bible (2008) explains:
While seen as canonical and inspired by God, the Revelation is the only New Testament book not publicly read in the services of the Orthodox Church. This is partly because the book was only gradually accepted as canonical in many parts of Christendom. In addition, in the second and third centuries Revelation was widely twisted and sensationally misinterpreted, and the erroneous teachings brought troublesome confusion to Christians–a trend that continues to this day.
Genesis and Revelation constitute fitting bookends of the Christian Bible. Genesis opens with mythology–the creation of an earthly paradise, followed by the end of that paradise–to be precise (Genesis 1-3). Revelation concludes with a vision of God, having finally defeated evil once and for all, restoring that earthly paradise and establishing the fully-realized Kingdom of God (Revelation 21-22).
THE ORIGIN OF THE APOCALYPSE OF JOHN
Revelation came from 92 to 96 C.E., at the end of the reign of the Emperor Domitian. Emperor-worship and the worship of the goddess Roma (Rome personified) were parts of conventional Roman patriotism and civic life. The Christian refusal to participate in these cults made Christians seem unpatriotic at best and treasonous at worst. Persecution was generally sporadic and regional at the time, but it was a constant threat. “John of Patmos” (whoever he was) wrote to seven churches in commercial cities in western Asia Minor.
The elaborate symbolism–including numerology–in apocalyptic literature prevented the uninitiated–in this case, Roman censors–from understanding the texts.
SYMBOLISM AND MEANING IN REVELATION 1
The only instance in which to interpret any number in the Apocalypse of John literally pertains to the seven churches in western Asia Minor.
Revelation 1 plunges us into the symbolic aspect of apocalyptic literature immediately. Stars (at the end of the chapter) represent angels and lamp-stands represent churches. Earlier in the chapter, Jesus has white hair, indicating holiness. His eyes, like a burning flame, pierce to the heart of all things. Christ’s “feet like burnished bronze” are stable and steadfast. His voice, “like the sound of the ocean,” is the convergence of the truth of God in the Hebrew Bible. Jesus holds the Church–then a vulnerable group of house congregations–in his hand. From Christ’s mouth emerges a two-edged sword (speech). His face shines like the sun. Christ is victorious, resurrected, ascended, and priestly.
The Roman Empire may have seemed to have had all the power and glory. It did not. The Roman Empire had executed Jesus. Yet he had risen; his tomb was empty. The power of the Roman Empire was nothing compared to the power of God in Christ.
That was treasonous, for, according to Roman coinage, the emperor was the “Son of God.”
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
OCTOBER 6, 2021 COMMON ERA
THE FEAST OF GEORGE EDWARD LYNCH COTTON, ANGLICAN BISHOP OF CALCUTTA
THE FEAST OF HEINRICH ALBERT, GERMAN LUTHERAN COMPOSER AND POET
THE FEAST OF HERBERT G. MAY, U.S. BIBLICAL SCHOLAR AND TRANSLATOR
THE FEAST OF JOHN ERNEST BODE, ANGLICAN PRIEST, POET, AND HYMN WRITER
THE FEAST OF WILLIAM TYNDALE, ENGLISH REFORMER, BIBLE TRANSLATOR, AND MARTYR, 1536; AND MILES COVERDALE, ENGLISH REFORMER, BIBLE TRANSLATOR, AND BISHOP OF EXETER
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Above: Ahriman (from Zoroastrianism)
Image in the Public Domain
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READING THIRD ISAIAH, PART II
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Isaiah 24:1-27:13
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Babylon is not mentioned even once. Rather, the eschatological focus of these chapters has raised their sights to the ultimate purpose of God in portraying the cosmological judgment of the world and its final glorious restoration. Moreover, the redemption of Israel is depicted as emerging from the ashes of the polluted and decaying world. Not just a remnant is redeemed , but the chapter recounts the salvation of all peoples who share in the celebration of God’s new order when death is banished forever (25:8).
