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THE TESTAMENTS OF
THE TWELVE PATRIARCHS
(I TO VI)
I.--THE TESTAMENT OF REUBEN CONCERNING THOUGHTS
1. The copy of the Testament of Reuben, what things he charged his sons before
he died in the hundred and twenty-fifth year of his life. When he was sick
two years after the death of Joseph, his sons and his sons' sons were gathered
together to visit him. And he said to them, My children, I am dying, and go
the way of my fathers. And when he saw there Judah and Gad and Asher, his brethren,
he said to them, Raise me up, my brethren, that I may tell to my brethren and
to my children what things I have hidden in my heart, for from henceforth my
strength faileth me. And he arose and kissed them, and said, weeping: Hear,
my brethren, give ear to Reuben your father, what things I command you. And,
behold, I call to witness against you this day the God of heaven, that ye walk
not in the ignorance of youth and fornication wherein I ran greedily, and I
defiled the bed of Jacob my father. For I tell you that He smote me with a
sore plague in my loins for seven months; and had not Jacob our father prayed
for me to the Lord, surely the Lord would have destroyed me. For I was thirty
years old when I did this evil in the sight of the Lord, and for seven months
I was sick even unto death; and I repented for seven years in the set purpose
of my soul before the Lord. Wine and strong drink I drank not, and flesh entered
not into my mouth, and I tasted not pleasant food,[1] mourning over my sin,
for it was great. And it shall not so be done in Israel.
2. And now hear me, my children, what things I saw in my repentance concerning
the seven spirits of error. Seven spirits are given against man from Beliar,
and they are chief of the works of youth; and seven spirits are given to him
at his creation, that in them should be done every work of man.[2] The first
(1) spirit is of life, with which man's whole being is created. The second
(2) spirit is of sight, with which ariseth desire. The third (3) spirit is
of hearing, with which cometh teaching. The fourth (4) spirit is of smelling,
with which taste is given to draw air and breath. The fifth (5) spirit is of
speech, with which cometh knowledge. The sixth (6) spirit is of taste, with
which cometh the eating of meats and drinks; and by them strength is produced,
for in food is the foundation of strength. The seventh (7) spirit is of begetting
and sexual intercourse, with which through love of pleasure sin also entereth
in: wherefore it is the last in order of creation, and the first of youth,
because it is filled with ignorance, which leadeth the young as a blind man
to a pit, and as cattle to a precipice.
3. Besides all these, there is an eighth (8) spirit of sleep, with which is
created entrancement of man's nature, and the image of death. With these spirits
are mingled the spirits of error. The first (1), the spirit of fornication,
dwelleth in the nature and in the senses; the second (2) spirit of insatiateness
in the belly; the third (3) spirit of fighting in the liver and the gall. The
fourth (4) is the spirit of fawning and trickery, that through over-officiousness
a man may be fair in seeming. The fifth (5) is the spirit of arrogance, that
a man may be stirred up and become high-minded. The sixth (6) is the spirit
of lying, in perdition and in jealousy to feign words, and to conceal[3] words
from kindred and friends. The seventh (7) is the spirit of injustice, with
which are theft and pilferings, that a man may work the desire of his heart;
for injustice worketh together with the other spirits by means of craft. Besides
all these, the spirit of sleep, the eighth (8) spirit, is conjoined with error
and fantasy. And so perisheth every young man, darkening his mind from the
truth, and not understanding the law of God, nor obeying the admonitions of
his fathers, as befell me also in my youth.
And now, children, love the truth, and it shall preserve you. I counsel you,
hear ye Reuben your father. Pay no heed to the sight of a woman, nor yet associate
privately with a female under the authority of a husband, nor meddle with affairs
of womankind. For had I not seen Bilhah bathing in a covered place, I had not
fallen into this great iniquity.[1] For my mind, dwelling on the woman's nakedness,
suffered me not to sleep until I had done the abominable deed. For while Jacob
our father was absent with Isaac his father, when we were in Gader, near to
Ephratha in Bethlehem, Bilhah was drunk, and lay asleep uncovered in her chamber;
and when I went in and beheld her nakedness, I wrought that impiety, and leaving
her sleeping I departed. And forthwith an angel of God revealed to my father
Jacob concerning my impiety, and he came and mourned over me, and touched her
no more.[2]
4. Pay no heed, therefore, to the beauty of women, and muse not upon their
doings; but walk in singleness of heart in the fear of the Lord, and be labouring
in works, and roaming in study and among your flocks, until the Lord give to
you a wife whom He will, that ye suffer not as I did. Until my father's death
I had not boldness to look stedfastly into the face of Jacob, or to speak to
any of my brethren, because of my reproach; and even until now my conscience
afflicteth me by reason of my sin. And my father comforted me; for he prayed
for me unto the Lord, that the anger of the Lord might pass away from me, even
as the Lord showed me. From henceforth, then, I was protected, and I sinned
not. Therefore, my children, observe all things whatsoever I command you, and
ye shall not sin. For fornication is the destruction of the soul, separating
it from God, and bringing it near to idols, because it deceiveth the mind and
understanding, and bringeth down young men into hell before their time. For
many hath fornication destroyed; because, though a man be old or noble, it
maketh him a reproach and a laughing-stock with Beliar and the sons of men.
For in that Joseph kept himself from every woman, and purged his thoughts from
all fornication, he found favour before the Lord and men. For the Egyptian
woman did many things unto him, and called for magicians, and offered him love
potions, and the purpose of his soul admitted no evil desire. Therefore the
God of my fathers delivered him from every visible and hidden death. For if
fornication overcome not the mind, neither shall Beliar overcome you.
5. Hurtful are women, my children; because, since they have no power or strength
over the man, they act subtilly through outward guise how they may draw him
to themselves; and whom they cannot overcome by strength, him they overcome
by craft. For moreover the angel of God told me concerning them, and taught
me that women are overcome by the spirit of fornication more than men, and
they devise in their heart against men; and by means of their adornment they
deceive first their minds, and instil the poison by the glance of their eye,
and then they take them captive by their doings, for a woman cannot overcome
a man by force.
Therefore flee fornication, my children, and command your wives and your daughters
that they adorn not their heads and their faces; because every woman who acteth
deceitfully in these things hath been reserved to everlasting punishment. For
thus they allured the Watchers[3] before the flood; and as these continually
beheld them, they fell into desire each of the other, and they conceived the
act in their mind, and changed themselves into the shape of men, and appeared
to them in their congress with their husbands; and the women, having in their
minds desire toward their apparitions, gave birth to giants, for the Watchers
appeared to them as reaching even unto heaven.[4]
6. Beware, therefore, of fornication; and if you wish to be pure in your mind,
guard your senses against every woman. And command them likewise not to company
with men, that they also be pure in their mind. For constant meetings, even
though the ungodly deed be not wrought, are to them an irremediable disease,
and to us an everlasting reproach of Beliar; for fornication hath neither understanding
nor godliness in itself, and all jealousy dwelleth in the desire thereof. Therefore
ye will be jealous against the sons of Levi, and will seek to be exalted over
them; but ye shall not be able, for God will work their avenging, and ye shall
die by an evil death. For to Levi the Lord gave the sovereignty, and to Judah,[5]
and to me also with them,[6] and to Dan and Joseph, that we should be for rulers.
Therefore I command you to hearken to Levi, because he shall know the law of
the Lord, and shall give ordinances for judgment and sacrifice for all Israel
until the completion of the times of Christ, the High Priest whom the Lord
hath declared. I adjure you by the God of heaven to work truth each one with
his neighbour; and draw ye near to Levi in humbleness of heart, that ye may
receive a blessing from his mouth. For he shall bless Israel; and specially
Judah, because him hath the Lord chosen to rule over all the peoples. And worship
we his Seed, because He shall die for us in wars visible and invisible, and
shall be among you an everlasting king.
7. And Reuben died after that he had given command to his sons; and they placed
him in a coffin until they bore him up from Egypt, and buried him in Hebron
in the double[1] cave where his fathers were.
II.--THE TESTAMENT OF SIMEON CONCERNING ENVY.
