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Triennial
Cycle (Triennial Torah Cycle) / Septennial Cycle (Septennial Torah Cycle)
Three and 1/2 year
Lectionary Readings |
Third Year of the Reading Cycle |
Kislev 25 – Tebet 02, 5771 |
Third Year of the Shmita Cycle |
Hanuka
Sameach!
We take
this opportunity to wish you and your loved ones a very happy Hanuka – a
festival of freedom and of consecration to the work of G-d. And even if we do
not finish the task before us, still we should do our very best in this life to
radiate it with the healing light of the Torah. For as the Psalmist wrote: “in
Your light do we see light” (Psalm 36:10).
Roll of Honor:
This Torah commentary comes to you courtesy of:
His Honor Rosh Paqid Adon Hillel ben David and beloved
wife HH Giberet Batsheva bat Sarah
His Honor Paqid Adon Mikha ben Hillel
His Honor Paqid Adon David ben Abraham
Her Excellency Giberet Sarai bat Sarah & beloved
family
His Excellency Adon Barth Lindemann & beloved
family
His Excellency Adon John Batchelor & beloved wife
His Excellency Adon Ezra ben Abraham and beloved wife
HE Giberet Karmela bat Sarah,
His Excellency Dr. Adon Yeshayahu ben Yosef and beloved
wife HE Giberet Tricia Foster
His Excellency Adon Yisrael ben Abraham and beloved
wife HE Giberet Elisheba bat Sarah
His Excellency Adon Eliyahu ben Abraham and beloved
wife HE Giberet Vardit bat Sarah
Her Excellency Giberet Laurie Taylor
His Excellency Dr. Adon Eliyahu ben Abraham and
beloved wife HE Giberet Dr. Elisheba bat Sarah
For their regular and sacrificial giving, providing
the best oil for the lamps, we pray that G-d’s richest blessings be upon their
lives and those of their loved ones, together with all Yisrael and her Torah
Scholars, amen ve amen!
Also a great thank you and great blessings be upon all
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Hanuka Fifth Day
Evening Sunday Dec. 05 – Evening
Monday Dec. 06, 2010
Torah: Numbers 7:36-47
Reader 1 - Num. 7:36-38
Reader 2 - Num. 7:39-41
Reader 3 - Num. 7:42-47
Yehudit (Judith) 8:28 – 10:23
1
Maccabees 9:1 - 10:32
Psalm 30:1-13
Nazareans add in their private
study and discussions: Isaiah 42:26; Psalm 43:3; Proverbs
10:27;
& 1 John 3:1-24 + 4:1-12
Rashi & Targum
Pseudo Jonathan
for: B’Midbar (Numbers)
7:36-47
Rashi |
Targum Pseudo Jonathan |
36.
On the fifth day, the chieftain was of the sons of Simeon, Shelumiel
the son of Zurishaddai. |
36.
on the fifth, Shelumiel bar Zurishaddai, prince of Shemeon; |
37.
His offering was one silver bowl weighing one hundred and thirty
[shekels], one silver sprinkling basin [weighing] seventy shekels according
to the holy shekel, both filled with fine flour mixed with olive oil for a
meal offering. |
37.
|
38.
One spoon [weighing] ten gold [shekels] filled with incense. |
38.
|
39.
One young bull, one ram and one lamb in its first year for a burnt
offering. |
39.
|
40.
One young he goat for a sin offering. |
40.
|
41.
And for the peace offering: two oxen, five rams, five he goats, five
lambs in their first year; this was the offering of Shelumiel the son of
Zurishaddai. |
41.
|
42.
On the sixth day, the chieftain was of the sons of Gad, Eliasaph the
son of De'uel. |
42.
on the sixth, Eljasaph bar Dehuel, prince of the Benei Gad; |
43.
His offering was one silver bowl weighing one hundred and thirty
[shekels], one silver sprinkling basin [weighing] seventy shekels according
to the holy shekel, both filled with fine flour mixed with olive oil for a
meal offering. |
43.
|
44.
One spoon [weighing] ten gold [shekels] filled with incense. |
44.
|
45.
One young bull, one ram and one lamb in its first year for a burnt
offering. |
45.
|
46.
One young he goat for a sin offering. |
46.
|
47.
And for the peace offering: two oxen, five rams, five he goats, five
lambs in their first year; this was the offering of Eliasaph the son of
De'uel. |
47.
|
Yehudit (Judith) 8:28 – 10:23
New Jerusalem Bible Version
28 Uzziah replied,
'Everything you have just said comes from an honest heart and no one will
contradict a word of it.
29 Not that today is
the first time your wisdom has been displayed; from your earliest years all the
people have known how shrewd you are and of how sound a heart.
30 But, parched with
thirst, the people forced us to act as we had promised them and to bind
ourselves by an inviolable oath.
31 You are a devout
woman; pray to the Lord, then, to send us a downpour to fill our
storage-wells, so that our faintness may pass.'
32 Judith replied,
'Listen to me, I intend to do something, the memory of which will be handed down to
the children of our race from age to age.
33 Tonight you must be
at the gate of the town. I shall make my way out with my attendant. Before the
time fixed by you for surrendering the town to our enemies, the Lord will make use of
me to rescue Israel.
34 You must not ask
what I intend to do; I shall not tell you until I have done it.'
35 Uzziah and the
chief men said, 'Go in peace. May the Lord show you a way to take revenge on our
enemies.'
36 And leaving the
upper room they went back to their posts.
NJB Judith 9:1 Judith threw herself face to the
ground, scattered ashes on her head,
undressed as far as the sackcloth she was wearing and cried loudly to the Lord. At
the same time in Jerusalem the evening incense was
being offered in the Temple of God. Judith said:
2 Lord, God of my
ancestor Simeon, you armed him with a sword to take vengeance on the foreigners
who had undone a virgin's belt to her shame, laid bare her thigh to her confusion,
violated her womb to her dishonour, since,
though you said, 'This must not be,' they did it.
3 For this you handed
their leaders over to slaughter, and their bed, defiled by their treachery, was
itself betrayed in blood. You struck the slaves with the chieftains and
the chieftains with their retainers.
4 You left their wives
to be carried off, their daughters to be taken captive, and their spoils to be
shared out among the sons you loved, who had been so zealous for you, had loathed the
stain put on their blood and called on
you for help. O God, my God, now hear this widow too;
5 for you have made
the past, and what is happening now, and what will follow. What is, what will
be, you have planned; what has been, you designed.
6 Your purposes stood
forward; 'See, here we are!' they said. For all your ways are prepared and your
judgements delivered with foreknowledge.
7 See the Assyrians,
with their army abounding glorying in their horses and their riders, exulting
in the strength of their infantry. Trust as they may in shield and spear,
in bow and sling, in you they have not recognised the Lord, the breaker of
battle-lines;
8 yours alone is the
title of Lord. Break their violence with your might, in your anger bring down
their strength. For they plan to profane your holy places, to defile the tabernacle,
the resting place of your glorious name,
and to hack down the horn of your altar.
9 Observe their
arrogance, send your fury on their heads, give the strength I have in mind to this
widow's hand.
10 By guile of my lips
strike down slave with master, and master with retainer. Break their pride by a
woman's hand.
11 Your strength does
not lie in numbers, nor your might in strong men; since you are the God of the
humble, the help of the oppressed, the support of the weak, the refuge of the forsaken,
the Saviour of the despairing.
12 Please, please, God
of my father, God of the heritage of Israel, Master of heaven and earth,
Creator of the waters, King of your whole creation, hear my prayer.
13 Give me a beguiling
tongue to wound and kill those who have formed such cruel designs against
your covenant, against your holy dwelling-place, against Mount Zion, against the
house belonging to your sons.
14 And demonstrate to
every nation, every tribe, that you are the Lord, God of all power, all
might, and that the race of Israel has no protector but you.
NJB Judith 10:1 Thus Judith called on the God of
Israel. When she had finished praying,
2 she got up from the
floor, summoned her maid and went down into the rooms which she used on
Sabbath days and festivals.
3 There she removed
the sackcloth she was wearing and taking off her widow's dress, she washed all
over, anointed herself plentifully with perfumes, dressed her hair, wrapped a turban
round it and put on the robe of joy she
used to wear when her husband Manasseh was alive.
4 She put sandals on
her feet, put on her necklaces, bracelets, rings, earrings and all her jewellery,
and made herself beautiful enough to beguile the eye of any man who saw her.
5 Then she handed her
maid a skin of wine and a flask of oil, filled a bag with barley girdle-cakes,
cakes of dried fruit and pure loaves, and wrapping all these provisions up
gave them to her as well.
6 They then went out,
making for the town gate of Bethulia. There they found Uzziah waiting with
the two elders of the town, Chabris and Charmis.
7 When they saw
Judith, her face so changed and her clothes so different, they were lost in
admiration of her beauty. They said to her:
8 May the God of our
ancestors keep you in his favour! May he crown your designs with success
to the glory of the children of Israel, to the greater glory of
Jerusalem!
9 Judith worshipped
God, and then she said, 'Have the town gate opened for me so that I can go
out and fulfil all the wishes you expressed to me.' They did as she asked and gave
orders to the young men to open the gate
for her.
10 This done, Judith
went out accompanied by her maid, while the men of the town watched her all
the way down the mountain and across the valley,
until they lost sight of her.
11 As the women were
making straight through the valley, an advance unit of Assyrians
intercepted them,
12 and, seizing
Judith, began to question her. 'Which side are you on? Where do you come from? Where are
you going?' 'I am a daughter of the Hebrews,' she replied, 'and I am fleeing from
them since they will soon be your prey.
13 I am on my way to
see Holofernes, the general of your army, to give him trustworthy information.
I shall show him the road to take if he wants to capture all the hill-country without
losing one man or one life.'
14 As the men listened
to what she was saying, they stared in astonishment at the sight of such
a beautiful woman.
15 'It will prove the
saving of you,' they said to her, 'coming down to see our master of your own
accord. You had better go to his tent; some of our men will escort you
and hand you over to him.
16 Once you are in his
presence do not be afraid. Tell him what you have just told us and you will be
well treated.'
17 They then detailed
a hundred of their men as escort for herself and her attendant, and these led
them to the tent of Holofernes.
18 News of her coming
had already spread through the tents, and there was a general stir in the
camp. She was still outside the tent of Holofernes waiting to be
announced, when a crowd began forming round her.
19 They were
immediately impressed by her beauty and impressed with the Israelites because of
her. 'Who could despise a people who have women like this?' they kept saying. 'Better not
leave one of them alive; let any go and
they could twist the whole world round their fingers!'
20 The bodyguard and
adjutants of Holofernes then came out and led Judith into the tent.
21 Holofernes was resting
on his bed under a canopy of purple and gold studded with emeralds and
precious stones.
22 The men announced
her and he came out to the entrance to the tent, with silver torches carried
before him.
23 When Judith
confronted the general and his adjutant, the beauty of her face astonished them all. She
fell on her face and did homage to him, but his servants raised her from the ground.
1 Maccabees 9:1 - 10:32
New Jerusalem Bible Version
NJB
1 Maccabees 9:1 Demetrius, hearing that Nicanor and his army had fallen in
battle, sent Bacchides and Alcimus a second time into Judaea, and with them the
right wing of his army.
2
They took the road to Galilee and besieged Mesaloth in Arbela, and captured it,
putting many people to death.
3
In the first month of the year 152, they encamped outside Jerusalem;
4
they then moved on, making their way to Beer-Zaith with twenty thousand foot
and two thousand horse.
5
Judas lay in camp at Elasa, with three thousand picked men.
6
When they saw the huge size of the enemy forces they were terrified, and many
slipped out of the camp, until no more than eight hundred of the force were
left.
7
With battle now inevitable, Judas realised that his army had melted away; he
was aghast, for he had no time to rally them.
8
Yet, dismayed as he was, he said to those who were left, 'Up! Let us face the
enemy; we may yet have the strength to fight them.'
9
His men tried to dissuade him, declaring, 'We have no strength for anything but
to escape with our lives this time; then we can come back with our brothers to
fight them; by ourselves we are too few.'
10
Judas retorted, 'That I should do such a thing as run away from them! If our
time has come, at least let us die like men for our countrymen, and leave
nothing to tarnish our reputation.'
11
The army marched out of camp and drew up, facing the enemy. The cavalry was
drawn up in two squadrons; the slingers and archers marched in the van of the
army, and all the best fighters were put in the front rank;
12
Bacchides was on the right wing. The phalanx advanced from between the two
squadrons, sounding the trumpets; the men on Judas' side also blew their
trumpets,
13
and the earth shook with the noise of the armies. The engagement lasted from
morning until evening.
14
Judas saw that Bacchides and the main strength of his army lay on the right;
all the stout-hearted rallied to him,
15
and they crushed the right wing, pursuing them as far as the Azara Hills.
16
But when the Syrians on the left wing saw that the right had been broken, they
turned and followed hot on the heels of Judas and his men to take them in the
rear.
17
The fight became desperate, and there were many casualties on both sides.
18
Judas himself fell, and the remnant fled.
19
Jonathan and Simon took up their brother Judas and buried him in his ancestral
tomb at Modein.
20
All Israel wept and mourned him deeply and for many days they repeated this
dirge.
21
'What a downfall for the strong man, the man who kept Israel safe!'
22
The other deeds of Judas, the battles he fought, the exploits he performed, and
all his titles to greatness have not been recorded; but they were very many.
23
After the death of Judas, the renegades came out of hiding throughout Israel
and all the evil-doers reappeared.
24
At that time there was a severe famine, and the country went over to their
side.
25
Bacchides deliberately chose the enemies of religion to administer the country.
26
These traced and searched out the friends of Judas and brought them before
Bacchides, who ill-treated and mocked them.
27
A terrible oppression began in Israel; there had been nothing like it since the
disappearance of prophecy among them.
28
The friends of Judas then all united in saying to Jonathan,
29
'Since your brother Judas died, there has been no one like him to head the
resistance against our enemies, people like Bacchides and others who hate our
nation.
30
Accordingly, we have today chosen you to take his place as our ruler and leader
and to fight our campaigns.'
31
Whereupon, Jonathan took command, in succession to his brother Judas.
32
Bacchides, when he heard the news, made plans to kill Jonathan.
33
But this became known to Jonathan, his brother Simon and all his supporters,
and they took refuge in the desert of Tekoa, camping by the water-supply at
Asphar storage-well.
34
(Bacchides came to know of this on the Sabbath day, and he too crossed the
Jordan with his entire army.)
35
Jonathan sent his brother, who was one of his commanders, to ask his friends
the Nabataeans to store their considerable baggage for them.
36
The sons of Amrai, however, those of Medeba, intercepted them, captured John
and everything he had and made off with their prize.
37
Later, Jonathan and his brother Simon were told that the sons of Amrai were
celebrating an important wedding, and were escorting the bride, a daughter of
one of the great notables of Canaan, from Nabata with a large retinue.
38
Remembering the bloody end of their brother John, they went up and hid under
cover of the mountain.
39
As they were keeping watch, a noisy procession came into sight with a great
deal of baggage, and the bridegroom, with his groomsmen and his family, came
out to meet it with tambourines and a band, and rich, warlike display.
40
The Jews rushed down on them from their ambush and killed them, inflicting
heavy casualties; the survivors escaped to the mountain, leaving their entire
baggage train to be captured.
41
Thus, the wedding was turned into mourning and the music of their band into
lamentation.
42
Having in this way avenged in full the blood of their brother, they returned to
the marshes of the Jordan.
43
As soon as Bacchides heard this, he came on the Sabbath day with a considerable
force to the steep banks of the Jordan.
44
Jonathan said to his men, 'Up! Let us fight for our lives, for today it is not
as in the old days.
45
You can see, we shall have to fight on our front and to our rear; we have the
waters of the Jordan on one side, the marsh and scrub on the other, and we have
no line of withdrawal.
46
This is the moment to call on Heaven, to deliver you from the clutches of your
enemies.'
47
The engagement was begun by Jonathan, who aimed a blow at Bacchides, but the
Syrian disengaged himself and withdrew,
48
whereupon Jonathan and his men leapt into the Jordan and swam to the other
bank; the enemy did not, however, cross the Jordan in pursuit.
