🕊️ The Way | Christian Leadership & Theology
Historical Focus: 1 Maccabees 9–12; Josephus, Antiquities 13
Approximate Date: 160–143 B.C.
The rebellion had lost its hero. Judas Maccabeus—the hammer of Israel—had fallen in battle, and with him seemed to fall the courage of a nation. The people who once sang of victory now whispered of survival. The foreign empire still held their land, the temple’s honor was uncertain, and hope had become fragile.
Then God raised another son from the same house—Jonathan Apphus, a leader not born for fame on the battlefield, but for wisdom in the council chamber.
Where Judas had won wars, Jonathan would win peace. His weapon was not the sword, but discernment. His courage was quieter, yet no less fierce.
In the fractured world left behind by Alexander the Great, kingdoms fought for power like waves crashing over the Holy Land. The Seleucid Empire—heirs of the Greek east—was torn between rival kings, Demetrius and Alexander Balas. Both sought Jewish loyalty. Both needed Jonathan.
