The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 292: The Power of Words (2024)
Episode Date: October 18, 2024As we continue our journey in 1 Maccabees, Fr. Mike explains that this book of the Bible is unlike others because it narrates stories and events without providing any interpretation. In Sirach, Fr. M...ike stresses the teaching on the power of our words and the gravity of gossip and slander. Today's readings are 1 Maccabees 11, Sirach 28-29, and Proverbs 23:9-12. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/bibleinayear. Please note: The Bible contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.
Transcript
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Bible in a Year podcast where
we encounter God's voice and live life through the lens of scripture.
The Bible in a Year podcast is brought to you by Ascension.
Using the Great Adventure Bible timeline, we'll read all the way from Genesis to Revelation,
discovering how the story of salvation unfolds and how we fit into that story today.
It is day 292 and we are reading 1 Maccabees chapter 11, continuing the history of the story of the people of God, Sirach 28 and 29, Proverbs chapter 23, 9 through 12. As
always, the Bible translation I'm reading from is the Revised Standard Version, 2nd Catholic Edition.
I'm using the Great Adventure Bible from Ascension. If you want to download your own
Bible in a Year reading plan, you can visit ascensionpress.com slash Bible in a Year.
You can also subscribe to this podcast and why not? Why not wait and say, you know what? Day 292, that was my day.
I didn't want to do it right away.
And I also didn't want to do it like halfway through.
But on day 292, kind of a palindrome of a number,
that's the day I wanted to subscribe.
As I said, it is day 292.
We're reading 1 Maccabees 11, more palindromes,
or at least a lot of ones, and
Sirach 28 and 29, Proverbs 23 verses 9 through 12.
The first book of Maccabees, chapter 11, Ptolemy invades Syria.
Then the king of Egypt gathered great forces like the sand by the seashore and many ships,
and he tried to get possession of Alexander's kingdom by trickery and add it to his own kingdom.
He set out for Syria with peaceable words, and the people of the cities opened their
gates to him and went to meet him, for Alexander the king had commanded them to meet him since
he was Alexander's father-in-law.
But when Ptolemy entered the cities, he stationed forces as a garrison in each city.
When he approached Asiatus, they showed him the temple of Dagon burned down,
and Azatis and its suburbs destroyed, and the corpses lying about, and the charred bodies of
those whom Jonathan had burned in the war, for they had piled them in heaps along his route.
They also told the king what Jonathan had done, to throw blame on him, but the king kept silent.
Jonathan met the king at Joppa with some pomp, and they greeted one another and spent the night there.
And Jonathan went with the king as far as the river called Eleutherus.
Then he returned to Jerusalem.
So King Ptolemy gained control of the coastal cities as far as Seleucia by the sea,
and he kept devising evil designs against Alexander.
He sent envoys to Demetrius the king, saying, Come, let us make a covenant with each other, and
I will give you in marriage my daughter who is Alexander's wife, and you shall reign
over your father's kingdom. For I now regret that I gave him my daughter, for he has tried
to kill me. He threw blame on Alexander because he coveted his kingdom, so he took his daughter
away from him and gave her to Demetrius. He was estranged from Alexander, and their enmity
became manifest. Then Ptolemy
entered Antioch and put on the crown of Asia. Thus he put two crowns upon his head, the
crown of Egypt and that of Asia. Now Alexander the king was in Cilicia at that time because
the people of that region were in revolt. And Alexander heard of it and came against
him in battle. Ptolemy marched out and met him with a strong force and put him to flight, so Alexander
fled into Arabia to find protection there and King Ptolemy was exalted.
Enzabdiel the Arab cut off the head of Alexander and sent it to Ptolemy.
But King Ptolemy died three days later and his troops in the strongholds were killed
by the inhabitants of the strongholds.
So Demetrius became king in the 167th year.
Jonathan's Diplomacy In those days, Jonathan assembled the men
of Judea to attack the citadel in Jerusalem, and he built many engines of war to use against
it.
