Chapter 1
1: In the
twelfth year of the reign of Nebuchadnezzar, who ruled over the
Assyrians in the great city of Nineveh, in the days of Arphaxad,
who ruled over the Medes in Ecbatana --
2: he is the king who built walls about Ecbatana with
hewn stones three cubits thick and six cubits long; he made the
walls seventy cubits high and fifty cubits wide;
3: at the gates he built towers a hundred cubits high and
sixty cubits wide at the foundations;
4: and he made its gates, which were seventy cubits high
and forty cubits wide, so that his armies could march out in
force and his infantry form their ranks --
5: it was in those days that King Nebuchadnezzar made war
against King Arphaxad in the great plain which is on the borders
of Ragae.
6: He was joined by all the people of the hill country
and all those who lived along the Euphrates and the Tigris and
the Hydaspes and in the plain where Arioch ruled the Elymaeans.
Many nations joined the forces of the Chaldeans.
7: Then Nebuchadnezzar king of the Assyrians sent to all
who lived in Persia and to all who lived in the west, those who
lived in Cilicia and Damascus and Lebanon and Antilebanon and
all who lived along the seacoast,
8: and those among the nations of Carmel and Gilead, and
Upper Galilee and the great Plain of Esdraelon,
9: and all who were in Samaria and its surrounding towns,
and beyond the Jordan as far as Jerusalem and Bethany and
Chelous and Kadesh and the river of Egypt, and Tahpanhes and
Raamses and the whole land of Goshen,
10: even beyond Tanis and Memphis, and all who lived in
Egypt as far as the borders of Ethiopia.
11: But all who lived in the whole region disregarded the
orders of Nebuchadnezzar king of the Assyrians, and refused to
join him in the war; for they were not afraid of him, but looked
upon him as only one man, and they sent back his messengers
empty-handed and shamefaced.
12: Then Nebuchadnezzar was very angry with this whole
region, and swore by his throne and kingdom that he would surely
take revenge on the whole territory of Cilicia and Damascus and
Syria, that he would kill them by the sword, and also all the
inhabitants of the land of Moab, and the people of Ammon, and
all Judea, and every one in Egypt, as far as the coasts of the
two seas.
13: In the seventeenth year he led his forces against
King Arphaxad, and defeated him in battle, and overthrew the
whole army of Arphaxad, and all his cavalry and all his
chariots.
14: Thus he took possession of his cities, and came to
Ecbatana, captured its towers, plundered its markets, and turned
its beauty into shame.
15: He captured Arphaxad in the mountains of Ragae and
struck him down with hunting spears; and he utterly destroyed
him, to this day.
16: Then he returned with them to Nineveh, he and all his
combined forces, a vast body of troops; and there he and his
forces rested and feasted for one hundred and twenty days.
Chapter 2
1: In the
eighteenth year, on the twenty-second day of the first month,
there was talk in the palace of Nebuchadnezzar king of the
Assyrians about carrying out his revenge on the whole region,
just as he said.
2: He called together all his officers and all his nobles
and set forth to them his secret plan and recounted fully, with
his own lips, all the wickedness of the region;
3: and it was decided that every one who had not obeyed
his command should be destroyed.
4: When he had finished setting forth his plan,
Nebuchadnezzar king of the Assyrians called Holofernes, the
chief general of his army, second only to himself, and said to
him,
5: "Thus says the Great King, the lord of the whole
earth: When you leave my presence, take with you men confident
in their strength, to the number of one hundred and twenty
thousand foot soldiers and twelve thousand cavalry.
6: Go and attack the whole west country, because they
disobeyed my orders.
7: Tell them to prepare earth and water, for I am coming
against them in my anger, and will cover the whole face of the
earth with the feet of my armies, and will hand them over to be
plundered by my troops,
8: till their wounded shall fill their valleys, and every
brook and river shall be filled with their dead, and overflow;
9: and I will lead them away captive to the ends of the
whole earth.
10: You shall go and seize all their territory for me in
advance. They will yield themselves to you, and you shall hold
them for me till the day of their punishment.
11: But if they refuse, your eye shall not spare and you
shall hand them over to slaughter and plunder throughout your
whole region.
12: For as I live, and by the power of my kingdom, what I
have spoken my hand will execute.
13: And you -- take care not to transgress any of your
sovereign's commands, but be sure to carry them out just as I
have ordered you; and do not delay about it."
14: So Holofernes left the presence of his master, and
called together all the commanders, generals, and officers of
the Assyrian army,
15: and mustered the picked troops by divisions as his
lord had ordered him to do, one hundred and twenty thousand of
them, together with twelve thousand archers on horseback,
16: and he organized them as a great army is marshaled
for a campaign.
17: He collected a vast number of camels and asses and
mules for transport, and innumerable sheep and oxen and goats
for provision;
18: also plenty of food for every man, and a huge amount
of gold and silver from the royal palace.
19: So he set out with his whole army, to go ahead of
King Nebuchadnezzar and to cover the whole face of the earth to
the west with their chariots and horsemen and picked troops of
infantry.
20: Along with them went a mixed crowd like a swarm of
locusts, like the dust of the earth -- a multitude that could
not be counted.
21: They marched for three days from Nineveh to the plain
of Bectileth, and camped opposite Bectileth near the mountain
which is to the north of Upper Cilicia.
22: From there Holofernes took his whole army, his
infantry, cavalry, and chariots, and went up into the hill
country
23: and ravaged Put and Lud, and plundered all the people
of Rassis and the Ishmaelites who lived along the desert, south
of the country of the Chelleans.
24: Then he followed the Euphrates and passed through
Mesopotamia and destroyed all the hilltop cities along the brook
Abron, as far as the sea.
25: He also seized the territory of Cilicia, and killed
every one who resisted him, and came to the southern borders of
Japheth, fronting toward Arabia.
26: He surrounded all the Midianites, and burned their
tents and plundered their sheepfolds.
27: Then he went down into the plain of Damascus during
the wheat harvest, and burned all their fields and destroyed
their flocks and herds and sacked their cities and ravaged their
lands and put to death all their young men with the edge of the
sword.
