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Title: The Hammer. A Story of the Maccabean Times
Author: Richmond Seeley, Alfred John Church
Title-Search: Amazon.DE Buchfreund.DE ZVAB.COM Terrashop.DE
Tags: Judaica
Publisher: Seeley And Co.
The Hammer. A Story of the Maccabean Times
Author: Alfred John Church, Richmond Seeley
Illustrations: John Jellicoe
Publisher: Seeley And Co.
Published: 1890
Quelle: Project Gutenberg
It is not so very long since the Apocrypha was found in almost every copy of
the English Bible, but in the present day it is seldom printed with it, and
very seldom indeed read. One or two of the writings included under this name
are trivial and even absurd; but, on the whole, the Apocryphal books deserve
far more attention than they receive. Among the foremost, in point of interest
and value, must be placed the First Book of Maccabees. Written within fifty
years of the events which it records, at a time, it must be remembered, that
was singularly barren of historical literature, it is a careful, sober, and
consistent narrative. It is our principal, not unfrequently our sole, authority
for the incidents of a very important period, a period that was in the highest
degree critical in the history of the Jewish nation and of the world which that
nation has so largely influenced. It is commonly said that the great visitation
of the Captivity finally destroyed in the Hebrew mind the tendency to [pg
vi]idolatry. But the denunciations of Ezekiel prove to us that the exiles
carried into the land of their captivity the evil which they had cherished in
the land of their birth, and it is no less certain that they brought it back
with them on their return. It grew to its height in the early part of the
Second Century B.C., along with the increasing influence of Greek civilization
in Western Asia. The feeble Jewish Commonwealth was more and more dominated by
the powerful kingdoms which had been established on the ruins of the empire of
Alexander, and the national religion was attacked by an enemy at least as
dangerous as the Phœnician Baal-worship had been in earlier days, an enemy
which may be briefly described by the word Hellenism. The story of how Judas
and his brothers led the movement which rescued the Jewish faith from this
peril is the story which we have endeavoured to tell in this volume. Our plan
has been to follow strictly the lines of the First Book of Maccabees, going to
the Second, a far less trustworthy document, only for some picturesque
incidents. The subsidiary characters are fictitious, but the narrative is, we
believe, apart from casual errors, historically correct.
(from the Preface)
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