But certain lawless men who hated their nation went to the king and reported to him that
Jonathan was besieging the citadel.
When he heard this, he was angry, and as soon as he heard it,
he set out and came to Ptolemaicus, and he wrote to Jonathan not to continue the siege,
but to meet him for a conference at Ptolemaicus as quickly as possible.
When Jonathan heard this, he gave orders to continue the siege,
and he chose some of the elders of Israel and some of the priests, and put himself in danger.
For he went to the king at Ptolemaeus, taking silver and gold and clothing,
and numerous other gifts. And he won his favor.
Although certain lawless men of his nation kept making complaints against him,
the king treated him as his predecessors had treated him.
He exalted him in the presence of all his friends.
He confirmed him in the high priesthood, and in as many other honors as he had formerly had,
and he made him to be regarded as one of his chief friends.
Then Jonathan asked the king to free Judea and the three districts of Samaria from tribute
and promised him three hundred talents.
The king consented, and wrote a letter to Jonathan about all these things.
Its contents were as follows.
King Demetrius, to Jonathan his brother, and to the nation of the Jews, greeting.
This copy of the letter which we wrote concerning you to Lastinese, our kinsmen, we have written
to you also, so that you may know what it says.
King Demetrius, to Lastinese his father, greeting.
To the nation of the Jews, who are our friends and fulfill their obligations to us, we have
determined to do good.
Because of the good will they show toward us.
We have confirmed as their possession both the territory of Judea and the three districts
of Afarhema, and Lida, and Rathamin.
The latter, with all the region bordering them, were added to Judea from Samaria.
To all those who offer sacrifice in Jerusalem we have granted release from the royal taxes
which the king formerly received from them each year from the crops of the land and the fruit of the trees, and the other
payments henceforth due to us of the tithes, and the taxes due to us, and the salt pits,
and the crown taxes due to us.
From all these we shall grant them release.
And not one of these grants shall be cancelled from this time forth for forever.
Now therefore, take care to make a copy of this, and let it be given to Jonathan and
put up in a conspicuous place on the Holy Mountain.
The Intrigue of Trifo
Now, when Demetrius the king saw that the land was quiet before him, and that there
was no opposition to him, he dismissed all his troops, each man, to his own place, except
the foreign troops which he had recruited from the islands of the nations.
So all the troops who had served his fathers hated him. Now Trifo had formerly been one of Alexander's supporters.
He saw that all the troops were murmuring against Demetrius.
So he went to Emelque the Arab, who was bringing up Antiochus, the young son of Alexander, and
insistently urged him to hand Antiochus over to him to become king in place of his father.
He also reported to Imelchus what Demetrius had done and told of the hatred which the
troops of Demetrius had for him, and he stayed there many days.
Now Jonathan sent to Demetrius the king, the request that he remove the troops of the Citadel
from Jerusalem, and the troops in the strongholds, for they kept fighting against Israel.
And Demetrius sent this message to Jonathan, Not only will I do these things for you and
your nation, but I will confer great honor on you and your nation if I find an opportunity.
Now then, you will do well to send me men who will help me, for all my troops have revolted.
So Jonathan sent three thousand stalwart men to him at Antioch, and when they came to the
king, the king rejoiced at their arrival.
Then the men of the city assembled within the city to the number of a hundred and twenty
thousand, and they wanted to kill the king.
But the king fled into the palace, then the men of the city seized the main streets of
the city and began to fight.
So the king called the Jews to his aid, and they all rallied about him and then spread
out through the city.
And they killed on that day as many as a hundred thousand men.
They set fire to the city, and seized much spoil on that day, and they saved the king.
When the men of the city saw that the Jews had gained control of the city as they pleased,
their courage failed, and they cried out to the king with this entreaty,
"'Grant us peace, and make the Jews stop fighting against us and our city.
And they threw down their arms and made peace.
So the Jews gained glory in the eyes of the king,
and of all the peoples in his kingdom, and they returned to Jerusalem with much spoil.
