The Perfection of 'Love for Offspring': Greek Representations of Maternal Affection and the Achievement of the Heroine of 4 Maccabees

Full title
The Perfection of 'Love for Offspring': Greek Representations of Maternal Affection and the Achievement of the Heroine of 4 Maccabees
Updated By
Research notes

reader checked|02/06/2014 SE

Reference type
Author(s)
DeSilva, David A.
Year
2006
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
New Testament Studies
Volume
52
Issue / Series Volume
2
Pages
251-268
Alternative title
NTS
Label
21/07/2008NS
Abstract

A close comparison with Plutarch's De amore prolis and Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics shows the author of 4 Maccabees to have used common topics from Greek ethical reflection on love for offspring as a means of commending Torah-observance as the means by which one is enabled to secure one's children's eternal well-being, fulfilling the natural goal of love for offspring more completely. The author shows how trust in God's future enables the mother to view even the death of her children as the fulfillment rather than the negation of her maternal investment, as in the laments of Euripides's heroines in Trojan Women and Hecuba, from which the author explicitly distances her, enabling her exemplary courage.

Primary Texts: Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha
Composition / Author
Passage
14^15