1. The copy of the words of Simeon, what things he spake to his sons before
he died, in the hundred and twentieth year of his life, in the year in which
Joseph died. For they came to visit him when he was sick, and he strengthened
himself and sat up and kissed them, and said to them:--
2. Hear, O my children, hear Simeon your father, what things I have in my heart.
I was born of Jacob my father, his second son; and my mother Leah called me
Simeon, because the Lord heard her prayer.[1] I became strong exceedingly;
I shrank from no deed, nor was I afraid of anything. For my heart was hard,
and my mind was unmoveable, and my bowels unfeeling: because valour also has
been given from the Most High to men in soul and in body. And at that time
I was jealous of Joseph because our father loved him;[2] and I set my mind
against him to destroy him, because the prince of deceit sent forth the spirit
of jealousy and blinded my mind, that I regarded him not as a brother, and
spared not Jacob my father. But his God and the God of his fathers sent forth
His angel, and delivered him out of my hands. For when I went into Shechem
to bring ointment for the flocks, and Reuben to Dotham, where were our necessaries
and all our stores, Judah our brother sold him to the Ishmaelites. And when
Reuben came he was grieved, for he wished to have restored him safe to his
father.[3] But I was wroth against Judah in that he let him go away alive,
and for five months I continued wrathful against him; but God restrained me,
and withheld from me all working of my hands, for my right hand was half withered
for seven days. And I knew, my children, that because of Joseph this happened
to me, and I repented and wept; and I besought the Lord that He would restore
my hand unto me, and that I might be kept from all pollution and envy, and
from all folly. For I knew that I had devised an evil deed before the Lord
and Jacob my father, on account of Joseph my brother, in that I envied him.
3. And now, children, take heed of the spirit of deceit and of envy. For envy
ruleth over the whole mind of a man, and suffereth him neither to eat, nor
to drink, nor to do any good thing: it ever suggesteth to him to destroy him
that he envieth; and he that is envied ever flourisheth, but he that envieth
fades away. Two years of days I afflicted my soul with fasting in the fear
of the Lord, and I learnt that deliverance from envy cometh by the fear of
God. If a man flee to the Lord, the evil spirit runneth away from him, and
his mind becometh easy. And henceforward he sympathizeth with him whom he envied,
and condemneth not those who love him, and so ceaseth from his envy.
4. And my father asked concerning me, because he saw that I was sad; and I
said, I am pained in my liver. For I mourned more than they all, because I
was guilty of the selling of Joseph. And when we went down into Egypt, and
he bound the as a spy, I knew that I was suffering justly, and I grieved not.
Now Joseph was a good man, and had the Spirit of God within him: compassionate
and pitiful, he bore not malice against me; nay, he loved me even as the rest
of his brothers. Take heed, therefore, my children, of all jealousy and envy,
and walk in singleness of soul and with good heart, keeping in mind the brother
of your father, that God may give to you also grace and glory, and blessing
upon your heads, even as ye saw in him. All his days he reproached us not concerning
this thing, but loved us as his own soul, and beyond his own sons; and he glorified
us, and gave riches, and cattle, and fruits freely to us all. Do ye then also,
my beloved children, love each one his brother with a good heart, and remove
from you the spirit of envy, for this maketh savage the soul and destroyeth
the body; it turneth his purposes into anger and war, and stirreth up unto
blood, and leadeth the mind into frenzy, and suffereth not prudence to act
in men: moreover, it taketh away sleep, and causeth tumult to the soul and
trembling to the body. For even in sleep some malicious jealousy, deluding
him, gnaweth at his soul, and with wicked spirits disturbeth it, and causeth
the body to be troubled, and the mind to awake from sleep in confusion; and
as though having a wicked and poisonous spirit, so appeareth it to men.
5. Therefore was Joseph fair in appearance, and goodly to look upon, because
there dwelt not in him any wickedness; for in trouble of the spirit the face
declareth it. And now, my children, make your hearts good before the Lord,
and your ways straight before men, and ye shall find grace before God and men.
And take heed not to commit fornication, for fornication is mother of all evils,
separating from God, and bringing near to Beliar. For I have seen it inscribed
in the writing of Enoch[1] that your sons shall with you be corrupted in fornication,
and shall do wrong against Levi with the sword. But they shall not prevail
against Levi, for he shall wage the war of the Lord, and shall conquer all
your hosts; and there shall be a few divided in Levi and Judah, and there shall
be none[2] of you for sovereignty, even as also my father Jacob prophesied
in his blessings.
6. Behold, I have foretold you all things, that I may be clear from the sin
of your souls. Now, if ye remove from you your envy, and all your stiffneckedness,
as a rose shall my bones flourish in Israel, and as a lily my flesh in Jacob,
and my odour shall be as the odour of Libanus; and as cedars shall holy ones
be multiplied from me for ever, and their branches shall stretch afar off.
Then shall perish the seed of Canaan, and a remnant shall not be to Amalek,
and all the Cappadocians[3] shall perish, and all the Hittites[4] shall be
utterly destroyed. Then shall fail the land of Ham, and every people shall
perish. Then shall all the earth rest from trouble, and all the world under
heaven from war. Then shall Shem be glorified, because the Lord God, the Mighty
One of Israel, shall appear upon earth as man,[5] and saved by Him Adam.[6]
Then shall all the spirits of deceit be given to be trampled under foot, and
men shall rule over the wicked spirits. Then will I arise in joy, and will
bless the Most High because of His marvellous works, because God hath taken
a body and eaten with men and saved men.
7. And now, my children, obey Levi, and in Judah shall ye be redeemed:[7] and
be not lifted up against these two tribes, for from them shall arise to you
the salvation of God. For the Lord shall raise up from Levi as it were a Priest,[8]
and from Judah as it were a King, God and man.[5] So shall He save all the
Gentiles and the race of Israel. Therefore I command you all things, in order
that ye also may command your children, that they may observe them throughout
their generations.
8. And Simeon made an end of commanding his sons, and slept with his fathers,
being an hundred and twenty years old. And they laid him in a coffin of incorruptible
wood, to take up his bones to Hebron. And they carried them up in a war of
the Egyptians secretly: for the bones of Joseph the Egyptians guarded in the
treasure-house of the palace; for the sorcerers told them that at the departure
of the bones of Joseph there should be throughout the whole of Egypt darkness
and gloom, and an exceeding great plague to the Egyptians, so that even with
a lamp a man should not recognise his brother.
9. And the sons of Simeon bewailed their father according to the law of mourning,
and they were in Egypt until the day of their departure from Egypt by the hand
of Moses.
III.--THE TESTAMENT OF LEVI CONCERNING THE PRIESTHOOD AND ARROGANCE.
1. The copy of the words of Levi, what things he appointed to his sons, according
to all that they should do, and what things should befall them until the day
of judgment. He was in sound health when he called them to him, for it had
been shown to him that he should die. And when they were gathered together
be said to them :--
2. I Levi was conceived in Haran and born there, and after that I came with
my father to Shechem. And I was young, about twenty years of age, when with
Simeon I wrought the vengeance on Hamor for our sister Dinah. And when we were
feeding our flocks in Abel-Maul, a spirit of understanding of the Lord came
upon me,[1] and I saw all men corrupting their way, and that unrighteousness
had built to itself walls, and iniquity sat upon towers; and I grieved for
the race of men, and I prayed to the Lord that I might be saved. Then there
fell upon me a sleep, and I beheld a high mountain: this is the mountain of
Aspis[2] in Abel-Maul. And behold, the heavens were opened, and an angel of
God said to me, Levi, enter. And I entered from the first heaven into the second,
and I saw there water hanging between the one and the other. And I saw a third
heaven far brighter than those two, for there was in it a height without bounds.
And I said to the angel, Wherefore is this? And the angel said to me, Marvel
not at these, for thou shall see four other heavens brighter than these, and
without comparison, when thou shall have ascended thither: because thou shalt
stand near the Lord, and shalt be His minister, and shall declare His mysteries
to men, and shalt proclaim concerning Him who shall redeem Israel;[3] and by
thee and Judah shall the Lord appear among men, saving in them every race of
men; and of the portion of the Lord shall be thy life, and He shall be thy
field and vineyard, fruits, gold, silver.
3. Hear, then, concerning the seven[4] heavens. The lowest is for this cause
more gloomy, in that it is near all the iniquities of men. The second hath
fire, snow, ice, ready for the day of the ordinance of the Lord, in the righteous
judgment of God: in it are all the spirits of the retributions for vengeance
on the wicked. In the third are the hosts of the armies which are ordained
for the day of judgment, to work vengeance on the spirits of deceit and of
Beliar. And the heavens up to the fourth above these are holy, for in the highest
of all dwelleth the Great Glory, in the holy of holies, far above all holiness.