49
That day, Bacchides lost about a thousand men.
50
Bacchides went back to Jerusalem and began fortifying some of the Judaean
towns: the fortresses of Jericho, Emmaus, Beth-Horon, Bethel, Timnath,
Pharathon and Tephon, with high walls and barred gates,
51
and stationed a garrison in each of them to harass Israel.
52
He also fortified the town of Beth-Zur, Gezer and the Citadel, and placed
troops in them with supplies of provisions.
53
He took the sons of the leading men of the country as hostages, and had them
placed under guard in the Citadel of Jerusalem.
54
In the year 153, in the second month, Alcimus ordered the demolition of the
wall of the inner court of the sanctuary, destroying the work of the prophets.
Alcimus had just begun the demolition
55
when he suffered a stroke, and his work was interrupted. His mouth became
obstructed, and his paralysis made him incapable of speaking at all or giving
directions to his household;
56
it was not long before he died in great agony.
57
On the death of Alcimus, Bacchides went back to the king, and Judaea was left
in peace for two years.
58
The renegades then all agreed on a plan. 'Now is the time,' they said, 'while
Jonathan and his supporters are living in peace and are full of confidence, for
us to bring back Bacchides, and he will arrest the lot of them in one night.'
59
So they went to him and reached an understanding.
60
Bacchides at once set out with a large force, and sent secret instructions to
all his allies in Judaea to seize Jonathan and his supporters. But they were
unable to do this because their plan became known,
61
and Jonathan and his men arrested some fifty of the men of the country who were
ringleaders in the plot, and put them to death.
62
Jonathan and Simon then retired with their partisans to Beth-Bassi in the
desert; they rebuilt the ruinous parts of the place and fortified it.
63
When Bacchides heard this, he mustered his whole force and notified his
adherents in Judaea.
64
He then proceeded to lay siege to Beth-Bassi, the fighting was protracted, and
he constructed siege-engines.
65
Jonathan, however, leaving his brother Simon in the town, broke out into the
countryside with a handful of men.
66
He launched a blow at Odomera and his brothers, and at the sons of Phasiron in
their encampment; whereupon, these too came into the struggle, joining forces
with him.
67
Simon and his people, meanwhile, made a sortie from the town and set fire to
the siege-engines.
68
Taking the offensive against Bacchides, they defeated him. He was greatly
disconcerted to find that his plan and his assault had come to nothing,
69
and vented his anger on those renegades who had induced him to enter the
country, putting many of them to death; he then decided to take his own troops
home.
70
Discovering this, Jonathan sent envoys to negotiate peace terms and the release
of prisoners with him.
71
Bacchides agreed to this, accepting his proposals and swearing never to seek
occasion to harm him for the rest of his life.
72
Having surrendered to Jonathan those prisoners he had earlier taken in Judaea,
he turned about and withdrew to his own country, and never again came near
their frontiers.
73
The sword no longer hung over Israel, and Jonathan settled in Michmash, where
he began to judge the people and to rid Israel of the godless.
NJB
1 Maccabees 10:1 In the year 160, Alexander, son of Antiochus Epiphanes, raised
an army and occupied Ptolemais. He was well received, and there inaugurated his
reign.
2
On hearing this, King Demetrius assembled a very large army and marched off to
do battle with him.
3
Demetrius furthermore sent Jonathan a most conciliatory letter, promising to
promote him in rank,
4
for, as he said, 'We had better move first to come to terms with these people
before he makes common cause with Alexander against us;
5
he will not have forgotten all the wrongs we inflicted on him and his brothers,
and on his nation.'
6
He even authorised him to raise an army, to manufacture arms, and to describe
himself as his ally, and ordered the hostages in the Citadel to be surrendered
to him.
7
Jonathan went straight to Jerusalem and read the letter in the hearing of the
whole people and of the men in the Citadel.
8
They were terrified when they heard that the king had given him authority to
raise an army.
9
The men in the Citadel surrendered the hostages to Jonathan, who handed them
back to their parents.
10
Jonathan then took up residence in Jerusalem and began the rebuilding and
restoration of the city.
11
He ordered those responsible for the work to build the walls and the defences
round Mount Zion of squared stone blocks to make them stronger, and this was
done.
12
The foreigners in the fortresses built by Bacchides abandoned them,
13
one after another leaving his post to go back to his own country.
14
Only at Beth-Zur were a few left of those who had forsaken the Law and the
precepts, since this was their refuge.
15
King Alexander heard of all the promises Demetrius had sent to Jonathan, and he
was also given an account of the battles and exploits of this man and his
brothers and of the hardships they had endured.
16
'Shall we ever find another man like him?' he exclaimed. 'We must make him our
friend and ally!'
17
He therefore wrote him a letter, addressing him in these terms:
18
'King Alexander to his brother Jonathan, greetings.
19
'You have been brought to our notice as a strong man of action and as someone
who deserves to be our friend.
20
Accordingly, we have today appointed you high priest of your nation, with the
title of "Friend of the King" ' -- he also sent him a purple robe and
a golden crown-'and you are to study our interests and maintain friendly
relations with us.'
21
Jonathan put on the sacred vestments in the seventh month of the year 160, on
the feast of Shelters; he then set about raising troops and manufacturing arms
in quantity.
22
Demetrius was displeased when he heard what had happened.
23
'What have we been doing,' he said, 'for Alexander to forestall us in winning
the friendship of the Jews and so improving his own position?
24
I too shall address an appeal to them, offering them advancement and riches as
an inducement to support me.'
25
And he wrote to them as follows: 'King Demetrius to the Jewish nation,
greetings.
26
'We have heard how you have kept your agreement with us and have maintained
friendly relations with us and have not gone over to our enemies, and it has
given us great satisfaction.
27
If you now continue to keep faith with us, we shall make you a handsome return
for what you do on our behalf.
28
We shall accord you many exemptions and grant you privileges.
29
'Henceforth I release you and exempt all the Jews from the tribute, the salt
dues and the crown levies,
30
and whereas I am entitled to one-third of the grain and one-half of the fruit
of the trees, I release from this levy, from today and for the future, Judaea
and the three districts annexed to it from Samaria-Galilee, from this day
henceforth in perpetuity.
31
Jerusalem will be sacred and exempt, with its territory, from tithes and dues.
32
I relinquish control of the Citadel in Jerusalem and make it over to the high
priest, so that he may man it with a garrison of his own choosing.
Tehillim - Psalm 30:1-13
Rashi |
Targum |
1.
A psalm; a song of dedication of the House, of David. |
1. A praise song for the dedication of the
sanctuary. Of David. |
2.
I will exalt You, O Lord, for You have raised me up, and You have not
allowed my enemies to rejoice over me. |
2. I will praise you, O LORD, for you made me stand
erect, and did not let my enemies rejoice over me. |
3.
O Lord, I have cried out to You, and You have healed me. |
3.
O LORD my God, I prayed in Your presence and You healed me. |
4.
O Lord, You have brought my soul from the grave; You have revived me
from my descent into the Pit. |
4.
O LORD, You raised my soul out of Sheol; You preserved me from going
down to the pit. |
5.
Sing to the Lord, His pious ones, and give thanks to His holy name. |
5.
Sing praise in the LORD's presence, you His devotees; and give thanks
at the invocation of His holy one. |
6.
For His wrath lasts but a moment; life results from His favor; in the
evening, weeping may tarry, but in the morning there is joyful singing. |
6.
For His anger is but a moment; eternal life is His good pleasure. In
the evening one goes to bed in tears, but in the morning one rises in praise. |
7.
And I said in my tranquility, "I will never falter." |
7.
And I said when I dwelt in trust, I will never be shaken. |
8.
O Lord, with Your will, You set up my mountain to be might, You hid
Your countenance and I became frightened. |
8.
O LORD, by Your will You prepared the mighty mountains; You removed
Your presence, I became afraid. |
9.
To You, O Lord, I would call, and to the Lord I would supplicate. |
9.
In Your presence, O LORD, I will cry out; and to You, O my God,
I will pray. |
10.
"What gain is there in my blood, in my descent to
the grave? Will dust thank You; will it recite Your truth? |
10.
And I said, What profit is there in my blood, when I
descend to the grave? Can those who descend to the dust praise You? Will they
tell of Your faithfulness? |
11.
Hear, O Lord, and be gracious to me; O Lord, be my helper." |
11.
Accept, O LORD, my prayer, and have mercy on me; O LORD, be my helper. |
12.
You have turned my lament into dancing for me; You loosened my
sackcloth and girded me with joy. |
12.
You turned my lament into my celebration; You loosened my sackcloth and
girded me with joy. |
13.
So that my soul will sing praises to You and not be silent. O Lord, my
God, I will thank You forever. |
13.
Because the nobles of the world will give You praise and not be
silent, O LORD my God, I too will give You praise. |
|
|
Isaiah 42:16 -
JPS
I
will lead the blind by a road they did not know, And I will make them walk by
paths they never knew. I will turn darkness before them to light, rough places
into level ground. These are the promises -- I will keep them without fail.
Psalm 43:3 - JPS
3
Send forth Your light and Your truth; they will lead me; they will bring me to
Your holy mountain, to Your dwelling-place,
Proverbs 10:27 -
JPS
27 The
fear of the LORD prolongs life, While the years of the wicked will be
shortened.
1 John 3:1-24 + 4:1-12
Hakham’s &
Dr. Adon Eliyahu’s Rendition
1.
Behold what [manner] of love has the Father given to us [Jews] that
we are given the vocation (calling) to [prepare ourselves to] become
B’ne Elohim (i.e. Rabbis/Hakhamim). Because of this the [pagan] world
knows us not, because it has not known Him (i.e. God).
2
Beloved, now we are [potentially] B’ne Elohim (i.e. Rabbis/Hakhamim),
and what we will be has not yet been revealed. But we know that whenever he (i.e.
Messiah) be revealed, in his (i.e. Messiah’s) likeness (i.e. a
Hakham) we will be, because we will see him (i.e. Messiah) just as
he is.
3
And everyone who holds this expectation in him purifies (ceremonially and
morally) himself, even as he (i.e. Messiah) is (ceremonially and
morally) pure.
4
Everyone who practices sin also practices Lawlessness, for sin is Lawlessness (i.e.
transgression of the Law).
5
And you know that that he was revealed that our sins he might take away, and in
him [there] is no sin.
6
Everyone that tabernacles in him (i.e. Messiah) does not [continually
and habitually] sin. Everyone that sins [continually and habitually]
has neither [prophetically] seen him (i.e. Messiah) nor [intimately]
known him (i.e. Messiah).
7
[My] sons, let no one lead you astray: the one who [continually and
habitually] practices righteousness/generosity is righteous/generous, just
as he (i.e. Messiah) is righteous/generous.
8
He who [continually and habitually] practices sin is of the Accuser (i.e.
Heb. “HaSatan”), because the Accuser (i.e. “HaSatan”) has been [continually
and habitually] sinning from the beginning (i.e. Beresheet – cf. Gen.
1:1ff). For this [reason] the son of God (Heb. Ben Elohim – lit.
“the son of the Judge” – i.e. the King Messiah of Israel) was revealed:
that he may destroy (loosen) the works of the Accuser (i.e. Heb.
“HaSatan”). .
9
Everyone who is fathered (begotten) of God does not [continually and
habitually] practices sin (i.e. Lawlessness –cf v.4 above), because
His (God’s) seed (Greek: “Sperm” – i.e. the Torah) tabernacles in
him, and he is not capable to [continually and habitually] sin, because
he has been fathered (begotten) by God.
10
In this the sons of God (Heb. B’ne Elohim - i.e. Rabbis/Hakhamim) and
the sons of the Accuser (Heb. “HaSatan”) are manifest: everyone who does
not practice righteousness/generosity is not of God, nor the one who does not
love [and treasure greatly] his [Jewish] brother/sister.
11
For this is the message that you have heard from [the] beginning (i.e.
Beresheet – Gen. 1:1ff): that we should love [and treasure greatly] one
another,
12
not as Cain, [who] was of the Lawless one and [violently] murdered
his brother. And for what reason did he [violently] murder him? Because
his deeds were Lawless and those of his brother [were] righteous/generous.
13
Do not be surprised, my brothers, if the [pagan] world hates you.
14
We [intimately] know that we have departed from the sentence of [eternal]
death to [eternal] life because we love [and treasure greatly]
the [Jewish] brotherhood. The one who does not love [and treasure
greatly] his [Jewish] brother/sister remains under the sentence of [eternal]
death.
15
Everyone who hates his [Jewish] brother/sister is a murderer, and you
know that every murderer does not have eternal life tabernacling in him.
16
In this we have [intimately] know love, because he (i.e. Messiah)
shared his life for us, and we must [consequently following his example] lay
down our lives for the [Jewish] brotherhood.
17
But whoever may have the world's means of life (i.e. material possessions)
and sees his [Jewish] brother/sister having need and shuts up his
sympathy/affection from him/her, how does the love of God tabernacle in him/her?
18
My sons, we must not love with words nor with tongue, but in deeds and truth (i.e.
Torah - cf. Psalm 119:142).
19
And in this we intimately know that we are of the truth (i.e. Torah - cf.
Psalm 119:142) and before Him (i.e. God’s Presence) we will persuade
our hearts,
20
that if our hearts should condemn us, God is greater than our hearts and He knows
all things.
21
Beloved, if our hearts should not condemn us, we have confidence before God,
22
and whatever we may ask we receive from Him (i.e. God), because we keep/observe
His commandments and practice what is pleasing before His [presence].
23
And this is His (God’s) commandment: that we should adhere to the
authority of his son (i.e. the King Messiah of Israel) Yeshua the
Messiah and should love [and treasure greatly] one another, just as he (i.e.
the Master) commanded us.
24
And the one who keeps/observe His (God’s) commandments tabernacles in
him (i.e. Messiah), and he (i.e. Messiah) in him. And in this we [intimately]
know that he (i.e. Messiah) tabernacles in us: by the spirit [of God]
which he (i.e. Messiah) has given to us.
1
Beloved, do not faithfully obey every spirit, but test the spirits [to
determine] if they are from God, because many pseudo prophets have come
forth into the world.
2
By this you [will intimately] know the spirit of God: every spirit that professes
[that] Yeshua the Messiah came in (or, according to) [the] flesh is from God,
3
and every spirit that does not profess [that] Yeshua
the Messiah came in (or, according to) [the] flesh is not from
God, and this is of the anti-messiah, that you have heard that is coming, and
now he is already in the [pagan] world.
4
You are from God, sons, and have conquered them (the pseudo-prophets), because
greater is He who [is] in you than he who [is] in the [pagan]
world.
5
They (the pseudo-prophets) are from the [pagan] world; because of
this they speak from the [pagan] world and the [pagan] world
listens to them.
6
We are from God. The one who knows God listens to us [Jewish Hakhamim];
whoever is not from God does not listen to us [Jewish Hakhamim]. By this
we know/distinguish the spirit of truth (i.e. of the Torah – cf. Psalm
119:142) and/from the spirit of deceit.
7
Beloved, we must love [and treasure greatly] one another, because love
is from God (the numerical value of Ahavah and Echad = 13), and everyone
who loves [and treasures greatly the Jewish brethren] has been fathered (begotten)
by God and knows God.
8
The one who does not love [and does not treasure greatly the Jewish brethren]
does not know God, because God is love (the numerical value of Ahavah
and Echad = 13).
9
In this the love of God is revealed in us: that God has sent his only begotten
son (i.e. the King Messiah of Israel) into the [pagan] world that
we may live through him.
10
In this is love: not that we loved God, but that He (God) loved us and sent his
son (i.e. the King Messiah of Israel) [as] a propitiation for our sins.
11
Beloved, if God loved us so, we must also love [and treasure greatly]
one another.
12
No one has seen God at any time. If we should love [and treasure greatly] one
another, God tabernacles in us and His love has been achieved in us.
END OF THE READINGS FOR THE FIFTH
DAY OF HANUKA
Hanuka Sixth Day
&
Rosh Chodesh
Tebet (New Moon for the Month of Tebet) Day One
Evening Monday Dec. 06 – Evening
Tuesday Dec. 07, 2010
Torah: Numbers 28:1-15 & 7:42-47
Reader 1 - Num. 28:1-5
Reader 2 - Num. 28:6-10
Reader 3 - Num. 28:11-15
Reader 4 – Num. 7:42-47
Yehudit (Judith) 11:1 – 12:20
1
Maccabees 10:33 - 11:59
Psalm 30:1-13
Proverbs 7:1-27
Nazareans
add in their private study and discussions: Psalm 27:1; Psalm 119:105; & 1
John 4:13-21
Rashi & Targum
Pseudo Jonathan
for: B’Midbar (Numbers)
28:1-15
Rashi |
Targum Pseudo Jonathan |
1.
|
1. And the LORD spoke with Mosheh, saying: |
2.
|
2. Instruct the children of Israel, and say to them:
The priests may eat of My oblation the bread of the order of My table; but
that which you offer upon My altar may no man eat. Is there not a fire that
will consume it? And it will be accepted before Me as a pleasant smell. Sons
of Israel, My people, be admonished to offer it from the firstlings on the
Sabbath, an oblation before Me in its time. |
3.
|
3. And say to them: This is the order of the
oblations you will offer before the LORD; two lambs of the year, unblemished,
daily, a perpetual burnt offering. |
4.
|
4. The one lamb you will perform in the morning to
make atonement for the sins of the night; and the second lamb you will
perform between the suns to atone for the sins of the day; |
5.
|
5. and the tenth of three seahs of wheat flour as a
mincha mingled with beaten olive oil, the fourth of a hin. |
6.
|
6. It is a perpetual burnt offering, such as was
(ordained to be) offered at Mount Sinai, to be received with favor as an
oblation before the LORD. |
7.
|
7. And its libation will be the fourth of a hin for
one lamb; from the vessels of the house of the Sanctuary will it be
outpoured, a libation of old wine. But if old wine may not be found, bring
wine of forty days to pour out before the LORD. |
8.
|
8. And the second lamb you will perform between the
suns, according to the presentation of the morning, and according to its
oblation will you make the offering, that it may be accepted with favor
before the LORD. |
9.
And on the Sabbath day, two unblemished lambs in the first year, and
two tenths fine flour as a meal offering, mixed with oil, and its libation. |
9. but on the day of Shabbat two lambs of the year
without blemish, and two-tenths of flour mixed with olive oil for the mincha
and its libation. |
10.
[This is] the burnt offering of each Sabbath on its Sabbath, in
addition to the continual burnt offering and its libation. |
10.
On the Sabbath you will make a Sabbath burnt sacrifice in addition to
the perpetual burnt sacrifice and its libation. |
11.
And on the beginning of your months, you shall offer up a burnt
offering to the Lord: two young bulls, one ram, and seven lambs in the first
year, [all] unblemished. |
11.
And at the beginning of your months you will offer a burnt sacrifice
before the LORD; two young bullocks, without mixture, one ram, lambs of the
year seven, unblemished; |
12.
Three tenths fine flour as a meal offering, mixed with oil for each
bull, and two tenths fine flour as a meal offering, mixed with oil for each
ram. |
12.
and three tenths of flour mingled with oil for the mincha for one
bullock; two tenths of flour with olive oil for the mincha of the one ram; |
13.
And one tenth of fine flour mixed with oil as a meal offering for each
lamb. A burnt offering with a spirit of satisfaction, a fire offering to the
Lord. |
13. and
one tenth of flour with olive oil for the mincha for each lamb of the burnt
offering, an oblation to be received with favor before the LORD. |
14.
And their libations: a half of a hin for each bull, a third of a hin
for each ram, and a quarter of a hin for each lamb; this is the burnt
offering of each new month in its month, throughout the months of the year. |
14.
And for their libation to be offered with them, the half of a bin for
a bullock, the third of a bin for the ram, and the fourth of a hin for a
lamb, of the wine of grapes. This burnt sacrifice will be offered at the
beginning of every month in the time of the removal of the beginning of every
month in the year; |
15.
And one young male goat for a sin offering to the Lord; it shall be
offered up in addition to the continual burnt offering and its libation. |
15.
and one kid of the goats, for a sin offering before the LORD at the
disappearing (failure) of the moon, with the perpetual burnt sacrifice will
you perform with its libation. |
|
|
Rashi & Targum
Pseudo Jonathan
for: B’Midbar (Numbers)
7:42-47
Rashi |
Targum PseudoJonathan |
42.
On the sixth day, the chieftain was of the sons of Gad, Eliasaph the
son of De'uel. |
42.
on the sixth, Eljasaph bar Dehuel, prince of the Benei Gad; |
43.
His offering was one silver bowl weighing one hundred and thirty
[shekels], one silver sprinkling basin [weighing] seventy shekels according
to the holy shekel, both filled with fine flour mixed with olive oil for a
meal offering. |
43.
|
44.
One spoon [weighing] ten gold [shekels] filled with incense. |
44.
|
45.
One young bull, one ram and one lamb in its first year for a burnt
offering. |
45.
|
46.
One young he goat for a sin offering. |
46.
|
47.
And for the peace offering: two oxen, five rams, five he goats, five
lambs in their first year; this was the offering of Eliasaph the son of
De'uel. |
47.
|
|
|
Yehudit (Judith) 11:1 – 12:20
New Jerusalem Bible Version
NJB Judith 11:1 'Courage, woman,' Holofernes
said, 'do not be afraid. I have never hurt anyone who chose to serve
Nebuchadnezzar, king of the whole world.
2
Even now, if your nation of mountain dwellers had not insulted me, I would not
have raised a spear against them. This was their fault, not mine.
3
But tell me, why have you fled from them and come to us? . . . Anyhow, this
will prove the saving of you. Courage! You will live through this night, and
many after.
4
No one will hurt you. On the contrary, you will be treated as well as any who
serve my lord King Nebuchadnezzar.'
5
Judith said, 'Please listen favourably to what your slave has to say. Permit
your servant to speak in your presence, I shall speak no word of a lie to my
lord tonight.
6
You have only to follow your servant's advice and God will bring your work to a
successful conclusion; in what my lord undertakes he will not fail.
7
Long life to Nebuchadnezzar, king of the whole world, who has sent you to set
every living soul to rights; may his power endure! Since, thanks to you, he is
served not only by human beings, but because of your might the wild animals
themselves, the cattle, and the birds of the air are to live in the service of
Nebuchadnezzar and his whole House.
8
'We have indeed heard of your genius and adroitness of mind. It is known
everywhere in the world that throughout the empire you have no rival for
ability, wealth of experience and brilliance in waging war.
9
We have also heard what Achior said in his speech to your council. The men of
Bethulia having spared him, he has told them everything that he said to you.
10
Now, master and lord, do not disregard what he said; keep it in your mind,
since it is true; our nation will not be punished, the sword will indeed have
no power over them, unless they sin against their God.
11
But as it is, my lord need expect no repulse or setback, since death is about
to fall on their heads, for sin has gained a hold over them, provoking the
anger of their God each time that they commit it.
12
As they are short of food and their water is giving out, they have resolved to
fall back on their cattle and decided to make use of all the things that God
has, by his laws, forbidden them to eat.
13
Not only have they made up their minds to eat the first-fruits of corn and the
tithes of wine and oil, though these have been consecrated by them and set
apart for the priests who serve in Jerusalem in the presence of our God, and
may not lawfully even be handled by ordinary people,
14
but they have sent men to Jerusalem -- where the inhabitants are doing much the
same -- to bring them back authorisation from the Council of Elders.
15
Now this will be the outcome: when the permission arrives and they act on it,
that very day they will be delivered over to you for destruction.
16
'When I, your servant, came to know all this, I fled from them. God has sent me
to do things with you at which the world will be astonished when it hears.
17
Your servant is a devout woman; she honours the God of heaven day and night. I
therefore propose, my lord, to stay with you. I, your servant, shall go out
every night into the valley and pray to God to let me know when they have
committed their sin.
18
I shall then come and tell you, so that you can march out with your whole army;
and none of them will be able to resist you.
19
I shall be your guide right across Judaea until you reach Jerusalem; there I
shall enthrone you in the very middle of the city. And then you can round them
up like shepherd-less sheep, with never a dog daring to bark at you.
Foreknowledge tells me this; this has been foretold to me and I have been sent
to reveal it to you.'
20
Her words pleased Holofernes, and all his adjutants. Full of admiration at her
wisdom they exclaimed,
21
'There is no woman like her from one end of the earth to the other, so lovely
of face and so wise of speech!'
22
Holofernes said, 'God has done well to send you ahead of the others. Strength
will be ours, and ruin theirs who have insulted my lord.
23
As for you, you are as beautiful as you are eloquent; if you do as you have
promised, your God shall be my God, and you yourself shall make your home in
the palace of King Nebuchadnezzar and be famous throughout the world.'
NJB Judith 12:1 With that he had her brought in
to where his silver dinner service was already laid, and had his own food
served to her and his own wine poured out for her.
2
But Judith said, 'I would rather not eat this, in case I incur some fault. What
I have brought will be enough for me.'
3
'Suppose your provisions run out,' Holofernes asked, 'how could we get more of
the same sort? We have no one belonging to your race here.'
4
'May your soul live, my lord,' Judith answered, 'the Lord will have used me to
accomplish his plan, before your servant has finished these provisions.'
5
Holofernes' adjutants then took her to a tent where she slept until midnight. A
little before the morning watch, she got up.
6
She had already sent this request to Holofernes, 'Let my lord kindly give
orders for your servant to be allowed to go out and pray,'
7
and Holofernes had ordered his guards not to prevent her. She stayed in the
camp for three days; she went out each night to the valley of Bethulia and washed
at the spring where the picket had been posted.
8
As she went she prayed to the Lord God of Israel to guide her in her plan to
relieve the children of her people.
9
Having purified herself, she would return and stay in her tent until her meal
was brought her in the evening.
10
On the fourth day Holofernes gave a banquet, inviting only his own staff and
none of the other officers.
11
He said to Bagoas, the officer in charge of his personal affairs, 'Go and
persuade that Hebrew woman you are looking after to come and join us and eat
and drink in our company.
12
We shall be disgraced if we let a woman like this go without seducing her. If
we do not seduce her, everyone will laugh at us!'
13
Bagoas then left Holofernes and went to see Judith. 'Would this young and
lovely woman condescend to come to my lord?' he asked. 'She will occupy the
seat of honour opposite him, drink the joyful wine with us and be treated today
like one of the Assyrian ladies who stand in the palace of Nebuchadnezzar.'
14
'Who am I', Judith replied, 'to resist my lord? I shall not hesitate to do
whatever he wishes, and doing this will be my joy to my dying day.'
15
So she got up and put on her dress and all her feminine adornments. Her maid
preceded her, and on the floor in front of Holofernes spread the fleece which
Bagoas had given Judith for her daily use to lie on as she ate.
16
Judith came in and took her place. The heart of Holofernes was ravished at the
sight; his very soul was stirred. He was seized with a violent desire to sleep
with her; and indeed since the first day he saw her, he had been waiting for an
opportunity to seduce her.
17
'Drink then!' Holofernes said. 'Enjoy yourself with us!'
18
'I am delighted to do so, my lord, for since my birth I have never felt my life
more worthwhile than today.'
19
She took what her maid had prepared, and ate and drank facing him.
20
Holofernes was so enchanted with her that he drank far more wine than he had
drunk on any other
day
in his life.
1 Maccabees 10:33 - 11:59
New Jerusalem Bible Version
33
Every Jewish person taken from Judaea into captivity in any part of my kingdom
I set free without ransom, and decree that all will be exempt from taxes, even
on their livestock.
34
All festivals, Sabbaths, New Moons and days of special observance, and the
three days before and three days after a festival, will be days of exemption
and quittance for all the Jews in my kingdom,
35
and no one will have the right to exact payment from, or to molest, any of them
for any matter whatsoever.
36
'Jews will be enrolled in the king's forces to the number of thirty thousand
men and receive maintenance on the same scale as the rest of the king's forces.
37
Some of them will be stationed in the king's major fortresses, and from among
others appointments will be made to positions of trust in the kingdom. Their
officers and commanders will be appointed from their own number and will live
under their own laws, as the king has prescribed for Judaea.
38
'As regards the three districts annexed to Judaea from the province of Samaria,
these will be integrated into Judaea and considered as coming under one
governor, obeying the high priest's authority and no other.
39
Ptolemais and the land thereto pertaining I present to the sanctuary in
Jerusalem, to meet the necessary expenses of public worship.
40
And I make a personal grant of fifteen thousand silver shekels annually
chargeable to the royal revenue from appropriate places.
41
And the entire surplus, which has not been paid in by the officials as in
previous years, will henceforth be paid over by them for work on the Temple.
42
In addition, the sum of five thousand silver shekels, levied annually on the
profits of the sanctuary, as shown in the annual accounts, is also relinquished
as the perquisite of the priests who perform the liturgy.
43
Anyone who takes refuge in the Temple in Jerusalem or any of its precincts,
when in debt to the royal exchequer or otherwise, will be discharged in full
possession of all the goods he owns in my kingdom.
44
As regards the building and restoration of the sanctuary, the expense of the
work will be met from the royal exchequer.
45
The reconstruction of the walls of Jerusalem and the fortification of the
perimeter will also be a charge on the royal exchequer, as also the
reconstruction of other city walls in Judaea.'
46
When Jonathan and the people heard these proposals, they put no faith in them
and refused to accept them, remembering what great wrongs Demetrius had done to
Israel and how cruelly he had oppressed them.
47
They decided in favour of Alexander, since he seemed to offer the better
inducements of the two, and they became his constant allies.
48
King Alexander now mustered large forces and advanced against Demetrius.
49
The two kings met in battle. Alexander's army was routed, and Demetrius pursued
him and defeated his troops.
50
He continued the battle with vigour until sunset. Demetrius himself, however,
was killed the same day.
51
Alexander sent ambassadors to Ptolemy king of Egypt, with this message:
52
'Since I have returned to my kingdom, have ascended the throne of my ancestors,
have gained control by crushing Demetrius, and so recovered our country-
53
for I fought him and we crushed both him and his army, and I now occupy his
royal throne-
54
let us now make a treaty of friendship. Give me your daughter in marriage: as
your son-in-law, I shall give you, and her, presents which are worthy of you.'
55
King Ptolemy replied as follows: 'Happy the day when you returned to the land
of your ancestors and ascended their royal throne!
56
I shall at once do for you what your letter proposes; but meet me at Ptolemais,
so that we can see one another, and I shall become your father-in-law, as you
have asked.'
57
Ptolemy left Egypt with his daughter Cleopatra and reached Ptolemais in the
year 162.
58
King Alexander went to meet him, and Ptolemy gave him the hand of his daughter
Cleopatra and celebrated her wedding in Ptolemais with great magnificence, as
kings do.
59
King Alexander then wrote to Jonathan to come and meet him.
60
Jonathan made his way in state to Ptolemais and met the two kings; he gave them
and their friends silver and gold, and many gifts, and made a favourable
impression on them.
61
A number of scoundrels, the pest of Israel, combined to denounce him, but the
king paid no attention to them.
62
In fact, the king commanded that Jonathan should be divested of his own
garments and clothed in the purple, which was done.
63
The king then seated him by his side and said to his officers, 'Escort him into
the centre of the city and proclaim that no one is to bring charges against him
on any count; no one is to molest him for any reason.'
64
And so, when his accusers saw the honour done him by this proclamation, and
Jonathan himself invested in the purple, they all fled.
65
The king did him the honour of enrolling him among the First Friends, and
appointed him commander-in-chief and governor-general.
66
Jonathan then returned to Jerusalem in peace and gladness.
67
In the year 165, Demetrius son of Demetrius came from Crete to the land of his
ancestors.
68
When King Alexander heard of it he was plunged into gloom, and retired to
Antioch.
69
Demetrius confirmed Apollonius as governor of Coele-Syria; the latter assembled
a large force, encamped at Jamnia and sent the following message to Jonathan
the high priest:
70
'You are entirely alone in rising against us, and now I find myself ridiculed
and reproached on your account. Why do you use your authority to our
disadvantage in the mountains?
