'' The
Catholic Church,
Eastern Orthodox Church,
Oriental Orthodox Churches, and the
Assyrian Church of the East regard 2 Maccabees as canonical.
Jews and
Protestants do not.
Hellenistic Judaism Greek-speaking Jews were the original audience addressed by the work. Both 1 and 2 Maccabees appear in some
Septuagint manuscripts. Unlike most works in the Septuagint, which were Greek translations of Hebrew originals, 2 Maccabees was a Greek work originally. While not a problem for Greek-speaking
Hellenistic Jews nor Christians (whose scriptures were written in Greek), other Jews who kept to the Hebrew version of the Hebrew Bible never included it. Hellenistic Judaism slowly waned as many of its adherents either converted to Christianity or switched to other languages, and 2 Maccabees thus did not become part of the Jewish canon.
Josephus, the most famous Jewish writer of the first century whose work was preserved, does not appear to have read 2 Maccabees, for example; neither does
Philo of Alexandria. Neither book of the Maccabees was found among the
Dead Sea Scrolls of the
Essenes, a Jewish sect hostile to the Hasmoneans and their memory. Various works such as
Seder Olam Rabbah (a 2nd-century AD
midrash) indicate that the age of prophecy ended with Alexander the Great, and 2 Maccabees, a work clearly written later, thus could not be prophetic. Traditionally, it was hypothesized that the author of 2 Maccabees might have been influenced by the
Pharasaic tradition. The Pharisees emphasized adherence to Jewish law and disputed with the rulers of the
Hasmonean kingdom. They criticized how the Hasmoneans took a dual role of both Chief Priest and King and demanded that they cede one of the titles (usually the kingship, which was expected
to be held by one of the family lineage of King David). Hasmonean King
Alexander Jannaeus is recorded as organizing a massacre of his political opponents, and many went into exile. The theory goes that 2 Maccabees praises Judas for saving the Temple but excludes mention of how his brothers and extended family later took the throne, which might have been written by a Pharisee from Judea writing in Egyptian exile. The work's emphasis on adherence to the
Law even on pain of martyrdom, keeping
Shabbat, and the promise of a future
resurrection seems to fit within Pharisaic theology and praxis. Still, other scholars disagree that the author shows any signs of such inclinations, and belief in a future resurrection of the dead was not limited to only Pharisees; scholars since the 1980s have tended to be skeptical of the proposed connection. The theology of the work is an update to the "
Deuteronomist" history seen in older Jewish works. The classical Deuteronomist view had been that when Israel is faithful and upholds the covenant, the Jews prosper; when Israel neglects the covenant, God withdraws his favor, and Israel suffers. The persecution of Antiochus IV stood in direct contradiction to this tradition: the most faithful Jews were the ones who suffered the most. At the same time, those who abandoned Jewish practices became wealthy and powerful. The author of 2 Maccabees attempts to make sense of this in several ways: he explains that the suffering was a swift and merciful corrective to set the Jews back on the right path. While God had revoked his protection of the Temple in anger at the impious High Priests, his wrath turned to mercy upon seeing the suffering of the martyrs. The work also takes pains to ensure that some sin or error is at fault when setbacks occur. For those truly blameless, such as the martyrs, the author invokes life after death: that post-mortem rewards and punishments would accomplish what might have been lacking in the mortal world. These references to the resurrection of the dead despite suffering and torture were part of a new current in Judaism also seen in the
Book of Daniel, a work the authors of 2 Maccabees were likely familiar with. This would prove especially influential among Roman-era Jews who converted to Christianity. In the
early Christian tradition, the Septuagint was used as the basis for the Christian
Old Testament. The inclusion of 2 Maccabees in some copies of the Septuagint saw it as a part of various early canon lists and manuscripts, albeit sometimes as part of an appendix.
Pope Damasus I's
Council of Rome in 382, if the 6th-century
Gelasian Decree is correctly associated with it, issued a biblical canon that included both 1 and 2 Maccabees, but neither 3 nor 4.
Pope Innocent I (405 AD), the
Synod of Hippo (393 AD), the
Council of Carthage (397 AD), the Council of Carthage (419 AD), and the
Apostolic Canons all seemed to think that 2 Maccabees was canonical, either by explicitly saying so or citing it as scripture.