In the heaven next to it are the angels of the presence of the Lord, who minister
and make propitiation to the Lord for all the ignorances of the righteous;
and they offer to the Lord a reasonable sweet-smelling savour, and a bloodless
offering. And in the heaven below this are the angels who bear the answers
to the angels of the presence of the Lord. And in the heaven next to this are
thrones, dominions, in which hymns are ever offered to God. Therefore, whenever
the Lord looketh upon us, all of us are shaken; yea, the heavens, and the earth,
and the abysses, are shaken at the presence of His majesty; but the sons of
men, regarding not these things, sin, and provoke the Most High.
4. Now, therefore, know that the Lord will execute judgment upon the sons of
men; because when the rocks are rent,[5] and the sun quenched, and the waters
dried up, and the fire trembling, and all creation troubled, and the invisible
spirits melting away, and the grave[6] spoiled in the suffering of the Most
High,[7] men unbelieving will abide in their iniquity, therefore with punishment
shall they be judged. Therefore the Most High hath heard thy prayer, to separate
thee from iniquity, and that thou shouldest become to Him a son, and a servant,
and a minister of His presence. A shining light of knowledge shalt thou shine
in Jacob, and as the sun shalt thou be to all the seed of Israel. And a blessing
shall be given to thee, and to all thy seed, until the Lord shall visit all
the heathen in the tender mercies of His Son, even for ever. Nevertheless thy
sons shall lay hands upon Him to crucify Him; and therefore have counsel and
understanding been given thee, that thou mightest instruct thy sons concerning
Him, because he that blesseth Him shall be blessed, but they that curse Him
shall perish.
5. And the angel opened to me the gates of heaven, and I saw the holy temple,
and the Most High upon a throne of glory. And He said to me, Levi, I have given
thee the blessings of the priesthood until that I shall come and sojourn in
the midst of Israel. Then the angel brought me to the earth, and gave me a
shield and a sword, and said, Work vengeance on Shechem because of Dinah, and
I will be with thee, because the Lord hath sent me. And I destroyed at that
time the sons of Hamor, as it is written in the heavenly tablets.[8] And I
said to Him, I pray Thee, O Lord, tell me Thy name, that I may call upon Thee
in a day of tribulation. And He said, I am the angel who intercedeth for the
race of Israel, that He smite them not utterly, because every evil spirit attacketh
it. And after these things I was as it were awaked, and blessed the Most High,
and the angel that intercedeth for the race of Israel, and for all the righteous.[9]
6. And when I came to my father I found a brazen shield;[1] wherefore also
the name of the mountain is Aspis, which is near Gebal, on the right side of
Abila; and I kept these words in my heart. I took counsel with my father, and
with Reuben my brother, that he should bid the sons of Hamor that they should
be circumcised; for I was jealous because of the abomination which they had
wrought in Israel. And I slew Shechem at the first, and Simeon slew Hamor.
And after this our brethren came and smote the city with the edge of the sword;
and our father heard it and was wroth, and he was grieved in that they had
received the circumcision, and after that had been put to death, and in his
blessings he dealt otherwise with us. For we sinned because we had done this
thing against his will, and he was sick upon that day. But I knew that the
sentence of God was for evil upon Shechem; for they sought to do to Sarah as
they did to Dinah our sister, and the Lord hindered them. And so they persecuted
Abraham our father when he was a stranger, and they harried his flocks when
they were multiplied upon him; and Jeblae his servant, born in his house, they
shamefully handled. And thus they did to all strangers, taking away their wives
by force, and the men themselves driving into exile. But the wrath of the Lord
came suddenly upon them to the uttermost.[2]
7. And I said to my father, Be not angry, sir, because by thee will the Lord
bring to nought the Canaanites, and will give their land to thee, and to thy
seed after thee. For from this day forward shall Shechem be called a city of
them that are without understanding; for as a man mocketh at a fool, so did
we mock them, because they wrought folly in Israel to defile our sister. And
we took our sister from thence, and departed, and came to Bethel.
8. And there I saw a thing again even as the former, after we had passed seventy
days. And I saw seven men in white raiment saying to me, Arise, put on the
robe of the priesthood, and the crown of righteousness, and the breastplate
of understanding, and the garment of truth, and the diadem of faith, and the
tiara of miracle, and the ephod of prophecy.[3] And each one of them bearing
each of these things put them on me, and said, From henceforth become a priest
of the Lord, thou and thy seed for ever. And the first anointed me with holy
oil, and gave to me the rod of judgment. The second washed me with pure water,
and fed me with bread and wine, the most holy things,[4] and clad me with a
holy and glorious robe. The third clothed me with a linen vestment like to
an ephod. The fourth put round me a girdle like unto purple. The fifth gave
to me a branch of rich olive. The sixth placed a crown on my head. The seventh
placed on my head a diadem of priesthood, and filled my hands with incense,
so that I served as a priest to the Lord. And they said to me, Levi, thy seed
shall be divided into three branches,[5] for a sign of the glory of the Lord
who is to come; and first shall he be that hath been faithful; no portion shall
be greater than his. The second shall be in the priesthood. The third--a new
name shall be called over Him, because He shall arise as King from Judah, and
shall establish a new priesthood, after the fashion of the Gentiles, to all
the Gentiles.[6] And His appearing shall be unutterable, as of an exalted[7]
prophet of the seed of Abraham our father. Every desirable thing in Israel
shall be for thee and for thy seed, and everything fair to look upon shall
ye eat, and the table of the Lord shall thy seed apportion, and some of them
shall be high priests, and judges, and scribes; for by their mouth shall the
holy place be guarded. And when I awoke, I understood that this thing was like
unto the former. And I hid this also in my heart, and told it not to any man
upon the earth.
9. And after two days I and Judah went up to Isaac after[8] our father; and
the father of my father blessed me according to all the words of the visions
which I had seen: and he would not come with us to Bethel. And when we came
to Bethel, my father Jacob saw in a vision concerning me, that I should be
to them for a priest unto the Lord; and he rose up early in the morning, and
paid tithes of all to the Lord through me. And we came to Hebron to dwell there,
and Isaac called me continually to put me in remembrance of the law of the
Lord, even as the angel of God showed to me. And he taught me the law of the
priesthood, of sacrifices, whole burnt-offerings, first-fruits, free-will offerings,
thank-offerings. And each day he was instructing me, and was busied for me
before the Lord. And he said to me, Take heed, my child, of the spirit of fornication;
for this shall continue, and shall by thy seed pollute the holy things. Take
therefore to thyself, while yet thou art young, a wife, not having blemish,
nor yet polluted, nor of the race of the Philistines or Gentiles. And before
entering into the holy place, bathe;[1] and when thou offerest the sacrifice,
wash; and again when thou finishest the sacrifice, wash. Of twelve trees ever
having leaves, offer up the fruits to the Lord, as also Abraham taught me;
and of every clean beast and clean bird offer a sacrifice to the Lord, and
of every firstling and of wine offer first-fruits; and every sacrifice thou
shalt salt with salt.[2]
10. Now, therefore, observe whatsoever I command you, children; for whatsoever
things I have heard from my fathers I have made known to you. I am clear from
all your ungodliness and transgression which ye will do in the end of the ages
against the Saviour of the world, acting ungodly, deceiving Israel, and raising
up against it great evils from the Lord.[3] And ye will deal lawlessly with
Israel, so that Jerusalem shall not endure your wickedness; but the veil of
the temple shall be rent, so as not to cover your shame. And ye shall be scattered
as captives among the heathen, and shall be for a reproach and for a curse,
and for a trampling under foot. For the house which the Lord shall choose shall
be called Jerusalem, as is contained in the book of Enoch the righteous.[4]
11. Therefore, when I took a wife I was twenty-eight years old, and her name
was Melcha. And she conceived and bare a son, and she called his name Gersham,
for we were sojourners in our land: for Gersham is interpreted sojourning.
And I saw concerning him that he would not be in the first rank. And Kohath
was born in my thirty-fifth year, towards the east. And I saw in a vision that
he was standing on high in the midst of all the congregation. Therefore I called
his name Kohath, which meaneth, beginning of majesty and instruction. And thirdly,
she bare to me Merari, in the fortieth year of my life; and since his mother
bare him with difficulty, she called him Merari, which meaneth my bitterness,
because he also died. And Jochebed was born in my sixty-fourth year, in Egypt,
for I was renowned then in the midst of my brethren.