–Brevard S. Childs, Isaiah (2001), 173
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INTRODUCTION
Isaiah 24-27 constitutes the Isaiah Apocalypse. They also constitute an early and not full-blown example of Biblical apocalyptic literature. Some books I read inform me that the Jewish apocalyptic form emerged in the wake of the fall of the Chaldean/Neo-Babylonian Empire–in the late sixth century (early 500s) B.C.E., to be precise. These books also teach that full-blown Jewish apocalypses emerged only in the second century (100s) B.C.E., as in the case of Daniel 7-12.
Isaiah 24, in vivid language, depicts the divine destruction of the natural order and the social order. I recommend the translation by Robert Alter, in particular. Regardless of the translation, we read that people have violated the moral mandates embedded in the Law of Moses:
And the earth is tainted beneath its dwellers,
for they transgressed teachings, flouted law, broke the eternal covenant.
Therefore has a curse consumed the earth,
and all its dwellers are mired in guilt.
Therefore earth’s dwellers turn pale,
and all but a few humans remain.
–Isaiah 24:5-6, in Robert Alter, The Hebrew Bible: A Translation with Commentary, Volume 2, Prophets (2019)
The timeframe is sometime in the future, relative to both Third Isaiah and 2021. in this vision, high socio-economic status provides no protection against God’s creative destruction.
Within the Book of Isaiah, in its final form, chapters 24-27 follow oracles against the nations (chapters 13-23) and precede more oracles against nations (chapters 28-33). This relative placement is purposeful.
SWALLOWING UP DEATH FOREVER
Returning to the Isaiah Apocalypse, the establishment of the fully-realized Kingdom of God entails the defeat of the enemies of God’s people, the celebration of an eschatological banquet, and the swallowing up of death forever (See 1 Corinthians 15:54; Revelation 7:7-17). The divine swallowing up of death echoes the swallowing up of Mot (the Canaanite god of death) in mythology.
Isaiah 25:8 and 26:19 refer to divine victory over death. Given the temporal origin of the Isaiah Apocalypse, is this a metaphor for the divine vindication of the downtrodden, likened to the dead? Such language, in Book of Daniel (100s B.C.E.) and the Revelation of John (late 100s C.E.), refers to the afterlife. The operative question regarding Isaiah 25:8 and 26:19, however, is if the author knew about and affirmed the resurrection of the dead. We know that Ezekiel 37 (the vision of the dry bones) is a metaphor for the restoration of Israel after the Babylonian Exile. But what about Isaiah 25:8 and 26:19? Even the Jewish commentaries I consult do not arrive at a conclusion.
I understand why. The Isaiah Apocalypses comes from a time when Jewish theology was changing, under the influence of Zoroastrianism. Satan was moving away from being God’s employee–loyalty tester (Job 1-2) and otherwise faithful angel (Numbers 22:22-40)–and becoming a free agent and the chief rebel. The theology of Ahriman, the main figure of evil in Zoroastrianism, was influencing this change in Jewish theology. Jewish ideas of the afterlife were also changing under Zoroastrian influence. Sheol was passing away. Reward and punishment in the afterlife were becoming part of Jewish theology. By the second century (100s) B.C.E., belief in individual resurrection of the dead was unambiguous (Daniel 12:2-3, 12).
I do not know what Third Isaiah believed regarding the resurrection of the dead. I suppose that he could have affirmed that doctrine. The historical context and the symbolic language of the apocalypse combine to confuse the matter. So be it; I, as an Episcopalian, am comfortable with a degree of ambiguity.
DIVINE JUDGMENT ON ENEMIES OF THE COVENANT PEOPLE
Isaiah 25:9-12 singles out Moab, in contrast to the usual practice of not naming enemies in chapters 24-27. One may recall material condemning Moab in Amos 2:1-3; Isaiah 15:1-16:13; Jeremiah 48:1-47; Ezekiel 25:8-11.
In the divine order, the formerly oppressed rejoice in their victory over those who had oppressed them. Oppression has no place in the divine order.