71
If you are so confident in your forces, come down now to meet us on the plain
and let us take each other's measure there; on my side I have the strength of
the towns.
72
Ask and learn who I am and who the others supporting us are. You will hear that
you cannot stand up to us, since your ancestors were twice routed on their own
ground,
73
nor will you now be able to withstand the cavalry or so great an army on the
plain, where there is neither rock, nor stone, nor refuge of any kind.'
74
On hearing Apollonius' words, Jonathan's spirit was roused; he picked ten
thousand men and left Jerusalem, and his brother Simon joined him with
reinforcements.
75
He drew up his forces outside Joppa, the citizens having shut him out, since
Apollonius had a garrison in Joppa. When they began the attack,
76
the citizens took fright and opened the gates, and Jonathan occupied Joppa.
77
Hearing this, Apollonius marshalled three thousand cavalry and a large army and
made his way to Azotus as though intending to march through, while in fact
pressing on into the plain, since he had a great number of cavalry on which he
was relying.
78
Jonathan pursued him as far as Azotus, where the armies joined battle.
79
Now, Apollonius had left a thousand horsemen in concealment behind them.
80
Jonathan knew of this enemy position behind him; the horsemen surrounded his
army, firing their arrows into his men from morning till evening.
81
But the troops stood firm, as Jonathan had ordered. Once the cavalry was
exhausted,
82
Simon sent his own troops into attack against the phalanx, which he cut to
pieces and routed.
83
The cavalry scattered over the plain and fled to Azotus, where they took
sanctuary in Beth-Dagon, the temple of their idol.
84
Jonathan, however, set fire to Azotus and the surrounding towns, plundered
them, and burned down the temple of Dagon, with all the fugitives who had
crowded into it.
85
The enemy losses, counting those who fell by the sword and those burnt to
death, totalled about eight thousand men.
86
Jonathan then left and pitched camp outside Ascalon, where the citizens came
out to meet him with great ceremony.
87
Jonathan then returned to Jerusalem with his followers, laden with booty.
88
In the event, when King Alexander heard what had happened, he awarded Jonathan
further honours:
89
he sent him the golden brooch, of the kind customarily presented to the King's
Cousins, and gave him proprietary rights over Ekron and the land adjoining it.
NJB 1 Maccabees 11:1 The king of Egypt then
assembled an army as numerous as the sands of the seashore, with many ships, and
set out to take possession of Alexander's kingdom by a ruse and add it to his
own kingdom.
2
He set off for Syria with protestations of peace, and the people of the towns
opened their gates to him and came out to meet him, since King Alexander's
orders were to welcome him, Ptolemy being his father-in-law.
3
On entering the towns, however, Ptolemy quartered troops as a garrison in each
one.
4
When he reached Azotus he was shown the burnt-out temple of Dagon, with Azotus
and its suburbs in ruins, corpses scattered here and there, and the charred
remains of those whom Jonathan had burnt to death in the battle, piled into
heaps along his route.
5
They explained to the king what Jonathan had done, hoping for his disapproval;
but the king said nothing.
6
Jonathan went in state to meet the king at Joppa, where they greeted each other
and spent the night.
7
Jonathan accompanied the king as far as the river called Eleutherus, and then
returned to Jerusalem.
8
King Ptolemy for his part occupied the coastal towns as far as Seleucia on the
coast, all the while maturing his wicked designs against Alexander.
9
He sent envoys to King Demetrius to say, 'Come and let us make a treaty; I
shall give you my daughter, whom Alexander now has, and you shall rule your
father's kingdom.
10
I regret having given my daughter to that man, since he has tried to kill me.'
11
He made this accusation because he coveted his kingdom.
12
Having carried off his daughter and bestowed her on Demetrius, he broke with
Alexander, and their enmity became open.
13
Ptolemy next entered Antioch and assumed the crown of Asia; he now wore on his
head the two crowns of Egypt and Asia.
14
King Alexander was in Cilicia at the time, since the people of those parts had
risen in revolt,
15
but when he heard the news, he advanced on his rival to give battle, while
Ptolemy for his part also took the field, met him with a strong force and
routed him.
16
Alexander fled to Arabia for refuge, and King Ptolemy reigned supreme.
17
Zabdiel the Arab cut off Alexander's head and sent it to Ptolemy.
18
Three days later King Ptolemy died, and the Egyptian garrisons in the
strongholds were killed by the local inhabitants.
19
So Demetrius became king in the year 167.
20
At the same time, Jonathan mustered the men of Judaea for an assault on the
Citadel of Jerusalem, and they set up numerous siege-engines against it.
21
But some renegades who hated their nation made their way to the king and told
him that Jonathan was besieging the Citadel.
22
The king was angered by the news. No sooner had he been informed than he set
out and came to Ptolemais. He wrote to Jonathan, telling him to raise the siege
and to meet him for a conference in Ptolemais as soon as possible.
23
When Jonathan heard this, he gave orders for the siege to continue; he then
selected a deputation from the elders of Israel and the priests, and took the
deliberate risk
24
of himself taking silver and gold, clothing and numerous other presents, and
going to Ptolemais to face the king, whose favour he succeeded in winning;
25
and although one or two renegades of his nation brought charges against him,
26
the king treated him as his predecessors had treated him, and promoted him in
the presence of all his friends.
27
He confirmed him in the high-priesthood and whatever other distinctions he
already held, and had him ranked among the First Friends.
28
Jonathan asked the king to exempt Judaea and the three Samaritan districts from
taxation, promising him three hundred talents in return.
29
The king consented, and wrote Jonathan a rescript covering the whole matter, in
these terms:
30
'King Demetrius to Jonathan his brother, and to the Jewish nation, greetings.
31
'We have written to Lasthenes our cousin concerning you, and now send you this
copy of our rescript for your own information:
32
"King Demetrius to his father Lasthenes, greetings.
33
"The nation of the Jews is our ally; they fulfil their obligations to us,
and in view of their goodwill towards us we have decided to show them our
bounty.
34
We confirm them in their possession of the territory of Judaea and the three
districts of Aphairema, Lydda and Ramathaim; these were annexed to Judaea from
Samaritan territory, with all their dependencies, in favour of all who offer
sacrifice in Jerusalem, instead of the royal dues which the king formerly
received from them every year, from the yield of the soil and the fruit crops.
35
As regards our other rights over the tithes and taxes due to us, over the salt
marshes, and the crown taxes due to us, as from today we release them from them
all.
36
None of these grants will be revoked henceforth or anywhere.
37
You will make yourself responsible for having a copy of this made, to be given
to Jonathan and displayed on the holy mountain in a conspicuous place." '
38
When King Demetrius saw that the country was at peace under his rule and that
no resistance was offered him, he dismissed his forces, and sent all the men
home, except for the foreign troops that he had recruited in the foreign
island, thus incurring the enmity of the veterans who had served his ancestors.
39
Now Trypho, one of Alexander's former supporters, noting that all the troops
were muttering against Demetrius, went to see Iamleku, the Arab who was
bringing up Antiochus, Alexander's young son,
40
and repeatedly urged him to let him have the boy, so that he might succeed his
father as king; he told him of Demetrius' decision and of the resentment it had
aroused among his troops. He spent a long time there.
41
Jonathan, meanwhile, sent to ask King Demetrius to withdraw the garrisons from
the Citadel in Jerusalem and from the other fortresses, since they were
constantly fighting Israel.
42
Demetrius sent word back to Jonathan, 'Not only will I do this for you and for
your nation, but I shall heap honours on you and your nation if I find a
favourable opportunity.
43
For the present, you would do well to send me reinforcements, since all my
troops have deserted.'
44
Jonathan sent three thousand experienced soldiers to him in Antioch; when they
reached the king, he was delighted at their arrival.
45
The citizens crowded together in the centre of the city, to the number of some
hundred and twenty thousand, intending to kill the king.
46
The king took refuge in the palace, while the citizens occupied the
thoroughfares of the city and began to attack.
47
The king then called on the Jews for help; and these all rallied round him,
then fanned out through the city, and that day killed about a hundred thousand
of its inhabitants.
48
They fired the city, seizing a great deal of plunder at the same time, and
secured the king's safety.
49
When the citizens saw that the Jews had the city at their mercy, their courage
failed them, and they made an abject appeal to the king,
50
'Give us the right hand of peace, and let the Jews stop their fight against us
and the city.'
51
They threw down their arms and made peace. The Jews were covered in glory, in
the eyes of the king and of everyone else in his kingdom. Having won renown in
his kingdom, they returned to Jerusalem laden with booty.
52
Thus, King Demetrius sat all the more securely on his royal throne, and the
country was quiet under his government.
53
But he gave the lie to all the promises he had made, and changed his attitude
to Jonathan, giving nothing in return for the services Jonathan had rendered
him, but thwarting him at every turn.
54
After this, Trypho came back with the little boy Antiochus, who became king and
was crowned.
55
All the troops that Demetrius had summarily dismissed rallied to Antiochus, and
made war on Demetrius, who turned tail and fled.
56
Trypho captured the elephants and seized Antioch.
57
Young Antiochus then wrote as follows to Jonathan: 'I confirm you in the
high-priesthood and set you over the four districts and appoint you one of the
Friends of the King.'
58
He sent him a service of gold plate, and granted him the right to drink from
gold vessels, and to wear the purple and the golden brooch.
59
He appointed his brother Simon commander-in-chief of the region from the Ladder
of Tyre to the frontiers of Egypt.
Tehillim - Psalm 30:1-13
Rashi |
Targum |
1.
A psalm; a song of dedication of the House, of David. |
1. A praise song for the dedication of the
sanctuary. Of David. |
2.
I will exalt You, O Lord, for You have raised me up, and You have not
allowed my enemies to rejoice over me. |
2. I will praise you, O LORD, for you made me stand
erect, and did not let my enemies rejoice over me. |
3.
O Lord, I have cried out to You, and You have healed me. |
3.
O LORD my God, I prayed in Your presence and You healed me. |
4.
O Lord, You have brought my soul from the grave; You have revived me
from my descent into the Pit. |
4.
O LORD, You raised my soul out of Sheol; You preserved me from going
down to the pit. |
5.
Sing to the Lord, His pious ones, and give thanks to His holy name. |
5.
Sing praise in the LORD's presence, you His devotees; and give thanks
at the invocation of His holy one. |
6.
For His wrath lasts but a moment; life results from His favor; in the
evening, weeping may tarry, but in the morning there is joyful singing. |
6.
For His anger is but a moment; eternal life is His good pleasure. In
the evening one goes to bed in tears, but in the morning one rises in praise. |
7.
And I said in my tranquility, "I will never falter." |
7.
And I said when I dwelt in trust, I will never be shaken. |
8.
O Lord, with Your will, You set up my mountain to be might, You hid
Your countenance and I became frightened. |
8.
O LORD, by Your will You prepared the mighty mountains; You removed
Your presence, I became afraid. |
9.
To You, O Lord, I would call, and to the Lord I would supplicate. |
9.
In Your presence, O LORD, I will cry out; and to You, O my God,
I will pray. |
10.
"What gain is there in my blood, in my descent to
the grave? Will dust thank You; will it recite Your truth? |
10.
And I said, What profit is there in my blood, when I
descend to the grave? Can those who descend to the dust praise You? Will they
tell of Your faithfulness? |
11.
Hear, O Lord, and be gracious to me; O Lord, be my helper." |
11.
Accept, O LORD, my prayer, and have mercy on me; O LORD, be my helper. |
12.
You have turned my lament into dancing for me; You loosened my
sackcloth and girded me with joy. |
12.
You turned my lament into my celebration; You loosened my sackcloth and
girded me with joy. |
13.
So that my soul will sing praises to You and not be silent. O Lord, my
God, I will thank You forever. |
13.
Because the nobles of the world will give You praise and not be
silent, O LORD my God, I too will give You praise. |
|
|
Special Ketubim Rosh Chodesh – Proverbs 7:1-27
1 ¶
My son, keep my words, and lay up my commandments with you.
2
Keep my commandments and live, and my teaching as the apple of your eye.
3
Bind them upon your fingers, write them upon the table of thy heart.
4
Say unto wisdom: ‘You are my sister’, and call understanding your kinswoman;
5
That they may keep you from the strange woman, from the alien woman that makes
smooth her words.
6 ¶
For at the window of my house I looked forth through my lattice;
7
And I beheld among the thoughtless ones, I discerned among the youths, a young
man void of understanding,
8
Passing through the street near her corner, and he went the way to her house;
9 In
the twilight, in the evening of the day, in the blackness of night and the
darkness.
10
And, behold, there met him a woman with the attire of a harlot, and wily of
heart.
11
She is riotous and rebellious, her feet abide not in her house;
12
Now she is in the streets, now in the broad places, and lies in wait at every
corner.
13
So she caught him, and kissed him, and with an impudent face she said unto him:
14
‘Sacrifices of peace-offerings were due from me; this day have I paid my vows.
15
Therefore came I forth to meet you, to seek your face, and I have found you.
16 I
have decked my couch with coverlets, with striped cloths of the yarn of Egypt.
17 I
have perfumed my bed with myrrh, aloes, and cinnamon.
18
Come, let us take our fill of love until the morning; let us solace ourselves
with loves.
19 For
my husband is not at home, he is gone a long journey;
20 He
has taken the bag of money with him; he will come home at the appointed day (new
moon).’
21
With her much fair speech she causes him to yield, with the blandishment of her
lips she entices him away.
22
He goes after her straightway, as an ox that goes to the slaughter, or as one
in fetters to the correction of the fool;
23
Till an arrow strike through his liver; as a bird hastens to the snare—and
knows not that it is at the cost of his life.
24 ¶
Now therefore, O you children, hearken unto me, and attend to the words of my
mouth.
25
Let not your heart decline to her ways, go not astray in her paths.
26
For she has cast down many wounded; yes, a mighty host are all her slain.
27
Her house is the way to the nether-world, going down to the chambers of death.
Psalm 27:1 - JPS
1
Of David. The LORD is my light and my help; whom should I fear? The LORD is the
stronghold of my life, whom should I dread?
Psalm 119:105 -
JPS
105
Your word is a lamp to my feet, a light for my path. (Psa 119:105 TNK)
1 John 4:13-21
Hakham’s &
Dr. Adon Eliyahu’s Rendition
13
In this we know that we tabernacle in him (the Master) and he (the Master) in
us: that he (the Master) has given to us of his spirit.
14
And we have seen and bear witness that the Father has sent His son (i.e. the
King Messiah of Israel) as redeemer of the [pagan] world.
15
Whosoever acknowledges that Yeshua is the son of God (i.e. the King Messiah
of Israel), God tabernacles in him and he in God.
16
And we have come to know and have believed the love that God has for us [i.e.
the Jewish people]. God is love (the numerical value of Ahavah and Echad
= 13), and the one who tabernacles in love [for the Jewish people] tabernacles
in God, and God tabernacles in him.
17
In this love is achieved in us, [so] that we may have confidence in the
day of judgment, because just as he (i.e. the King Messiah of Israel) is
[an agent of G-d], so also are we [agents of G-d] in this [pagan]
world.
18
There is no fear in [the] love [of God and His Jewish people],
but perfect love [of God and His Jewish people] drives out fear [from
anyone or anything], because fear includes punishment, and the one who is
afraid has not been perfected in [the] love [of God and the Jewish people].
19
We love, because he first loved us.
20
If anyone says, "I love God," and hates his [Jewish] brother/sister,
he is a liar, for the one who does not love his [Jewish] brother/sister
whom he has seen is not able to love God whom he has not seen.
21 And this is the commandment we have from
him (i.e. the Master): that the one who loves God should love his [Jewish]
brother/sister also.
END OF THE READINGS FOR THE SIXTH
DAY OF HANUKA
Hanuka Seventh
Day
&
Rosh Chodesh
Tebet (New Moon for the Month of Tebet) Day Two
Evening Tuesday Dec. 07 – Evening
Wednesday Dec. 08, 2010
Torah: Numbers 28:1-15 + 7:48-53
Reader 1 - Num. 28:1-5
Reader 2 - Num. 28:6-10
Reader 3 - Num. 28:11-15
Reader 4 – Num. 7:48-53
Yehudit (Judith) 13:1 – 14:19
1
Maccabees 11:60 - 13:47
Psalm 30:1-13
Proverbs 7:1-27
Nazareans
add in their private study and discussions: Isaiah 9:1-2; & 1
John 5:1-12
Rashi & Targum
Pseudo Jonathan
for: B’Midbar (Numbers)
28:1-15
Rashi |
Targum Pseudo Jonathan |
1.
