Judith
The book of Judith, deuterocanonical as well, stages a striking deliverance by the weakest of hands. A Jewish town is besieged, ready to surrender; a widow, without an army and without strength, saves the whole people by cutting off the head of the enemy general. The account, written in a deliberately stylized setting, tells a constant truth: God confounds the mighty by the lowly, and prayer is the weapon of his people.
The Besieged City
A great king, whom the account names Nebuchadnezzar and says reigns over Assyria, wishes to subdue the whole earth and to be worshiped as a god. This deliberate mixing of names and epochs warns the reader: the book does not write a chronicle, it composes a picture, to paint for all time the pride of empires raised against God. The king sends his general Holofernes at the head of an immense army, which crushes the nations of the West; the peoples, terrified, submit and hand over their sanctuaries. Only the Jews, scarcely returned from exile, refuse, to defend their God and his Temple. Holofernes lays siege to Bethulia, a small town that guards the pass toward Jerusalem, and cuts off its water. After days without a drop, the cisterns empty, the people faint and rise up against their leaders; the elders, at the end of their strength, promise to surrender in five days if God has not saved them by then. This term set for God is the true danger of the account: the people, in despair, come to bargain with their Lord and to summon him to act within a term they impose on him.
Judith, the Faithful Widow
In the town lives Judith, a beautiful and wealthy widow, pious and respected, who had lived withdrawn since her husband’s death, fasting almost every day and wearing the garb of mourning. She summons the elders and rebukes them strongly: in setting God a term of five days, they claim to command him and to test him, as if salvation depended on their patience and not on his mercy. She reminds them that trial is not abandonment, but the testing of a faith, and that God tried the fathers in the same way, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to draw them nearer to himself; she calls them to humble themselves and to hope against all evidence. "Let us pray to the Lord with tears… as the pride of our enemies has troubled our hearts, our humility may become for us a cause of glory." Judith 8:17 Then she announces that she herself will act, by a means she does not disclose, and withdraws to pray at length. Invoking the God of her ancestor who avenged the outrage done to his house, she recalls that he is the help of the weak and the support of the lowly, and asks for the strength to accomplish what she plans. "Put in my heart enough firmness to despise him, enough strength to bring him down." Judith 9:14 Her boldness comes not from herself, but from her faith: she knows that the victory belongs to God alone.
The Head of Holofernes
Judith takes off her widow’s garments, adorns herself in her finest, and goes down with her maid to the enemy camp, feigning to flee a doomed people and to offer Holofernes the secret of an easy victory. Charmed by her beauty and her skillful words, the general receives her with favor. Each night she obtains leave to go out of the camp to pray, so that the guards grow used to her comings and goings. After a few days, Holofernes gives a banquet at which he means to dishonor her; but he drinks himself into a stupor and collapses alone on his bed. Left alone with him, Judith prays silently for strength, takes the general’s own sword, and with two blows cuts off his head; she hides it in her food bag and passes back through the lines as if to go and pray, as she had done each night. Back in Bethulia, she shows the people her prize. "Here is the head of Holofernes… when the Lord our God struck him down by the hand of a woman." Judith 13:19 At dawn, the Jews hang the head on the ramparts and sally out as if to attack; the Assyrians run to wake their commander, find him beheaded, and, seized with panic, scatter; Israel pursues them and the siege is lifted. God has saved his people by the hand of a woman, so that no one may boast of it: the strong is brought down by the weak.
The Glory of Her People
The high priest and the elders come from Jerusalem to honor Judith, and all the people bless her with one voice. "You are the glory of Jerusalem, you are the joy of Israel, you are the honor of our people!" Judith 15:10 Judith raises a long canticle of thanksgiving, in which she sings that the Lord breaks wars and lifts up the lowly; she refuses all honor for herself, consecrates to God the spoils of Holofernes, sets her maid free, and returns to her widowhood until she dies at a great age, and no one, as long as she lived nor for long after, dared to trouble Israel. The Church has long applied to Mary the very words that greet Judith, for Mary is the true glory of Jerusalem and the joy of Israel: the lowly woman by whose "yes" the head of the ancient serpent is crushed, according to the promise made from the garden. The victory of Judith, won by prayer and purity rather than by arms, announces from afar that of the handmaid of the Lord over the powers of evil.