28: So fear and terror of him fell upon all the people
who lived along the seacoast, at Sidon and Tyre, and those who
lived in Sur and Ocina and all who lived in Jamnia. Those who
lived in Azotus and Ascalon feared him exceedingly.
Chapter 3
1: So they
sent messengers to sue for peace, and said,
2: "Behold, we the servants of Nebuchadnezzar, the
Great King, lie prostrate before you. Do with us whatever you
will.
3: Behold, our buildings, and all our land, and all our
wheat fields, and our flocks and herds, and all our sheepfolds
with their tents, lie before you; do with them whatever you
please.
4: Our cities also and their inhabitants are your slaves;
come and deal with them in any way that seems good to you."
5: The men came to Holofernes and told him all this.
6: Then he went down to the seacoast with his army and
stationed garrisons in the hilltop cities and took picked men
from them as his allies.
7: And these people and all in the country round about
welcomed him with garlands and dances and tambourines.
8: And he demolished all their shrines and cut down their
sacred groves; for it had been given to him to destroy all the
gods of the land, so that all nations should worship
Nebuchadnezzar only, and all their tongues and tribes should
call upon him as god.
9: Then he came to the edge of Esdraelon, near Dothan,
fronting the great ridge of Judea;
10: here he camped between Geba and Scythopolis, and
remained for a whole month in order to assemble all the supplies
for his army.
Chapter 4
1: By this
time the people of Israel living in Judea heard of everything
that Holofernes, the general of Nebuchadnezzar the king of the
Assyrians, had done to the nations, and how he had plundered and
destroyed all their temples;
2: they were therefore very greatly terrified at his
approach, and were alarmed both for Jerusalem and for the temple
of the Lord their God.
3: For they had only recently returned from the
captivity, and all the people of Judea were newly gathered
together, and the sacred vessels and the altar and the temple
had been consecrated after their profanation.
4: So they sent to every district of Samaria, and to Kona
and Beth-horon and Belmain and Jericho and to Choba and Aesora
and the valley of Salem,
5: and immediately seized all the high hilltops and
fortified the villages on them and stored up food in preparation
for war -- since their fields had recently been harvested.
6: And Joakim, the high priest, who was in Jerusalem at
the time, wrote to the people of Bethulia and Betomesthaim,
which faces Esdraelon opposite the plain near Dothan,
7: ordering them to seize the passes up into the hills,
since by them Judea could be invaded, and it was easy to stop
any who tried to enter, for the approach was narrow, only wide
enough for two men at the most.
8: So the Israelites did as Joakim the high priest and
the senate of the whole people of Israel, in session at
Jerusalem, had given order.
9: And every man of Israel cried out to God with great
fervor, and they humbled themselves with much fasting.
10: They and their wives and their children and their
cattle and every resident alien and hired laborer and purchased
slave -- they all girded themselves with sackcloth.
11: And all the men and women of Israel, and their
children, living at Jerusalem, prostrated themselves before the
temple and put ashes on their heads and spread out their
sackcloth before the Lord.
12: They even surrounded the altar with sackcloth and
cried out in unison, praying earnestly to the God of Israel not
to give up their infants as prey and their wives as booty, and
the cities they had inherited to be destroyed, and the sanctuary
to be profaned and desecrated to the malicious joy of the
Gentiles.
13: So the Lord heard their prayers and looked upon their
affliction; for the people fasted many days throughout Judea and
in Jerusalem before the sanctuary of the Lord Almighty.
14: And Joakim the high priest and all the priests who
stood before the Lord and ministered to the Lord, with their
loins girded with sackcloth, offered the continual burnt
offerings and the vows and freewill offerings of the people.
15: With ashes upon their turbans, they cried out to the
Lord with all their might to look with favor upon the whole
house of Israel.
Chapter 5
1: When
Holofernes, the general of the Assyrian army, heard that the
people of Israel had prepared for war and had closed the passes
in the hills and fortified all the high hilltops and set up
barricades in the plains,
2: he was very angry. So he called together all the
princes of Moab and the commanders of Ammon and all the
governors of the coastland,
3: and said to them, "Tell me, you Canaanites, what
people is this that lives in the hill country? What cities do
they inhabit? How large is their army, and in what does their
power or strength consist? Who rules over them as king, leading
their army?
4: And why have they alone, of all who live in the west,
refused to come out and meet me?"
5: Then Achior, the leader of all the Ammonites, said to
him, "Let my lord now hear a word from the mouth of your
servant, and I will tell you the truth about this people that
dwells in the nearby mountain district. No falsehood shall come
from your servant's mouth.
6: This people is descended from the Chaldeans.
7: At one time they lived in Mesopotamia, because they
would not follow the gods of their fathers who were in Chaldea.
8: For they had left the ways of their ancestors, and
they worshiped the God of heaven, the God they had come to know;
hence they drove them out from the presence of their gods; and
they fled to Mesopotamia, and lived there for a long time.
9: Then their God commanded them to leave the place where
they were living and go to the land of Canaan. There they
settled, and prospered, with much gold and silver and very many
cattle.
10: When a famine spread over Canaan they went down to
Egypt and lived there as long as they had food; and there they
became a great multitude -- so great that they could not be
counted.
11: So the king of Egypt became hostile to them; he took
advantage of them and set them to making bricks, and humbled
them and made slaves of them.
12: Then they cried out to their God, and he afflicted
the whole land of Egypt with incurable plagues; and so the
Egyptians drove them out of their sight.
13: Then God dried up the Red Sea before them,
14: and he led them by the way of Sinai and
Kadesh-barnea, and drove out all the people of the wilderness.
15: So they lived in the land of the Amorites, and by
their might destroyed all the inhabitants of Heshbon; and
crossing over the Jordan they took possession of all the hill
country.
16: And they drove out before them the Canaanites and the
Perizzites and the Jebusites and the Shechemites and all the
Gergesites, and lived there a long time.
17: As long as they did not sin against their God they
prospered, for the God who hates iniquity is with them.
18: But when they departed from the way which he had
appointed for them, they were utterly defeated in many battles
and were led away captive to a foreign country; the temple of
their God was razed to the ground, and their cities were
captured by their enemies.
