4 Maccabees 14
1 And more than this, they even urged
them on to this ill-treatment; so that they not only despised pains
themselves, but they even got the better of their affections of brotherly
love.
2 O reasonings more royal than a king,
and freer than freemen! 3 Sacred and
harmonious concert of the seven brethren as concerning piety!
4 None of the seven youths turned
cowardly, or shrank back from death.
5 But all of them, as though running
the road to immortality, hastened on to death through tortures.
6 For just as hands and feet are moved
sympathetically with the directions of the soul, so those holy youths agreed
unto death for religion's sake, as through the immortal soul of religion.
7 O holy seven of harmonious brethren!
for as the seven days of creation, about religion,
8 so the youths, circling around the
number seven, annulled the fear of torments.
9 We now shudder at the recital of the
affliction of those young men; but they not only beheld, and not only heard
the immediate execution of the threat, but undergoing it, persevered; and that
through the pains of fire. 10 And
what could be more painful? for the power of fire, being sharp and quick,
speedily dissolved their bodies.
11 And think it not wonderful that
reasoning bore rule over those men in their torments, when even a woman's mind
despised more manifold pains. 12 For
the mother of those seven youths endured the rackings of each of her children.
13 And consider how comprehensive is
the love of offspring, which draws every one to sympathy of affection,
14 where irrational animals possess a
similar sympathy and love for their offspring with men.
15 The tame birds frequenting the
roofs of our houses, defend their fledglings.
16 Others build their nests, and
hatch their young, in the tops of mountains and in the precipices of valleys,
and the holes and tops of trees, and keep off the intruder.
17 And if not able to do this, they
fly circling round them in agony of affection, calling out in their own note,
and save their offspring in whatever manner they are able.
18 But why should we point attention
to the sympathy toward children shewn by irrational animals?
19 The very bees, at the season of
honey-making, attack all who approach; and pierce with their sting, as with a
sword, those who draw near their hive, and repel them even unto death.
20 But sympathy with her children did
not turn aside the mother of the young men, who had a spirit kindred with that
of Abraham.