So Demetrius the king sat on the throne of his kingdom,
and the land was quiet before him.
But he broke his word about all that he had promised,
and he became estranged from Jonathan, and did not repay the favors which Jonathan had done
him but oppressed him greatly.
Trifo seized his power.
After this Trifo returned, and with him the young boy Antiochus who began to reign and
put on the crown.
All the troops that Demetrius had cast off gathered around him, and they fought against
Demetrius and he fled and was routed.
And Trifo captured the elephants and gained control of Antioch.
Then young Antiochus wrote to Jonathan, saying, I confirm you in the high priesthood, and
set you over the four districts, and make you one of the friends of the king.
And he sent him gold plate and a table service, and granted him the right to drink from gold
cups and dress in purple and wear a gold buckle.
Simon his brother he made governor from the ladder of Tyre to the borders of Egypt.
Campaigns of Jonathan and Simon.
Then Jonathan set forth and traveled beyond the river and among the cities, and all the
army of Syria gathered to him as allies.
When he came to Ascalon, the people of the city met him and paid him honor.
From there he departed to Gaza, but the men of Gaza shut him out. So he besieged it and
burned its suburbs with fire and plundered them. Then the people of Gaza pleaded with
Jonathan and he made peace with them, and took the sons of the rulers as hostages and
sent them to Jerusalem. And he passed through the country as far as Damascus.
Then Jonathan heard that the officers of Demetrius had come to Kadesh in Galilee with a large
army intending to remove him from office.
He went to meet them, but left his brother Simon in the country.
Simon encamped before Bet-Zur and fought against it for many days and hemmed it in.
Then they asked him to grant them terms of peace, and he did so.
He removed them from there, took possession of the city, and set a garrison over it.
Jonathan and his army, encamped by the waters of Gennesaret, early in the morning they marched
to the plain of Hesor, and behold, the army of the foreigners met him in the plain.
They had set an ambush against him in the mountains, but they themselves met him face
to face.
Then the men in ambush emerged from their places and joined the battle.
All the men with Jonathan fled, not one of them was left except Mattathias the son of
Absalom and Judas the son of Kalfi, commanders of the forces of the army.
Jonathan tore his garments and put dust on his head and prayed.
Then he turned back to the battle against the enemy and routed them, and they fled.
When his men who were fleeing saw this, they returned to him
and joined him in the pursuit as far as Kadesh, to their camp where they had encamped.
As many as three thousand of the foreigners fell that day, and Jonathan returned to Jerusalem.
The Book of Sirach, Chapter 28
He that takes vengeance will suffer vengeance from the Lord, and he will firmly establish his sins. The Book of Sirach, Chapter 28. mercy toward a man like himself and yet pray for his own sins. If he himself, being flesh,
maintains wrath, will he then seek forgiveness from God? Who will make expiation for his
sins? Remember the end of your life and cease from
enmity. Remember destruction and death and be true to the commandments. Remember the
commandments and do not be angry with your neighbor. Remember the covenant of the Most High and overlook ignorance. Refrain from strife, and you will lessen sins. For a man
given to anger will kindle strife, and a sinful man will disturb friends, and inject enmity
among those who are at peace. In proportion to the fuel for the fire, so will be the burning.
And in proportion to the obstinacy of strife will be the burning.
In proportion to the strength of the man will be his anger, and in proportion to his wealth
he will heighten his wrath.
A hasty quarrel kindles fire, and urgent strife sheds blood.
If you blow on a spark it will glow, if you spit on it, it will be put out, and both come
out of your mouth.
Curse the whisperer and deceiver, for he has destroyed many who were at peace.
Slander has shaken many and scattered them from nation to nation, and destroyed strong
cities and overturned the houses of great men.
Slander has driven away courageous women, and deprived them of the fruit of their toil.
Whoever pays heed to slander will not find rest, nor will he settle down in peace.
The blow of a whip raises a welt, but the blow of the tongue crushes the bones.