19: But now they have returned to their God, and have
come back from the places to which they were scattered, and have
occupied Jerusalem, where their sanctuary is, and have settled
in the hill country, because it was uninhabited.
20: Now therefore, my master and lord, if there is any
unwitting error in this people and they sin against their God
and we find out their offense, then we will go up and defeat
them.
21: But if there is no transgression in their nation,
then let my lord pass them by; for their Lord will defend them,
and their God will protect them, and we shall be put to shame
before the whole world."
22: When Achior had finished saying this, all the men
standing around the tent began to complain; Holofernes' officers
and all the men from the seacoast and from Moab insisted that he
must be put to death.
23: "For," they said, "we will not be
afraid of the Israelites; they are a people with no strength or
power for making war.
24: Therefore let us go up, Lord Holofernes, and they
will be devoured by your vast army."
Chapter 6
1: When the
disturbance made by the men outside the council died down,
Holofernes, the commander of the Assyrian army, said to Achior
and all the Moabites in the presence of all the foreign
contingents:
2: "And who are you, Achior, and you hirelings of
Ephraim, to prophesy among us as you have done today and tell us
not to make war against the people of Israel because their God
will defend them? Who is God except Nebuchadnezzar?
3: He will send his forces and will destroy them from the
face of the earth, and their God will not deliver them -- we the
king's servants will destroy them as one man. They cannot resist
the might of our cavalry.
4: We will burn them up, and their mountains will be
drunk with their blood, and their fields will be full of their
dead. They cannot withstand us, but will utterly perish. So says
King Nebuchadnezzar, the lord of the whole earth. For he has
spoken; none of his words shall be in vain.
5: "But you, Achior, you Ammonite hireling, who have
said these words on the day of your iniquity, you shall not see
my face again from this day until I take revenge on this race
that came out of Egypt.
6: Then the sword of my army and the spear of my servants
shall pierce your sides, and you shall fall among their wounded,
when I return.
7: Now my slaves are going to take you back into the hill
country and put you in one of the cities beside the passes,
8: and you will not die until you perish along with them.
9: If you really hope in your heart that they will not be
taken, do not look downcast! I have spoken and none of my words
shall fail."
10: Then Holofernes ordered his slaves, who waited on him
in his tent, to seize Achior and take him to Bethulia and hand
him over to the men of Israel.
11: So the slaves took him and led him out of the camp
into the plain, and from the plain they went up into the hill
country and came to the springs below Bethulia.
12: When the men of the city saw them, they caught up
their weapons and ran out of the city to the top of the hill,
and all the slingers kept them from coming up by casting stones
at them.
13: However, they got under the shelter of the hill and
they bound Achior and left him lying at the foot of the hill,
and returned to their master.
14: Then the men of Israel came down from their city and
found him; and they untied him and brought him into Bethulia and
placed him before the magistrates of their city,
15: who in those days were Uzziah the son of Micah, of
the tribe of Simeon, and Chabris the son of Gothoniel, and
Charmis the son of Melchiel.
16: They called together all the elders of the city, and
all their young men and their women ran to the assembly; and
they set Achior in the midst of all their people, and Uzziah
asked him what had happened.
17: He answered and told them what had taken place at the
council of Holofernes, and all that he had said in the presence
of the Assyrian leaders, and all that Holofernes had said so
boastfully against the house of Israel.
18: Then the people fell down and worshiped God, and
cried out to him, and said,
19: "O Lord God of heaven, behold their arrogance,
and have pity on the humiliation of our people, and look this
day upon the faces of those who are consecrated to thee."
20: Then they consoled Achior, and praised him greatly.
21: And Uzziah took him from the assembly to his own
house and gave a banquet for the elders; and all that night they
called on the God of Israel for help.
Chapter 7
1: The next
day Holofernes ordered his whole army, and all the allies who
had joined him, to break camp and move against Bethulia, and to
seize the passes up into the hill country and make war on the
Israelites.
2: So all their warriors moved their camp that day; their
force of men of war was one hundred and seventy thousand
infantry and twelve thousand cavalry, together with the baggage
and the foot soldiers handling it, a very great multitude.
3: They encamped in the valley near Bethulia, beside the
spring, and they spread out in breadth over Dothan as far as
Balbaim and in length from Bethulia to Cyamon, which faces
Esdraelon.
4: When the Israelites saw their vast numbers they were
greatly terrified, and every one said to his neighbor,
"These men will now lick up the face of the whole land;
neither the high mountains nor the valleys nor the hills will
bear their weight."
5: Then each man took up his weapons, and when they had
kindled fires on their towers they remained on guard all that
night.
6: On the second day Holofernes led out all his cavalry
in full view of the Israelites in Bethulia,
7: and examined the approaches to the city, and visited
the springs that supplied their water, and seized them and set
guards of soldiers over them, and then returned to his army.
8: Then all the chieftains of the people of Esau and all
the leaders of the Moabites and the commanders of the coastland
came to him and said,
9: "Let our lord hear a word, lest his army be
defeated.
10: For these people, the Israelites, do not rely on
their spears but on the height of the mountains where they live,
for it is not easy to reach the tops of their mountains.
11: Therefore, my lord, do not fight against them in
battle array, and not a man of your army will fall.
12: Remain in your camp, and keep all the men in your
forces with you; only let your servants take possession of the
spring of water that flows from the foot of the mountain --
13: for this is where all the people of Bethulia get
their water. So thirst will destroy them, and they will give up
their city. We and our people will go up to the tops of the
nearby mountains and camp there to keep watch that not a man
gets out of the city.
14: They and their wives and children will waste away
with famine, and before the sword reaches them they will be
strewn about in the streets where they live.
15: So you will pay them back with evil, because they
rebelled and did not receive you peaceably."
16: These words pleased Holofernes and all his servants,
and he gave orders to do as they had said.
17: So the army of the Ammonites moved forward, together
with five thousand Assyrians, and they encamped in the valley
and seized the water supply and the springs of the Israelites.
