1 Macc 1

The reign of Alexander and his successors: Antiochus rifles and profanes the temple of God: and persecutes unto death all that will not forsake the law of God, and the religion of their fathers.

1And it happened afterwards that Alexander, the son of Philip the Macedonian, who first reigned in Greece having come from the land of Kittim, struck Darius the king of the Persians and the Medes.
1:1Notice that the book begins as if it were a continuation of another book: “And it happened afterwards....” The author of this book must have written another book (apparently one not inspired as Scripture), on the topic of Jewish history. That book is not part of Scripture and this one is.(Conte)
2He appointed many battles, and he took hold of all the fortifications, and he executed the kings of the earth. 3And he passed through even to the ends of the earth. And he received the spoils of many nations. And the earth was silenced in his sight. 4And he gathered together power, and an exceedingly strong army. And he was exalted, and his heart was lifted up. 5And he captured the regions of nations and of sovereign leaders, and they became tributaries to him. 6And after these things, he fell down on his bed, and he knew that he would die. 7And he called his servants, nobles who were raised with him from his youth. And he divided his kingdom to them, while he was still alive.
1:7 Divided his kingdom, etc: This is otherwise related by Q. Curtius; though he acknowledges that divers were of that opinion, and that it had been delivered by some authors, lib. 10. But here we find from the sacred text, that he was in error.(Challoner)
8And Alexander reigned twelve years, and then he died. 9And his servants obtained his kingdom, each one in his place.

10And they all put diadems on themselves after his death, and their sons after them, for many years; and evils were multiplied on the earth.

11And there went forth from among them a sinful root, Antiochus the illustrious, the son of king Antiochus, who had been a hostage at Rome. And he reigned in the one hundred and thirty-seventh year of the kingdom of the Greeks.
1:11 Antiochus the Illustrius: Epiphanes, the younger son of Antiochus the Great, who usurped the kingdom, to the prejudice of his nephew Demetrius, son of his elder brother Seleucus Philopater.(Challoner)
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1:11 Of the kingdom of the Greeks: Counting, not from the beginning of the reign of Alexander, but from the first year of Seleucus Nicator.(Challoner)
12In those days, there went forth from Israel sons of iniquity, and they persuaded many, saying: “Let us go and negotiate a covenant with the Gentiles that are all around us. For since we have withdrawn from them, many evils have found us.” 13And the word seemed good in their eyes. 14And some of the people determined to do this, and they went to the king. And he gave them the power to act according to the justice of the Gentiles. 15And they built a sports arena in Jerusalem, according to the laws of the Nations.

16And they made themselves uncircumcised, and they withdrew from the holy covenant, and they were joined to the nations, and they were sold into evil-doing.
1:16Literally, they made themselves foreskins, in other words, they tried to undo their circumcision. This verse has a spiritual meaning, referring to those Christians who abandon the faith and act as if they were never baptized.(Conte)
17And the kingdom was ready in the sight of Antiochus, and he began to reign over the land of Egypt, so that he might reign over two kingdoms. 18And he entered into Egypt with an oppressive multitude, with swift chariots, and elephants, and horsemen, and a great abundance of ships. 19And he appointed a war against Ptolemy, the king of Egypt, and Ptolemy was filled with dread before his face, and he fled, and many fell down wounded.

20And he took hold of the fortified cities in the land of Egypt, and he received the spoils of the land of Egypt. 21And Antiochus turned back, after he struck Egypt, in the one hundred and forty-third year, and he ascended against Israel. 22And he ascended to Jerusalem, with an oppressive multitude. 23And he entered into the sanctuary with arrogance, and he took the golden altar, and the lampstand of light, and all the vessels, and the table for the bread of the Presence, and the vessels of libation, and the vials, and the little mortars of gold, and the veil, and the crowns, and the golden ornament, which was at the face of the temple. And he crushed them all.
1:23Literally, ‘mensam propositionis’ is ‘the table of showing,’ i.e. the table for the bread of the Presence used in ancient times by the Jews. This bread of the Presence was a foreshadowing of the Eucharist, in which Christ is fully Present. Antiochus was a foreshadowing of the Antichrist, who will take away the Eucharist from most places on earth, and replace it with the abomination of desolation.(Conte)
24And he took the silver and gold, and the precious vessels, and he took the hidden treasures, which he found. And having taken all these things away, he departed into his own land. 25And he caused a massacre of men, and he was speaking with great arrogance. 26And there was great wailing in Israel and in all of their places. 27And the leaders and elders mourned, and the virgins and young men became weak, and the splendor of the women was changed. 28Every bridegroom took up lamentation, and those who sat in the marriage bed mourned.
1:28A bridegroom is either one who is about to marry or one who has recently married. The expression, ‘those who sat in the marriage bed’ refers to newlyweds.(Conte)

29And the land shook on behalf of the inhabitants in it, and the entire house of Jacob was clothed with confusion.
1:29The land shook because of an earthquake; this verse predicts an earthquake about the time that the Antichrist invades and conquers the holy land of Israel.(Conte)
30And after two years of days, the king sent the prince of his tributes to the cities of Judah, and he came to Jerusalem with a great crowd.
1:30 The chief collector, etc: Apollonius.(Challoner)
31And he spoke peaceful words to them, in deceitfulness; and they believed him. 32And he rushed upon the city suddenly, and he struck it with a great scourging, and he destroyed many of the people of Israel. 33And he took the spoils of the city, and he burned it with fire, and he destroyed its houses and the walls around it. 34And they led away the women as captives, and they possessed the children and the cattle. 35And they built up the city of David with a great and strong wall, and with strong towers, and it became a stronghold for them.
1:35 The city of David: That is, the castle of Sion.(Challoner)
36And they set up in that place a sinful people, wicked men, and together they grew strong in it. And they stored up weapons and provisions. And they gathered together the spoils of Jerusalem, 37and deposited them in that place. And they became a great snare. 38And this became a place of ambush against the sanctuary and a diabolical evil in Israel.
1:38 An evil devil: That is, an adversary watching constantly to do harm, as the evil spirit is always watching and seeking whom he may devour.(Challoner)
39And they poured out innocent blood around the sanctuary, and they contaminated the sanctuary. 40And the inhabitants of Jerusalem fled because of them, and the city became the dwelling place of outsiders, and she became a stranger to her own offspring, and her own children abandoned her.

41Her sanctuary was desolate, like a place of solitude, her feast days were turned into mourning, her Sabbaths into disgrace, her honors into nothing. 42Her shame was multiplied according to her glory, and her loftiness was turned into lamentation. 43And king Antiochus wrote to all his kingdom, that all the people must be one, and that each one should relinquish his own law. 44And all Gentiles consented, according to the word of king Antiochus. 45And many out of Israel consented to his servitude, and they sacrificed to idols, and they polluted the Sabbath. 46And the king sent letters, by the hand of messengers, to Jerusalem and to all the cities of Judah: that they should follow the law of the Nations of the earth, 47and that they should prohibit holocausts and sacrifices and atonements to be made in the temple of God, 48and that they should prohibit the celebration of the Sabbath and the solemn days. 49And he ordered the holy places to be defiled, along with the holy people of Israel. 50And he ordered altars to be built, and temples, and idols, and he ordered the immolation of the flesh of swine and of unclean cattle,
1:50This text refers, eschatologically, to the time during the Antichrist’s reign, when he tries to destroy the Church from within by promoting a perverse imitation of the sacrifice of the Mass and of the Eucharist. This perverse imitation of the Eucharist is called the abomination of desolation.(Conte)
51and that they should leave their sons uncircumcised, and defile their souls with all that is unclean, and with abominations, so that they would forget the law and would alter all the justifications of God, 52and that whoever would not act according to the word of king Antiochus should be put to death. 53According to all these words, he wrote to all his kingdom. And he appointed leaders over the people, who would compel them to do these things.

54And these ordered the cities of Judah to sacrifice. 55And many from the people, who had abandoned the law of the Lord, were gathered together by them. And they committed evils upon the land. 56And they drove the people of Israel into hiding and into the secret places of fugitives. 57On the fifteenth day of the month of Kislev, in the one hundred and forty-fifth year, king Antiochus set up the abominable idol of desolation on the altar of God, and they built altars throughout all the surrounding cities of Judah.
1:57 The abominable idol, etc: Viz., the statue of Jupiter Olympius.(Challoner)
58And they burned frankincense, and they sacrificed before the doors of houses and in the streets. 59And they cut up the books of the law of God and destroyed them with fire. 60And all those who were found with the books of the testament of the Lord, and whoever observed the law of the Lord, they butchered, according to the edict of the king. 61By their power, they did these things to the people of Israel, as they were discovered in the cities, month after month. 62And on the twenty-fifth day of the month, they sacrificed on that altar which was opposite the high altar. 63And the women who circumcised their sons were butchered, according to the order of king Antiochus. 64And they suspended the children by their necks in all their houses, and those who had circumcised them, they butchered. 65And many of the people of Israel decided within themselves that they would not eat unclean things. And they chose to die, rather than to be defiled with unclean foods.
1:65Some Christians will choose to die, rather than to consume the abomination of desolation, that false and perverse imitation of the Eucharist.(Conte)
66And they were not willing to infringe upon the holy law of God, and they were butchered. 67And there was a very great wrath upon the people.
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