Divine judgment and mercy remain in balance in Isaiah 24-27. Divine deliverance of the oppressors is frequently catastrophic for the oppressors. And the contrast between the fates of the enemies of God (27:11) and the Jews worshiping in Jerusalem (27:13) is stark. As Brevard S. Childs offers:
In sum, the modern theology of religious universalism, characterized by unlimited inclusivity, is far removed from the biblical proclamation of God’s salvation (cf. Seitz, 192),
—Isaiah (2001), 186
GOD’S VINEYARD
Neither do apostasy and idolatry have any place in the divine order. And all the Jewish exiles will return to their ancestral homeland. Also, the message of God will fill the earth:
In days to come Jacob shall take root,
Israel shall bud and flower,
and the face of the world shall fill with bounty.
–Isaiah 27:6, Robert Alter (2019)
The face of the world will be God’s productive vineyard, figuratively. The people and kingdom of God, figuratively, are a vineyard in the Old and New Testament. (See Isaiah 5:1-7; Matthew 20:1-16; Matthew 21:33-46; Mark 12:1-12; Luke 20:9-19).
CONCLUSION
Despite ambiguities in the texts, I am unambiguous on two germane points:
- Apocalyptic literature offers good news: God will win in the end. Therefore, faithful people should remain faithful.
- Apocalyptic literature calls the powers and leaders to account. It tells them that they fall short of divine standards when they oppress populations and maintain social injustice. It damns structures and institutions of social inequality. It condemns societies that accept the unjust status quo.
Regardless of–or because of–certain ambiguities in the Isaiah Apocalypse, chapters 24-27 speak to the world in 2021. Some vagueness in prophecy prevents it from becoming dated and disproven, after all. And structural inequality remains rife and politically defended, unfortunately.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
JULY 16, 2021 COMMON ERA
THE FEAST OF THE RIGHTEOUS GENTILES
THE FEAST OF CATHERINE LOUISA MARTHENS, FIRST LUTHERAN DEACONESS CONSECRATED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1850
THE FEAST OF GEORGE ALFRED TAYLOR RYGH, U.S. LUTHERAN MINISTER AND HYMN WRITER
THE FEAST OF HENRY WILLIAMS, ANGLICAN MISSIONARY IN NEW ZEALAND; HIS WIFE, MARIANNE WILLIAMS, ANGLICAN MISSIONARY AND EDUCATOR IN NEW ZEALAND; HER SISTER-IN-LAW, JANE WILLIAMS, ANGLICAN MISSIONARY AND EDUCATOR IN NEW ZEALAND; AND HER HUSBAND AND HENRY’S BROTHER, WILLIAM WILLAMS, ANGLICAN BISHOP OF WAIAPU
THE FEAST OF SAINT MARY MAGDALEN POSTEL, FOUNDER OF THE POOR DAUGHTERS OF MERCY
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Above: Coin of King Antiochus IV Epiphanes
Image in the Public Domain
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READING 1, 2 AND 4 MACCABEES
PART VI
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2 Maccabees 4:7-50
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Jason had originally been Joshua, son of Onias III, son of Simon II “the Just” (3 Maccabees 2:1-20; Sirach 50:1-24), and grandson of Onias II. The High Priesthood, of the lineage of Aaron, was supposed to be a lifetime appointment. The pious Onias III was out of office. Joshua, who took a Greek name (Jason), purchased the High Priesthood from the new monarch, Antiochus IV Epiphanes. Jason committed what later became known as simony, after Simon Magus offering to purchase the Holy Spirit (Acts 8:9-24).
Jason, unlike his brother, father, grandfather, et cetera, betrayed the faith. He imposed Hellenism and led people into apostasy. The Jewish High Priest ever tried to make an offering to Hercules. After three years of being the High Priest, Jason lost his job to simony. How ironic!
Menelaus, son of Simon the corrupt Temple administrator, purchased the High Priesthood from King Antiochus IV Epiphanes in 172 B.C.E. The cruel Menelaus never paid the king, though. Meanwhile, Jason in exile among the Ammonites. Menelaus, summoned to appear before King Antiochus IV Epiphanes, appeared before Andronicus, a regent, instead. (The monarch had to deal with two rebellious cities.) Menelaus attempted to bribe Andronicus. Onias III denounced Menelaus, who suggested the murder of Onias III. Andronicus had Onias III executed.
Before leaving Jerusalem, Menelaus had placed his brother Lysimachus in his stead. When a crowd protested his perfidy, Lysimachus doubled down on it. He sent forces to attack the crowd. But the crowd killed Lysimachus.
Menelaus managed to remain in office, despite an attempt to remove him.
Yet thanks to the cupidity of those in power, Menelaus, this arch-plotter against his fellow citizens, continued in office and went from bad to worse.
–2 Maccabees 4:50, The Revised English Bible (1989)
Daniel 9, 11, and 12 help to date most of the Book of Daniel to a certain late period on the B.C.E. scale, due to historical references. Onias III is “an anointed one cut off” in Daniel 9:26 and the “prince of the covenant” in Daniel 11:22. King Antiochus IV Epiphanes is the “contemptible person on whom royal majesty had not been conferred” (11:21). And Jason is “an alliance” in 11:23.
As people say,
It will get worse before it gets better.
That statement applies to the next post, I will cover the beginning of the persecution of the Jews by King Antiochus IV Epiphanes.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
FEBRUARY 5, 2021 COMMON ERA
THE FEAST OF THE MARTYRS OF JAPAN, 1597-1639
THE FEAST OF SAINT AVITUS OF VIENNE, ROMAN CATHOLIC BISHOP
THE FEAST OF SAINTS JAMES NICHOLAS JOUBERT AND MARIE ELIZABETH LANGE, FOUNDERS OF THE OBLATE SISTERS OF PROVIDENCE
THE FEAST OF SAINT JANE (JOAN) OF VALOIS, COFOUNDER OF THE SISTERS OF THE ANNUNCIATION
THE FEAST OF SAINTS PHILEAS AND PHILOROMUS, ROMAN CATHOLIC MARTYRS, 304
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Above: Map Showing Asia Minor, the Seleucid Empire, and the Ptolemaic Empire, 188 B.C.E.
Image in the Public Domain
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READING 1, 2 AND 4 MACCABEES
PART I
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1 Maccabees 1:1-19
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Reading the Bible in more than one translation is a positive spiritual and literary practice. One may decide that a particular translation is best for reading a certain book or certain books of the Bible. For example, I propose that Job reads best in The Jerusalem Bible (1966), that the Song of Songs reads best in TANAKH: The Holy Scriptures (1985), and that First Maccabees reads best in The Revised English Bible (1989).
I am an Episcopalian with strong Roman Catholic and Lutheran tendencies. I am an also an Episcopalian who grew up a Low Church Protestant and a preacher’s kid–Southern Baptist for my first seven years, followed by United Methodist for the next eleven years. I tell you, O reader, this so that you will appreciate the significance of my affirmation of the Roman Catholic definition of the canon of scripture. The first two books of the Maccabees are Deuterocanonical, not Apocryphal.
First Maccabees probably dates to about 100 B.C.E. The anonymous author’s composition is contemporary with Tobit, Judith, and most of Daniel. The agenda of 1 Maccabees is the affirmation of the Hasmonean Dynasty. After all, why were members of the Davidic Dynasty not on the throne of independent Judea? That was the question of political legitimacy the author of 1 Maccabees addressed.
1 Maccabees 1:1-19 establishes the historical and cultural context: Hellenism. The passage names Alexander the Great (d. 323 B.C.E.) then moves along quickly to Antiochus IV Epiphanes (reigned 175-164/163 B.C.E.), King of the Seleucid Empire, one of the successors to Alexander’s expansive Macedonian Empire. One may or may not recall the references to Antiochus IV Epiphanes in Daniel 7, 8, 9, and 11. One may or may not also remember the allusion to the notorious monarch in 3 Maccabees 2-4.
The struggle against imposed Hellenism formed the backdrop of the Hasmonean Rebellion. To make matters worse, some Jews turned apostate.