18: And the sons of Esau and the sons of Ammon went up
and encamped in the hill country opposite Dothan; and they sent
some of their men toward the south and the east, toward Acraba,
which is near Chusi beside the brook Mochmur. The rest of the
Assyrian army encamped in the plain, and covered the whole face
of the land, and their tents and supply trains spread out in
great number, and they formed a vast multitude.
19: The people of Israel cried out to the Lord their God,
for their courage failed, because all their enemies had
surrounded them and there was no way of escape from them.
20: The whole Assyrian army, their infantry, chariots,
and cavalry, surrounded them for thirty-four days, until all the
vessels of water belonging to every inhabitant of Bethulia were
empty;
21: their cisterns were going dry, and they did not have
enough water to drink their fill for a single day, because it
was measured out to them to drink.
22: Their children lost heart, and the women and young
men fainted from thirst and fell down in the streets of the city
and in the passages through the gates; there was no strength
left in them any longer.
23: Then all the people, the young men, the women, and
the children, gathered about Uzziah and the rulers of the city
and cried out with a loud voice, and said before all the elders,
24: "God be judge between you and us! For you have
done us a great injury in not making peace with the Assyrians.
25: For now we have no one to help us; God has sold us
into their hands, to strew us on the ground before them with
thirst and utter destruction.
26: Now call them in and surrender the whole city to the
army of Holofernes and to all his forces, to be plundered.
27: For it would be better for us to be captured by them;
for we will be slaves, but our lives will be spared, and we
shall not witness the death of our babes before our eyes, or see
our wives and children draw their last breath.
28: We call to witness against you heaven and earth and
our God, the Lord of our fathers, who punishes us according to
our sins and the sins of our fathers. Let him not do this day
the things which we have described!"
29: Then great and general lamentation arose throughout
the assembly, and they cried out to the Lord God with a loud
voice.
30: And Uzziah said to them, "Have courage, my
brothers! Let us hold out for five more days; by that time the
Lord our God will restore to us his mercy, for he will not
forsake us utterly.
31: But if these days pass by, and no help comes for us,
I will do what you say."
32: Then he dismissed the people to their various posts,
and they went up on the walls and towers of their city. The
women and children he sent home. And they were greatly depressed
in the city.
Chapter 8
1: At that
time Judith heard about these things: she was the daughter of
Merari the son of Ox, son of Joseph, son of Oziel, son of
Elkiah, son of Ananias, son of Gideon, son of Raphaim, son of
Ahitub, son of Elijah, son of Hilkiah, son of Eliab, son of
Nathanael, son of Salamiel, son of Sarasadai, son of Israel.
2: Her husband Manasseh, who belonged to her tribe and
family, had died during the barley harvest.
3: For as he stood overseeing the men who were binding
sheaves in the field, he was overcome by the burning heat, and
took to his bed and died in Bethulia his city. So they buried
him with his fathers in the field between Dothan and Balamon.
4: Judith had lived at home as a widow for three years
and four months.
5: She set up a tent for herself on the roof of her
house, and girded sackcloth about her loins and wore the
garments of her widowhood.
6: She fasted all the days of her widowhood, except the
day before the sabbath and the sabbath itself, the day before
the new moon and the day of the new moon, and the feasts and
days of rejoicing of the house of Israel.
7: She was beautiful in appearance, and had a very lovely
face; and her husband Manasseh had left her gold and silver, and
men and women slaves, and cattle, and fields; and she maintained
this estate.
8: No one spoke ill of her, for she feared God with great
devotion.
9: When Judith heard the wicked words spoken by the
people against the ruler, because they were faint for lack of
water, and when she heard all that Uzziah said to them, and how
he promised them under oath to surrender the city to the
Assyrians after five days,
10: she sent her maid, who was in charge of all she
possessed, to summon Chabris and Charmis, the elders of her
city.
11: They came to her, and she said to them, "Listen
to me, rulers of the people of Bethulia! What you have said to
the people today is not right; you have even sworn and
pronounced this oath between God and you, promising to surrender
the city to our enemies unless the Lord turns and helps us
within so many days.
12: Who are you, that have put God to the test this day,
and are setting yourselves up in the place of God among the sons
of men?
13: You are putting the Lord Almighty to the test -- but
you will never know anything!
14: You cannot plumb the depths of the human heart, nor
find out what a man is thinking; how do you expect to search out
God, who made all these things, and find out his mind or
comprehend his thought? No, my brethren, do not provoke the Lord
our God to anger.
15: For if he does not choose to help us within these
five days, he has power to protect us within any time he
pleases, or even to destroy us in the presence of our enemies.
16: Do not try to bind the purposes of the Lord our God;
for God is not like man, to be threatened, nor like a human
being, to be won over by pleading.
17: Therefore, while we wait for his deliverance, let us
call upon him to help us, and he will hear our voice, if it
pleases him.
18: "For never in our generation, nor in these
present days, has there been any tribe or family or people or
city of ours which worshiped gods made with hands, as was done
in days gone by --
19: and that was why our fathers were handed over to the
sword, and to be plundered, and so they suffered a great
catastrophe before our enemies.
20: But we know no other god but him, and therefore we
hope that he will not disdain us or any of our nation.
21: For if we are captured all Judea will be captured and
our sanctuary will be plundered; and he will exact of us the
penalty for its desecration.
22: And the slaughter of our brethren and the captivity
of the land and the desolation of our inheritance -- all this he
will bring upon our heads among the Gentiles, wherever we serve
as slaves; and we shall be an offense and a reproach in the eyes
of those who acquire us.
23: For our slavery will not bring us into favor, but the
Lord our God will turn it to dishonor.
24: "Now therefore, brethren, let us set an example
to our brethren, for their lives depend upon us, and the
sanctuary and the temple and the altar rest upon us.
25: In spite of everything let us give thanks to the Lord
our God, who is putting us to the test as he did our
forefathers.
26: Remember what he did with Abraham, and how he tested
Isaac, and what happened to Jacob in Mesopotamia in Syria, while
he was keeping the sheep of Laban, his mother's brother.
27: For he has not tried us with fire, as he did them, to
search their hearts, nor has he taken revenge upon us; but the
Lord scourges those who draw near to him, in order to admonish
them."