Many have fallen by the edge of the sword, but not so many as have fallen because of
the tongue.
Happy is the man who is protected from it, who has not been exposed to its anger, who
has not borne its yoke, and has not been bound with its chains.
For its yoke is a yoke of iron, and its chains are chains of bronze.
Its death is an evil death, and Hades is preferable to it.
It will not be master over the godly, and they will not be burned in its flame.
Those who forsake the Lord will fall into its power,
it will burn among them, and will not be burned in its flame. Those who forsake the Lord will fall into its power, it will burn among them, and will not be put out. It will be sent out
against them like a lion, like a leopard it will mangle them. See that you fence
in your property with thorns, lock up your silver and gold, make balances and
scales for your words, and make a door and a bolt for your mouth. Beware lest
you err with your tongue, lest you fall before Him who lies in wait.
Chapter 29, on lending and borrowing, home and hospitality.
He that shows mercy will lend to his neighbor,
and he that strengthens him with his hand
keeps the commandments.
Lend to your neighbor in the time of his need,
and in turn repay your neighbor promptly.
Confirm your word and keep faith with him, and on every occasion you will find what you need.
Many persons regard a loan as a windfall and cause trouble to those who help them.
A man will kiss another's hands until he gets a loan,
and will lower his voice in speaking of his neighbor's money,
but at the time of repayment he will delay,
and will pay in words of unconcern, and will find fault with the time. If the lender exerts
pressure, he will hardly get back half, and will regard that as a windfall. If he does
not, the borrower has robbed him of his money, and he has needlessly made him his enemy.
He will repay him with curses and reproaches, and instead of glory will repay him with dishonor.
Because of such wickedness, therefore, many have refused to lend. They have been afraid
of being defrauded needlessly. Nevertheless, be patient with a man in humble circumstances,
and do not make him wait for your alms. Help a poor man for the commandments' sake, and
because of his need, do not send him away empty.
Lose your silver for the sake of a brother or a friend, and do not let it rust under a stone and be lost.
Lay up your treasure according to the commandments of the Most High, and it will profit you more than gold.
Store up almsgiving in your treasury, and it will rescue you from all affliction.
More than a mighty shield and more than a heavy spear,
it will fight on your behalf against your enemy.
A good man will be surety for his neighbor,
but a man who has lost his sense of shame will fail him.
Do not forget all the kindness of your surety,
for he has given his life for you.
A sinner will overthrow the prosperity of his surety,
and one who does not feel grateful
will abandon his rescuer.
Being surety has ruined many men who were prosperous, and has shaken them like a wave
of the sea.
It has driven men of power into exile, and they have wandered among foreign nations.
The sinner who has fallen into suretieship and pursues gain will fall into lawsuits.
Assist your neighbor according to your ability,
but take heed to yourself lest you fall.
The essentials for life are water and bread
and clothing and a house to cover one's nakedness.
Better is the life of a poor man
under the shelter of his roof
than someshua's food in another man's house.
Be content with little or much.
It is a miserable life to go from house to house,
and where you are a stranger you may not open your mouth. You will play the host and provide
drink without being thanked, and besides this you will hear bitter words. Come here stranger,
prepare the table, and if you have anything at hand let me have it to eat. Give place,
stranger, to an honored person. My brother has come to stay with me.
I need my house.
These things are hard to bear for a man who has feeling, scolding about lodging and the
reproach of the moneylender.
The Book of Proverbs, chapter 23, verses 9 through 12.
Do not speak in the hearing of a fool, for he will despise the wisdom of your words.
Do not remove an ancient landmark or enter the fields of the fatherless, for the Redeemer
is strong.
He will plead their cause against you.
Apply your mind to instruction and your ear to words of knowledge.
Father in heaven, we give you praise and glory.
Thank you so much for this gift.
Thank you for unfolding the story.
This is part of our story, the story of the Maccabees, the story of the people of Israel
and the story of the history of the world.