1 Maccabees 1:16-19 lays down another historical marker. It mentions the successful Seleucid invasion of the Ptolemaic Empire during the reign (180-145 B.C.E.) of King Ptolemy VI Philometor in 169 B.C.E. The reader who may be unfamiliar with this part of ancient history ought to know that the Seleucid and Ptolemaic Empires, successors to the sprawling Macedonian Empire of Alexander the Great, fought each other. Such a reader should also understand that ancient Palestine kept changing imperial masters, depending on the most germane military victory.
Palestinian Jews still lived under occupation Antiochus IV Epiphanes was an especially cruel imperial master.
How could Jews, even those dwelling in their ancestral homeland, live faithfully under the Seleucid Empire?
I clue you, O reader, in on a recurring motif in 1 Maccabees. Keeping the divine covenant and the Law of Moses is essential, as the book teaches. So is being pragmatic in faithful communal life. But when does pragmatism cross the line over into the territory of unjust and faithless compromise? This is a timeless question and a quandary.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
FEBRUARY 4, 2021 COMMON ERA
THE FEAST OF SAINT CORNELIUS THE CENTURION
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Above: King John Hyrcanus I
Image in the Public Domain
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READING JUDITH
PART III
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Judith 4:1-6:2
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Holofernes represented an oppressive violent power and an ego-driven monarch. The general had succeeded in his previous campaigns, even against people who had greeted his army with garlands, dancing, and the sound of timbrels (2:1-3:10). The Israelites were in dire straits as he turned his attention toward them.
Yet the Israelites worshiped God. They prayed to God. And, as even Achior, the Ammonite leader acknowledged, the Israelites’ power and strength resided in God. Yet Holofernes asked scornfully,
Who is God beside Nebuchadnezzar?
–Judith 6:2b, The New American Bible–Revised Edition (2011)
Achior found refuge with the Israelites, at least.
A refresher on the Kingdom of Ammon and on the Ammonites is in order.
- “Ammon” comes from Benammi, both the son and grandson of Lot (Genesis 19:30-38). Lot’s daughters had gotten their father drunk then seduced him. They gave birth to the founders of the Moabite and Ammonite peoples.
- The attitude toward the Ammonites in the Bible is mostly negative.
- The Kingdom of Ammon was east of the River Jordan and north of Moab.
- The Kingdom of Ammon, a vassal state of Israel under Kings David and Solomon. After Ammon reasserted itself, it became a vassal state of the Neo-Assyrian Empire then the Chaldean/Neo-Babylonian Empire. A failed rebellion led to mass deportations of Ammonites and the colonization of their territory by Chaldeans.
Anyone who wants to read more about the Ammonites in the Bible may want to follow the following reading plan:
- Genesis 19;
- Numbers 21;
- Deuteronomy 2, 3, 23;
- Joshua 12, 13;
- Judges 3, 10, 11, 12;
- 1 Samuel 10, 11, 12, 14;
- 2 Samuel 8, 10, 11, 12, 17, 23;
- 1 Kings 11, 14;
- 2 Kings 23, 24;
- 1 Chronicles 11, 18, 19, 20;
- 2 Chronicles 12, 20, 24, 26, 27;
- Ezra 9;
- Nehemiah 2, 4, 13;
- Psalm 83;
- Isaiah 11;
- Jeremiah 9, 25, 27, 40, 41, 49;
- Ezekiel 21, 25;
- Daniel 11;
- Amos 1;
- Zephaniah 2;
- Judith 1, 5, 6, 7, 14;
- 1 Maccabees 5; and
- 2 Maccabees 4, 5.
Back to Achior…
A close reader of Achior’s report (5:6-21) may detect some details he got wrong. Not all characters speak accurately in every matter. One may expect an outsider to misunderstand some aspects of the Israelite story.
At the end of the Chapter 6, we see the conflict between the arrogance of enemies of God and the humility of Israelites. We know that, in the story, the Israelites could turn only to God for deliverance. Anyone familiar with the Hebrew prophets ought to know that this theme occurs in some of the prophetic books, too.