12. And Gersham took a wife, and she bare to him Lomni and Semei. And the sons
of Kohath, Ambram, Isaar, Chebro, and Ozel. And the sons of Merari, Mooli and
Homusi. And in my ninety-fourth year Ambram took Jochebed my daughter to him
to wife, for they were born in one day, he and my daughter. Eight years old
was I when I went into the land of Canaan, and eighteen years when I slew Shechem,
and at nineteen years I became priest, and at twenty-eight years I took a wife,
and at forty years I went into Egypt. And behold, ye are my children, my children
even of a third generation. In my hundred and eighteenth year Joseph died.
13. And now, my children, I command you that ye fear our Lord with your whole
heart, and walk in simplicity according to all His[5] law. And do ye also teach
your children learning, that they may have understanding in all their life,
reading unceasingly the law of God; for every one who shall know the law of
God shall be honoured, and shall not be a stranger wheresoever he goeth. Yea,
many friends shall he gain more than his forefathers; and many men shall desire
to serve him, and to hear the law from his mouth. Work righteousness, my children,
upon the earth, that ye may find treasure in the heavens, and sow good things
in your souls, that ye may find them in your life. For if ye sow evil things,
ye shall reap all trouble and affliction. Get wisdom in the fear of God with
diligence; for though there shall be a leading into captivity, and cities be
destroyed, and lands and gold and silver and every possession shall perish,
the wisdom of the wise none can take away, save the blindness of ungodliness
and the palsy of sin: for even among his enemies shall it be to him glorious,
and in a strange country a home, and in the midst of foes shall it be found
a friend. If a man teach these things and do them, he shall be enthroned with
kings, as was also Joseph our brother.
14. And now, my children, I have learnt from the writing of Enoch that at the
last ye will deal ungodly, laying your hands upon the Lord in all malice; and
your brethren shall be ashamed because of you, and to all the Gentiles shall
it become a mocking. For our father Israel shall be pure from the ungodliness
of the chief priests who shall lay their hands upon the Saviour of the world.
Pure is the heaven above the earth, and ye are the lights of the heaven as
the sun and the moon. What shall all the Gentiles do if ye be darkened in ungodliness?
So shall ye bring a curse upon our race for whom came the light of the world,
which was given among you for the lighting up of every man.[6] Him will ye
desire to slay, teaching commandments contrary to the ordinances of God. The
offerings of the Lord will ye rob, and from His portion will ye steal; and
before ye sacrifice to the Lord, ye will take the choicest parts, in despitefulness
eating them with harlots. Amid excesses[1] will ye teach the commandments of
the Lord, the women that have husbands will ye pollute, and the virgins of
Jerusalem will ye defile; and with harlots and adulteresses will ye be joined.
The daughters of the Gentiles will ye take for wives, purifying them with an
unlawful purification; and your union shall be like unto Sodom and Gomorrah
in ungodliness. And ye will be puffed up because of the priesthood lifting
yourselves up against men. And not only so, but being puffed up also against
the commands of God, ye will scoff at the holy things, mocking in despitefulness.
15. Therefore the temple which the Lord shall choose shall be desolate in uncleanness,
and ye shall be captives throughout all nations, and ye shall be an abomination
among them, and ye shall receive reproach and everlasting shame from the righteous
judgment of God; and all who see you shall flee from you. And were it not for
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob our fathers, not one from my seed should be left
upon the earth.
16. And now I have learnt in the book of Enoch that for seventy weeks will
ye go astray, and will profane the priesthood, and pollute the sacrifices,
and corrupt the law, and set at nought the words of the prophets. In perverseness
ye will persecute righteous men, and hate the godly; the words of the faithful
will ye abhor, and the man who reneweth the law in the power of the Most High
will ye call a deceiver ;[2] and at last, as ye suppose, ye will slay Him,
not understanding His resurrection, wickedly taking upon your own heads the
innocent blood.[3] Because of Him shall your holy places be desolate, polluted
even to the ground, and ye shall have no place that is clean; but ye shall
be among the Gentiles a curse and a dispersion, until He shall again look upon
you, and in pity shall take you to Himself through faith and water.[4]
17. And because ye have heard concerning the seventy weeks, hear also concerning
the priesthood; for in each jubilee there shall be a priesthood. In the first
jubilee, the first who is anointed into the priesthood shall be great, and
shall speak to God as to a Father; and his priesthood shall be filled with
the fear of the Lord, and in the day of his gladness shall he arise for the
salvation of the world. In the second jubilee, he that is anointed shall be
conceived in the sorrow of beloved ones; and his priesthood shall be honoured,
and shall be glorified among all. And the third priest shall be held fast in
sorrow; and the fourth shall be in grief, because unrighteousness shall be
laid upon him exceedingly, and all Israel shall hate each one his neighbour.
The fifth shall be held fast in darkness, likewise also the sixth and the seventh.
And in the seventh there shall be such pollution as I am not able to express,
before the Lord and men, for they shall know it who do these things. Therefore
shall they be in captivity and for a prey, and their land and their substance
shall be destroyed. And in the fifth week they shall return into their desolate
country, and shall renew the house of the Lord. And in the seventh week shall
come the priests, worshippers of idols, contentious, lovers of money, proud,
lawless, lascivious, abusers of children and beasts.
18. And after their punishment shall have come from the Lord, then will the
Lord raise up to the priesthood a new Priest, to whom all the words of the
Lord shall be revealed; and He shall execute a judgment of truth upon the earth,[5]
in the fulness of days. And His star shall arise in heaven,[6] as a king shedding
forth the light of knowledge in the sunshine of day, and He shall be magnified
in the world until His ascension. He shall shine forth as the sun in the earth,
and shall drive away all darkness from the world under heaven, and there shall
be peace in all the earth. The heavens shall rejoice in His days, and the earth
shall be glad, and the clouds shall be joyful, and the knowledge of the Lord
shall be poured forth upon the earth, as the water of seas; and the angels
of the glory of the presence of the Lord shall be glad in Him. The heavens
shall be opened, and from the temple of glory shall the sanctification come
upon Him with the Father's voice, as from Abraham the father of Isaac. And
the glory of the Most High shall be uttered over Him, and the spirit of understanding
and of sanctification shall rest upon Him in the water. He shall give the majesty
of the Lord to His sons in truth for evermore; and there shall none succeed
Him for all generations, even for ever.[7] And in His priesthood shall all
sin come to an end, and the lawless shall rest from evil, and the just shall
rest in Him. And He shall open the gates of paradise, and shall remove[8] the
threatening sword against Adam; and He shall give to His saints to eat from
the tree of life,[9] and the spirit of holiness shall be on them. And Beliar
shall be bound by Him, and He shall give power to His children to tread upon
the evil spirits.[1] And the Lord shall rejoice in His children, and the Lord
shall be well pleased in His beloved for ever. Then shall Abraham and Isaac
and Jacob be joyful, and I will be glad, and all the saints shall put on gladness.
19. And now, my children, ye have heard all; choose therefore for yourselves
either the darkness or the light, either the law of the Lord or the works of
Beliar. And we answered our father, saying, Before the Lord will we walk according
to His law. And our father said, The Lord is witness, and His angels are witnesses,
and I am witness, and ye are witnesses, concerning the word of your mouth.
And we said, We are witnesses. And thus Levi ceased giving charge to his sons;
and he stretched out his feet, and was gathered to his fathers, after he had
lived a hundred and thirty-seven years. And they laid him in a coffin, and
afterwards they buried him in Hebron, by the side of Abraham, and Isaac, and
Jacob.
IV.--THE TESTAMENT OF JUDAH CONCERNING FORTITUDE, AND LOVE OF MONEY, AND FORNICATION.
1. The copy of the words of Judah, what things he spake to his sons before
he died. They gathered themselves together, and came to him, and he said to
them: I was the fourth son born to my father, and my mother called me Judah,
saying, I give thanks to the Lord, because He hath given to me even a fourth
son.[1] I was swift and active in my youth, and obedient to my father in everything.
And I honoured my mother and my mother's sister. And it came to pass, when
I became a man, that my father Jacob prayed over me, saying, Thou shall be
a king, and prosperous in all things.