28: Then Uzziah said to her, "All that you have said
has been spoken out of a true heart, and there is no one who can
deny your words.
29: Today is not the first time your wisdom has been
shown, but from the beginning of your life all the people have
recognized your understanding, for your heart's disposition is
right.
30: But the people were very thirsty, and they compelled
us to do for them what we have promised, and made us take an
oath which we cannot break.
31: So pray for us, since you are a devout woman, and the
Lord will send us rain to fill our cisterns and we will no
longer be faint."
32: Judith said to them, "Listen to me. I am about
to do a thing which will go down through all generations of our
descendants.
33: Stand at the city gate tonight, and I will go out
with my maid; and within the days after which you have promised
to surrender the city to our enemies, the Lord will deliver
Israel by my hand.
34: Only, do not try to find out what I plan; for I will
not tell you until I have finished what I am about to do."
35: Uzziah and the rulers said to her, "Go in peace,
and may the Lord God go before you, to take revenge upon our
enemies."
36: So they returned from the tent and went to their
posts.
Chapter 9
1: Then Judith
fell upon her face, and put ashes on her head, and uncovered the
sackcloth she was wearing; and at the very time when that
evening's incense was being offered in the house of God in
Jerusalem, Judith cried out to the Lord with a loud voice, and
said,
2: "O Lord God of my father Simeon, to whom thou
gavest a sword to take revenge on the strangers who had loosed
the girdle of a virgin to defile her, and uncovered her thigh to
put her to shame, and polluted her womb to disgrace her; for
thou hast said, `It shall not be done' -- yet they did it.
3: So thou gavest up their rulers to be slain, and their
bed, which was ashamed of the deceit they had practiced, to be
stained with blood, and thou didst strike down slaves along with
princes, and princes on their thrones;
4: and thou gavest their wives for a prey and their
daughters to captivity, and all their booty to be divided among
thy beloved sons, who were zealous for thee, and abhorred the
pollution of their blood, and called on thee for help -- O God,
my God, hear me also, a widow.
5: "For thou hast done these things and those that
went before and those that followed; thou hast designed the
things that are now, and those that are to come. Yea, the things
thou didst intend came to pass,
6: and the things thou didst will presented themselves
and said, `Lo, we are here'; for all they ways are prepared in
advance, and thy judgment is with foreknowledge.
7: "Behold now, the Assyrians are increased in their
might; they are exalted, with their horses and riders; they
glory in the strength of their foot soldiers; they trust in
shield and spear, in bow and sling, and know not that thou art
the Lord who crushest wars; the Lord is thy name.
8: Break their strength by thy might, and bring down
their power in thy anger; for they intend to defile thy
sanctuary, and to pollute the tabernacle where thy glorious name
rests, and to cast down the horn of thy altar with the sword.
9: Behold their pride, and send thy wrath upon their
heads; give to me, a widow, the strength to do what I plan.
10: By the deceit of my lips strike down the slave with
the prince and the prince with his servant; crush their
arrogance by the hand of a woman.
11: "For thy power depends not upon numbers, nor thy
might upon men of strength; for thou art God of the lowly,
helper of the oppressed, upholder of the weak, protector of the
forlorn, savior of those without hope.
12: Hear, O hear me, God of my father, God of the
inheritance of Israel, Lord of heaven and earth, Creator of the
waters, King of all thy creation, hear my prayer!
13: Make my deceitful words to be their wound and stripe,
for they have planned cruel things against thy covenant, and
against thy consecrated house, and against the top of Zion, and
against the house possessed by thy children.
14: And cause thy whole nation and every tribe to know
and understand that thou art God, the God of all power and
might, and that there is no other who protects the people of
Israel but thou alone!"
Chapter 10
1: When Judith
had ceased crying out to the God of Israel, and had ended all
these words,
2: she rose from where she lay prostrate and called her
maid and went down into the house where she lived on sabbaths
and on her feast days;
3: and she removed the sackcloth which she had been
wearing, and took off her widow's garments, and bathed her body
with water, and anointed herself with precious ointment, and
combed her hair and put on a tiara, and arrayed herself in her
gayest apparel, which she used to wear while her husband
Manasseh was living.
4: And she put sandals on her feet, and put on her
anklets and bracelets and rings, and her earrings and all her
ornaments, and made herself very beautiful, to entice the eyes
of all men who might see her.
5: And she gave her maid a bottle of wine and a flask of
oil, and filled a bag with parched grain and a cake of dried
fruit and fine bread; and she wrapped up all her vessels and
gave them to her to carry.
6: Then they went out to the city gate of Bethulia, and
found Uzziah standing there with the elders of the city, Chabris
and Charmis.
7: When they saw her, and noted how her face was altered
and her clothing changed, they greatly admired her beauty, and
said to her,
8: "May the God of our fathers grant you favor and
fulfil your plans, that the people of Israel may glory and
Jerusalem may be exalted." And she worshiped God.
9: Then she said to them, "Order the gate of the
city to be opened for me, and I will go out and accomplish the
things about which you spoke with me." So they ordered the
young men to open the gate for her, as she had said.
10: When they had done this, Judith went out, she and her
maid with her; and the men of the city watched her until she had
gone down the mountain and passed through the valley and they
could no longer see her.
11: The women went straight on through the valley; and an
Assyrian patrol met her
12: and took her into custody, and asked her, "To
what people do you belong, and where are you coming from, and
where are you going?" She replied, "I am a daughter of
the Hebrews, but I am fleeing from them, for they are about to
be handed over to you to be devoured.
13: I am on my way to the presence of Holofernes the
commander of your army, to give him a true report; and I will
show him a way by which he can go and capture all the hill
country without losing one of his men, captured or slain."
14: When the men heard her words, and observed her face
-- she was in their eyes marvelously beautiful -- they said to
her,
15: "You have saved your life by hurrying down to
the presence of our lord. Go at once to his tent; some of us
will escort you and hand you over to him.
16: And when you stand before him, do not be afraid in
your heart, but tell him just what you have said, and he will
treat you well."
17: They chose from their number a hundred men to
accompany her and her maid, and they brought them to the tent of
Holofernes.
