While he was still in Persia, a messenger brought him the news that the armies that had invaded the land of Judah had been routed, that Lysias--who had advanced with a massive force--had been put to flight by the Israelites, that the Israelites had grown increasingly strong as a result of the weapons, equipment, and abundant spoils they had captured from the armies they had destroyed, that they had pulled down the Abomination he had built upon the altar in Jerusalem, and that they had surrounded the sanctuary with high walls as they had done in the past and had fortified his city of Beth-zur.
When the king heard this report, he was distraught and deeply shaken. Sick with grief because his plans had failed, he retreated to his bed. He lay there for many days, overwhelmed repeatedly with disappointment, and he realized that he was at the point of death.
Therefore, he summoned all his Friends and said to them: "Sleep is gone from my eyes, and my heart is overwhelmed with anxiety. I have asked myself: 'Why have I been brought to these depths of despair, inasmuch as during my reign I was always kind and greatly beloved?' But now I recall the evil deeds I perpetrated in Jerusalem in seizing all its vessels of silver and gold and unjustifiably ordering the extermination of the inhabitants of Judah. I am certain that this is the reason why these misfortunes have afflicted me, and why I am dying here of bitter grief in a strange land."
Then he summoned Philip, one of his Friends, and appointed him ruler over his entire kingdom. He gave him his crown, his robe, and his signet ring, entrusting him with the authority to educate his son Antiochus and train him to be king. King Antiochus died in Persia, in the year one hundred and forty-nine.
1ST MACCABEES: CHAPTER 6, VERSES 1 - 16
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