In the context contemporary to the composition of the Book of Judith, Jews had endured Hellenistic oppression under the Seleucid Empire. Jews had won the independence of Judea. John Hyrcanus I (reigned 135-104 B.C.E.; named in 1 Maccabees 13:53 and 16:1-23) had ordered the destruction of the Samaritan temple on Mount Gerazim and forced many people to convert to Judaism. The persecuted had become persecutors. This was certainly on the mind of the anonymous author of the Book of Judith.
May we, collectively and individually, do to others as we want them to do to us, not necessarily as they or others have done to us.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
DECEMBER 8, 2020 COMMON ERA
THE TENTH DAY OF ADVENT
THE FEAST OF WALTER CISZEK, ROMAN CATHOLIC MISSIONARY PRIERST AND POLITICAL PRISONER
THE FEAST OF SAINTS AMATUS OF LUXEUIL AND ROMARIC OF LUXEUIL, ROMAN CATHOLIC MONKS AND ABBOTS
THE FEAST OF ERIK CHRISTIAN HOFF, NORWEGIAN LUTHERAN COMPOSER AND ORGANIST
THE FEAST OF JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER, U.S. QUAKER ABOLITIONIST, POET, AND HYMN WRITER
THE FEAST OF SAINT MARIN SHKURTI, ALBANIAN ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIEST AND MARTYR, 1969
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Above: Susanna and the Elders
Image in the Public Domain
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READING DANIEL
PART XI
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Daniel 13:1-64
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Daniel and Susanna, according to study Bibles I consulted, hails from either the second or the first centuries B.C.E. A standard description of Daniel 13 is that it is the oldest surviving detective story. I prefer to think of it as the oldest surviving Perry Mason story.
The cast of named characters is:
- Joakim, husband of Susanna;
- Susanna, daughter of Hilkiah and wife of Joakim;
- Hilkiah, father of Susanna; and
- Daniel.
The story does not name the two wicked elders.
This is a story about the miscarriage of justice. We read that the beautiful and pious Susanna, wife of the wealthy and pious Joakim, refused the sexual advances of the lecherous and homicidal elders, who had hidden in her garden. The story describes the two elders as predators. We also read of their perjury and of Susanna’s false conviction, followed by her sentence of death (Leviticus 20:10; Deuteronomy 22:21-22).
This is also a story about justice. We read of Susanna’s prayer (verses 42-43) and of God’s reply: sending Daniel to rescue her. We read of Daniel’s Perry Mason routine, by which he exposed the two elders’ lies with an arborial question:
Now, if you really saw this woman, then tell us, under what tree did you see them together?”
–Verse 54, The Revised English Bible with the Apocrypha (1989)
We also read of the elders’ execution, in accordance with the Law of Moses (Deuteronomy 19:16-21). In the Law of Moses, the punishment for committing perjury to convict someone falsely is to suffer the fate one intended for the accused.
The suffering of the innocent and the pious is a major theme in the Book of Daniel. We also read of God delivering such victims in Daniel 2 and 3. Yet Daniel 10-12 wrestles with the realities of martyrdoms.
God delivers the innocent and the pious some of the time. This tension is evident in the Book of Psalms. Some of those texts sound like Elihu, as well as Job’s alleged friends: Suffering results from sins, and God delivers the righteous. Yet other Psalms come from the perspective of the suffering righteous. The former position fills Proverbs, the Wisdom of Solomon, and Ecclesiasticus/Sirach/the Wisdom of Ben Sira, too. Ecclesiastes functions as a counter-argument to that excessive optimism.
Why does God deliver some of the righteous and not all of them? I have no pat answer for such a challenging question. In Revelation 6:9-11, even the martyrs in Heaven are not always happy.
