Old Testament

New Testament

2 Maccabees 10:8-26 Common English Bible (CEB)

8. They voted and issued a public decree that all Jews should celebrate these days each year.

9. And so the matters concerning Antiochus called Epiphanes came to an end.

10. We will now report about what occurred under Antiochus Eupator, that ungodly man’s son, summarizing the distressful events of the dreadful wars.

11. When this man received the kingdom, he appointed a certain Lysias as supreme governor of Coele-Syria and Phoenicia.

12. Ptolemy, called Macron, took the lead in showing justice to the Jews because of the wrongs done to them, and he tried to handle matters concerning them peacefully.

13. Because of this, the king’s political advisors accused him before Eupator and branded him a traitor. They accused him of abandoning Cyprus after Philometor had entrusted him with it, and of going back to Antiochus Epiphanes. Because Ptolemy no longer commanded the respect of his high office, he poisoned himself and died.

14. Gorgias, who became governor of the region, maintained a mercenary army and waged constant war against the Jews.

15. In addition to him, the Idumeans who controlled some strategic fortresses harassed the Jews. They gave safe harbor to those who were driven from Jerusalem and tried to keep the war going.

16. The Maccabee and his followers were praying and calling on God to help them. They rushed against the Idumean fortresses.

17. After mounting a vigorous attack, they gained control of all the sites and held off those fighting on the wall. They slaughtered all those they encountered, killing at least twenty thousand.

18. When no fewer than nine thousand fled into two towers well equipped for a siege,

19. the Maccabee departed to other places that needed his urgent attention, leaving Simon, Joseph, and Zacchaeus with a sufficient force for the siege of these towers.

20. Some men in the towers bribed greedy people around Simon. These people in turn, after receiving seventy thousand drachmen, allowed some of the enemy to slip away.

21. When the Maccabee found out what happened, he gathered the leaders of the people and accused them of selling their brothers for silver by setting free the enemy.

22. He executed the traitors and then quickly took the two towers.

23. He was successful in all things relating to war and killed more than twenty thousand men in the two towers.

24. Timothy, who was defeated by the Jews earlier, assembled a large number of foreign troops and brought many horses from Asia. He arrived intending to fight against Judea.

25. As he approached, the Maccabee’s followers prayed to God for help. Sprinkling their heads with dust, wrapping themselves with mourning clothes,

26. and falling down opposite the foundation of the altar, they begged God to be gracious to them, to be hostile to those hostile to them, and to be an opponent of their opponents, just as the Law promises.

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