The Lord spoke to: Moses, saying: |
1. And the LORD spoke with Mosheh, saying: |
2.
Command the children of Israel and say to them: My offering, My food
for My fire offerings, a spirit of satisfaction for Me, you shall take care
to offer to Me at its appointed time. |
2. Instruct the children of Israel, and say to them:
The priests may eat of My oblation the bread of the order of My table; but
that which you offer upon My altar may no man eat. Is there not a fire that
will consume it? And it will be accepted before Me as a pleasant smell. Sons
of Israel, My people, be admonished to offer it from the firstlings on the
Sabbath, an oblation before Me in its time. |
3.
And you shall say to them: This is the fire offering which you shall
offer to the Lord: two unblemished lambs in their first year each day as a
continual burnt offering. |
3. And say to them: This is the order of the
oblations you will offer before the LORD; two lambs of the year, unblemished,
daily, a perpetual burnt offering. |
4.
The one lamb you shall offer up in the morning, and the other lamb you
shall offer up in the afternoon. |
4. The one lamb you will perform in the morning to
make atonement for the sins of the night; and the second lamb you will
perform between the suns to atone for the sins of the day; |
5.
And one tenth of an ephah of fine flour for a meal offering, mixed
with a quarter of a hin of crushed [olive] oil. |
5. and the tenth of three seahs of wheat flour as a
mincha mingled with beaten olive oil, the fourth of a hin. |
6.
A continual burnt offering, as the one offered up at Mount Sinai, for
a spirit of satisfaction, a fire offering to the Lord. |
6. It is a perpetual burnt offering, such as was
(ordained to be) offered at Mount Sinai, to be received with favor as an
oblation before the LORD. |
7.
Its libation shall be one quarter of a hin for each lamb, to be poured
on the holy [altar] as a libation of strong wine to the Lord. |
7. And its libation will be the fourth of a hin for
one lamb; from the vessels of the house of the Sanctuary will it be
outpoured, a libation of old wine. But if old wine may not be found, bring
wine of forty days to pour out before the LORD. |
8.
And the second lamb you shall offer up in the afternoon. You shall
offer up it with the same meal offering and libation as the morning
[sacrifice], a fire offering with a spirit of satisfaction to the Lord. |
8. And the second lamb you will perform between the
suns, according to the presentation of the morning, and according to its
oblation will you make the offering, that it may be accepted with favor
before the LORD. |
9.
And on the Sabbath day, two unblemished lambs in the first year, and
two tenths fine flour as a meal offering, mixed with oil, and its libation. |
9. but on the day of Shabbat two lambs of the year
without blemish, and two-tenths of flour mixed with olive oil for the mincha
and its libation. |
10.
[This is] the burnt offering of each Sabbath on its Sabbath, in
addition to the continual burnt offering and its libation. |
10.
On the Sabbath you will make a Sabbath burnt sacrifice in addition to
the perpetual burnt sacrifice and its libation. |
11.
And on the beginning of your months, you shall offer up a burnt
offering to the Lord: two young bulls, one ram, and seven lambs in the first
year, [all] unblemished. |
11.
And at the beginning of your months you will offer a burnt sacrifice
before the LORD; two young bullocks, without mixture, one ram, lambs of the
year seven, unblemished; |
12.
Three tenths fine flour as a meal offering, mixed with oil for each
bull, and two tenths fine flour as a meal offering, mixed with oil for each
ram. |
12.
and three tenths of flour mingled with oil for the mincha for one
bullock; two tenths of flour with olive oil for the mincha of the one ram; |
13.
And one tenth of fine flour mixed with oil as a meal offering for each
lamb. A burnt offering with a spirit of satisfaction, a fire offering to the
Lord. |
13. and
one tenth of flour with olive oil for the mincha for each lamb of the burnt
offering, an oblation to be received with favor before the LORD. |
14.
And their libations: a half of a hin for each bull, a third of a hin
for each ram, and a quarter of a hin for each lamb; this is the burnt
offering of each new month in its month, throughout the months of the year. |
14.
And for their libation to be offered with them, the half of a bin for
a bullock, the third of a bin for the ram, and the fourth of a hin for a
lamb, of the wine of grapes. This burnt sacrifice will be offered at the
beginning of every month in the time of the removal of the beginning of every
month in the year; |
15.
And one young male goat for a sin offering to the Lord; it shall be
offered up in addition to the continual burnt offering and its libation. |
15.
and one kid of the goats, for a sin offering before the LORD at the
disappearing (failure) of the moon, with the perpetual burnt sacrifice will
you perform with its libation. |
|
|
Rashi & Targum
Pseudo Jonathan
for: B’Midbar (Numbers)
7:48-53
Rashi |
Targum Pseudo Jonathan |
48.
On the seventh day, the chieftain was of the sons of Ephraim, Elishama
the son of Ammihud. |
48.
on the seventh, Elishama bar Ammihud, prince of the Benei Ephraim; |
49.
His offering was one silver bowl weighing one hundred and thirty
[shekels], one silver sprinkling basin [weighing] seventy shekels according
to the holy shekel, both filled with fine flour mixed with olive oil for a
meal offering. |
49.
|
50.
One spoon [weighing] ten gold [shekels] filled with incense. |
50.
|
51.
One young bull, one ram and one lamb in its first year for a burnt
offering. |
51.
|
52.
One young he goat for a sin offering. |
52.
|
53.
And for the peace offering: two oxen, five rams, five he goats, five
lambs in their first year; this was the offering of Elishama the son of
Ammihud; |
43.
|
|
|
Yehudit (Judith) 13:1 – 14:19
New Jerusalem Bible Version
NJB Judith 13:1 It grew late and his staff
hurried away. Bagoas closed the tent from the outside, having shown out those
who still lingered in his lord's presence. They went to their beds wearied with
too much drinking,
2 and Judith was left alone in the tent with
Holofernes who had collapsed wine-sodden on his bed.
3 Judith then told her maid to stay just
outside the bedroom and wait for her to come out, as she did every morning. She
had let it be understood she would be going out to her prayers and had also
spoken of her intention to Bagoas.
4 By now everyone had left Holofernes, and no
one, either important or unimportant, was left in the bedroom. Standing beside
the bed, Judith murmured to herself: Lord God, to whom all strength belongs,
prosper what my hands are now to do for the greater glory of Jerusalem;
5 now is the time to recover your heritage and
to further my plans to crush the enemies arrayed against us.
6 With that she went up to the bedpost by
Holofernes' head and took down his scimitar;
7 coming closer to the bed she caught him by
the hair and said, 'Make me strong today, Lord God of Israel!'
8 Twice she struck at his neck with all her
might, and cut off his head.
9 She then rolled his body off the bed and
pulled down the canopy from the bedposts. After which, she went out and gave
the head of Holofernes to her maid
10 who put it in her food bag. The two then
left the camp together, as they always did when they went to pray. Once they
were out of the camp, they skirted the ravine, climbed the slope to Bethulia
and made for the gates.
11 From a distance, Judith shouted to the
guards on the gates, 'Open the gate! Open! For the Lord our God is with us
still, displaying his strength in Israel and his might against our enemies, as
he has done today!'
12 Hearing her voice, the townsmen hurried
down to the town gate and summoned the elders.
13 Everyone, great and small, came running
down, since her arrival was unexpected. They threw the gate open, welcomed the
women, lit a fire to see by and crowded round them.
14 Then Judith raised her voice and said,
'Praise God! Praise him! Praise the God who has not withdrawn his mercy from the
House of Israel, but has shattered our enemies by my hand tonight!'
15 She pulled the head out of the bag and held
it for them to see. 'This is the head of Holofernes, general-in-chief of the
Assyrian army; here is the canopy under which he lay drunk! The Lord has struck
him down by the hand of a woman!
16 Glory to the Lord who has protected me in
the course I took! My face seduced him, only to his own undoing; he committed
no sin with me to shame me or disgrace me.'
17 Overcome with emotion, the people all
prostrated themselves and worshipped God, exclaiming with one voice, 'Blessings
on you, our God, for confounding your people's enemies today!'
18 Uzziah then said to Judith: May you be
blessed, my daughter, by God Most High, beyond all women on earth; and blessed
be the Lord God, Creator of heaven and earth, who guided you to cut off the
head of the leader of our enemies!
19 The trust which you have shown will not
pass from human hearts, as they commemorate the power of God for evermore.
20 God grant you may be always held in honour
and rewarded with blessings, since you did not consider your own life when our
nation was brought to its knees, but warded off our ruin, walking in the right
path before our God. And the people all said, 'Amen! Amen!'
NJB Judith 14:1 Judith said, 'Listen to me,
brothers. Take this head and hang it on your battlements.
2 When morning comes and the sun is up, let
every man take his arms and every able-bodied man leave the town. Appoint a
leader for them, as if you meant to march down to the plain against the
Assyrian advanced post. But you must not do this.
3 The Assyrians will gather up their
equipment, make for their camp and wake up their commanders; they in turn will
rush to the tent of Holofernes and not be able to find him. They will then be
seized with panic and flee at your advance.
4 All you and the others who live in the
territory of Israel will have to do is to give chase and slaughter them as they
retreat.
5 'But before you do this, call me Achior the
Ammonite, for him to see and identify the man who held the House of Israel in
contempt, the man who sent him to us as someone already doomed to die.'
6 So they had Achior brought from Uzziah's
house. No sooner had he arrived and seen the head of Holofernes held by a
member of the people's assembly than he fell on his face in a faint.
7 They lifted him up. He then threw himself at
Judith's feet and, prostrate before her, exclaimed: May you be blessed in all
the tents of Judah and in every nation; those who hear your name will be seized
with dread!
8 'Now tell me everything that you have done
in these past few days.' And surrounded by the people, Judith told him
everything she had done from the day she left Bethulia to the moment when she
was speaking.
9 When she came to the end, the people cheered
at the top of their voices until the town echoed.
10 Achior, recognising all that the God of
Israel had done, believed ardently in him and, accepting circumcision, was
permanently incorporated into the House of Israel.
11 At daybreak they hung the head of
Holofernes on the ramparts. Every man took his arms and they all went out in
groups to the slopes of the mountain.
12 Seeing this, the Assyrians sent word to
their leaders, who in turn reported to the generals, the captains of thousands
and all the other officers;
13 and these in their turn reported to the
tent of Holofernes. 'Rouse our master,' they said to his major-domo, 'these
slaves have dared to march down on us to attack -- and to be wiped out to a
man!'
14 Bagoas went inside and struck the curtain
dividing the tent, thinking that Holofernes was sleeping with Judith.
15 But as no one seemed to hear, he drew the
curtain and went into the bedroom, to find him thrown down dead on the
threshold, with his head cut off.
16 He gave a great shout, wept, sobbed,
shrieked and rent his clothes.
17 He then went into the tent which Judith had
occupied and could not find her either. Then, rushing out to the men, he
shouted,
18 'The slaves have rebelled! A single Hebrew woman
has brought shame on the House of Nebuchadnezzar. Holofernes is lying dead on
the ground, without his head!'
19 When they heard this, the leaders of the
Assyrian army tore their tunics in consternation, and the camp rang with their
wild cries and their shouting.
1 Maccabees 11:60 - 13:47
New Jerusalem Bible Version
60
Jonathan then set out and made a progress through Transeuphrates and its towns,
and the entire Syrian army rallied to his support. He came to Ascalon and was
received in state by the inhabitants.
61 From there he proceeded to Gaza, but the
people of Gaza shut him out, so he laid siege to it, burning down its suburbs
and plundering them.
62 The people of Gaza then pleaded with
Jonathan, and he made peace with them; but he took the sons of their chief men
as hostages and sent them away to Jerusalem. He then travelled through the
country as far as Damascus.
63 Jonathan now learned that Demetrius'
generals had arrived at Kadesh in Galilee with a large army, intending to
remove him from office,
64 and went to engage them, leaving his
brother Simon inside the country.
65 Simon laid siege to Beth-Zur, attacking it
day after day, and blockading the inhabitants
66 till they sued for peace, which he granted
them, though he expelled them from the town and occupied it, stationing a
garrison there.
67 Jonathan and his army, meanwhile, having
pitched camp by the Lake of Gennesar, rose early, and by morning were already
in the plain of Hazor.
68 The foreigners' army advanced to fight them
on the plain, having first positioned an ambush for him in the mountains. While
the main body was advancing directly towards the Jews,
69 the troops in ambush broke cover and
attacked first.
70 All the men with Jonathan fled; no one was
left, except Mattathias son of Absalom and Judas son of Chalphi, the generals
of his army.
71 At this, Jonathan tore his garments, put
dust on his head, and prayed.
72 Then he returned to the fight and routed
the enemy, who fled.
73 When the fugitives from his own forces saw
this, they came back to him and joined in the pursuit as far as Kadesh where
the enemy encampment was, and there they themselves pitched camp.
74 About three thousand of the foreign troops
fell that day. Jonathan then returned to Jerusalem.
NJB 1 Maccabees 12:1 When Jonathan saw that
circumstances were working in his favour, he sent a select mission to Rome to
confirm and renew his treaty of friendship with the Romans.
2 He also sent letters to the same effect to
the Spartans and to other places.
3 The envoys made their way to Rome, entered
the Senate and said, 'Jonathan the high priest and the Jewish nation have sent
us to renew your treaty of friendship and alliance with them as before.'
4 The Senate gave them letters to the
authorities of each place, to procure their safe conduct to Judaea.
5 The following is the copy of the letter
Jonathan wrote to the Spartans:
6 'Jonathan the high priest, the senate of the
nation, the priests and the rest of the Jewish people to the Spartans their
brothers, greetings.
7 'In the past, a letter was sent to Onias,
the high priest, from Areios, one of your kings, stating that you are indeed
our brothers, as the copy subjoined attests.
8 Onias received the envoy with honour, and
accepted the letter, in which a clear declaration was made of friendship and
alliance.
9 For our part, though we have no need of
these, having the consolation of the holy books in our possession,
10 we venture to send to renew our fraternal
friendship with you, so that we may not become strangers to you, a long time
having elapsed since you last wrote to us.
11 We, for our part, on every occasion, at our
festivals and on other appointed days, unfailingly remember you in the
sacrifices we offer and in our prayers, as it is right and fitting to remember
brothers.
12 We rejoice in your renown.
13 'We ourselves, however, have had many
trials and many wars, the neighbouring kings making war on us.
14 We were unwilling to trouble you or our
other allies and friends during these wars,
15 since we have the support of Heaven to help
us, thanks to which we have been delivered from our enemies, and they are the
ones who have been brought low.
16 We have therefore chosen Numenius son of
Antiochus, and Antipater son of Jason, and sent them to the Romans to renew our
former treaty of friendship and alliance,
17 and we have ordered them also to visit you,
to greet you and deliver you this letter of ours concerning the renewal of our
brotherhood;
18 we shall be grateful for an answer to it.'
19 The following is the copy of the letter
sent to Onias:
20 'Areios king of the Spartans, to Onias the
high priest, greetings.
21 'It has been discovered in records
regarding the Spartans and Jews that they are brothers, and of the race of
Abraham.
22 Now that this has come to our knowledge, we
shall be obliged if you will send us news of your welfare.
23 Our own message to you is this: your flocks
and your possessions are ours, and ours are yours, and we are instructing our
envoys to give you a message to this effect.'
24 Jonathan learned that Demetrius' generals
had returned with a larger army than before to make war on him.
25 He therefore left Jerusalem and went to
engage them in the area of Hamath, not giving them the time to invade his own
territory.
26 He sent spies into their camp, who told him
on their return that the enemy were taking up positions for a night attack on
the Jews.
27 At sunset, Jonathan ordered his men to keep
watch with their weapons at hand, in readiness to fight at any time during the
night, and posted advance guards all round the camp.
28 On learning that Jonathan and his men were
ready to fight, the enemy took fright and, with quaking hearts, lit fires in
their bivouac and decamped.