18: There was great excitement in the whole camp, for her
arrival was reported from tent to tent, and they came and stood
around her as she waited outside the tent of Holofernes while
they told him about her.
19: And they marveled at her beauty, and admired the
Israelites, judging them by her, and every one said to his
neighbor, "Who can despise these people, who have women
like this among them? Surely not a man of them had better be
left alive, for if we let them go they will be able to ensnare
the whole world!"
20: Then Holofernes' companions and all his servants came
out and led her into the tent.
21: Holofernes was resting on his bed, under a canopy
which was woven with purple and gold and emeralds and precious
stones.
22: When they told him of her he came forward to the
front of the tent, with silver lamps carried before him.
23: And when Judith came into the presence of Holofernes
and his servants, they all marveled at the beauty of her face;
and she prostrated herself and made obeisance to him, and his
slaves raised her up.
Chapter 11
1: Then
Holofernes said to her, "Take courage, woman, and do not be
afraid in your heart, for I have never hurt any one who chose to
serve Nebuchadnezzar, the king of all the earth.
2: And even now, if your people who live in the hill
country had not slighted me, I would never have lifted my spear
against them; but they have brought all this on themselves.
3: And now tell me why you have fled from them and have
come over to us -- since you have come to safety.
4: Have courage; you will live, tonight and from now on.
No one will hurt you, but all will treat you well, as they do
the servants of my lord King Nebuchadnezzar."
5: Judith replied to him, "Accept the words of your
servant, and let your maidservant speak in your presence, and I
will tell nothing false to my lord this night.
6: And if you follow out the words of your maidservant,
God will accomplish something through you, and my lord will not
fail to achieve his purposes.
7: Nebuchadnezzar the king of the whole earth lives, and
as his power endures, who had sent you to direct every living
soul, not only do men serve him because of you, but also the
beasts of the field and the cattle and the birds of the air will
live by your power under Nebuchadnezzar and all his house.
8: For we have heard of your wisdom and skill, and it is
reported throughout the whole world that you are the one good
man in the whole kingdom, thoroughly informed and marvelous in
military strategy.
9: "Now as for the things Achior said in your
council, we have heard his words, for the men of Bethulia spared
him and he told them all he had said to you.
10: Therefore, my lord and master, do not disregard what
he said, but keep it in your mind, for it is true: our nation
cannot be punished, nor can the sword prevail against them,
unless they sin against their God.
11: "And now, in order that my lord may not be
defeated and his purpose frustrated, death will fall upon them,
for a sin has overtaken them by which they are about to provoke
their God to anger when they do what is wrong.
12: Since their food supply is exhausted and their water
has almost given out, they have planned to kill their cattle and
have determined to use all that God by his laws has forbidden
them to eat.
13: They have decided to consume the first fruits of the
grain and the tithes of the wine and oil, which they had
consecrated and set aside for the priests who minister in the
presence of our God at Jerusalem -- although it is not lawful
for any of the people so much as to touch these things with
their hands.
14: They have sent men to Jerusalem, because even the
people living there have been doing this, to bring back to them
permission from the senate.
15: When the word reaches them and they proceed to do
this, on that very day they will be handed over to you to be
destroyed.
16: "Therefore, when I, your servant, learned all
this, I fled from them; and God has sent me to accomplish with
you things that will astonish the whole world, as many as shall
hear about them.
17: For your servant is religious, and serves the God of
heaven day and night; therefore, my lord, I will remain with
you, and every night your servant will go out into the valley,
and I will pray to God and he will tell me when they have
committed their sins.
18: And I will come and tell you, and then you shall go
out with your whole army, and not one of them will withstand
you.
19: Then I will lead you through the middle of Judea,
till you come to Jerusalem; and I will set your throne in the
midst of it; and you will lead them like sheep that have no
shepherd, and not a dog will so much as open its mouth to growl
at you. For this has been told me, by my foreknowledge; it was
announced to me, and I was sent to tell you."
20: Her words pleased Holofernes and all his servants,
and they marveled at her wisdom and said,
21: "There is not such a woman from one end of the
earth to the other, either for beauty of face or wisdom of
speech!"
22: And Holofernes said to her, "God has done well
to send you before the people, to lend strength to our hands and
to bring destruction upon those who have slighted my lord.
23: You are not only beautiful in appearance, but wise in
speech; and if you do as you have said, your God shall be my
God, and you shall live in the house of King Nebuchadnezzar and
be renowned throughout the whole world."
Chapter 12
1: Then he
commanded them to bring her in where his silver dishes were
kept, and ordered them to set a table for her with some of his
own food and to serve her with his own wine.
2: But Judith said, "I cannot eat it, lest it be an
offense; but I will be provided from the things I have brought
with me."
3: Holofernes said to her, "If your supply runs out,
where can we get more like it for you? For none of your people
is here with us."
4: Judith replied, "As your soul lives, my lord,
your servant will not use up the things I have with me before
the Lord carries out by my hand what he has determined to
do."
5: Then the servants of Holofernes brought her into the
tent, and she slept until midnight. Along toward the morning
watch she arose
6: and sent to Holofernes and said, "Let my lord now
command that your servant be permitted to go out and pray."
7: So Holofernes commanded his guards not to hinder her.
And she remained in the camp for three days, and went out each
night to the valley of Bethulia, and bathed at the spring in the
camp.
8: When she came up from the spring she prayed the Lord
God of Israel to direct her way for the raising up of her
people.
9: So she returned clean and stayed in the tent until she
ate her food toward evening.
10: On the fourth day Holofernes held a banquet for his
slave only, and did not invite any of his officers.
11: And he said to Bagoas, the eunuch who had charge of
his personal affairs, "Go now and persuade the Hebrew woman
who is in your care to join us and eat and drink with us.
12: For it will be a disgrace if we let such a woman go
without enjoying her company, for if we do not embrace her she
will laugh at us."
13: So Bagoas went out from the presence of Holofernes,
and approached her and said, "This beautiful maidservant
will please come to my lord and be honored in his presence, and
drink wine and be merry with us, and become today like one of
the daughters of the Assyrians who serve in the house of
Nebuchadnezzar."
14: And Judith said, "Who am I, to refuse my lord?
