Sunday, January 22, 2023
The Four Questions of Hannukah
Ken Spiro – December 2022
-Is there a reason why Hanukkah and Christmas happen at the same time of the year?
Growing up as a young Jewish kid in New York with a very limited after-school, Hebrew school education, I came up with my own theory as to why Hannukah and Christmas always fall out aroundthe same time in December. By the age of 9, I figured out that smart rabbis must have thought that if Jewish kids saw Christian kids getting presents and they didn’t get presents too, they might not stay Jewish. An interesting theory, even if it was far from the truth.
The reality is very different. As for the date of the holiday, the Talmud explicitly states:
“The Sages taught: On the twenty-fifth of Kislev, the days of Hanukkah are eight.” (1)
The Book of the Maccabees, which tells the story of Hannukah, also mentions the exact same date:
“Early in the morning of the 25th day of the ninth
month which is the month of Kislev...they [the priests] rose and offered
sacrifices, as the law directs, on the new alter of burnt offerings which they
had built...it was dedicated with songs and harps and lutes and cymbals...So
they celebrated the dedication of the alter for eight days...” (2)
So Hannukah REALLY did happen in the month of Kislev,
which always falls out around December and which are, in the northern
hemisphere, the shortest days of the year.
The question is, why is Christmas also in December?
The connection of Christmas (the traditional day of
Jesus’s birth) to the same time of year happened sometime in the 4th
century C.E. when the early church fathers fixed the date as December 25th,
but there is no reference to this date in the Christian Bible and there is much
historical speculation as to why this date was chosen.
One possible
explanation is that much of Christian ritual has its origins in the paganism of
the Roman Empire. Late December, which
the Romans also recognized as the Winter Solstice was traditionally a time of
several major pagan holidays-Saturnalia-Celebrating Saturn, the god of
agriculture and also that of Sol Invictus/Helios-the sun god. It could well be that the early church
fathers deliberately placed Jesus’s birthday in December to de-paganize the
season and give it a Christian ” flavor “and focus.
2-Why isn’t the Book of the Maccabee’s in the Hebrew
Bible?
There are actually 8 separate works that have the
title Book of the Maccabees. By far, the best-known books are Maccabees 1
and 2. Maccabees 1 was written in Hebrew by a royal chronicler of the Hasmonean
Dynasty (The Hasmonean Dynasty is the family of the Maccabees) sometime in the
late 2nd century BCE and Maccabees 2 was probably written in Greek by a Jew
living in Egypt, also around the same time.
We do not have the original Hebrew version of Maccabees 1 nor the original,
unabridged version of Maccabees 2.
Both the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches
consider the Books of the Maccabees to be canonical (included in the list of sacred books officially accepted as
genuine.) and are included in their versions of the Bible. The question is why doesn’t Judaism consider
these books to be holy?
Jewish tradition teaches that the different books that
comprise the Tanach-the twenty-four books of the Hebrew Bible,
designated as holy - were compiled by the Men of the Great Assembly (the
120 spiritual leaders who led the Jewish people approximately 2,500 years ago
during the Babylonian Exile). Two criteria were used by these great sages to
decide which books to include in the Bible:
1-The book had to be authored by a prophet
2-The book had to contain a message relevant for all
time.
All the books of the Maccabees were written centuries
after the completion of the Hebrew Bible and none of the authors of any of these
books meet the above criteria. While the books of the Maccabees are a
tremendous source of information and even inspiration, they are not considered
by Judaism to be holy.
3-What happened to the Maccabees?
The story of the Maccabees is not only one of great
heroism and sacrifice but also one of corruption and tragedy. The five sons of Matisyahu (Mattathias) led a
struggle against the Greeks that lasted for 25 years. During this protracted conflict,
four of the five brothers either died in battle or were murdered.
The sole surviving brother, Simon, finally gained
independence from the Greeks and established a dynasty, known as the Hasmonean
Dynasty that would last for 103 years. For about a century Israel had independence
and Simon’s descendants assumed the roles of high priests and rulers of Israel.
As descendants of Moses’s brother,
Aaron, they could lay claim to the priesthood, but they had no right to
kingship as that position could only be claimed by a descendant of King David.
Tragically, later Maccabean rulers not only became
corrupted by their power but ended up persecuting the rabbinic leadership that
their ancestors had sacrificed their lives to preserve. Internal power
struggles within the family eventually degenerated into civil war which opened
the door to the Roman conquest of Israel
in 63BCE and ultimately the end of the Hasmonean in 37BCE when the Romans made
Herod the Great the king of Israel.
Coming from non-Jewish ancestry, Herod had even less
claim to kingship than the Maccabees. To compensate for his lack of legitimacy
Herod married the last surviving Maccabean female, Miriam. Obsessively
paranoid, jealous, and impulsive, the historian Josephus writes that Herod
eventually had her executed. He also put to death the two children that she
bore him as well as Miriam’s brother, the high priest, Aristobulus. And so, the
Maccabees ceased to exist. (3)
The Talmudic account of the end of the Hasmonaeans differs
in that it doesn’t mention Herod’s marriage to Miriam or her murder, but rather
that the last Maccabean female committed suicide rather than marrying Herod. (4) Regardless
of which version you choose to follow the family of the Maccabees came to a
tragic end over 2,000 years ago. The
Talmud concludes:
“Whoever
says that he is from the household of the Hasmoneans is surely a slave.” (5)
4-Why do we focus on the small miracle of the
oil? Wasn’t the military victory a far greater
miracle?
There is only one very short reference to
Hannukah in the Talmud:
“When the Greeks entered the Sanctuary, they defiled
all the oils that were in the Sanctuary by touching them. And when the
Hasmonean monarchy overcame them and emerged victorious over them, they
searched and found only one cruse of oil that was placed with the seal of the
High Priest, undisturbed by the Greeks. And there was sufficient oil there to
light the candelabrum for only one day. A miracle occurred and they lit the
candelabrum from it eight days. The next year the Sages instituted those days
and made them holidays with recitation of hallel and special
thanksgiving in prayer and blessings.”
The military victory of tiny Israel over superpower
Greece was certainly a more impressive achievement, but the symbolism of the
light of the menorah goes to the heart of the true victory:
Hannukah was
history’s first religious/ideological war-It was paganism’s battle against humanity’s
only monotheistic faith. The Greeks tried to destroy not Jews but Judaism.
Despite the beauty and sophistication of Greek culture,
their objective was to snuff out the light of Judaism. With that in mind, we now understand why it’s
truly fitting to focus on the miracle of the oil and not the military victory. The
military victory gained Israel brief independence, but that didn’t last
long. The Hannukah lights that continue
to shine brightly during the darkest time of the year truly represents the real
miracle-The survival of a faith and a people and the power of that people’s
faith to transform humanity and truly bring light to the world.
(1)
Babylonian Talmud, Shabbat 21:b
(2)
I Maccabees
4:52-56
(3)
Josephus The Jewish Wars
(4)
Babylonian Talmud, Bava Batra 3:b
(5)
Babylonian Talmud, Kiddushin 70:b
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