29 Jonathan and his men, watching the glow of
the fires, were unaware of their withdrawal until morning,
30 and although Jonathan pursued them, he
failed to overtake them, for they had already crossed the river Eleutherus.
31 So Jonathan wheeled round on the Arabs
called Zabadaeans, beat them and plundered them;
32 then, breaking camp, he went to Damascus,
thus crossing the whole province.
33 Simon, meanwhile, had also set out and had
penetrated as far as Ascalon and the neighbouring towns. He then turned on
Joppa and moved quickly to occupy it,
34 for he had heard of their intention to hand
over this strong point to the supporters of Demetrius; he stationed a garrison
there to hold it.
35 Jonathan, on his return, called a meeting
of the elders of the people and decided with them to build fortresses in Judaea
36 and to heighten the walls of Jerusalem and
erect a high barrier between the Citadel and the city, to cut the former off
from the city and isolate it, to prevent the occupants from buying or selling.
37 Rebuilding the city was a co-operative
effort: part of the wall over the eastern ravine had fallen down; he restored
the quarter called Chaphenatha.
38 Simon, meanwhile, rebuilt Adida in the
lowlands, fortifying it, and erecting gates with bolts.
39 Trypho's ambition was to become king of
Asia, assume the crown, and overpower King Antiochus.
40 He was apprehensive that Jonathan might not
allow him to do this, and might even make war on him, so he set out and came to
Beth-Shean, in the hopes of finding some pretext for having him arrested and
put to death.
41 Jonathan went out to intercept him, with
forty thousand picked men in battle order, and arrived at Beth-Shean.
42 When Trypho saw him there with a large
force, he hesitated to make any move against him.
43 He even received him with honour, commended
him to all his friends, gave him presents and ordered his friends and his
troops to obey him as they would himself.
44 He said to Jonathan, 'Why have you given
all these people so much trouble, when there is no threat of war between us?
45 Send them back home; pick yourself a few
men as your bodyguard, and come with me to Ptolemais, which I am going to hand
over to you, with the other fortresses and the remaining troops and all the
officials; after which, I shall take the road for home. This was my purpose in
coming here.'
46 Jonathan trusted him and did as he said; he
dismissed his forces, who went back to Judaea.
47 With him he retained three thousand men, of
whom he left two thousand in Galilee, while a thousand accompanied him.
48 But as soon as Jonathan had entered
Ptolemais, the people of Ptolemais closed the gates, seized him, and put all
those who had entered with him to the sword.
49 Trypho sent troops and cavalry into Galilee
and the Great Plain to destroy all Jonathan's supporters.
50 These, concluding that he had been taken
and had perished with his companions, encouraged one another, marching with
closed ranks and ready to give battle,
51 and when their pursuers saw that they would
fight for their lives, they turned back.
52 All reached Judaea safe and sound, and
there they lamented Jonathan and his companions, being very frightened indeed;
all Israel was plunged into mourning.
53 The surrounding nations were all now
looking for ways of destroying them: 'They have no leader,' they said, 'no
ally; we have only to attack them now, and we shall blot out their very memory
from all peoples.'
NJB 1 Maccabees 13:1 Simon heard that Trypho had
collected a large army to invade and devastate Judaea,
2 and when he saw how the people were quaking
with fear, he went up to Jerusalem, called the people together,
3 and exhorted them thus, 'You know yourselves
how much I and my brothers and my father's family have done for the laws and
the sanctuary; you know what wars and hardships we have experienced.
4 That is why my brothers are all dead, for
Israel's sake, and I am the only one left.
5 Far be it from me, then, to be sparing of my
own life in any time of oppression, for I am not worth more than my brothers.
6 Rather will I avenge my nation and the
sanctuary and your wives and children, now that the foreigners are all united
in malice to destroy us.'
7 The people's spirit rekindled as they
listened to his words,
8 and they shouted back at him, 'You are our
leader in place of Judas and your brother Jonathan.
9 Fight our battles for us, and we will do
whatever you tell us.'
10 So he assembled all the fighting men and
hurried on with completing the walls of Jerusalem, fortifying the whole
perimeter.
11 He sent a considerable force to Joppa under
Jonathan son of Absalom who drove out the inhabitants and remained there in
occupation.
12 Trypho now left Ptolemais with a large army
to invade Judaea, taking Jonathan with him under guard.
13 Simon pitched camp in Adida, facing the plain.
14 When Trypho learned that Simon had taken
the place of his brother Jonathan and that he intended to join battle with him,
he sent envoys to him with this message,
15 'Your brother Jonathan was in debt to the
royal exchequer for the offices he held; that is why we are detaining him.
16 If you send a hundred talents of silver and
two of his sons as hostages, to make sure that on his release he does not
revolt against us, we shall release him.'
17 Although Simon was aware that the message
was a ruse, he sent for the money and the boys for fear of incurring great
hostility from the people,
18 who would have said that Jonathan had died
because Simon would not send Trypho the money and the children.
19 He therefore sent both the boys and the
hundred talents, but Trypho broke his word and did not release Jonathan.
20 Next, Trypho set about the invasion and
devastation of the country; he made a detour along the Adora road, but Simon
and his army confronted him wherever he attempted to go.
21 The men in the Citadel kept sending
messengers to Trypho, urging him to get through to them by way of the desert
and send them supplies.
22 Trypho organised his entire cavalry to go,
but that night it snowed so heavily that he could not get through for the snow,
so he left there and moved off into Gilead.
23 As he approached Baskama he killed
Jonathan, who was buried there.
24 Trypho turned back and regained his own
country.
25 Simon sent and recovered the bones of his
brother Jonathan, and buried him in Modein, the town of his ancestors.
26 All Israel kept solemn mourning for him and
long bewailed him.
27 Over the tomb of his father and brothers,
Simon raised a monument high enough to catch the eye, using dressed stone back
and front.
28 He erected seven pyramids facing each
other, for his father and mother and his four brothers,
29 surrounding them with a structure
consisting of tall columns surmounted by trophies of arms to their everlasting
memory and, beside the trophies of arms, ships sculpted on a scale to be seen
by all who sail the sea.
30 Such was the monument he constructed at
Modein, and it is still there today.
31 Now Trypho, betraying the trust of young
King Antiochus, put him to death.
32 He usurped his throne, assuming the crown
of Asia, and brought great havoc on the country.
33 Simon built up the fortresses of Judaea,
surrounding them with high towers, great walls and gates with bolts, and
stocked these fortresses with food.
34 He also sent a delegation to King
Demetrius, to get him to grant the province a remission, since all Trypho did
was to despoil.
35 King Demetrius replied to his request in a
letter framed as follows:
36 'King Demetrius to Simon, high priest and
Friend of Kings, and to the elders and nation of the Jews, greetings.
37 'It has pleased us to accept the golden
crown and the palm you have sent us, and we are disposed to make a general
peace with you, and to write to the officials to grant you remissions.
38 Everything that we have decreed concerning
you remains in force, and the fortresses you have built may remain in your
hands.
39 We pardon all offences, unwitting or
intentional, hitherto committed, and remit the crown tax you now owe us; and
whatever other taxes were levied in Jerusalem are no longer to be levied.
40 If any of you are suitable for enrolment in
our bodyguard, let them be enrolled, and let there be peace between us.'
41 The gentile yoke was thus lifted from
Israel in the year 170,
42 when our people began engrossing their
documents and contracts: 'In the first year of Simon, eminent high priest,
commander-in-chief and ethnarch of the Jews'.
43 About that time Simon laid siege to Gezer,
surrounding it with his troops. He constructed a mobile tower, brought it up to
the city, opened a breach in one of the bastions and took it.
44 The men in the mobile tower sprang out into
the city, where great confusion ensued.
45 The citizens, accompanied by their wives
and children, mounted the ramparts with their garments torn and loudly implored
Simon to make peace with them:
46 'Treat us', they said, 'not as our
wickedness deserves, but as your mercy prompts you.'
47 Simon came to terms with them and stopped
the fighting; but he expelled them from the city, purified the houses which
contained idols, and then made his entry with songs of praise.
Tehillim - Psalm 30:1-13
Rashi |
Targum |
1.
A psalm; a song of dedication of the House, of David. |
1. A praise song for the dedication of the
sanctuary. Of David. |
2.
I will exalt You, O Lord, for You have raised me up, and You have not
allowed my enemies to rejoice over me. |
2. I will praise you, O LORD, for you made me stand
erect, and did not let my enemies rejoice over me. |
3.
O Lord, I have cried out to You, and You have healed me. |
3.
O LORD my God, I prayed in Your presence and You healed me. |
4.
O Lord, You have brought my soul from the grave; You have revived me
from my descent into the Pit. |
4.
O LORD, You raised my soul out of Sheol; You preserved me from going
down to the pit. |
5.
Sing to the Lord, His pious ones, and give thanks to His holy name. |
5.
Sing praise in the LORD's presence, you His devotees; and give thanks
at the invocation of His holy one. |
6.
For His wrath lasts but a moment; life results from His favor; in the
evening, weeping may tarry, but in the morning there is joyful singing. |
6.
For His anger is but a moment; eternal life is His good pleasure. In
the evening one goes to bed in tears, but in the morning one rises in praise. |
7.
And I said in my tranquility, "I will never falter." |
7.
And I said when I dwelt in trust, I will never be shaken. |
8.
O Lord, with Your will, You set up my mountain to be might, You hid
Your countenance and I became frightened. |
8.
O LORD, by Your will You prepared the mighty mountains; You removed
Your presence, I became afraid. |
9.
To You, O Lord, I would call, and to the Lord I would supplicate. |
9.
In Your presence, O LORD, I will cry out; and to You, O my God,
I will pray. |
10.
"What gain is there in my blood, in my descent to
the grave? Will dust thank You; will it recite Your truth? |
10.
And I said, What profit is there in my blood, when I
descend to the grave? Can those who descend to the dust praise You? Will they
tell of Your faithfulness? |
11.
Hear, O Lord, and be gracious to me; O Lord, be my helper." |
11.
Accept, O LORD, my prayer, and have mercy on me; O LORD, be my helper. |
12.
You have turned my lament into dancing for me; You loosened my
sackcloth and girded me with joy. |
12.
You turned my lament into my celebration; You loosened my sackcloth and
girded me with joy. |
13.
So that my soul will sing praises to You and not be silent. O Lord, my
God, I will thank You forever. |
13.
Because the nobles of the world will give You praise and not be
silent, O LORD my God, I too will give You praise. |
|
|
Special Ketubim Rosh Chodesh – Proverbs 7:1-27
1 ¶
My son, keep my words, and lay up my commandments with you.
2
Keep my commandments and live, and my teaching as the apple of your eye.
3
Bind them upon your fingers, write them upon the table of thy heart.
4
Say unto wisdom: ‘You are my sister’, and call understanding your kinswoman;
5
That they may keep you from the strange woman, from the alien woman that makes
smooth her words.
6 ¶
For at the window of my house I looked forth through my lattice;
7
And I beheld among the thoughtless ones, I discerned among the youths, a young
man void of understanding,
8
Passing through the street near her corner, and he went the way to her house;
9 In
the twilight, in the evening of the day, in the blackness of night and the
darkness.
10
And, behold, there met him a woman with the attire of a harlot, and wily of
heart.
11
She is riotous and rebellious, her feet abide not in her house;
12
Now she is in the streets, now in the broad places, and lies in wait at every
corner.
13
So she caught him, and kissed him, and with an impudent face she said unto him:
14
‘Sacrifices of peace-offerings were due from me; this day have I paid my vows.
15
Therefore came I forth to meet you, to seek your face, and I have found you.
16 I
have decked my couch with coverlets, with striped cloths of the yarn of Egypt.
17 I
have perfumed my bed with myrrh, aloes, and cinnamon.
18
Come, let us take our fill of love until the morning; let us solace ourselves
with loves.
19 For
my husband is not at home, he is gone a long journey;
20 He
has taken the bag of money with him; he will come home at the appointed day (new
moon).’
21
With her much fair speech she causes him to yield, with the blandishment of her
lips she entices him away.
22
He goes after her straightway, as an ox that goes to the slaughter, or as one
in fetters to the correction of the fool;
23
Till an arrow strike through his liver; as a bird hastens to the snare—and
knows not that it is at the cost of his life.
24 ¶
Now therefore, O you children, hearken unto me, and attend to the words of my
mouth.
25
Let not your heart decline to her ways, go not astray in her paths.
26
For she has cast down many wounded; yes, a mighty host are all her slain.
27
Her house is the way to the nether-world, going down to the chambers of death.
Isaiah 9:1-2 -
JPS
1
The people that walked in darkness have seen a brilliant light; On those who
dwelt in a land of gloom light has dawned.
2 You have magnified that nation, have given
it great joy; They have rejoiced before You As they rejoice at reaping time, as
they exult when dividing spoil.
1 John 5:1-12
Hakham’s &
Dr. Adon Eliyahu’s Rendition
1 Everyone who is confident that Yeshua is the King Messiah of Israel
(i.e. has accepted the yokes of the kingdom and of the Torah) has been
fathered (begotten) by God, and everyone who loves Him (God) that
fathered (begat) [him/her] also loves the [the Jewish sons and
daughters] fathered by Him (God).
2 In this we know that we love the sons/daughters of
God: when we [continually and earnestly] love God and keep/observe [faithfully]
His commandments.
3 For this is the love of God: that we must [faithfully]
keep/observe His commandments. And His commandments are not burdensome (difficult
to observe/keep),
4 because everyone who is fathered (begotten) by
God conquers the [pagan] world; and this is [the conquering tool]
which conquers the [pagan] world, our faithful obedience [to God].
5 Now who is the one who conquers the [pagan] world
except the one who is confident that Yeshua is the son of God (i.e. the King Messiah of
Israel – i.e. has accepted the yokes of the kingdom and of the Torah)?
6 This is the one who came by [the] blood [of
circumcision] and [the] waters [of the Mikveh] Yeshua the
Messiah, not with the waters [of the Mikveh] only, but with the blood [of
circumcision] and the waters [of the Mikveh]. And the Spirit [of
G-d in the Bet Din] is the one who testifies, because the Spirit is the
truth [i.e. Torah – cf. Psalm 119:142).
7 For there are three that testify,
8 the Spirit [of G-d in the Bet Din], the blood
[of circumcision] and the waters [of the Mikveh], and the three
are in unity.
9 If we receive the witness of [Torah observant] persons,
the witness of God is greater, because this is the witness of God that He has
witnessed concerning his son (i.e. the King Messiah of Israel).
10 (The one who adheres to (or, puts his/her trust in)
the son of God (i.e.
the King Messiah of Israel- i.e. has accepted the yokes of the kingdom and of the Torah) has the
testimony [of the Bet Din, of circumcision and of the Mikveh] in himself.
The one who does not adhere [to
the King Messiah of Israel- i.e. has not accepted the yokes of the kingdom and of the
Torah] God has
made him a liar, because he has not adhered in the testimony that God has
testified concerning his son (i.e. the King Messiah of Israel).)
11 And this is the testimony: that God has given us
eternal life, and this life is in his son (i.e. the King Messiah of Israel).
12 The one who has the son (i.e. the King Messiah of Israel
– i.e. has accepted the yokes of the kingdom and of the Torah) has that
[eternal] life; the one who does not have the son of God (i.e. the King Messiah
of Israel – i.e. the yokes of the kingdom and of the Torah)
does not have that [eternal] life.
END OF THE READINGS FOR THE
SEVENTH DAY OF HANUKA
Hanuka Eighth
Day
Evening Wednesday Dec. 08 –
Evening Thursday Dec. 09, 2010
Torah: Numbers 7:54-89
Reader 1 - Num. 7:54-56
Reader 2 - Num. 7:57-59
Reader 3 - Num. 7:60-89
Yehudit (Judith) 15:1 – 16:25
1
Maccabees 13:48 - 16:24
Psalm 30:1-13
Nazareans
add in their private study and discussions: Zechariah 14:6-7; & 1 John 5:13-21
Rashi & Targum
Pseudo Jonathan
for: B’Midbar (Numbers)
7:54-89
Rashi |
Targum Pseudo Jonathan |
54.