Surely whatever pleases him I will do at once, and it will be a
joy to me until the day of my death!"
15: So she got up and arrayed herself in all her woman's
finery, and her maid went and spread on the ground for her
before Holofernes the soft fleeces which she had received from
Bagoas for her daily use, so that she might recline on them when
she ate.
16: Then Judith came in and lay down, and Holofernes'
heart was ravished with her and he was moved with great desire
to possess her; for he had been waiting for an opportunity to
deceive her, ever since the day he first saw her.
17: So Holofernes said to her. "Drink now, and be
merry with us!"
18: Judith said, "I will drink now, my lord, because
my life means more to me today than in all the days since I was
born."
19: Then she took and ate and drank before him what her
maid had prepared.
20: And Holofernes was greatly pleased with her, and
drank a great quantity of wine, much more than he had ever drunk
in any one day since he was born.
Chapter 13
1: When
evening came, his slaves quickly withdrew, and Bagoas closed the
tent from outside and shut out the attendants from his master's
presence; and they went to bed, for they all were weary because
the banquet had lasted long.
2: So Judith was left alone in the tent , with Holofernes
stretched out on his bed, for he was overcome with wine.
3: Now Judith had told her maid to stand outside the
bedchamber and to wait for her to come out, as she did every
day; for she said she would be going out for her prayers. And
she had said the same thing to Bagoas.
4: So every one went out, and no one, either small or
great, was left in the bedchamber. Then Judith, standing beside
his bed, said in her heart, "O Lord God of all might, look
in this hour upon the work of my hands for the exaltation of
Jerusalem.
5: For now is the time to help thy inheritance, and to
carry out my undertaking for the destruction of the enemies who
have risen up against us."
6: She went up to the post at the end of the bed, above
Holofernes' head, and took down his sword that hung there.
7: She came close to his bed and took hold of the hair of
his head, and said, "Give me strength this day, O Lord God
of Israel!"
8: And she struck his neck twice with all her might, and
severed it from his body.
9: Then she tumbled his body off the bed and pulled down
the canopy from the posts; after a moment she went out, and gave
Holofernes' head to her maid,
10: who placed it in her food bag. Then the two of them
went out together, as they were accustomed to go for prayer; and
they passed through the camp and circled around the valley and
went up the mountain to Bethulia and came to its gates.
11: Judith called out from afar to the watchmen at the
gates, "Open, open the gate! God, our God, is still with
us, to show his power in Israel, and his strength against our
enemies, even as he has done this day!"
12: When the men of her city heard her voice, they
hurried down to the city gate and called together the elders of
the city.
13: They all ran together, both small and great, for it
was unbelievable that she had returned; they opened the gate and
admitted them, and they kindled a fire for light, and gathered
around them.
14: Then she said to them with a loud voice, "Praise
God, O praise him! Praise God, who has not withdrawn his mercy
from the house of Israel, but has destroyed our enemies by my
hand this very night!"
15: Then she took the head out of the bag and showed it
to them, and said, "See, here is the head of Holofernes,
the commander of the Assyrian army, and here is the canopy
beneath which he lay in his drunken stupor. The Lord has struck
him down by the hand of a woman.
16: As the Lord lives, who has protected me in the way I
went, it was my face that tricked him to his destruction, and
yet he committed no act of sin with me, to defile and shame
me."
17: All the people were greatly astonished, and bowed
down and worshiped God, and said with one accord, "Blessed
art thou, our God, who hast brought into contempt this day the
enemies of thy people."
18: And Uzziah said to her, "O daughter, you are
blessed by the Most High God above all women on earth; and
blessed be the Lord God, who created the heavens and the earth,
who has guided you to strike the head of the leader of our
enemies.
19: Your hope will never depart from the hearts of men,
as they remember the power of God.
20: May God grant this to be a perpetual honor to you,
and may he visit you with blessings, because you did not spare
your own life when our nation was brought low, but have avenged
our ruin, walking in the straight path before our God." And
all the people said, "So be it, so be it!"
Chapter 14
1: Then Judith
said to them, "Listen to me, my brethren, and take this
head and hang it upon the parapet of your wall.
2: And as soon as morning comes and the sun rises, let
every valiant man take his weapons and go out of the city, and
set a captain over them, as if you were going down to the plain
against the Assyrian outpost; only do not go down.
3: Then they will seize their arms and go into the camp
and rouse the officers of the Assyrian army; and they will rush
into the tent of Holofernes, and will not find him. Then fear
will come over them, and they will flee before you,
4: and you and all who live within the borders of Israel
shall pursue them and cut them down as they flee.
5: But before you do all this, bring Achior the Ammonite
to me, and let him see and recognize the man who despised the
house of Israel and sent him to us as if to his death."
6: So they summoned Achior from the house of Uzziah. And
when he came and saw the head of Holofernes in the hand of one
of the men at the gathering of the people, he fell down on his
face and his spirit failed him.
7: And when they raised him up he fell at Judith's feet,
and knelt before her, and said, "Blessed are you in every
tent of Judah! In every nation those who hear your name will be
alarmed.
8: Now tell me what you have done during these
days." Then Judith described to him in the presence of the
people all that she had done, from the day she left until the
moment of her speaking to them.
9: And when she had finished, the people raised a great
shout and made a joyful noise in their city.
10: And when Achior saw all that the God of Israel had
done, he believed firmly in God, and was circumcised, and joined
the house of Israel, remaining so to this day.
11: As soon as it was dawn they hung the head of
Holofernes on the wall, and every man took his weapons, and they
went out in companies to the passes in the mountains.
12: And when the Assyrians saw them they sent word to
their commanders, and they went to the generals and the captains
and to all their officers.
13: So they came to Holofernes' tent and said to the
steward in charge of all his personal affairs, "Wake up our
lord, for the slaves have been so bold as to come down against
us to give battle, in order to be destroyed completely."
14: So Bagoas went in and knocked at the door of the
tent, for he supposed that he was sleeping with Judith.
15: But when no one answered, he opened it and went into
the bedchamber and found him thrown down on the platform dead,
with his head cut off and missing.
