The
name Maccabee is, according to mystical or pilpulistic students, simply
the initial Hebrew letters of the biblical phrase "Who is like
You, O Lord, among the celestials" (Exodus 15.11). These words
emblazoned on the battle standards fired Judah's army with invincible
faith and religious zeal to enter the field of combat against the Syrian
infidels.
The
rubric "Maccabee" also is formed by the name of Judah's father:
Mattityahu Kohen Ben Yohanan. His children perpetuated their stalwart
father's name when they used the first letters for their own surname.
Searching
into the sources of genealogy, others recognized Maccabee as a combination
not of initial letters, but of the last letters of the names of the
patriarchs: Avraham, Yitzhak, Yaakob. Maccabee (MKBI) was the progenitor
of the Hasmonean priestly dynasty, even as the first letters in the
name indicate Mamlekhet Kohanim Bet Yisrael, "kingdom of
priests of the House of Israel."
Scholars
have also advanced various explanations of Hasmonea, the name applied
to all the sons of Mattahias. The Hasidic student would find concealed
in the name "Hasmonean" those elements of the Jewish religion
which the Syrians had aimed to abolish, and he would interpret the letters
in the following manner:
Attempts were made to ascribe new meaning to the name Hanukkah. With
great ingenuity, therefore, they read Hanukkah as two words, hanu
and kah, "they [the Maccabees] rested [from their fighting]
on the twenty-fifth [day]." Thus the Hasmonean struggle and ultimate
victory on the twenty-fifth day of Kislev was chronicled in the name.
 |
The
talmudic controversy between the schools of Shammai and Hillel
concerning the laws of kindling the lights was also used to interpret
the word Hanukkah. According to the Shammaites the lights were
to be kindled in descending order: eight on the first night, seven
on the second, and so forth. On the eighth only one candle was
lit. The school of Hillel proposed an ascending order: one on
the first day and finally eight on the last day. The final decision
is recorded in the name itself as follows: |
|
|
Eight
Candles
And the law is
According to the school of
Hillel.
|
To
demonstrate how these letters reflected the detailed controversy would
be a novel scholastic achievement. Some students attempted it and
succeeded, thus: