4 Maccabees 1:17-27

17 This, in turn, is education in the law, by which we learn divine matters reverently and human affairs to our advantage.
18 Now the kinds of wisdom are rational judgment, justice, courage, and self-control.
19 Rational judgment is supreme over all of these, since by means of it reason rules over the emotions.
20 The two most comprehensive types [a] of the emotions are pleasure and pain; and each of these is by nature concerned with both body and soul.
21 The emotions of both pleasure and pain have many consequences.
22 Thus desire precedes pleasure and delight follows it.
23 Fear precedes pain and sorrow comes after.
24 Anger, as a person will see by reflecting on this experience, is an emotion embracing pleasure and pain.
25 In pleasure there exists even a malevolent tendency, which is the most complex of all the emotions.
26 In the soul it is boastfulness, covetousness, thirst for honor, rivalry, and malice;
27 in the body, indiscriminate eating, gluttony, and solitary gormandizing.

Footnotes 1

New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright 1989, Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.