16: And he cried out with a loud voice and wept and
groaned and shouted, and rent his garments.
17: Then he went to the tent where Judith had stayed, and
when he did not find her he rushed out to the people and
shouted,
18: "The slaves have tricked us! One Hebrew woman
has brought disgrace upon the house of King Nebuchadnezzar! For
look, here is Holofernes lying on the ground, and his head is
not on him!"
19: When the leaders of the Assyrian army heard this,
they rent their tunics and were greatly dismayed, and their loud
cries and shouts arose in the midst of the camp.
Chapter 15
1: When the
men in the tents heard it, they were amazed at what had
happened.
2: Fear and trembling came over them, so that they did
not wait for one another, but with one impulse all rushed out
and fled by every path across the plain and through the hill
country.
3: Those who had camped in the hills around Bethulia also
took to flight. Then the men of Israel, every one that was a
soldier, rushed out upon them.
4: And Uzziah sent men to Betomasthaim and Bebai and
Choba and Kola, and to all the frontiers of Israel, to tell what
had taken place and to urge all to rush out upon their enemies
to destroy them.
5: And when the Israelites heard it, with one accord they
fell upon the enemy, and cut them down as far as Choba. Those in
Jerusalem and all the hill country also came, for they were told
what had happened in the camp of the enemy; and those in Gilead
and in Galilee outflanked them with great slaughter, even beyond
Damascus and its borders.
6: The rest of the people of Bethulia fell upon the
Assyrian camp and plundered it, and were greatly enriched.
7: And the Israelites, when they returned from the
slaughter, took possession of what remained, and the villages
and towns in the hill country and in the plain got a great
amount of booty, for there was a vast quantity of it.
8: Then Joakim the high priest, and the senate of the
people of Israel who lived at Jerusalem, came to witness the
good things which the Lord had done for Israel, and to see
Judith and to greet her.
9: And when they met her they all blessed her with one
accord and said to her, "You are the exaltation of
Jerusalem, you are the great glory of Israel, you are the great
pride of our nation!
10: You have done all this singlehanded; you have done
great good to Israel, and God is well pleased with it. May the
Almighty Lord bless you for ever!" And all the people said,
"So be it!"
11: So all the people plundered the camp for thirty days.
They gave Judith the tent of Holofernes and all his silver
dishes and his beds and his bowls and all his furniture; and she
took them and loaded her mule and hitched up her carts and piled
the things on them.
12: Then all the women of Israel gathered to see her, and
blessed her, and some of them performed a dance for her; and she
took branches in her hands and gave them to the women who were
with her;
13: and they crowned themselves with olive wreaths, she
and those who were with her; and she went before all the people
in the dance, leading all the women, while all the men of Israel
followed, bearing their arms and wearing garlands and with songs
on their lips.
Chapter 16
1: Then Judith
began this thanksgiving before all Israel, and all the people
loudly sang this song of praise.
2: And Judith said, Begin a song to my God with
tambourines, sing to my Lord with cymbals. Raise to him a new
psalm; exalt him, and call upon his name.
3: For God is the Lord who crushes wars; for he has
delivered me out of the hands of my pursuers, and brought me to
his camp, in the midst of the people.
4: The Assyrian came down from the mountains of the
north; he came with myriads of his warriors; their multitude
blocked up the valleys, their cavalry covered the hills.
5: He boasted that he would burn up my territory, and
kill my young men with the sword, and dash my infants to the
ground and seize my children as prey, and take my virgins as
booty.
6: But the Lord Almighty has foiled them by the hand of a
woman.
7: For their mighty one did not fall by the hands of the
young men, nor did the sons of the Titans smite him, nor did
tall giants set upon him; but Judith the daughter of Merari
undid him with the beauty of her countenance.
8: For she took off her widow's mourning to exalt the
oppressed in Israel. She anointed her face with ointment and
fastened her hair with a tiara and put on a linen gown to
deceive him.
9: Her sandal ravished his eyes, her beauty captivated
his mind, and the sword severed his neck.
10: The Persians trembled at her boldness, the Medes were
daunted at her daring.
11: Then my oppressed people shouted for joy; my weak
people shouted and the enemy trembled; they lifted up their
voices, and the enemy were turned back.
12: The sons of maidservants have pierced them through;
they were wounded like the children of fugitives, they perished
before the army of my Lord.
13: I will sing to my God a new song: O Lord, thou are
great and glorious, wonderful in strength, invincible.
14: Let all thy creatures serve thee, for thou didst
speak, and they were made. Thou didst send forth thy Spirit, and
it formed them; there is none that can resist thy voice.
15: For the mountains shall be shaken to their
foundations with the waters; at thy presence the rocks shall
melt like wax, but to those who fear thee thou wilt continue to
show mercy.
16: For every sacrifice as a fragrant offering is a small
thing, and all fat for burnt offerings to thee is a very little
thing, but he who fears the Lord shall be great for ever.
17: Woe to the nations that rise up against my people!
The Lord Almighty will take vengeance on them in the day of
judgment; fire and worms he will give to their flesh; they shall
weep in pain for ever.
18: When they arrived at Jerusalem they worshiped God. As
soon as the people were purified, they offered their burnt
offerings, their freewill offerings, and their gifts.
19: Judith also dedicated to God all the vessels of
Holofernes, which the people had given her; and the canopy which
she took for herself from his bedchamber she gave as a votive
offering to the Lord.
20: So the people continued feasting in Jerusalem before
the sanctuary for three months, and Judith remained with them.
21: After this every one returned home to his own
inheritance, and Judith went to Bethulia, and remained on her
estate, and was honored in her time throughout the whole
country.
22: Many desired to marry her, but she remained a widow
all the days of her life after Manasseh her husband died and was
gathered to his people.
23: She became more and more famous, and grew old in her
husband's house, until she was one hundred and five years old.
She set her maid free. She died in Bethulia, and they buried her
in the cave of her husband Manasseh,
24: and the house of Israel mourned for her seven days.
Before she died she distributed her property to all those who
were next of kin to her husband Manasseh, and to her own nearest
kindred.
25: And no one ever again spread terror among the people
of Israel in the days of Judith, or for a long time after her
death. |