We who struggle with this vexing question belong to an ancient tradition. We are the current generation in a long train. We have reasons to rejoice, at least; God delivers some of the innocent and the pious.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
NOVEMBER 23, 2020 COMMON ERA
THE FEAST OF JOHN KENNETH PFOHL, SR., U.S. MORAVIAN BISHOP; HIS WIFE, HARRIET ELIZABETH “BESSIE” WHITTINGTON PFOHL, U.S. MORAVIAN MUSICIAN; AND THEIR SON, JAMES CHRISTIAN PFOHL, SR., U.S. MORAVIAN MUSICIAN
THE FEAST OF CASPAR FRIEDRICH NACHTENHOFER, GERMAN LUTHERAN MINISTER, LITURGIST, AND HYMN WRITER
THE FEAST OF SAINT CLEMENT I, BISHOP OF ROME
THE FEAST OF SAINT COLUMBAN, ROMAN CATHOLIC MONK, ABBOT, AND MISSIONARY
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Above: Icon of St. Michael the Archangel
Image in the Public Domain
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READING DANIEL
PART X
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Daniel 10:1-12:13
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This passage, superficially from 586 B.C.E. or so, actually comes from a time much closer to 164 B.C.E. The reference to the “prince of Greece” (the guardian angel of the Seleucid Empire) clues us into the actual period of composition.
Again, as I keep repeating in these posts, the Book of Daniel is not history. Chapter 11 mentions Darius the Mede, supposedly the conqueror of the Chaldean/Neo-Babylonian Empire, and the immediate predecessors of Cyrus II of the Persians and the Medes. Historical records tell us that Cyrus II conquered the Chaldean/Neo-Babylonian Empire in 539 B.C.E. Records also tell us that the Persian Empire had ten kings from 559 to 330 B.C.E., with Cyrus II being the first and Darius III the last. Daniel 11:2 reads:
Persia will have three more kings, and the fourth will be wealthier than them all; by the power he obtains through his wealth, he will stir everyone up against the kingdom of the Greeks.
—TANAKH: The Holy Scriptures (1985)
The material in the reading for this post is dense, with many references to ancient potentates.
- The “warrior king” in Daniel 11:3 is obviously a reference to Alexander III “the Great,” given the breaking up of his empire after his death (11:4).
- The kings of the south were kings of the Ptolemaic Empire.
- The kings of the north were kings of the Seleucid Empire.
- The kings of the south (11:5f) and the north (11:6f) were Ptolemy I Soter (reigned 323-285 B.C.E.) Seleucus II Callinicus (reigned 246-225 B.C.E.), respectively.
- Daniel 11:6 refers to the murder of the daughter of a daughter of King Ptolemy II Philadelphus (reigned 285-246 B.C.E.).
- Daniel 11:7 refers to the retaliation of King Ptolemy III Euergetes (reigned 246-221 B.C.E.).
- Daniel 11 also contains references to hostile relations during the reigns of subsequent kings, including Ptolemy V Ephiphanes (reigned 204-180 B.C.E.) and Antiochus III “the Great” (reigned 223-187 B.C.E).
- Daniel 11:20 refers to Seleucus IV Philopater (reigned 187-175 B.C.E.), who attempted to rob the treasury of the Temple in Jerusalem (2 Maccabees 3).
- Daniel 11:21f refers to Antiochus IV Epiphanes (reigned 175-164 B.C.E.), the bête noire of Hasmonean partisans and a foe of the Ptomemaic Dynasty in Egypt.
Jews were literally in the middle of this Ptolemaic-Seleucid warfare. Judea, incorporated into the Seleucid Empire after the Battle of Paneas (200 B.C.E.), were subject to religious persecution. This reality set the stage for the Hasmonean rebellion, in progress during the composition of Daniel 7-12.
The message of Daniel 10-12, then, is to remain faithful despite persecution and martyrdom. God will win in the end.
Daniel 12 contains another theologically important detail. The resurrection of the dead in Ezekiel 37 is a metaphor for the restoration of Judah after the Babylonian Exile. The resurrection of the dead is literal in Daniel 12, though.
Living in perilous times is stressful. The temptation to surrender hope is strong. Yet, as the Book of Daniel repeatedly reminds us, God is sovereign. God is faithful. And, to quote the Reverend Maltbie Davenport Babcock (1858-1901),
This is my Father’s world,
O let me ne’er forget
That though the wrong seems oft so strong,
God is the ruler yet.
