The Death of Marcus Aurelius

The Death of Marcus Aurelius

Friday, July 28, 2023

The Wisdom of Solomon 18:5-19


[5] When they had resolved to kill the babes of your holy ones, 
and one child had been exposed and rescued, 
you did in punishment take away a multitude 
of their children; 
and you did destroy them all together by a mighty flood. 
[6] That night was made known beforehand to our fathers, 
so that they might rejoice in sure knowledge 
of the oaths in which they trusted. 
[7] The deliverance of the righteous and the destruction
of their enemies 
were expected by your people. 
[8] For by the same means by which you did punish our enemies 
you did call us to yourself and glorify us. 
[9] For in secret the holy children of good men offered sacrifices, 
and with one accord agreed to the divine law, 
that the saints would share alike the same things, 
both blessings and dangers; 
and already they were singing the praises of the fathers. 
[10] But the discordant cry of their enemies echoed back, 
and their piteous lament for their children was spread abroad. 
[11] The slave was punished with the same penalty as the master, 
and the common man suffered the same loss as the king; 
[12] and they all together, by the one form of death, 
had corpses too many to count. 
For the living were not sufficient even to bury them, 
since in one instant their most valued children 
had been destroyed. 
[13] For though they had disbelieved everything 
because of their magic arts, 
yet, when their first-born were destroyed, 
they acknowledged your people to be God's sons. 
[14] For while gentle silence enveloped all things, 
and night in its swift course was now half gone, 
[15] your all-powerful word leaped from heaven, from 
the royal throne, 
into the midst of the land that was doomed, 
a stern warrior 
[16] carrying the sharp sword of your authentic command, and stood and filled all things with death, 
and touched heaven while standing on the earth. 
[17] Then at once apparitions in dreadful dreams 
greatly troubled them, 
and unexpected fears assailed them; 
[18] and one here and another there, hurled down half dead, 
made known why they were dying; 
[19] for the dreams which disturbed them forewarned them of this, 
so that they might not perish without knowing 
why they suffered. 

IMAGE: Charles Sprague Pearce, Lamentations Over the Death of the First-Born of Egypt (1877) 



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