On the eighth day, the chieftain was of the sons of Manasseh, Gamliel
the son of Pedazhur. |
54.
on the eighth, Gamaliel bar Pedazur, prince of Menasheh; |
55.
His offering was one silver bowl weighing one hundred and thirty
[shekels], one silver sprinkling basin [weighing] seventy shekels according
to the holy shekel, both filled with fine flour mixed with olive oil for a
meal offering. |
55.
|
56.
One spoon [weighing] ten gold [shekels] filled with incense. |
56.
|
57.
One young bull, one ram and one lamb in its first year for a burnt
offering. |
57.
|
58.
One young he goat for a sin offering. |
58.
|
59.
And for the peace offering: two oxen, five rams, five he goats, five
lambs in their first year; this was the offering of Gamliel the son of
Pedazhur. |
59.
|
60.
On the ninth day, the chieftain was of the sons of Benjamin, Abidan
the son of Gideoni. |
60.
on the ninth, Abidan bar Gideoni, prince of Benjamin; |
61.
His offering was one silver bowl weighing one hundred and thirty
[shekels], one silver sprinkling basin [weighing] seventy shekels according
to the holy shekel, both filled with fine flour mixed with olive oil for a
meal offering. |
|
62.
One spoon [weighing] ten gold [shekels] filled with incense. |
|
63.
One young bull, one ram and one lamb in its first year for a burnt
offering. |
|
64.
One young he goat for a sin offering. |
|
65.
And for the peace offering: two oxen, five rams, five he goats, five
lambs in their first year; this was the offering of Abidan the son of
Gideoni. |
|
66.
On the tenth day, the chieftain was of the sons of Dan, Ahiezer the
son of Ammishaddai. |
66.
on the tenth, Achiezer bar Amishaddai, prince of the Beni Dan; |
67.
His offering was one silver bowl weighing one hundred and thirty
[shekels], one silver sprinkling basin [weighing] seventy shekels according
to the holy shekel, both filled with fine flour mixed with olive oil for a
meal offering. |
|
68.
One spoon [weighing] ten gold [shekels] filled with incense. |
|
69.
One young bull, one ram and one lamb in its first year for a burnt
offering. |
|
70.
One young he goat for a sin offering. |
|
71.
And for the peace offering: two oxen, five rams, five he goats, five
lambs in their first year; this was the offering of Ahiezer the son of
Ammishaddai. |
|
72.
On the eleventh day, the chieftain was of the sons of Asher, Pag'iel
the son of Ochran. |
72.
on the eleventh, Pagiel bar Achran, prince of Asher; |
73.
His offering was one silver bowl weighing one hundred and thirty
[shekels], one silver sprinkling basin [weighing] seventy shekels according
to the holy shekel, both filled with fine flour mixed with olive oil for a
meal offering. |
|
74.
One spoon [weighing] ten gold [shekels] filled with incense. |
|
75.
One young bull, one ram and one lamb in its first year for a burnt
offering. |
|
76,
One young he goat for a sin offering. |
|
77.
And for the peace offering: two oxen, five rams, five he goats, five
lambs in their first year; this was the offering of Pag'iel the son of
Ochran. |
|
78.
On the twelfth day, the chieftain was of the sons of Naphtali, Ahira
the son of Enan. |
78.
and on the twelfth day, Achira bar Enan, prince of the Beni Naphtali,
offered. |
79.
His offering was one silver bowl weighing one hundred and thirty
[shekels], one silver sprinkling basin [weighing] seventy shekels according
to the holy shekel, both filled with fine flour mixed with olive oil for a
meal offering. |
|
80.
One spoon [weighing] ten gold [shekels] filled with incense. |
|
81.
One young bull, one ram and one lamb in its first year for a burnt
offering. |
|
82.
One young he goat for a sin offering. |
|
83.
And for the peace offering: two oxen, five rams, five he goats, five
lambs in their first year; this was the offering of Ahira the son of Enan. |
|
84.
This was the dedication offering of the altar presented by the
chieftains on the day it was anointed; there were twelve silver bowls, twelve
silver basins and twelve gold spoons. |
84.
This is the oblation at the anointing of the altar, on the day that they
anointed it, from the riches of the princes of Israel: twelve silver bowls,
answering to the twelve tribes; twelve silver vases, answering to the twelve
princes of the B’ne Yisrael; twelve golden pans, answering to the twelve
signs (mazalot). |
85.
The weight of each silver bowl was one hundred and thirty [shekels],
and that of each basin was seventy [shekels]; all the silver of the vessels
weighed in total two thousand four hundred [shekels] according to the holy
shekel. |
85.
One hundred and thirty shekels was the weight of each silver bowl, answering
to the years of Jokebed when she bare Mosheh; and seventy shekels was the
weight of each vase, answering to the seventy elders of the great Sanhedrin:
all the silver vessels, two thousand four hundred shekels, in shekels of the
sanctuary. |
86.
Twelve gold spoons filled with incense; each spoon weighing ten
[shekels] according to the holy shekel; all the gold spoons totaled one
hundred and twenty shekels. |
86.
The golden pans were twelve, answering to the princes of Israel, full of good
sweet incense; the weight of ten shekels was the weight of each pan,
answering to the Ten Words; all the gold of the pans, one hundred and twenty
(shekels), answering to the years lived by Mosheh the prophet. |
87.
The total of the cattle for the burnt offerings was twelve bulls,
twelve rams, and twelve lambs in their first year with their meal offerings.
And [there were] twelve young he goats for sin offerings. |
87.
All the bullocks for the burnt offering, twelve, a bullock for a prince of
the house of the fathers; twelve rams, because the twelve princes of Ishmael
would perish; twelve lambs of the year, because the twelve princes of Persia
would perish; and their minchas, that famine might be removed from the world;
and twelve kids of the goats for the sin offering, to atone for the sins of
the twelve tribes. |
88.
The total of cattle for the peace offerings was twenty four oxen,
sixty rams, sixty he goats, and sixty lambs in their first year. This was the
dedication offering for the altar, after it was anointed. |
88.
And all the oxen for consecrated victims, twenty‑four, answering to the
twenty‑four orders (of the priests); the rams, sixty, answering, to the
sixty years which Izhak had lived when he begat Jakob; the goats, sixty,
answering to the sixty letters in the benediction of the priests; lambs of
the year, sixty, to atone for the sixty myriads of Israel. This was the
dedication of the altar by anointment on the day that they anointed it. |
89.
When Moses would come into the Tent of Meeting to speak with Him, he
would hear the voice speaking to him from the two cherubim above the covering
which was over the Ark of Testimony, and He spoke to him. |
89.
And when Mosheh entered into the tabernacle of ordinance to speak with Him,
he heard the voice of the Spirit who spoke with him descending from the
heaven of heavens upon the Mercy Seat which was upon the Ark of the Testimony
between the two Cherubim, and from thence was the Oracle speaking with him. |
|
|
Yehudit (Judith) 15:1 – 16:25
New Jerusalem Bible Version
NJB Judith 15:1 When the men who were still in
their tents heard the news they were
appalled.
2 Panic-stricken and
trembling, no two of them could keep together, the rout was complete, with one
accord they fled along every track across the plain or through the mountains.
3 The men who had been
bivouacking in the mountains round Bethulia were fleeing too. Then all the Israelite
warriors charged down on them.
4 Uzziah sent
messengers to Betomasthaim, Bebai, Choba, Kola, throughout the whole territory of
Israel, to inform them of what had happened and to urge them all to hurl themselves on
the enemy and annihilate them.
5 As soon as the
Israelites heard the news, they fell on them as one man and massacred them all the
way to Choba. The men of Jerusalem and the entire mountain country also rallied to them,
once they had been informed of the
events in the enemy camp. Then the men of Gilead and Galilee attacked them
on the flank and struck at them fiercely till they neared Damascus and its
territory.
6 All the other
inhabitants of Bethulia fell on the Assyrian camp and looted it to their great profit.
7 The Israelites
returning from the slaughter seized what was left. The hamlets and villages of the
mountain country and the plain also captured a great deal of booty, since there were
vast stores of it.
8 Joakim the high
priest and the entire Council of Elders of Israel, who were in Jerusalem, came to
gaze on the benefits that the Lord had lavished on Israel and to see
Judith and congratulate her.
9 On coming to her
house, they blessed her with one accord, saying: You are the glory of Jerusalem!
You are the great pride of Israel! You are the highest honour of our
race!
10 By doing all this
with your own hand you have deserved well of Israel, and God has approved what
you have done. May you be blessed by the Lord
Almighty in all the days to come! And the people all said, 'Amen!'
11 The people looted
the camp for thirty days. They gave Judith the tent of Holofernes, all his
silver plate, his divans, his drinking bowls and all his furniture. She took
this, loaded her mule, harnessed her carts and heaped the things into them.
12 All the women of
Israel, hurrying to see her, formed choirs of dancers in her honour. Judith
took wands of vine-leaves in her hand and distributed them to the women who accompanied
her;
13 she and her
companions put on wreaths of olive. Then she took her place at the head of the
procession and led the women as they danced. All the men of Israel, armed and garlanded,
followed them, singing hymns.
14 With all Israel
round her, Judith broke into this song of thanksgiving and the whole people
sang this hymn:
NJB Judith 16:1 Break into song for my God, to
the tambourine, sing in honour of the Lord,
to the cymbal, let psalm and canticle mingle for him, extol his name, invoke it!
2 For the Lord is a
God who breaks battle-lines; he has pitched his camp in the middle of his people
to deliver me from the hands of my oppressors.
3 Assyria came down
from the mountains of the north, came with tens of thousands of his army.
Their multitude blocked the ravines, their horses covered the hills.
4 He threatened to
burn up my country, destroy my young men with the sword, dash my sucklings to
the ground, make prey of my little ones, carry off my maidens;
5 but the Lord
Almighty has thwarted them by a woman's hand.
6 For their hero did
not fall at the young men's hands, it was not the sons of Titans struck him down,
no proud giants made that attack, but Judith, the daughter of Merari, who disarmed him
with the beauty of her face.
7 She laid aside her
widow's dress to raise up those who were oppressed in Israel; she anointed
her face with perfume,
8 bound her hair under
a turban, put on a linen gown to seduce him.
9 Her sandal ravished
his eye, her beauty took his soul prisoner and the scimitar cut through his
neck!
10 The Persians
trembled at her boldness, the Medes were daunted by her daring.
11 These were struck
with fear when my lowly ones raised the war cry, these were seized with
terror when my weak ones shouted, and when they raised their voices these gave ground.
12 The children of
mere girls ran them through, pierced them like the offspring of deserters. They
perished in the battle of my Lord!
13 I shall sing a new
song to my God. Lord, you are great, you are glorious, wonderfully strong,
unconquerable.
14 May your whole
creation serve you! For you spoke and things came into being, you sent your
breath and they were put together, and no one can resist your voice.
15 Should mountains be
tossed from their foundations to mingle with the waves, should rocks melt like
wax before your face, to those who fear you, you would still be merciful.
16 A little thing
indeed is a sweetly smelling sacrifice, still less the fat burned for you in
burnt offering; but whoever fears the Lord is great for ever.
17 Woe to the nations
who rise against my race! The Lord Almighty will punish them on judgement
day. He will send fire and worms in their flesh and they will weep with pain for evermore.
18 When they reached
Jerusalem they fell on their faces before God and, once the people had been
purified, they presented their burnt offerings, voluntary offerings and gifts.
19 All Holofernes'
property given her by the people, and the canopy she herself had stripped from his
bed, Judith vowed to God as a dedicated offering.
20 For three months
the people gave themselves up to rejoicings in front of the Temple in Jerusalem,
where Judith stayed with them.
21 When this was over,
everyone returned home. Judith went back to Bethulia and lived on her
property; as long as she lived, she enjoyed a great reputation throughout the
country.
22 She had many
suitors, but all her days, from the time her husband Manasseh died and was gathered to
his people, she never gave herself to another man.
23 Her fame spread
more and more, the older she grew in her husband's house; she lived to the
age of one hundred and five. She emancipated her maid, then died in Bethulia and was
buried in the cave where Manasseh
her husband lay.
24 The House of Israel
mourned her for seven days. Before her death she had distributed her property
among her own relations and those of her husband Manasseh.
25 Never again during
the lifetime of Judith, nor indeed for a long time after her death, did anyone
trouble the Israelites.
1 Maccabees 13:48 - 16:24
New Jerusalem Bible Version
48
He banished all impurity from it, settled in it people who observed the Law,
and having fortified it, built a residence there for himself.
49
The occupants of the Citadel in Jerusalem, prevented as they were from coming
out and going into the countryside to buy and sell, were in desperate need of
food, and numbers of them were being carried off by starvation.
50
They begged Simon to make peace with them, and he granted this, though he
expelled them and purified the Citadel from its pollutions.
51
The Jews made their entry on the twenty-third day of the second month in the
year 171, with acclamations and carrying palms, to the sound of lyres, cymbals
and harps, chanting hymns and canticles, since a great enemy had been crushed
and thrown out of Israel. Simon made it a day of annual rejoicing.
52
He fortified the Temple hill on the Citadel side, and took up residence there
with his men.
53
Since his son John had come to manhood, Simon appointed him general-in-chief,
with his residence in Gezer.
NJB 1 Maccabees 14:1 In the year 172, King
Demetrius assembled his forces and marched into Media to raise help for the
fight against Trypho.
2
When Arsaces king of Persia and Media heard that Demetrius had entered his
territory, he sent one of his generals to capture him alive.
3
The general defeated the army of Demetrius, seized him and brought him to
Arsaces, who imprisoned him.
4
The country was at peace throughout the days of Simon. He sought the good of
his nation and they were well pleased with his authority, as with his
magnificence, throughout his life.
5
To crown his titles to glory, he took Joppa and made it a harbour, gaining
access to the Mediterranean Isles.
6
He enlarged the frontiers of his nation, keeping his mastery over the homeland,
7
resettling a host of captives. He conquered Gezer, Beth-Zur and the Citadel,
ridding them of every impurity, and no one could resist him.
8
The people farmed their land in peace; the land gave its produce, the trees of
the plain their fruit.
9
The elders sat at ease in the squares, all their talk was of their prosperity;
the young men wore splendid armour.
10
He kept the towns supplied with provisions and furnished with fortifications,
until his fame resounded to the ends of the earth.
11
He established peace in the land, and Israel knew great joy.
12
Each man sat under his own vine and his own fig tree, and there was no one to
make them afraid.
13
No enemy was left in the land to fight them, the very kings of those times had
been crushed.
14
He encouraged the afflicted members of his people, suppressing every wicked man
and renegade. He strove to observe the Law,
15
and gave new splendour to the Temple, enriching it with many sacred vessels.
16
When it became known in Rome and as far as Sparta that Jonathan was dead,
people were deeply grieved.
17
But as soon as they heard that his brother Simon had succeeded him as high
priest and was master of the country and the cities in it,
18
they wrote to him on bronze tablets to renew the treaty of friendship and
alliance which they had made with his brothers, Judas and Jonathan,
19
and the document was read out before the assembly in Jerusalem.
20
This is the copy of the letter sent by the Spartans: 'The rulers and the city
of Sparta, to Simon the high priest and to the elders and priests and the rest
of the people of the Jews, greetings.
21
'The ambassadors whom you sent to our people have informed us of your glory and
prosperity, and we are delighted with their visit.
22
We have recorded their declarations in the minutes of our public assemblies, as
follows, "Numenius son of Antiochus, and Antipater son of Jason,
ambassadors of the Jews, came to us to renew their friendship with us.
23
And it was the people's pleasure to receive these personages with honour and to
deposit a copy of their statements in the public archives, so that the people
of Sparta might preserve a record of them. A copy was also made for Simon the
high priest." '
24
After this, Simon sent Numenius to Rome as the bearer of a large golden shield
weighing a thousand mina, to confirm the alliance with them.
25
When these events were reported to our people, they said, 'What mark of
appreciation shall we give to Simon and his sons?
26
He stood firm, he and his brothers and his father's house: he fought off the
enemies of Israel and secured its freedom.' So they recorded an inscription on
bronze tablets and set it up on pillars on Mount Zion.
