Ma‘aseh Book
(Heb., ‘Story Book’; Yid., Mayse Bukh). A collection of anonymous Jewish folk tales. The
Ma‘aseh Book
was first publ. in
Yiddish
in 1602 and contains 254 stories, including
Talmudic
aggadah
,
midrash
, legends, jokes, and oral traditions.
Ma‘aser(ot)
(tithes):
Macarius, St, of Egypt
(
c.
300–
c.
390)
. One of the
Desert Fathers
, also known as ‘the Great’. At about the age of 30 he founded a settlement of monks in the desert of Scetis (Wadi al-Natrun), which became an important centre of Egyptian monasticism.
The
Macarian Homilies
traditionally ascribed to him seem to come rather from a writer in N. Mesopotamia in the 4th–5th cents. In modern times the
Fifty Spiritual Homilies
have been an influential mystical text (e.g. on John
Wesley
, who translated twenty-two of them into English).
Maccabees, Books of
.
Jewish
apocryphal
and pseudepigraphical works containing the history of Simon the
Hasmonean
and Judah Maccabee.
1 Maccabees
, originally written in Hebrew, covers the period of Jewish history from the accession of King Antiochus Epiphanes (
c.
175 BCE) to the death of Simon the Hasmonean in 135 BCE.
Machpelah, Cave of
.
Burial place of the Jewish
patriarchs
,
Abraham
,
Isaac
, and
Jacob
. The site of the Cave of Machpelah is identified with Haram el-Khalil in Hebron.