This is my Father’s world:
The battle is not done;
Jesus who died shall be satisfied,
And earth and heaven be one.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
NOVEMBER 22, 2020 COMMON ERA
CHRIST THE KING SUNDAY–PROPER 29: THE LAST SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST, YEAR A
THE FEAST OF ROBERT SEAGRAVE, ANGLICAN PRIEST AND HYMN WRITER
THE FEAST OF DITLEF GEORGSON RISTAD, NORWEGIAN-AMERICAN LUTHERAN MINISTER, HYMN TRANSLATOR, LITURGIST, AND EDUCATOR
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Above: The Vision of the Four Beasts
Image in the Public Domain
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READING DANIEL
PART VII
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Daniel 7:1-28
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The section of apocalyptic visions (Chapters 7-12) in the Book of Daniel begins here.
I remind you, O reader, what I have written in previous posts. The last Chaldean/Neo-Babylonian monarch was Nabonidus (reigned 556-539 B.C.E.). His son, Crown Prince Belshazzar, served as viceroy and regent (553-543 B.C.E.) while Nabonidus was on the Arabian peninsula for a decade. Belshazzar was never a king.
Daniel 7 has much in common with Chapter 2. Two competing lists of the four kingdoms mentioned in the two chapters exist. One list is:
- the Chaldean/Neo-Babylonian Empire;
- the Median Empire of “Darius the Mede;”
- the Persian Empire; and
- the Macedonian Empire of Alexander III “the Great.”
According to this list, the blasphemous horn is the notorious King Antiochus IV Epiphanes (reigned 175-164 B.C.E.). This identification makes sense to me, for it provides a clue regarding the period of composition.
The competing list is:
- the Chaldean/Neo-Babylonian Empire;
- the Persian Empire;
- the Macedonian Empire of Alexander III “the Great;” and
- the Roman Empire.
According to this list, the blasphemous horn is the antichrist.
The vision concludes with the descent of
one like a human being,
or, literally,
one like a son of man.
This was originally a reference to St. Michael the Archangel.
Son of man
has more than one meaning in the Hebrew Bible. Usually, it means a human being, as in Ezekiel 2:1 and Job 25:6. The term also means angel, as in Daniel 8:17, a reference to St. Gabriel the Archangel. The term clearly refers to a heavenly figure in Daniel 7:13. Christian tradition identifies the heavenly figure as Jesus.
Son of Man,
in relation to Jesus, is an apocalyptic label in the New Testament. This association of the label with a future messianic figure also exists in 1 Enoch 46:1 and 48:10, as well as in 2 Esdras/4 Ezra 13.
The establishment of the Kingdom of God in its fullness on Earth at the end of the visions of Daniel 2 and 7 expresses hope for a just world. This is the concept of the Kingdom of Heaven in the Gospel of Matthew. (See Jonathan Pennington.) This is the dream that remains unfulfilled thousands of years later.
I have read what many Biblical scholars have written about the Kingdom of God. I can, for example, quote C. H. Dodd (1884-1973) on Realized Eschatology at the drop of a hat. As logical as I find his case in The Founder of Christianity (1970) to be, I conclude that it feels like cold comfort on certain days. On those days, I agree and sympathize with Alfred Loisy, an excommunicated Roman Catholic theologian who complained,
Jesus proclaimed the Kingdom of God and what came was the Church.
As Bishop N. T. Wright wrote in Jesus and the Victory of God (1996), the response of many of the faithful to the Kingdom of God not arriving at the expected times has been to continue to hope for it. Hope persists.
KENNETH RANDOLPH TAYLOR
NOVEMBER 19, 2020 COMMON ERA
THE FEAST OF SAINT ELIZABETH OF HUNGARY, PRINCESS OF HUNGARY, AND HUMANITARIAN
THE FEAST OF JOHANN CHRISTIAN TILL, U.S. MORAVIAN ORGANIST, COMPOSER, AND PIANO BUILDER; AND HIS SON, JACOB CHRISTIAN TILL, U.S. MORAVIAN PIANO BUILDER
THE FEAST OF JOHANN HERMANN SCHEIN, GERMAN LUTHERAN COMPOSER
THE FEAST OF SAMUEL JOHN STONE, ANGLICAN PRIEST AND HYMN WRITER
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