Politically, the Psalms of Solomon are anti-
Hasmonean, and some psalms in the collection show an awareness of the
Roman conquest of Jerusalem under
Pompey in 63 BC, metaphorically treating him as a
dragon who had been sent by God to punish the Hasmoneans. Some of the psalms are messianic, in
the Jewish sense (referring to a mortal that seems to be divinely assisted, much like
Moses), but the majority are concerned less with the world at large, and more with individual behavior, expressing a belief that repentance for unintended
sins will return them to God's favor. There have been attempts to link the text both to the
Essenes of
Qumran, who separated themselves from what they saw as a wicked world, and alternatively to the
Pharisees in opposition to the
Sadducees who generally supported the Maccabees. ==See also==