American Minute with Bill Federer
Hanukkah
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The origin of lights at this season can be traced back to the Jewish Festival of Lights, or Feast of the Dedication, in Hebrew called "Hanukkah."
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Solomon dedicated the first Temple
in the 10th century BC with a 7 day festival ending on the 8th day (I Kings 8; II Chronicles 7).
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After Jews were taken captive to Babylon, 597-581 BC,
King Cyrus of Persia let them return to Jerusalem
after 70 years of captivity.
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They built the Second Temple
and dedicated it around 516 BC. (Ezra 6:16-17)
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Around 334 BC,
Alexander the Great
invaded from the west and
speedily conquered the Medo-Persian Empire.
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The prophet
Daniel
foretold in chapter 8:
"The male goat was coming from the west over the surface of the whole earth without touching the ground; and the goat had a conspicuous horn between his eyes.
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He came up to the ram that had the two horns, which I had seen standing in front of the canal, and rushed at him in his mighty wrath ... and he struck the ram and shattered his two horns."
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At the height of his power,
Alexander the Great
suddenly died and his four generals
divided up his empire.
Daniel
had foretold:
"The male goat magnified himself exceedingly. But as soon as he was mighty, the large horn was broken; and in its place there came up
four conspicuous horns toward the four winds of heaven."
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The common understanding is that
Alexander's Empire,
after numerous
"Diadochi" battles,
was divided up thus:
-Lysimachus
ruled Thrace & Asia Minor;
-Cassander
ruled Macedonia and Greece;
-Ptolemy
ruled Egypt and into the Middle East;
-Seleucus
ruled the rest of the Middle East, Syria, Babylon, Persia, and parts of India, collectively known as the "Seleucid Empire."
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Around 167 BC, out of the
Seleucid Empire,
there arose an aggressive king,
Antiochus IV Epiphanes.
Daniel
wrote further:
"Out of one of them came forth a rather small horn which grew exceedingly great toward the south, toward the east, and toward the Beautiful Land."
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Best-selling author
Joel Richardson
presents the thought, that with modern-day Iran threatening Israel, there may yet be
a future element to Daniel's prophecy:
"Son of man, understand that
the vision pertains to the time of the end."
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Antiochus
attacked
Jerusalem,
as reported in
2nd Book of Maccabees 5:11-14:
"The king ... thought that Judea was in revolt. Raging like a wild animal, he set out from Egypt and took Jerusalem by storm.
He ordered his soldiers to cut down without mercy those whom they met and to slay those who took refuge in their houses.
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... There was a massacre of young and old, a killing of women and children, a slaughter of virgins and infants ...
In the space of three days, eighty thousand were lost, forty thousand meeting a violent death, and the same number being sold into slavery."
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The prophet
Daniel
foretold in chapter 11:22-27:
"While returning to his land with great riches, his heart shall be moved against the holy covenant ... and return in rage against the holy covenant, and do damage ...
And forces shall be mustered by him, and they shall defile the sanctuary fortress; then they shall take away the daily sacrifices, and place there the abomination of desolation."
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Antiochus IV Epiphanes
tried to force the Jews to
abandon their beliefs
and adopt the
Greek culture,
as recorded in 2 Maccabees 5:11-14:
"Not long after this the king sent an Athenian senator to force the Jews to abandon the customs of their ancestors and live no longer by the laws of God;
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also to
profane the temple
in Jerusalem and dedicate it to Olympian Zeus ...
They also brought into the temple things that were forbidden, so that the altar was covered with abominable offerings prohibited by the laws ...
A man could not keep the sabbath or celebrate the traditional feasts, nor even admit that he was a Jew ...
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...
Women ... arrested for having circumcised their children were publicly paraded about the city with their babies hanging at their breasts and then thrown down from the top of the city wall ...
Others, who had assembled in nearby caves to observe the sabbath in secret, were betrayed ... and all burned to death."
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Daniel
prophesied:
"But the people who know their God shall be strong, and carry out great exploits."