Lord God, your hand is hidden in the affairs of our lives and we ask you to please give
us the eyes of faith so that we can see you're working. Give us a heart of faith that we can trust in your presence and give us a
lively and active faith that we can put your commandments into practice.
Put your wisdom into action and help us to follow you this day and every day. In Jesus name we pray.
Amen. In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Okay, so a couple quick things, maybe three.
Three quick things, how about?
Let's go somewhat in reverse.
Go three, one, two.
So, Proverbs first.
There's a proverb we heard today
that is very, very similar to a proverb we heard previously.
And that is, do not remove an ancient landmark
or enter the fields of the fatherless,
for the redeemer is strong,
he will plead their cause against you.
Basically, there was a proverb we had earlier
that was also kind of that sense of like,
do not remove those ancient statues, those ancient signs, those ancient, not statues is the wrong
word for it, but that landmark, that kind of situation of don't tear down altars, so don't
tear down fences. Essentially that sense of if I come across something, and this is so interesting,
it's just when it comes to wisdom, there's a man in GK Chesterton and he might be not the first one
to point it out. I mean in fact we have it here in the book of Proverbs, but Chesterton had pointed out
at one point, he was a man who was an atheist for a long time at the beginning of the 1900s
and he became a Catholic.
And one thing he said when it came to wisdom, and this is one of the things that we're
trying to grow in as we follow God's word is trying to go and grow in wisdom.
He said, if you were to buy a piece of land and you came across a fence on your piece of land
And you didn't know why it was there. He said the most foolish thing to do would be to say
I don't know why this is here. I'm gonna tear it down
The most foolish thing would be to say I don't know why someone built this. I don't see any purpose for it
Let's eliminate it
He said that'd be the most foolish thing you possibly could do to
Tear down something because you didn't understand
why someone built it in the first place?
And that's so wise because a lot of times,
you know, when we encounter the Lord
or even just anytime in our daily life,
we might not understand a commandment of God
and say, well, I don't know why this is here.
Let's just dismiss it.
You might encounter the wisdom of God and think like,
I don't know exactly what is this for?
What's the point of this?
And be tempted to tear it down, to be tempted to eliminate it.
And in Chesterton and here in Proverbs, that's the last time
that a person should tear something down is when you don't understand
why they put it up in the first place.
I don't know why this fence is here.
At some point though, it was put there for a reason.
It might be because, yeah, the people who were previously here,
they owned cattle and this fence kept the cattle in okay
I don't own cattle now
Maybe I can tear down the fence because I know the reason why it's there and I know the reason no longer applies
That's that's smart. That's wisdom
But to say um, I don't know the history of this place. Maybe this this the fence
Uh is because right beyond the fence. There's a cliff and people have wandered off the cliff,
therefore here is the fence that helps us.
Again, when I don't understand why a thing is there,
the last thing I should possibly do
if I'm gonna be wise is to tear it down.
And that is the wisdom here in Proverbs
and the wisdom in our lives.
Okay, then to Maccabees.
First Maccabees 11, one Maccabees, one, one.
This is a history lesson
and one of the things that I just, gosh, I hate to say this, on the 11th day of walking through Maccabees one one this is a history lesson and I one of the things that I just gosh I don't I hate to say this on the 11th day of walking through Maccabees
It's like well father you're finally saying this
I probably should have said this before we even started but you know how so many books of the Bible are historical books
I mean we we've gone through the narrative right the narrative are the historical books we went through
Genesis and Exodus and numbers and Deuteronomy these are
telling the story Joshua judges they're telling the story but here's the
interesting thing virtually all of those tellings of the story the
historical story has been different than first Maccabees now second Maccabees is
gonna be a whole nother kind of thing but those other stories things would
happen there'd be battles there'd stories, things would happen. There'd be battles, there'd
be prayers, there would be failure, there'd be victory. And all the while, the author
of the book would be saying, here's what this means. And here's where God was present.
And here's where God was absent. And here's where they were unfaithful. And that led to
this. And basically, all of those other historical books, they look through the lens of faith. How is God present?