2. And the Lord showed me favour in all my works both in the field and at home.
When I saw that I could run with the hind, then I caught it, and prepared meat
for my father. I seized upon the roes in the chase, and all that was in the
plains I outran. A wild mare I outran, and I caught it and tamed it; and I
slew a lion, and plucked a kid out of its mouth. I took a bear by its paw,
and rolled it over a cliff; and if any beast turned upon me, I rent it like
a dog. I encountered the wild boar, and overtaking it in the chase, I tore
it. A leopard in Hebron leaped upon the dog, and I caught it by the tail, and
flung it from me, and it was dashed to pieces in the coasts of Gaza. A wild
ox feeding in the field I seized by the horns; and whirling it round and stunning
it, I cast it from me, and slew it.
3. And when the two kings of the Canaanites came in warlike array against our
flocks, and much people with them, I by myself rustled upon King Sur and seized
him; and I beat him upon the legs, and dragged him down, and so I slew him.
And the other king, Taphue,[2] I slew as he sat upon his horse, and so I scattered
all the people. Achor the king, a man of giant stature, hurling darts before
and behind as he sat on horseback, I slew; for I hurled a stone of sixty pounds
weight, and cast it upon his horse, and killed him. And I fought with Achor
for two hours, and I killed him; and I clave his shield into two parts, and
I chopped off his feet. And as I stripped off his breastplate, behold, eight
men his companions began to fight with me. I wound round therefore my garment
in my hand; and I slang stones at them, and killed four of them, and the rest
fled. And Jacob my father slew Beelisa, king of all the kings, a giant in strength,
twelve cubits high; and fear fell upon them, and they ceased from making war
with us. Therefore my father had no care in the wars when I was among my brethren.
For he saw in a vision concerning me, that an angel of might followed me everywhere,
that I should not be overcome.
4. And in the south there befell us a greater war than that in Shechem; and
I joined in battle array with my brethren, and pursued a thousand men, and
slew of them two hundred men and four kings. And I went up against them upon
the wall, and two other kings I slew; and so we freed Hebron, and took all
the captives of the kings.
5. On the next day we departed to Areta,[3] a city strong and walled and inaccessible,
threatening us with death. Therefore I and Gad approached on the east side
of the city, and Reuben and Levi on the west and south. And they that were
upon the wall, thinking that we were alone, charged down upon us; and so our
brethren secretly climbed up the wall on both sides by ladders, and entered
into the city, while the men knew it not. And we took it with the edge of the
sword; and those who had taken refuge in the tower,--we set fire to the tower,
and took both it and them. And as we were departing the men of Thaffu set upon
our captives, and we took it with our sons, and fought with them even to Thaffu;
and we slew them, and burnt their city, and spoiled all the things that were
therein.
6. And when I was at the waters of Chuzeba,[1] the men of Jobel came against
us to battle, and we fought with them; and their allies from Selom[2] we slew,
and we allowed them no means of escaping, and of coming against us. And the
men of Machir[3] came upon us on the fifth day, to carry away our captives;
and we attacked them, and overcame them in fierce battle: for they were a host
and mighty in themselves, and we slew them before they had gone up the ascent
of the hill. And when we came to their city, their women rolled upon us stones
from the brow of the hill on which the city stood. And I and Simeon hid ourselves
behind the town, and seized upon the heights, and utterly destroyed the whole
city.
7. And the next day it was told us that the cities[4] of the two kings with
a great host were coming against us. I therefore and Dan reigned ourselves
to be Amorites, and went as allies into their city. And in the depth of night
our brethren came, and we opened to them the gates; and we destroyed all the
men and their substance, and we took for a prey all that was theirs, and their
three walls we cast down. And we drew near to Thamna,[5] where was all the
refuge of the hostile kings. Then having received hurt I was wroth, and charged
upon them to the brow of the hill; and they slang at me with stones and darts;
and had not Dan my brother aided me, they would have been able to slay me.
We came upon them therefore with wrath, and they all fled; and passing by another
way, they besought my father, and he made peace with them, and we did to them
no hurt, but made a truce with them, and restored to them all the captives.
And I built Thamna, and my father built Rhambael.[6] I was twenty years old
when this war befell, and the Canaanites feared me and my brethren.
8. Moreover, I had much cattle, and I had for the chief of my herdsmen Iran[7]
the Adullamite. And when I went to him I saw Barsan, king of Adullam, and he
made us a feast; and he entreated me, and gave me his daughter Bathshua to
wife. She bare me Er, and Onan, and Shelah; and the two of them the Lord smote
that they died childless: for Shelah lived, and his children are ye.
9. Eighteen years we abode at peace, our father and we, with his brother Esau,
and his sons with us, after that we came from Mesopotamia, from Laban. And
when eighteen years were fulfilled, in the fortieth year of my life, Esau,
the brother of my father, came upon us with much people and strong; and he
fell by the bow of Jacob, and was taken up dead in Mount Seir: even as he went
above Iramna[8] was he slain. And we pursued after the sons of Esau. Now they
had a city with walls of iron and gates of brass; and we could not enter into
it, and we encamped around, and besieged them. And when they opened not to
us after twenty days, I set up a ladder in the sight of all, and with my shield
upon my head I climbed up, assailed with stones of three talents' weight; and
I climbed up, and slew four who were mighty among them. And the next day Reuben
and Gad entered in and slew sixty others. Then they asked from us terms of
peace; and being aware of our father's purpose, we received them as tributaries.
And they gave us two hundred cors of wheat, five hundred baths of oil, fifteen
hundred measures of wine, until we went down into Egypt.
10. After these things, my son Er took to wife Tamar, from Mesopotamia, a daughter
of Aram.[9] Now Er was wicked, and he doubted concerning Tamar, because she
was not of the land of Canaan. And on the third day an angel of the Lord smote
him in the night, and he had not known her, according to the evil craftiness
of his mother, for he did not wish to have children from her. In the days of
the wedding-feast I espoused Onan to her; and he also in wickedness knew her
not, though he lived with her a year. And when I threatened him, he lay with
her,[10] ... according to the command of his mother, and he also died in his
wickedness. And I wished to give Shelah also to her, but my wife Bathshua suffered
it not; for she bore a spite against Tamar, because she was not of the daughters
of Canaan, as she herself was.
11. And I knew that the race of Canaan was wicked, but the thoughts of youth
blinded my heart. And when I saw her pouring out wine, in the drunkenness of
wine was I deceived, and I fell before her. And while I was away, she went
and took for Shelah a wife from the land of Caanan. And when I knew what she
had done, I cursed her in the anguish of my soul, and she also died in the
wickedness of her sons.
12. And after these things, while Tamar was a widow, she heard after two years
that I was going up to shear my sheep; then she decked herself in bridal array,
and sat over against the city by the gate. For it is a law of the Amorites,
that she who is about to marry sit in fornication seven days by the gate.[1]
I therefore, being drunk at the waters of Chozeb, recognised her not by reason
of wine; and her beauty deceived me, through the fashion of her adorning. And
I turned aside to her, and said, I would enter in to thee. And she said to
me, What wilt thou give me? And I gave her my staff, and my girdle, and my
royal crown; and I lay with her, and she conceived. I then, not knowing what
she had done, wished to slay her; but she privily sent my pledges, and put
me to shame. And when I called her, I heard also the secret words which I spoke
when lying with her in my drunkenness; and I could not slay her, because it
was from the Lord. For I said, Lest haply she did it in subtlety, and received
the pledge from another woman: but I came near her no more till my death, because
I had done this abomination in all Israel. Moreover, they who were in the city
said that there was no bride in the city, because she came from another place,
and sat for awhile in the gate, and she thought that no one knew that I had
gone in to her.[2] And after this we came into Egypt to Joseph, because of
the famine. Forty and six years old was I, and seventy and three years lived
I there.
13. And now, my children, in what things soever I command you hearken to your
father, and keep all my sayings to perform the ordinances of the Lord, and
to obey the command of the Lord God. And walk not after your lusts, nor in
the thoughts of your imaginations in the haughtiness of your heart; and glory
not in the works of the strength of youth, for this also is evil in the eyes
of the Lord. For since I also gloried that in wars the face of no woman of
goodly form ever deceived me, and upbraided Reuben my brother concerning Bilhah,
the wife of my father, the spirits of jealousy and of fornication arrayed themselves
within me, until I fell before Bathshua the Canaanite, and Tamar who was espoused
to my sons, And I said to my father-in-law, I will counsel with my father,
and so will I take thy daughter. And he showed me a boundless store of gold
in his daughter's behalf, for he was a king. And he decked her with gold and
pearls, and caused her to pour out wine for us at the feast in womanly beauty.