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In 167 BC,
Mattathias
and his sons began the
Maccabean Revolt
against Antiochus Epiphanes.
By 165 BC,
Judas Maccabaeus
was finally successful in driving the enemy out.
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When the
Second Temple
was cleansed of all the pagan defilements in 164 BC, the decision was made to rededicate.
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There was a problem -- there was only found enough holy olive oil to light
the golden lampstand - the menorah,
for one day, and it would take a week before more could be made.
The decision was made to relight it anyway, and miraculously,
the light burned for eight days.
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This is celebrated annually as the
Festival of Lights, or HANUKKAH,
which is the Hebrew word for
"dedication."
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Flavius Josephus
wrote in the
Jewish Antiquities
(12.7.6-7 316-325) that in 164 BC:
"The generals of
Antiochus' armies
having been
defeated ...
Judah Maccabee
assembled the people and told them that after the many victories which God had given them they ought to go up to
Jerusalem
and
purify the Temple
...
But when he with the whole multitude came to Jerusalem and found he Temple deserted, its gates burned down, and plants growing in the Temple of their own accord because of the desolation, he and those with him began to lament ..."
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Josephus
continued:
"He had carefully purged it he brought in new vessels --
the menorah,
the table and the incense altar, which were made of gold ...
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... And on the 25th day of the month Kislev, which the Macedonians call Apellaios,
they lighted the lights that were on the menorah,
and
offered incense upon the altar,
and laid the loaves upon the table, and offered whole burnt offerings upon the new altar.
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As it happened, these things took place on
the very same day
on which,
three years before,
the divine worship had been reduced to an impure and profane form of worship;
for
the Temple had remained desolate for three years
after being made so by
Antiochus ..."
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Josephus
concluded:
"And so
Judah
and his fellow citizens
celebrated the festival of the restoration
of the sacrifices of the
Temple for eight days ...
They honored God, and delighted themselves with psalms of praise and the playing of harps.
Indeed, they were
so very glad
at the revival of their customs and, after so long a time, having unexpectedly regained their right to worship, that
they made it a law for their posterity
that they should
keep a festival celebrating the restoration of their Temple worship for eight days."
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The New Testament Book of John,
chapter 10:22-23, recorded that even
Jesus
observed the
Feast of Dedication:
"At that time the
Feast of the Dedication
took place at
Jerusalem;
it was winter, and
Jesus
was walking
in the temple in the portico of Solomon.
The
Jews
then gathered around
Him,
and were saying to Him, 'How long will You keep us in suspense?
If You are the Christ,
tell us plainly.'"
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The many centuries of
Hanukkah candles
being lit during the winter might have been an inspiration for the Christian tradition of putting lights in tree branches to depict the sky above Bethlehem.
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Various U.S. Presidents acknowledged
Hanukkah:
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Franklin D. Roosevelt
wrote to Samuel I. Rosenman, President of the Jewish Education Committee in New York, December 16, 1940:
"Dear Sam, Please convey my best wishes to your co-workers in the Jewish Education Committee of New York, at the annual
Hanukkah
Dinner ...
Our modern democratic way of life has its deepest roots in our great common religious tradition, which for ages past has taught to civilized mankind the dignity of the human being, his equality before God, and his responsibility in the making of a better and fairer world ...
The world (is) ... engaged in a great spiritual struggle to test whether that ancient wisdom is to endure, or whether ... some few men shall dominate multitudes of others and dictate to them their thinking, their religion, their living ...
We need the sustaining, buttressing aid of those great ethical religious teachings which are the heritage of our modern civilization.
For 'not upon strength nor upon power, but upon the spirit of God' shall our democracy be founded."
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In 1951,
President Harry S Truman
received a presentation of a
Hanukkah
menorah from Israel's Prime Minister,
David Ben-Gurion.
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On December 17, 1979,
President Jimmy Carter
was the first President to participate in
Hanukkah.
He walked from the White House to Lafayette Park to light the
National Menorah
erected by the American Friends of Lubavitch.
