An Apocryphal book mainly of maxims (resembling Proverbs in that respect)
1Josephus, and Philo, and Sirach extolled him in their writings.
2Jesus the son of Sirach prefigures the Messiah as a Prophet and a Doctor.
3In the Greek version, however, he is known simply as Jesus, the son of Sirach.
4Date and Character of Jesus the Son of Sirach.-II
5All except David and Hezekiah and Josiah, were defective, says Jesus Sirach (xlix.
6Date and Character of Jesus, the Son of Sirach.
7A prayer of Jesus the son of Sirach.
8Jesus, son of Sirach, and Hillel, had uttered aphorisms almost as exalted as those of Jesus.
9On the one side, Sirach, the author of this Apocryphal work, does not hesitate (ch.
10Then, another Scripture, "As moths from a garment, so from a woman wickedness" (Sirach xlii.)
11The author was Jesus the son of Sirach of Jerusalem, who flourished about two hundred years before Christ.
13One sees clearly from Sirach l., and from more than one statement of Josephus (e.g., Ant., xviii.
14Ben Sira, or Sirach, was apparently his family name, while Jesus is the Greek equivalent of Jeshua or Joshua.
15Preston quotes Jesus ben Sirach, {mи йmpipte hнna mи epoorthкs, kaм mи makrаn aphнstoo hнna mи epilesthкs}.
16Seraphia married rather late in life; her husband, Sirach, was descended from the chaste Susannah, and was a member of the Sanhedrin.