Jason in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
ja'-sun (Iason): A common name among the Hellenizing Jews
who used it for Jesus or Joshua, probably connecting it with
the Greek verb iashthai ("to heal").
(1) Son of Eleazar, sent (161 BC) by Judas Maccabeus with
other deputies to Rome "to make a league of amity and
confederacy" (1 Macc 8:17; Josephus, Ant, XII, x, 6), and
perhaps to be identified with (2).
(2) The father of Antipater who went as ambassador of
Jonathan to Rome in 144 BC (1 Macc 12:16; 14:22; Ant, XIII,
v, 8).
(3) Jason of Cyrene, a Jewish historian, who is known only
from what is told of him in 2 Macc 2:19-23. 2 Macc is in
fact simply an abridgment in one book of the 5 books written
by Jason on the Jewish wars of liberation. He must have
written after 162 BC, as his books include the wars under
Antiochus Eupator.
(4) Jason the high priest, second son of Simon II and
brother of Onias III. The change of name from Jesus
(Josephus, Ant, XII, v) was part of the Hellenizing policy
favored by Antiochus Epiphanes from whom he purchased the
high-priesthood by a large bribe, thus excluding his elder
brother from the office (2 Macc 4:7-26). He did everything
in his power to introduce Greek customs and Greek life among
the Jews. He established a gymnasium in Jerusalem, so that
even the priests neglected the altars and the sacrifices,
and hastened to be partakers of the "unlawful allowance" in
the palaestra. The writer of 2 Macc calls him "that ungodly
wretch" and "vile" Jason. He even sent deputies from
Jerusalem to Tyre to take part in the worship of Hercules;
but what he sent for sacrifices, the deputies expended on
the "equipment of galleys." After 3 years of this
Hellenizing work he was supplanted in 172 BC in the favor of
Antiochus by Menelaus who gave a large bribe for the high
priest's office. Jason took refuge with the Ammonites; on
hearing that Antiochus was dead he tried with some success
to drive out Menelaus, but ultimately failed (2 Macc 5:5
ff). He took refuge with the Ammonites again, and then with
Aretas, the Arabian, and finally with the Lacedaemonians,
where he hoped for protection "as being connected by race,"
and there "perished-miserably in a strange land."
(5) A name mentioned in Acts 17:5-9 and in Rom 16:21. See
following article.
J. Hutchison
Read More about Jason in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE