Old Testament

New Testament

2 Maccabees 14:24-34 New American Bible, Revised Edition (NABRE)

24. and he always kept Judas in his company, for he felt affection for the man.

25. He urged him to marry and have children; so Judas married and settled into an ordinary life.

26. When Alcimus saw their mutual goodwill, he took the treaty that had been made, went to Demetrius, and said that Nicanor was plotting against the government, for he had appointed Judas, that conspirator against the kingdom, as his successor.

27. Stirred up by the villain’s slander, the king became enraged. He wrote to Nicanor, stating that he was displeased with the treaty, and ordering him to send Maccabeus at once as a prisoner to Antioch.

28. When this message reached Nicanor he was dismayed and troubled at the thought of annulling his agreement with a man who had done no wrong.

29. However, there was no way of opposing the king, so he watched for an opportunity to carry out this order by a stratagem.

30. But Maccabeus, noticing that Nicanor was more harsh in his dealings with him, and acting with unaccustomed rudeness when they met, concluded that this harshness was not a good sign. So he gathered together not a few of his men, and went into hiding from Nicanor.

31. When Nicanor realized that he had been cleverly outwitted by the man, he went to the great and holy temple, at a time when the priests were offering the customary sacrifices, and ordered them to surrender Judas.

32. As they declared under oath that they did not know where the man they sought was,

33. he stretched out his right arm toward the temple and swore this oath: “If you do not hand Judas over to me as prisoner, I will level this shrine of God to the ground; I will tear down the altar, and erect here a splendid temple to Dionysus.”

34. With these words he went away. The priests stretched out their hands toward heaven, calling upon the unfailing defender of our nation in these words:

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