27
This is a copy of the text: 'The eighteenth of Elul, in the year 172, being the
third year of Simon, eminent high priest:
28
'In Asaramel, in the Grand Assembly of priests and people, of princes of the
nation and of elders of the country: 'We are acquainted with the matters
following:
29
'When there was almost incessant fighting in the country Simon, son of
Mattathias, a priest of the line of Joarib, and his brothers courted danger and
withstood their nation's enemies to safeguard the integrity of their sanctuary
and of the Law, and so brought their nation great glory;
30
'For when, Jonathan having rallied his nation and become its high priest and
having then been gathered to his ancestors,
31
the enemy planned to invade the country, intending to devastate their territory
and to lay hands on their sanctuary,
32
Simon next came forward to fight for his nation: spending much of his personal
wealth on arming his nation's fighting men and on providing their pay;
33
fortifying the towns of Judaea, as well as Beth-Zur on the Judaean frontier
where the enemy arsenal had formerly been, and stationing in it a garrison of
Jewish soldiers;
34
fortifying Joppa on the coast, and Gezer on the borders of Azotus, a place
formerly inhabited by the enemy, founding a Jewish colony there, and providing
the settlers with everything they needed to set them on their feet;
35
'In consequence of which, the people, aware of Simon's loyalty and of the glory
which he was determined to win for his nation, have made him their ethnarch and
high priest, for all his services and for the integrity and loyalty which he
has shown towards his nation, and for having by every means sought to enhance
his people's power;
36
'It has fallen to him in his time to expel the foreigners from his country,
including those in the City of David in Jerusalem, who had converted it into a
citadel for their own use, from which they would sally out to defile the
surroundings of the sanctuary and to violate its sacred character;
37
to station Jewish soldiers there instead for the security of the country and
the city; and to heighten the walls of Jerusalem;
38
'And since King Demetrius has heard that the Romans call the Jews their
friends, allies and brothers,
39
and that they have given an honourable reception to Simon's ambassadors, and,
furthermore,
40
that the Jews and priests are happy that Simon should, pending the advent of a
genuine prophet, be their ethnarch and high priest for life
41
therefore he has confirmed him in the high-priestly office, has raised him to
the rank of Friend and has showered great honours on him, also confirming him
as their commander-in-chief,
42
with the right to appoint officials to oversee the fabric of the sanctuary and
to administer the country, munitions and fortresses;
43
he is to have personal charge of the sanctuary, and to be obeyed by all; all
official documents in the country must be drawn up in his name; and he may
assume the purple and may wear golden ornaments;
44
'Furthermore, it is against the law for any member of the public or of the
priesthood to contravene any of these enactments or to contest his decisions,
or to convene a meeting anywhere in the country without his permission, or to
assume the purple or wear the golden brooch;
45
and anyone acting contrary to, or rejecting any article of, these enactments is
liable to punishment;
46
'And since the people have unanimously agreed to grant Simon the right to act
as aforesaid, and
47
since Simon, for his part, has given his assent, and has consented to assume
the high-priestly office and to be commander-in-chief and ethnarch of the Jews
and their priests, and to preside over all:
48
'So, be it now enacted: that this record be inscribed on bronze tablets and be
erected at some conspicuous place within the precincts of the Temple,
49
and that copies be deposited in the Treasury for Simon and his descendants.'
NJB 1 Maccabees 15:1 Antiochus son of King
Demetrius addressed a letter from the Mediterranean Isles to Simon, priest and
ethnarch of the Jews, and to the whole nation;
2
this was how it read: 'King Antiochus to Simon, high priest and ethnarch, and
to the Jewish nation, greetings.
3
'Whereas certain scoundrels have seized control of the kingdom of our fathers,
and I propose to claim back the kingdom so that I may re-establish it as it was
before, and whereas I have accordingly recruited very large forces and fitted
out warships,
4
intending to make a landing in the country and to hunt down the men who have
ruined it and laid waste many towns in my kingdom;
5
'I now, therefore, confirm in your favour all remissions of taxes granted to
you by the kings my predecessors, as well as the waiving of whatever presents
they may have conceded.
6
I hereby authorise you to mint your own coinage as legal tender for your own
country.
7
I declare Jerusalem and the sanctuary to be free; all the arms you have
manufactured and the fortresses you have built and now occupy may remain yours.
8
All debts to the royal treasury, present or future, are cancelled henceforth in
perpetuity.
9
Furthermore, when we have won back our kingdom, we shall bestow such great
honour on yourself, your nation and the sanctuary as will make your glory known
throughout the world.'
10
Antiochus invaded the land of his ancestors in the year 174 and, since the
troops all rallied to him, Trypho was left with few supporters.
11
Antiochus pursued the usurper, who took refuge in Dora on the coast,
12
knowing that misfortunes were piling up on him and that his troops had deserted
him.
13
Antiochus pitched camp outside Dora with a hundred and twenty thousand fighting
men and eight thousand cavalry.
14
He laid siege to the city while the ships closed in from the sea, so that he
had the city under attack from land and sea, and allowed no one to go in or
come out.
15
Numenius and his companions, meanwhile, arrived from Rome, bringing letters
addressed to various kings and states, in the following terms:
16
'Lucius, consul of the Romans, to King Ptolemy, greetings.
17
'The Jewish ambassadors have come to us as our friends and allies to renew our
original friendship and alliance in the name of the high priest Simon and the
Jewish people.
18
They have brought a golden shield worth a thousand mina.
19
Accordingly, we have seen fit to write to various kings and states, warning
them neither to molest the Jewish people nor to attack either them or their
towns or their country, nor to ally themselves with any such aggressors.
20
We have seen fit to accept the shield from them.
21
If, therefore, any scoundrels have fled their country to take refuge with you,
hand them over to Simon the high priest, to be punished by him according to
their law.'
22
The consul sent the same letter to King Demetrius, to Attalus, Ariarathes and
Arsaces,
23
and to all states, including Sampsames, the Spartans, Delos, Myndos, Sicyon,
Caria, Samos, Pamphylia, Lycia, Halicarnassus, Rhodes, Phaselis, Cos, Side,
Arados, Gortyn, Cyprus and Cyrene.
24
They also drew up a copy for Simon the high priest.
25
Antiochus, meanwhile, from his positions on the outskirts of Dora, was
continually throwing detachments against the town. He constructed
siege-engines, and blockaded Trypho, preventing movement in or out.
26
Simon sent him two thousand picked men to support him in the fight, with silver
and gold and plenty of equipment.
27
But Antiochus would not accept them; instead, he repudiated all his previous
agreements with Simon and completely changed his attitude to him.
28
He sent him Athenobius, one of his Friends, to confer with him and say, 'You
are now occupying Joppa and Gezer and the Citadel in Jerusalem, which are towns
in my kingdom.
29
You have laid waste their territory and done immense harm to the country; and
you have seized control of many places properly in my kingdom.
30
Either now surrender the towns you have taken and the taxes from the places you
have seized outside the frontiers of Judaea,
31
or else pay me five hundred talents of silver in compensation for them and for
the destruction you have done, and another five hundred talents for the taxes
from the towns; otherwise we shall come and make war on you.'
32
When the King's Friend, Athenobius, reached Jerusalem and saw Simon's
magnificence, his cabinet of gold and silver plate and the state he kept, he
was dumbfounded. He delivered the king's message,
33
but Simon gave him this answer, 'We have not taken foreign territory or any
alien property but have occupied our ancestral heritage, for some time unjustly
wrested from us by our enemies;
34
now that we have a favourable opportunity, we are merely recovering our
ancestral heritage.
35
As regards Joppa and Gezer, which you claim, these were towns that did great
harm to our people and laid waste our country; we are prepared to give a hundred
talents for them.' Without so much as a word in answer,
36
the envoy went back to the king in a rage and reported on Simon's answer and
his magnificence, and on everything he had seen, at which the king fell into a
fury.
37
Trypho now boarded a ship and escaped to Orthosia.
38
The king appointed Cendebaeus military governor of the coastal region and
allotted him a force of infantry and cavalry.
39
He ordered him to deploy his men facing Judaea, and instructed him to rebuild
Kedron and fortify its gates, and to make war on our people, while the king
himself went in pursuit of Trypho.
40
Cendebaeus arrived at Jamnia and began to provoke our people forthwith,
invading Judaea, taking prisoners, and massacring.
41
Having rebuilt Kedron, he stationed cavalry and troops there to make sorties
and patrol the roads of Judaea, as the king had ordered.
NJB 1 Maccabees 16:1 John then went up from Gezer
and reported to his father Simon what Cendebaeus was busy doing.
2
At this, Simon summoned his two elder sons, Judas and John, and said to them,
'My brothers and I, and my father's House, have fought the enemies of Israel
from our youth until today, and many a time we have been successful in rescuing
Israel.
3
But now I am an old man, while you, by the mercy of Heaven, are the right age;
take the place of my brother and myself, go out and fight for our nation, and
may Heaven's aid be with you.'
4
He then selected twenty thousand of the country's fighting men and cavalry, and
these marched against Cendebaeus, spending the night at Modein.
5
Making an early start, they marched into the plain, to find a large army
opposing them, both infantry and cavalry; there was, however, a stream-bed in
between.
6
John drew up facing them, he and his army and, seeing that the men were afraid
to cross the stream-bed, crossed over first himself. When his men saw this,
they too crossed after him.
7
He divided his army into two, with the cavalry in the centre and the infantry
on either flank, as the opposing cavalry was very numerous.
8
The trumpets rang out; Cendebaeus and his army were put to flight, many of them
falling mortally wounded and the rest of them fleeing to the fortress.
9
Then it was that Judas, John's brother, was wounded, but John pursued them
until Cendebaeus reached Kedron, which he had rebuilt.
10
Their flight took them as far as the towers in the countryside of Azotus, and
John burnt these down. The enemy losses amounted to ten thousand men; John
returned safely to Judaea.
11
Ptolemy son of Abubos had been appointed general in command of the Plain of
Jericho; he owned a great deal of silver and gold,
12
and was the high priest's son-in-law.
13
His ambition was fired; he hoped to make himself master of the whole country
and therefore treacherously began to plot the destruction of Simon and his
sons.
14
Simon, who was inspecting the towns up and down the country and attending to
their administration, had come down to Jericho with his sons Mattathias and
Judas, in the year 172, in the eleventh month, the month of Shebat.
15
The son of Abubos lured them into a small fortress called Dok, which he had
built, where he offered them a great banquet, having previously hidden men in
the place.
16
When Simon and his sons were drunk, Ptolemy and his men reached for their
weapons, rushed on Simon in the banqueting hall and killed him with his two
sons and some of his servants.
17
He thus committed a great act of treachery and rendered evil for good.
18
Ptolemy wrote a report of the affair and sent it to the king, in the
expectation of being sent reinforcements and of having the cities and the
province made over to him.
19
He also sent people to Gezer to murder John, and sent written orders to the
military commanders to come to him so that he could give them silver, gold and
presents;
20
and he also sent others to seize control of Jerusalem and the Temple mount.
21
But someone had been too quick for him and had already informed John in Gezer
that his father and brothers had perished, adding, 'He is sending someone to
kill you too!'
22
Overcome as John was by the news, he arrested the men who had come to kill him
and put them to death, being forewarned of their murderous design.
23
The rest of John's acts, the battles he fought and the exploits he performed,
the city walls he built, and all his other achievements,
24
from the day he succeeded his father as high priest, are recorded in the annals
of his pontificate.
Tehillim - Psalm 30:1-13
Rashi |
Targum |
1.
A psalm; a song of dedication of the House, of David. |
1. A praise song for the dedication of the
sanctuary. Of David. |
2.
I will exalt You, O Lord, for You have raised me up, and You have not
allowed my enemies to rejoice over me. |
2. I will praise you, O LORD, for you made me stand
erect, and did not let my enemies rejoice over me. |
3.
O Lord, I have cried out to You, and You have healed me. |
3.
O LORD my God, I prayed in Your presence and You healed me. |
4.
O Lord, You have brought my soul from the grave; You have revived me
from my descent into the Pit. |
4.
O LORD, You raised my soul out of Sheol; You preserved me from going
down to the pit. |
5.
Sing to the Lord, His pious ones, and give thanks to His holy name. |
5.
Sing praise in the LORD's presence, you His devotees; and give thanks
at the invocation of His holy one. |
6.
For His wrath lasts but a moment; life results from His favor; in the
evening, weeping may tarry, but in the morning there is joyful singing. |
6.
For His anger is but a moment; eternal life is His good pleasure. In
the evening one goes to bed in tears, but in the morning one rises in praise. |
7.
And I said in my tranquility, "I will never falter." |
7.
And I said when I dwelt in trust, I will never be shaken. |
8.
O Lord, with Your will, You set up my mountain to be might, You hid
Your countenance and I became frightened. |
8.
O LORD, by Your will You prepared the mighty mountains; You removed
Your presence, I became afraid. |
9.
To You, O Lord, I would call, and to the Lord I would supplicate. |
9.
In Your presence, O LORD, I will cry out; and to You, O my God,
I will pray. |
10.
"What gain is there in my blood, in my descent to
the grave? Will dust thank You; will it recite Your truth? |
10.
And I said, What profit is there in my blood, when I
descend to the grave? Can those who descend to the dust praise You? Will they
tell of Your faithfulness? |
11.
Hear, O Lord, and be gracious to me; O Lord, be my helper." |
11.
Accept, O LORD, my prayer, and have mercy on me; O LORD, be my helper. |
12.
You have turned my lament into dancing for me; You loosened my
sackcloth and girded me with joy. |
12.
You turned my lament into my celebration; You loosened my sackcloth and
girded me with joy. |
13.
So that my soul will sing praises to You and not be silent. O Lord, my
God, I will thank You forever. |
13.
Because the nobles of the world will give You praise and not be
silent, O LORD my God, I too will give You praise. |
|
|
Zechariah 14:6-7
- JPS
6
In that day, there shall be neither sunlight nor cold moonlight,
7
but there shall be a continuous day -- only the LORD knows when -- of neither
day nor night, and there shall be light at eventide.
1 John 5:13-21
Hakham’s &
Dr. Adon Eliyahu’s Rendition
13
These things I have written to you who have confidence in (or,
adhere to) the authority of the son of God (i.e. the King Messiah of Israel
– i.e. take upon the yokes of the kingdom and of the Torah), that
you may know that you have eternal life and that you may adhere to the
authority of the son of God (i.e.
the King Messiah of Israel – i.e. taking upon the yokes of the kingdom and of
the Torah).
14 And this is the confidence that we have before Him (i.e.
G-d): that if we ask anything [in] accordance to His (i.e. G-d’s)
will, He (G-d) hears us.
15 And if we know that He hears us [in] whatever
we ask, we know that we have the requests that we have asked from Him.
16 If anyone should see his brother sinning a sin not
unto death, he will ask [for G-d’s forgiveness], and He will grant
life to him, for those who sin not unto death. (There is a sin unto
death; I do not say that he should ask about that.
17 All unrighteousness/injustices is sin, and [there]
are sins not unto death.)
18 We know that everyone who is fathered (begotten)
by God does not [habitually and continually] sin, but the one fathered (begotten)
by God, [He] protects him, and the evil one (i.e. HaSatan) does
not touch him [without G-d’s permission].
19 We know that we are from God, and the whole [pagan]
world lies in the power of the evil one [i.e. HaSatan].
20 And we know that the son of God (i.e. the King Messiah
of Israel) has come and has given us understanding, that we may intimately
know the one who is true [the Torah tabernacling in the flesh], and we
are in him who is true [the Torah tabernacling in the flesh], in His son
Yeshua the Messiah King of Israel. This one is the true Elohim (Judge)
and [bringer of] eternal life.
21 My sons, guard/keep yourselves from idols, Amen!
We
have been worthy to begin and complete all the readings for the eight days of
the Fest of Hanuka 5771. So may we be worthy of enjoying this festival again.
May Eliyahu the Tishbite come, who is called the one who will “restore the
heart of the fathers to the children” (Malachi 3:24). And from him we will seek
G-d to explain all these readings in “seventy ways.” Amen, may this be His
will! Praise to G-d, most blessed be He, Creator of the ages!