First Book of Ethiopian Maccabees

Chapter 1

1:1          A certain man named Tseerutsaydan$1$ loved his sin. He would often boast of the great profusion of his troops and of the great armies which he held governance over.

1:2          He had countless priests who served the false gods which he worshiped, and [he would often] bow to them and make sacrifices by night and day.

1:3          In the sightlessness of his own heart, he believed that they granted him power and strength.

1:4          He believed that they gave him sovereignty over the nations.

1:5          And as his sway over the nations progressed, he believed that [these false gods] granted him the right to supremacy.

1:6          [The King] would offer sacrifices to them by night and day,

1:7          appointing priests to serve these idols.

1:8          These priests ate from the unclean sacrifices, all the while telling the king that the idols had consumed what was offered.

1:9          They sought to proselytize among the people, so that they might make greater sacrifices to be consumed.

1:10        The king trusted in these idols, which can grant no favors, nor yield any merit to his welfare.

1:11        At the time, when his heart was blind to the truth, [the king] believed that they had given him to fate, by placing him with a diadem. It would appear to him that [these idols] had created him, for Satan$2$ blocked him from knowledge of the true God, who alone grants eternal life. Rather, [Satan] sought to bring him away from life, into the fire of Gehenna$3$ forever, for he believed the idols to be gods,

1:12        but since they do not truly live, they cannot give life.

1:13        It was Satan’s tyranny that mislead them, which   was found within their idolatry. He gave of them false speech, and said he would reveal great truths to them, and for this he was loved. [Therefore, Satan] cast the people’s discernment upon the false gods and those that believe in them, and among all the children of Adam, whose  prayers had become like that of the dust.

1:14        They gazed upon [the idols] in solemn reverence, and [Satan] filled their mind with their own desires. And the people complied, offering as sacrifice their young girls and young boys, children of their own blood. They spilled the innocent blood of their children.

1:15        This did not concern [the king], for Satan had savored the sacrifices he made to his gods in order to complete his malicious designs. [Satan sought to] bring him down into Gehenna, where  he dwells, and where there is no respite for all eternity, and where all will receive chastisement.

1:16        This king, Tseerutsaydan, was full of conceit; for he had fifty idols made of false gods, and twenty idols of false goddesses.

1:17        He would often boast about his idolatry, and offered glorification and praise to the idols while he made his daily sacrifices.

1:18        He commanded the people, that they too might make sacrifices to these idols. [The king] would eat from these unclean sacrifices, and ordered that the people do the same, to spread the evil which he created.

1:19        Now, [the king] had five workshops which were under his command, where he forged the idols out of iron, brass and lead.

1:20        The king had then adorned in silver and in gold,   and had veiled curtains around his palaces for them, each hidden in a tabernacle.

1:21        He appointed guardians for their care, and would make offerings of meat to these idols from forty creatures- ten fattened oxen and ten fatted ewes, ten barren calves and ten barren goats, along with winged birds of the air.

1:22        It appeared to [the king] that these idols ate and drank, consuming fifty bunches of grapes and fifty dishes of bread kneaded with oil.

1:23        The king said to the priests, “Take this, give it to them. Let my gods consume the meat that has been slaughtered on their account. Make them drink from of the wine I have given to them. If this is not enough to quench their desire, I will give them more.”

1:24        [The king] then ordered that everyone should eat and drink from that defiling sacrifice.

1:25        He then, in his corruption, sent out his armies to   march on all the nations of his realm$4$, to find one who would neither make sacrifices, nor prostrate themselves [before the idols], so that they could be brought before him. He sought to punish them by fire and by sword, [for he feared that the gods] might seize his wealth and burn his palaces. [The king] lived in terror that they might remove his great fortune and destroy him.

1:26        “My gods are generous and great, and out of their benevolence I have forged them. Therefore, I will give chastisement on him that does not worship my gods and make sacrifices to them.

1:27        I will show punish punishment and retribution! For they have created the heavens and the earth, the great wide sea, the moon and sun, the rains and the wind, and all that abide in this world.

1:28        Those who will not worship shall be punished under the penalty of law, and I shall have no mercy.

Chapters 2-36 not in the public domain