And the wine led my eyes astray, and pleasure blinded my heart; and I loved
her, and I fell, and transgressed the commandment of the Lord and the commandment
of my fathers, and I took her to wife. And the Lord rewarded me according to
the thought of my heart, insomuch that I had no joy in her children.
14. And now, my children, be not drunk with wine; for wine turneth the mind
away from the truth, and kindleth in it the passion of lust, and leadeth the
eyes into error. For the spirit of fornication hath wine as a minister to give
pleasures to the mind; for these two take away the power from a man. For if
a man drink wine to drunkenness, he disturbeth his mind with filthy thoughts
to fornication, and exciteth his body to carnal union; and if the cause of
the desire be present, he worketh the sin, and is not ashamed. Such is wine,
my children; for he who is drunken reverenceth no man. For, lo, it made me
also to err, so that I was not ashamed of the multitude in the city, because
before the eyes of all I turned aside unto Tamar, and I worked a great sin,
and I uncovered the covering of the shame of my sons. After that I drank wine
I reverenced not the commandment of God, and I took a woman of Canaan to wife.
Wherefore, my children, he who drinketh wine needeth discretion; and herein
is discretion in drinking wine, that a man should drink as long as he keepeth
decency; but if he go beyond this bound, the spirit of deceit attacketh his
mind and worketh his will; and it maketh the drunkard to talk filthily, and
to transgress and not to be ashamed, but even to exult in his dishonour, accounting
himself to do well.
15. He that committeth fornication, and[3] uncovereth his nakedness, hath become
the servant of fornication, and escapeth not[4] from the power thereof, even
as I also was uncovered. For I gave my staff, that is, the stay of my tribe;
and my girdle, that is, my power; and my diadem, that is, the glory of my kingdom.
Then I repented for these things, and took no wine or flesh until my old age,
nor did I behold any joy. And the angel of God showed me that for ever do women
bear rule over king and beggar alike; and from the king they take away his
glory, and from the valiant man his strength, and from the beggar even that
little which is the stay of his poverty.
16. Observe therefore, my children, moderation in wine; for there are in it
four evil spirits--of (I) lust, of (2) wrath, of (3) riot, of (4) filthy lucre.
If ye drink wine in gladness, with shamefacedness, with the fear of God, ye
shall live. For if ye drink not with shamefacedness, and the fear of God departeth
from you, then cometh drunkenness, and shamelessness stealeth in. But[1] even
if ye drink not at all, take heed lest ye sin in words of outrage, and fighting,
and slander, and transgression of the commandments of God; so shall ye perish
before your time. Moreover, wine revealeth the mysteries of God and men to
aliens, even as I also revealed the commandments of God and the mysteries of
Jacob my father to the Canaanitish Bathshua, to whom God forbade to declare
them. And wine also is a cause of war and confusion.
17. I charge you, therefore, my children, not to love money, nor to gaze upon
the beauty of women; because for the sake of money and beauty I was led astray
to Bathshua the Canaanite. For I know that because of these two things shall
ye who are my race fall into wickedness; for even wise men among my sons shall
they mar, and shall cause the kingdom of Judah to be diminished, which the
Lord gave me because of my obedience to my father.[2] For I never disobeyed
a word of Jacob my father, for all things whatsoever he commanded I did. And
Abraham, the father of my father, blessed me that I should be king in Israel,
and Isaac further blessed me in like manner. And I know that from me shall
the kingdom be established.
18. For I have read also in the books of Enoch the righteous what evils ye
shall do in the last days. Take heed, therefore, my children, of fornication
and the love of money; hearken to Judah your father, for these things do withdraw
you from the law of God, and blind the understanding of the soul, and teach
arrogance, and suffer not a man to have compassion upon his neighbour: they
rob his soul of all goodness, and bind him in toils and troubles, and take
away his sleep and devour his flesh, and hinder the sacrifices of God; and
he remembereth not blessing, and he hearkeneth not to a prophet when he speaketh,
and is vexed at the word of godliness. For one who serveth two passions contrary
to the commandments of God cannot obey God, because they have blinded his soul,
and he walketh in the day-time as in the night.
19. My children, the love of money leadeth to idols; because, when led astray
through money, men make mention of those who are no gods, and it causeth him
who hath it to fall into madness. For the sake of money I lost my children,
and but for the repentance of my flesh, and the humbling of my soul, and the
prayers of Jacob my father, I should have died childless. But the God of my
fathers, who is pitiful and merciful, pardoned me, because I did it in ignorance.[3]
For the prince of deceit blinded me, and I was ignorant as a man and as flesh,
being corrupted in sins; and I learnt my own weakness while thinking myself
unconquerable.[4]
20. [5]Learn therefore, my children, that two spirits wait upon man--the spirit
of truth and the spirit of error; and in the midst is the spirit of the understanding
of the mind, to which it belongeth to turn whithersoever it will. And the works
of truth and the works of error are written upon the breast of men, and each
one of them the Lord knoweth. And there is no time at which the works of men
can be hid from Him; for on the bones of his breast hath he been written down
before the Lord. And the spirit of truth testifieth all things, and accuseth
all; and he who sinneth is burnt up by his own heart, and cannot raise his
face unto the Judge.
21. And now, my children, love Levi, that ye may abide, and exalt not yourselves
against him, lest ye be utterly destroyed. For to me the Lord gave the kingdom,
and to him the priesthood, and He set the kingdom beneath the priesthood. To
me He gave the things upon the earth; to him the things in the heavens. As
the heaven is higher than the earth, so is the priesthood of God higher than
the kingdom upon the earth. For the Lord chose him above thee, to draw near
to Him, and to eat of His table and first-fruits, even the choice things of
the sons of Israel, and thou shall be to them as a sea. For as, on the sea,
just and unjust are tossed about, some taken into captivity while others are
enriched, so also shall every race of men be in thee, some are in jeopardy
and taken captive, and others shall grow rich by means of plunder. For they
who rule will be as great sea-monsters, swallowing up men like fishes: free
sons and daughters do they enslave; houses, lands, flocks, money, will they
plunder; and with the flesh of many will they wrongfully feed the ravens and
the cranes; and they will go on further in evil, advancing on still in covetousness.
And there shall be false prophets like tempests, and they shall persecute all
righteous men.
22. And the Lord shall bring upon them divisions one against another, and there
shall be continual wars in Israel; and among men of other race shall my kingdom
be brought to an end, until the salvation of Israel shall come, until the appearing
of the God of righteousness, that Jacob and all the Gentiles may rest in peace.[1]
And he shall guard the might of my kingdom for ever: for the Lord sware to
me with an oath that the kingdom should never fail from me, and from my seed
for all days, even for ever.
23. Now I have much grief, my children, because of your lewdness, and witchcrafts,
and idolatries, which ye will work against the kingdom, following them that
have familiar spirits ye[2] will make your daughters singing girls[3] and harlots
for divinations and demons of error, and ye will be mingled in the pollutions
of the Gentiles: for which things' sake the Lord shall bring upon you famine
and pestilence, death and the sword, avenging siege, and dogs for the rending
in pieces of enemies, and revilings of friends, destruction and blighting of
eyes, children slaughtered, wives carried off, possessions plundered, temple
of God in flames, your land desolated, your own selves enslaved among the Gentiles,
and they shall make some of you eunuchs for their wives; and whenever ye will
return to the Lord with humility of heart, repenting and walking in all the
commandments of God, then will the Lord visit you in mercy and in love, bringing
you from out of the bondage of your enemies.
24. And after these things shall a Star arise to you from Jacob in peace, and
a Man shall rise from my seed, like the Sun of righteousness, walking with
the sons of men[4] in meekness and righteousness, and no sin shall be found
in Him. And the heavens shall be opened above Him, to shed forth the blessing
of the Spirit from the Holy Father; and He shall shed forth a spirit of grace
upon you, and ye shall be unto Him sons in truth, and ye shall walk in His
commandments, the first and the last. This is the Branch of God Most High,
and this the Well-spring unto life for all flesh. [5]Then shall the sceptre
of my kingdom shine forth, and from your root shall arise a stem; and in it
shall arise a rod of righteousness to the Gentiles, to judge and to save all
that call upon the Lord.
25. And after these things shall Abraham and Isaac and Jacob arise unto life,
and I and my brethren will be chiefs, even your sceptre in Israel: Levi first,
I the second, Joseph third, Benjamin fourth, Simeon fifth, Issachar sixth,
and so all in order. And the Lord blessed Levi; the Angel of the Presence,
me; the powers of glory,[6] Simeon; the heaven, Reuben; the earth, Issachar;
the sea, Zebulun; the mountains, Joseph; the tabernacle, Benjamin; the lights
of heaven, Dan; the fatness of earth, Naphtali; the sun, Gad; the olive, Asher:
and there shall be one people of the Lord, and one tongue; and there shall
no more be a spirit of deceit of Beliar, for he shall be cast into the fire
for ever. And they who have died in grief shall arise in joy, and they who
have lived in poverty for the Lord's sake shall be made rich, and they who
have been in want shall be filled, and they who have been weak shall be made
strong, and they who have been put to death for the Lord's sake shall awake
in life.[7] And the harts of Jacob shall run in joyfulness, and the eagles
of Israel shall fly in gladness; but the ungodly shall lament, and sinners
all weep, and all the people shall glorify the sh Lord for ever.
26. Observe, therefore, my children, all the law of the Lord, for there is
hope for all them who follow His way aright. And he said to them: I die before
your eyes this day, a hundred and nineteen years old. Let no one bury me in
costly apparel, nor tear open my bowels,[8] for this shall they who are kings
do: and carry me up to Hebron with you. And Judah, when he had said these things,
fell asleep; and his sons did according to all whatsoever he commanded them,
and they buried him in Hebron with his fathers.
V.--THE TESTAMENT OF ISSACHAR CONCERNING SIMPLICITY.
1. The record of the words of Issachar. He called his sons, and said to them:
Hearken, my children, to Issachar your father; give ear to my words, ye who
are beloved of the Lord. I was the fifth son born to Jacob, even the hire of
the mandrakes.[1] For Reuben[2] brought in mandrakes from the field, and Rachel
met him and took them. And Reuben wept, and at his voice Leah my mother came
forth. Now these mandrakes were sweet-smelling apples which the land of Aram
produced on high ground below a ravine of water. And Rachel said, I will not
give them to thee, for they shall be to me instead of children. Now there were
two apples; and Leaf said, Let it suffice thee that thou hast taken the husband
of my virginity: wilt thou also take these? And she said, Behold, let Jacob
be to thee this night instead of the mandrakes of thy son. And Leah said to
her, Boast not, and vaunt not thyself; for Jacob is mine, and I am the wife
of his youth. But Rachel said, How so? for to me was he first espoused, and
for my sake he served our father fourteen years. What shall I do to thee, because
the craft and the subtlety of men are increased, and craft prospereth upon
the earth? And were it not so, thou wouldest not now see the face of Jacob.
For thou art not his wife, but in craft wert taken to him in my stead. And
my father deceived me, and removed me on that night, and suffered me not to
see him; for had I been there, it had not happened thus. And Rachel said, Take
one mandrake, and for the other thou shalt hire him from me for one night.
And Jacob knew Leah, and she conceived and bare me, and on account of the hire[1]
I was called Issachar.
2. Then appeared to Jacob an angel of the Lord, saying, Two children shall
Rachel bear; for she hath refused company with her husband, and hath chosen
continency. And had not Leah my mother given up the two apples for the sake
of his company, she would have borne eight sons; and for this thing she bare
six, and Rachel two: because on account of the mandrakes the Lord visited her.
For He knew that for the sake of children she wished to company with Jacob,
and not for lust of pleasure.[2] For she went further, and on the morrow too
gave up Jacob that she might receive also the other mandrake. Therefore the
Lord hearkened to Rachel because of the mandrakes: for though she desired them,
she ate them not, but brought them to the priest of the Most High who was at
that time, and offered them up in the house of the Lord.
3. When, therefore, I grew up, my children, I walked in uprightness of heart,
and I became a husbandman for my parents and my brethren, and I brought in
fruits from the field according to their season; and my father blessed me,
for he saw that I walked in simplicity. And I was not a busybody in my doings,
nor malicious and slanderous against my neighbour. I never spoke against any
one, nor did I censure the life of any man, but walked in the simplicity of
my eyes. Therefore when I was thirty years old I took to myself a wife, for
my labour wore away my strength, and I never thought upon pleasure with women;
but through my labour my sleep sufficed me, and my father always rejoiced in
my simplicity. For on whatever I laboured I offered first to the Lord, by the
hands of the priests, of all my produce and all first-fruits; then to my father,
and then took for myself. And the Lord increased twofold His benefits in my
hands; and Jacob also knew that God aided my simplicity, for on every poor
man and every one in distress I bestowed the good things of the earth in simplicity
of heart.
4. And now hearken to me, my children, and walk in simplicity of heart, for
I have seen in it all that is well-pleasing to the Lord. The simple coveteth
not gold, defraudeth not his neighbour, longeth not after manifold dainties,
delighteth not in varied apparel, doth not picture to himself to live a long
life, but only waiteth for the will of God, and the spirits of error have no
power against him. For he cannot allow within his mind a thought of female
beauty, that he should not pollute his mind in corruption. No envy can enter
into his thoughts, no jealousy melteth away his soul, nor doth he brood over
gain with insatiate desire; for he walketh in uprightness of life, and beholdeth
all things in simplicity, not admitting in his eyes malice from the error of
the world, lest he should see the perversion of any of the commandments of
the Lord.
5. Keep therefore the law of God, my children, and get simplicity, and walk
in guilelessness, not prying over-curiously into the commands of God and the
business of your neighbour; but love the Lord and your neighbour, have compassion
on the poor and weak. Bow down your back unto husbandry, and labour in tillage
of the ground in all manner of husbandry, offering gifts unto the Lord with
thanksgiving; for with the first-fruits of the earth did the Lord bless me,
even as He blessed all the saints from Abel even until now. For no other portion
is given to thee than of the fatness of the earth, whose fruits are raised
by toil; for our father Jacob blessed me with blessings of the earth and of
first-fruits. And Levi and Judah were glorified by the Lord among the sons
of Jacob; for the Lord made choice of them, and to the one He gave the priesthood,
to the other the kingdom. Them therefore obey, and walk in the simplicity of
your father; for unto Gad hath it been given to destroy the temptations that
are coming upon Israel.
6. I know, my children, that in the last times your sons will forsake simplicity,
and will cleave unto avarice, and leaving guilelessness will draw near to malice,
and forsaking the commandments of the Lord will cleave unto Beliar, and leaving
husbandry will follow after their wicked devices, and shall be dispersed among
the Gentiles, and shall serve their enemies. And do you therefore command these
things to your children, that if they sin they may the more quickly return
to the Lord; for He is merciful, and will deliver them even to bring them back
into their land.
7. I am a hundred and twenty-two years old, anti I know not against myself
a sin unto death. Except my wife, I have not known any woman. I never committed
fornication in the haughtiness of my eyes; I drank not wine, to be led astray
thereby; I coveted not any desirable thing that was my neighbour's; guile never
entered in my heart; a lie never passed through my lips; if any man grieved,
I wept with him, and I shared my bread with the poor. I never ate alone; I
moved no landmark; in all my days I wrought godliness and truth. I loved the
Lord with all my strength; likewise also did I love every man even as my own
children. So ye also do these things, my children, and every spirit of Beliar
shall flee from you, and no deed of malicious men shall rule over you; and
every wild beast shall ye subdue, having with yourselves the God of heaven
walking with men in simplicity of heart.
And he commanded them that they should carry him up to Hebron, and bury him
there in the cave with his fathers. And he stretched out his feet and died,
the fifth son of Jacob, in a good old age; and with every limb sound, and with
strength unabated, he slept the eternal sleep.[1]
VI.--THE TESTAMENT OF ZEBULUN CONCERNING COMPASSION AND MERCY.
1. The record of Zebulun, which he enjoined his children in the hundred[1]
and fourteenth year of his life, thirty-two years after the death of Joseph.