How is God active? How are the people faithful or how are they unfaithful?
Maccabees chapter 11 highlights the fact that the author of Maccabees, even though it's divinely inspired telling us this real history
the author doesn't
Give us a sermon the author doesn't say here's where God was present.
Yes, in some of the battles they say you know that here's Judas Maccabeus and he
prayed and they had victory, but it is not as clearly marked out and delineated
as it is in the other books. Basically the author of First Maccabees is just
telling us the story with very very little editorial comments I'll say it
like that which is fascinating to us because we're so used to the editorial
comments we're so used to well tell me what this means to the eyes of faith and
yet as we're going through Maccabees we have to realize this is a book of faith
but the sermon is left out if that makes any sense so as we continue Maccabees you
know there are 16 chapters Maccabees five left
Keep that in mind you the sermon is gonna be left out
so we're getting the story of the rise and the fall of these dynasties and the rise and the fall of these kings and and
basically as Jeff said on the first day of the Maccabean revolt time period and
As he pointed this out. He said this is still the story of the people of Israel. And this is not God being silent for 400 years.
This is God being very, very present
and very, very active and engaged.
But we have to have the eyes to see it for ourselves
because the author's not going to point it out here
in First Maccabees.
Okay, last, last quick thing.
Gosh, I, Sirach, you know, Sirach is a lot like Proverbs.
It's gonna be a lot like some of the other,
those wisdom books.
And so sometimes it can feel like disjointed advice and yet there's themes that come
up very regularly. One of those themes is the power of words. And so in chapter
28 beginning with that gosh you didn't you can begin with the verse one but I'm
gonna jump into verse 11. It says, a hasty quarrel kindles fire
and urgent strife sheds blood.
Yes, that sense of gosh, how many times have people,
families, brothers, sisters, parents been divided
because of a hasty quarrel?
We rushed into a fight we shouldn't have fought,
but we did this.
But it goes on to say, where does that come from?
And I love this essentially a proverb here
in Sirach 28 verse 12. If you blow on a spark, where does that come from? And I love this essentially a proverb here in Sirach 28 verse 12.
If you blow on a spark, it will glow.
If you spit on it, it will be put out
and both come out of your mouth.
I think about how that is so true
that you blow on a spark, blow on an ember
and it will glow and will hopefully grow into a flame
if you want the flame.
But you spit on it and puts the ember out.
And both come from the same source.
So what are the things that are coming out of my mouth?
Do they bring warmth and light?
Or do they bring destruction and devastation?
Goes on to say, verse 13,
curse the whisperer and deceiver,
for he has destroyed many who were at peace.
It goes on this whole section almost to the very end of chapter 28, talking about how the power of
the word, the power of tongues, the power of what we say and how, you know, the last thing people
will oftentimes confess in confession is gossip or slander or just any kind of like talking about
anyone else. That's one of the of what you might call an acceptable sin
in our day and age.
When I say acceptable sin, what I mean is,
it's the kind of sin that you can use as an example.
If there's like, oh yeah, I struggle with anger,
I struggle with slander.
Those things are way more acceptable to say.
And we think, oh yeah, me too kind of thing.
But some of the other non-acceptable sins
will be the things we wouldn't necessarily use
as our personal examples.
Oh, I struggle with this thing.
I can't even think of an example right now
that's not embarrassing to say.
And so, yet, here's verse 17, last thing here.
Chapter 28 verse 17.
The blow of a whip raises a welt.
Yeah, hurts, terrible.
But the blow of the tongue crushes bones.
Many have fallen by the edge of the sword,
but not so many as have fallen because of the tongue.
Gosh, again, our words are just so powerful,
and so we ask the Lord to please help us
to use our words well, to be wise in how we speak,
and to give him glory and not destruction
for the people around us.
But that is a struggle for a lot of us,
and so we need prayers. I'm praying for you. Please, please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike. I cannot wait to see you tomorrow. God bless.