Parallel
4 Maccabees 18
Brenton's English Septuagint · Berean Standard Bible
O Israelitish children, descendants of the seed of Abraham, obey this law, and in every way be religious.
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Knowing that religious reasoning is lord of the passions, and those not only inward but outward.
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Whence those persons giving up their bodies to pains for the sake of religion, were not only admired by men, but were deemed worthy of a divine portion.
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And the nation through them obtained peace, and having renewed the observance of the law in their country, drove the enemy out of the land.
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And the tyrant Antiochus was both punished upon earth, and is punished now he is dead; for when he was quite unable to compel the Israelites to adopt foreign customs, and to desert the manner of life of their fathers,
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And the righteous mother of the seven children spake also as follows to her offspring: I was a pure virgin, and went not beyond my father's house; but I took care of the built-up rib.
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No destroyer of the desert, [or] ravisher of the plain, injured me; nor did the destructive, deceitful, snake, make spoil of my chaste virginity; and I remained with my husband during the period of my prime.
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And these my children, having arrived at maturity, their father died: blessed was he! for having sought out a life of fertility in children, he was not grieved with a period of loss of children.
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He used to read to you the slaying of Abel by Cain, and the offering up of Isaac, and the imprisonment of Joseph.
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And he used to tell you of the zealous Phinehas; and informed you of Ananias and Azarias, and Misael in the fire.
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And he used to put you in mind of the scripture of Esaias, which saith, Even if thou pass through the fire, it shall not burn thee.
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He declared the proverbs of Solomon, who saith, He is a tree of life to all those who do His will.
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For he did not forget the song which Moses taught, proclaiming, I will kill, and I will make to live.
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O that bitter, and yet not bitter, day when the bitter tyrant of the Greeks, quenching fire with fire in his cruel caldrons, brought with boiling rage the seven sons of the daughter of Abraham to the catapelt, and to all his torments!
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He pierced the balls of their eyes, and cut out their tongues, and put them to death with varied tortures.
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But the children of Abraham, with their victorious mother, are assembled together to the choir of their fathers; having received pure and immortal souls from God.
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