And he said to them: Hearken to me sons of Zebulun, attend to the words of
your father. I am Zebulun, a good gift[2] to my parents. For when I was born
our father was increased very exceedingly, both in flocks and herds, when with
the streaked rods he had his portion. I know not, my children, that in all
my days I have sinned, save only in thought. Nor do I remember that I have
done any iniquity, except the sin of ignorance which I committed against Joseph;
for I screened my brethren, not telling to my father what had been done. And
I wept sore in secret, for I feared my brethren, because they had all agreed
together, that if any one should declare the secret, he should be slain with
the sword. But when they wished to kilt him, I adjured them much with tears
not to be guilty of this iniquity.
2. For Simeon and Gad came against Joseph to kill him. And Joseph fell upon
his face, and said unto them, Pity me, my brethren, have compassion upon the
bowels of Jacob our father lay not upon me your hands to shed innocent blood,
for I have not sinned against you; yea, if I have sinned, with chastening chastise
me, but lay not upon me your hand, for the sake of Jacob our father. And as
he spoke these words, I pitied him and began to weep, and my heart melted within
me, and all the substance of my bowels was loosened within my soul. And Joseph
also wept, and I too wept with him; and my heart throbbed fast, and the joints
of my body trembled, and I was not able to stand. And when he saw me weeping
with him, and them coming against him to slay him, he fled behind me, beseeching
them. And Reuben rose and said, My brethren, let us not slay him, but let us
cast him into one of these dry pits which our fathers digged and found no water.
For for this cause the Lord forbade that water should rise up in them, in order
that Joseph might be preserved; and the Lord appointed it so, until they sold
him to the Ishmaelites.
3. For in the price of Joseph, my children, I had no share; but Simeon and
Gad and six other of our brethren took the price of Joseph, and bought sandals[3]
for themselves, their wives, and their children, saying, We will not eat of
it, for it is the price of our brother's blood, but will tread it down under
foot, because he said that he was king over us, and so let us see what his
dreams mean. Therefore is it written in the writing of the law of Enoch, that
whosoever will not raise up seed to his brother, his sandal shall be unloosed,
and they shall spit into his face.[4] And the brethren of Joseph wished not
that their brother should live, and the Lord loosed unto them the sandal of
Joseph. For when they came into Egypt they were unloosed by the servants of
Joseph before the gate, and so made obeisance to Joseph after the fashion of
Pharaoh. And not only did they make obeisance to him, but were spit upon also,
falling down before him forthwith, and so they were put to shame before the
Egyptians; for after this the Egyptians heard all the evils which we had done
to Joseph.
4. After these things they brought forth food; for I through two days and two
nights tasted nothing, through pity for Joseph. And Judah ate not with them,
but watched the pit; for he feared lest Simeon and Gad should run back and
slay him. And when they saw that I also ate not, they set me to watch him until
he was sold. And he remained in the pit three days and three nights, and so
was sold famishing. And when Reuben heard that while he was away Joseph had
been sold, he rent his clothes about him, and mourned, saying, How shall I
look in the face of Jacob my father? And he took the money, and ran after the
merchants, and found no one; for they had left the main road, and journeyed
hastily through rugged byways.[1] And Reuben ate no food on that day, Dan therefore
came to him, and said, Weep not, neither grieve for I have found what we can
say to our father Jacob. Let us slay a kid of the goats, and dip in it the
coat of Joseph; and we will say, Look, if this is the coat of thy son: for
they stripped off from Joseph the coat of our father when they were about to
sell him, and put upon him an old garment of a slave. Now Simeon had the coat,
and would not give it up, wishing to rend it with his sword; for he was angry
that Joseph lived, and that he had not slain him. Them we all rose up together
against him, and said, If thou give it not up, we will say that thou alone
didst this wickedness in Israel; and so he gave it up, and they did even as
Dan had said.
5. And now, my children, I bid you to keep the commands of the Lord, and to
show mercy upon your neighbour, and to have compassion towards all, not towards
men only, but also towards beasts. For for this thing's sake the Lord blessed
me; and when all my brethren were sick I escaped without sickness, for the
Lord knoweth the purposes of each. Have therefore compassion in your hearts,
my children, because even as a man doeth to his neighbour, even so also will
the Lord do to him. For the sons of my brethren were sickening, were dying
on account of joseph, because they showed not mercy in their hearts; but my
sons were preserved without sickness, as ye know. And when I was in Canaan,
by the sea-coast, I caught spoil of fish for Jacob my father; and when many
were choked in the sea, I abode unhurt.
6. I was the first who made a boat to sail upon the sea, for the Lord gave
me understanding and wisdom therein; and I let down a rudder behind it, and
I stretched a sail on an upright mast in the midst; and sailing therein along
the shores, I caught fish for the house of my father until we went into Egypt;
and through compassion, I gave of my fish to every stranger. And if any man
were a stranger, or sick, or aged, I boiled the fish and dressed them well,
and offered them to all men as every man had need, bringing them together and
having compassion upon them. Wherefore also the Lord granted me to take much
fish: for he that imparteth unto his neighbour, receiveth manifold more from
the Lord. For five years I caught fish, and gave thereof to every man whom
I saw, and brought sufficient for all the house of my father. In the summer
I caught fish, and in the winter I kept sheep with my brethren.
7. Now I will declare unto you what I did, I saw a man in distress and nakedness
in wintertime, and had compassion upon him, and stole away[2] a garment secretly
from my house, and gave it to him who was in distress. Do you therefore, my
children, from that which God bestoweth upon you, show compassion and mercy
impartially to all men, and give to every man with a good heart. And if ye
have not at the time wherewith to give to him that asketh you, have compassion
for him in bowels of mercy. I know that my hand found not at the time wherewith
to give to him that asked me, and I walked with him weeping for more than seven
furlongs, and my bowels yearned towards him unto compassion.
8. Have therefore yourselves also, my children, compassion towards every man
with mercy, that the Lord also may have compassion upon you, and have mercy
upon you; because also in the last days God sendeth His compassion on the earth,
and wheresoever He findeth bowels of mercy, He dwelleth in him. For how much
compassion a man hath upon his neighbours, so much also hath the Lord upon
him. For when we went down into Egypt, Joseph bore no malice against us, and
when he saw me he was filled with compassion. And looking towards him, do ye
also, my children, approve yourselves without malice, and love one another;
and reckon not each one the evil of his brother, for this breaketh unity, and
divideth all kindred, and troubleth the soul: for he who beareth malice hath
not bowels of mercy.
9. Mark the waters, that they flow together, and sweep along stones, trees,
sand; but if they are divided into many streams, the earth sucketh them up,
and they become of no account. So also shall ye be if ye be divided. Divide
not yourselves into two heads, for everything which the Lord made hath but
one head; He gave two shoulders, hands, feet, but all the members are subject
unto the one head. I have learnt by the writing of my fathers, that in the
last days ye will depart from the Lord, and be divided in Israel, and ye will
follow two kings, and will work every abomination, and every idol will ye worship,
and your enemies shall lead you captive, and ye shall dwell among the nations
with all infirmities and tribulations and anguish of soul. And after these
things ye will remember the Lord, and will repent, and He will lead you back;
for He is merciful and full of compassion, not imputing evil to the sons of
men, because they are flesh, and the spirits of error deceive them in all their
doings, And after these things shall the Lord Himself arise to you,[1] the
Light of righteousness, and healing[2] and compassion shall be upon His wings.
He shall redeem all captivity of the sons of men from Beliar, and every spirit
of error shall be trodden down. And He shall bring back all the nations to
zeal for Him, and ye shall see God in the fashion of a man[3] whom the Lord
shall choose, Jerusalem is His name. And again with the wickedness of your
words will ye provoke Him to anger, and ye shall be cast away, even unto the
time of consummation.
10. And now, my children, grieve not that I am dying, nor be troubled in that
I am passing away from you. For I shall arise once more in the midst of you,
as a ruler in the midst of his sons; and I will rejoice in the midst of my
tribe, as many as have kept the law of the Lord, and the commandments of Zebulun
their father.[4] But upon the ungodly shall the Lord bring everlasting fire,
and will destroy them throughout all generations. I am hastening away unto
my rest, as did my fathers; but do ye fear the Lord your God with all your
strength all the days of your life. And when he had said these things he fell
calmly asleep, and his sons laid him in a coffin; and afterwards they carried
him up to Hebron, and buried him with his fathers.
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