Menelaus also joined them, and with considerable hypocrisy, he kept urging Antiochus on, not for the sake of his country's welfare, but in the belief that he would thereby become established in office. However, the King of kings stirred up the fury of Antiochus against this scoundrel, and when Lysias offered convincing evidence to the king that Menelaus was to blame for all the trouble, Antiochus ordered him to be taken to Beroea and executed there in the customary local manner. In that place there is a tower seventy-five feet high, full of ashes, with a rim encircling it that slopes down precipitously on all sides into the ashes. Anyone found guilty of sacrilege, or any other heinous crime, is taken to the top and then hurled down to destruction. Such was the fate suffered by Menelaus, the transgressor of the law, as he died without even being given the privilege of burial in the ground. His manner of death was eminently just, for he had committed innumerable sins against the altar whose fire and ashes were holy, and it was in ashes that he met his death.
2 MACCABEES: chapter 13, verses 1 - 8
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