The Grandson of Ben Sira

Updated by: 
Charles Stover
Research notes: 
CS/not checked/04/12/2019
Reference type: 
Journal Article
Author(s): 
Cadbury, Henry J.
year: 
1955
Full title: 

The Grandson of Ben Sira

Journal / Book Title || Series Title: 
Harvard Theological Review
Volume: 
48
Issue / Series Volume: 
4
Abbreviated Series Name: 
HTR
Pages: 
219-225
Work type: 
Essay/Monograph
Abstract: 

Users of Bible Translations and especially makers of them have reason to be interested in the grandson of Ben Sira. He is perhaps the earliest identified person of either species. He lived in Egypt twenty-one centuries ago having arrived there, as he tells us, “in the thirty-eighth year under Euergetes the King,” which is probably 132 B.C. That is of course too early to speak of a finished Bible, though he does know the law and the prophets and other books and knows them also in another tongue than Hebrew. It was another Hebrew book—what we call Ecclesiasticus—written by his own grandfather, that he himself translated into Greek. With other translations this was accepted into the Greek and Christian Bible and so has come down to us in the Septuagint, while its original in Hebrew was not ultimately so received in the Hebrew or Jewish Bible.

Primary Texts: Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha: 
Composition / Author: 
Ben Sira
URL: 
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/harvard-theological-review/article/grandson-of-ben-sira/6A428F574B08B7DC0133E5FAA8502B5E
Record number: 
105 988