3 Maccabees
Basic Information
- Despite title, not about Maccabees/Hasmoneans
- Canonical for Eastern Orthodox, but not for western church
deuterocanonical, i.e., on lower level
- Set under Ptolemy IV (222-204 BCE)
- but uses legend associated with Ptolemy VII (145-117 BCE)
- [see Josephus Against Apion 2:53-56]
Structure
Beginning of work apparently missing.
- Chapters 1-2 : Punishment in Egypt for Jerusalem "affront"
- 1:1-7 : Battle of Raphia [Ptolemy IV Philopator vs Antiochus III the Great]
- 1:8 - 2:24 : Ptolemey's visit to Jerusalem
- 2:25-33 : Division among Egyptian Jews at Ptolemy's demands
- Chapters 3-7 : Punishment taken away by God's action
- 3 - 5 : Conspiracy of lies leads to imminent disaster for Egyptian
Jewish community
- 6 - 7 : Rescue from elephants through prayer - and vindication of Jews
Similarities
2 Maccabees
- 3 Macc 2 variant tradition of 2 Macc 3
- also similar historical syle to 2 Macc
- but note that Heliodorus was convinced by the miracle
(2 macc 3:9-39),
whereas Ptolemy after this episode still unrepentant
(3 Macc 2:24)
Letter of Aristeas
The Letter of Aristeas is best known among Christian students as the work
recounting the translation of the Septuagint, sponsored by Ptolemy II (283-247 BCE).
Its main theme, however, is the compatibility of Judaism with Greek culture
(without denial of Torah).
3 Maccabees shares with Letter of Aristeas the dual setting in Palestine
and Egypt during Ptolemaic rule. Both deal with relationship between Jews
and gentiles, with 3 Macc emphasizing the differences, but Aristeas emphasizing commonalities.
genre of tales of persecution and exaltation
- Dan 1-6 and Esther
- close verbal parallels between 6:23-28; 7:2;
3:18; 5:20 with (Greek) Esther 16:3-6, 10-16
(with priority possibly to 3 Macc)
- King who opposed God now proclaims him -- as in
Daniel stories
- Governmental authorization for Jews to execute a
certain class of opponents -- as in Esther
formal and verbal parallels with Wis Sol 2; 4-5
notes
ptolemy IV philopator (221-204 bce)
cause of persecution
1: ptolemy's punishment for their failure to apostasize [2:32-3:1]
2: conspiracy against jews by other unnamed people [3:2-7]
pseudo-aristeas' glowing portrait of ptolemy II
contra apion: ptolemy VIII (euergetes ii, 145-117 bce) physcon
dositheus - not mentioned by polybius
role reminiscent of esth 2:21-23
collins: dependence on greek esther and daniel
combination of persecution of egyptian jews and threat to jewish temple
parallels reign of caligula (37-41 ce) - cf philo embassy
to gaius
note that alexandrians hostile, but greeks sympathetic
three threats
1:1-2:24
2:25-4:21 [failed registration - center of concentric reading]
5:1-7:23
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This page last modified 14 April 2001.