1 Maccabees 12 – Jonathan decides that it is not enough
to be siding with Trypho and his attempt to set the child-king Antiochus up.
Jonathan
continues to use “triangulation” as a policy; he sends people to Rome and
Sparta to build other alliances against the Hellenists. He sends letters and
ambassadors to renew or initiate treaties of friendship. The author includes a
copy of the letter Jonathan sends to the Spartans. It reminds them of good
relations in the past and speaks of the terrible wars that have encircled them.
They have tried to appeal to Heaven for aid but now they are also appealing to
Rome and to the Spartans.
When Demetrius
comes again to make war on them, Jonathan tries to divert them to Hamath so as
to keep them away from Jerusalem. Hamath is on the northern border of Syria. They
learn that Demetrius plans a night raid and they prepare for it.
When the
troops of Demetrius learn somehow that the Jews know their plan and are
preparing to meet it, they become afraid and decide to withdraw after lighting
fires to cover their retreat. Meanwhile Jonathan’s brother, Simon, takes Joppa
to keep it out of the hands of the Seleucids.
Jonathan
returns to Jerusalem and meets with the elders there; he convinces them to
build fortresses in Judaea and to make the walls of Jerusalem higher and to
isolate the city even commercially.
Then the story
returns to Trypho. He decides he would much rather be king himself than have
the young Antiochus on the throne. He fears that Jonathan might not support
that plan. So Trypho decides he must wage war against Jonathan. He fools
Jonathan, into thinking he is going to even turn the city of Antioch
[Ptolemais] over to him. He
convinces Jonathan that he can trust him, but when Jonathan comes to Antioch, Trypho
seizes him, puts some of Jonathan’s men to the sword, and holds Jonathan
himself captive.
Some escape and
return to Jerusalem. There “they mourned for Jonathan and his companions and
were in great fear; and all Israel mourned deeply” (12:52). This chapter makes it sound that Jonathan has been killed,
but he will show up again in chapter 13 as a captive, so I am assuming he was
not dead yet. The chapter ends with the pagans all around Israel
exulting in their weakness and planning to wipe them out.
An
important letter – combining elements that are strongly emphasized in Quaker
thought but really important to all Christian groups.
1 John 1 – The prologue to the
Gospel according to John says in verse 14 that the Word with God in the
beginning was “made flesh, and dwelt among us.” It is this that John writes of
in this letter: “Something which has existed since the beginning, that we have
heard, and we have seen with our own eyes; that we have watched and touched
with our hands: the Word, who is life—this is our subject” (1:1).
John
wants to tell us about this all so we too “may be in union with [them], as
[they] are in union with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ” (1:3).
The
central message is this: “God is light; there is no darkness in him at all. If
we say that we are in union with God while we are living in darkness, we are
lying because we are not living the truth. But if we live our lives in the
light, as he is in the light, we are in union with one another and the blood of
Jesus, his Son, purifies us from all sin” (1:4).
This
reality of sin is not something we can deny but “if we acknowledge our sins,
then God who is faithful and just will forgive our sins and purify us from
everything that is wrong” (1:9).
1 John 2 - John wants us to
realize that we can live differently, not caged in our sinful natures. Jesus is
our eternal “advocate with the Father” (2:1). But it is not enough to just say
we know God through Christ; we must show it in the way we live. “We can be sure
that we are in God only when the one who claims to be living in him is living
the same kind of life as Christ lived”(2:6).
This
is nothing NEW. It is the same expectation God had of us since He created us.
It is the same old commandment (2:7). But it is new as well because “the night
is over and the real light is already shining” (2:8). It is all about love. “Anyone who claims to be in the light but
hates his brother is still in the dark. But anyone who loves his brother is
living in the light and need not be afraid of stumbling” (2:9-10).
So
while sin is real and we must break with it by submitting to the commandment
that we love our “brothers,” we can only do this if we detach ourselves from
worldly desires. “The love of the Father cannot be in any man who loves the
world because nothing the world has to offer—the sensual body, the lustful eye,
pride in possessions—could ever come from the Father but only from the world;
and the world, with all it craves for, is coming to an end; but anyone who does
the will of God remains for ever” (2:15-17).
John,
like Peter before him, and really all the early apostles and teachers of
Christianity, is convinced that the end times are near. Here he says, “these
are the last days . . . and now several antichrists have already appeared”
(2:18). These antichrists are “rivals of Christ” (2:19) who have arisen from
the Christian community itself; but he says they have left. “The man who denies
that Jesus is the Christ—he is the liar, he is Antichrist; and he is denying
the Father as well as the On, because no one who has the Father can deny the
Son, and to acknowledge the Son is to have the Father as well” (2:22-23).
“Keep
alive in yourselves what you were taught in the beginning; as long as what you
were taught in the beginning is alive in you, you will live in the Son and in
the Father” (2:24). The “anointing [Christ] gave teaches [us] everything” we
need to know - what you received from him remains in you, so that you do not
need anyone to teach you. The content of this letter,
the ideas expressed in it, were incredibly important to early Friends; and I
would say that much of what John says here still remains central to Quakers.
But I think many Quakers would have trouble with some of John’s words about the
Word here. He is very concerned that people NOT FORGET that this Word was FLESH
in Jesus Christ.
It
might be interesting for Friends to know that the Catholic Catechism also
teaches this same lesson in section 427: “[E]verything is taught with reference
to him – and it is Christ alone who
teaches – anyone else teaches to the extent that he is Christ’s spokesman.
. .” And I like also that the Catechism teaches
in #430 something I felt I first learned when I studied early Quaker writings that
in “Jesus, God recapitulates all of his history of salvation on behalf of men.”
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