Jerome and
Augustine of Hippo (c. 397 AD) had seemingly inconsistent positions: they directly excluded 2 Maccabees from canon, but did say that the book was useful; yet in other works, both cited 2 Maccabees as if it were scripture, or listed it among scriptural works. Theologically, the major aspects of 2 Maccabees that resonated with Roman-era Christians and medieval Christians were its stories of
martyrology and the
resurrection of the dead in its stories of
Eleazar and the
woman with seven sons. Christians made sermons and comparisons of Christian martyrs to the Maccabean martyrs, along with the hope of an eventual salvation;
Eusebius compared the
persecuted Christians of Lyon to the Maccabean martyrs, for example. The one awkward aspect was that the martyrs had died upholding Jewish Law in an era when many Christians felt that the Law of Moses was not merely obsolete, but actively harmful. Christian authors generally downplayed the Jewishness of the martyrs, treating them as proto-Christians instead. 2 Maccabees was in a position of being an official part of the canon, but as a deuterocanonical work and thus subtly lesser than the older scriptures during the early 1500s.
Josse van Clichtove, in his work
The Veneration of Saints, cited 2 Maccabees as support for the idea of
dead saints interceding for the salvation of the living; in Chapter 15, during a dream vision, both the earlier high priest Onias III and the prophet Jeremiah are said to pray for whole of the people. He also cited 2 Maccabees as support for
prayers for the dead, the reverse case of the living praying for the salvation of souls suffering in purgatory. The book became controversial due to opposition from
Martin Luther and other reformers during the
Protestant Reformation of the 1500s. Luther had a very high opinion of scripture, but precisely because of this, he wished for the canon to be strict. He would eventually demote the deuterocanonical works to "
apocrypha"; still useful to read and part of the 1534 version of the
Luther Bible, but set aside in their own separate section and not accepted as a sound basis for Christian doctrine. Luther had several complaints. One was that it was an abridgment of another work, rather than a single divinely inspired author. Another was a general preference for using the Hebrew Bible as the basis for the Old Testament, rather than the Latin Vulgate or the Greek Septuagint. This passage was used as an example of the efficacy of monetary
indulgences paid to the Catholic Church to free souls from
purgatory by some Catholic authors of the period. Luther disagreed with both indulgences and the concept of purgatory, and in his 1530 work
Disavowl of Purgatory, he denied that 2 Maccabees was a valid source to cite. The reformer
Jean Calvin agreed with Luther's criticism of 2 Maccabees, and added his own criticism as well. Calvin propounded
predestination, the doctrine that God has chosen the elect, and nothing can change this. Thus, the arguments from Clichtove and other Catholics that cited 2 Maccabees for the doctrine of the
intercession of saints was suspect to him: for Calvin, salvation was strictly God's choice, and not a matter that dead saints could intervene on. Another issue Calvin and other Protestants raised was the self-effacing epilogue to 2 Maccabees, which Calvin took as an admission from the epitomist that he was not divinely inspired. In response to this, the Catholic Church went in the opposite direction. While earlier Church Fathers had considered the deuterocanonical books useful but lesser than the main scriptures, the Catholic Church now affirmed that 2 Maccabees (and other deuterocanonical works) were in fact fully reliable as scripture at the
Council of Trent in 1546.
Modern status 2 Maccabees is still used to endorse the doctrine of resurrection of the dead, intercession of saints, and prayers for the dead to be released from purgatory in the Catholic tradition. The
Latin Church Lectionary makes use of texts from 2 Maccabees 6 and 7, along with texts from 1 Maccabees 1 to 6, in the weekday readings for the 33rd week in
Ordinary Time, in year 1 of the two-year cycle of readings, always in November, and as one of the options available for readings during a
Mass for the Dead. The Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox Churches consider the book canonical. As in antiquity, the most notable section remains the martyrs, who are celebrated as saints by a variety of feast days. They are especially honored in
Syriac Christianity, perhaps due to suffering persecution themselves; the mother of seven sons is known as
Marth Shmouni in that tradition. In the Protestant tradition, the book is regarded non-canonical, though it is traditionally included in the intertestamental
Apocrypha section of the Bible (especially those used by Lutherans and Anglicans). As with the Lutheran Churches, Article VI of the
Thirty-nine Articles of the
Church of England and the wider
Anglican Communion defines 2 Maccabees as useful but not the basis of doctrine.
Scripture readings from the Apocrypha are included in the
lectionaries of the Lutheran Churches and Anglican Communion. The texts regarding the martyrdoms under Antiochus IV in 2 Maccabees are held in high esteem by the
Anabaptists, who faced persecution in their history. ==Literary influence==