Ben Sira or Joshua ben Sirach (; ) was a Hellenistic Jewish scribe, sage, and Allegory from Seleucid Empire-controlled Jerusalem of the Second Temple period. He is the author of the Book of Sirach, also known as "Ecclesiasticus".
Ben Sirach wrote his work in Hebrew, possibly in Alexandria in the Ptolemaic Kingdom c. 180–175 BCE, where he is thought to have established a school.See Guillaume, Philippe, New Light on the Nebiim from Alexandria: A Chronography to Replace the Deuteronomistic History. PDF Journal of Hebrew Scriptures 5.9 (2004): sections 3–5: full notes and bibliography
While Ben Sira is sometimes claimed to be a contemporary of Simeon the Just, it is more likely that his contemporary was High Priest Simon II (219–199 BCE) and this is due to confusion with his father, Joshua.
A medieval text, the Alphabet of Sirach, was falsely attributed to him.
The copy owned by Saadia Gaon, the prominent rabbi, Jewish philosopher, and exegete of the 10th century, had the reading "Shimʽon, son of Yeshuaʽ, son of Elʽazar ben Siraʼ"; and a similar reading occurs in the Hebrew manuscript B. Wm. Oscar Oesterley & George Herbert Box, introduction to Sirach, in Robt. H. Charles, The Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament in English (1913, Oxford) vol. 1 page 270.
Sirach is the Greek form of the family name Sira. It adds the letter Chi, an addition like that in Hakel-dama-ch in Acts 1:19.
The grandson states that he came to Egypt in the thirty-eighth year of the reign of Euergetes. Ptolemy VIII Physcon must be intended; he ascended the throne in 170 BCE, together with his brother Philometor, but he soon became sole ruler of Cyrene, and from 146 to 117 BCE, held sway over all Egypt. He dated his reign from the year in which he received the crown (i.e., from 170 BCE). The translator must therefore have gone to Egypt in 132 BCE.
The prologue is generally considered the earliest witness to a canon of the books of the prophets.Wm. Oscar Oesterley & George Herbert Box, annotations to Sirach, in Robt. H. Charles, The Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament in English (1913, Oxford) vol. 1 page 316.
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