Carter
commented:
"It's a real honor for me to come from the White House here to this ceremony celebrating the commencement of
Chanukah,
last night, the
Feast of Lights.
As many of you know, the season of
Chanukah
commemorates the victory of religious freedom ...
At the commencement of the celebration of this annual event, this season of thanksgiving and closeness to God, there was a miracle within which the candle which was supposed to only burn a short time burned for 8 days and nights ...
This miracle showed that God meets our needs. If we depend on Him, He will meet our needs. This also shows that there is a need to celebrate courage and to remember that hope in one's breast need never die ...
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... The first candle that I lit, the shammes candle, has given its light now in this glass cage to five other candles.
It has not itself been diminished. It shows that when we give life and love to others, the life and love in our own hearts is not diminished ... It grows the more we share it.
So, tonight we pray that our closeness to God, our memory of these fine commitments of human beings down through the ages will strengthen our desires to share our life and our love ...
I'm very grateful that this beautiful menorah has been dedicated for the commemoration of the season of
Chanukah,
and I'm very grateful as President to be partaking in this commemoration of a season when human beings are drawn closer to God and, in that spirit, have confidence that the future will bring us a better life with God and with one another."
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President Ronald Reagan
stated in his
Hanukkah
Message, 1983:
"Whether we be Americans or Israelis, we are all children of Abraham, children of the same God. The bonds between our two peoples are growing stronger, and they must not and will never be broken.
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President George H.W. Bush
stated in his
Hanukkah
Message, 1991:
"When Judah Maccabee and his followers prepared to rededicate the Temple in Jerusalem, they found ... only enough oil to light the menorah for one night. Miraculously, it lasted eight."
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In 1996, the
U.S. Postal Service
unveiled the first stamp commemorating
Hanukkah.
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President Bill Clinton
stated in his
Hanukkah
Message, 1997:
"From the days of the ancient Maccabees down to our present time, tyrants have sought to deny people the free expression of their faith and the right to live according to their own conscience and convictions ...
Hanukkah
symbolizes the heroic struggle of all who seek to defeat such oppression and the miracles that come to those full of faith and courage.
This holiday holds special meaning for us in America, where freedom of religion is one of the cornerstones of our democracy.
The coming year will mark the 50th anniversary of the State of Israel, where the story of the first
Hanukkah
took place so many centuries ago ...
May the candles of the menorah light our way to a true and lasting peace for the people of the Middle East."
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President George W. Bush
remarked lighting the
Hanukkah Menorah
in the White House, December 10, 2001:
"Tonight, for the first time in American history, the
Hanukkah menorah
will be lit at the White House residence ... The magnificent menorah before us was crafted over a century ago in the city of Lvov ...
The Jews of Lvov fell victim to the horror of the Nazi Holocaust, but their great menorah survived. And as God promised Abraham, the people of Israel still live ...
We're reminded of the ancient story of Israel's courage and of the power of faith to make the darkness bright.
We can see the heroic spirit of the Maccabees lives on in Israel today, and we trust that a better day is coming, when this Festival of Freedom will be celebrated in a world free from terror."
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President Donald J. Trump
remarked on
Hanukkah,
December 12, 2017:
"The miracle of
Hanukkah
began more than 2,000 years ago, when the practice of Judaism was made punishable by death. A small band of Jewish patriots rose up and reclaimed their Jewish identity by vanquishing a mighty army.
In their pursuit to rededicate their holy temple, the Jewish heroes found only enough oil to light the temple’s menorah for one night. However, a miracle occurred and with God’s grace the oil lasted for eight days.
On this holiday, we are proud to stand with the Jewish people who shine as a light to all nations.
We also stand with the people of Israel, the Jewish State,
which has itself
a miraculous history of overcoming the tallest of odds.
We hope that those observing the holiday here, in Israel, and around the world have a wonderful holiday."
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Schedule Bill Federer for informative interviews & captivating PowerPoint presentations: 314-502-8924
wjfederer@gmail.com
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