IV Maccabees 5:9-19

9 And you will be acting, I think, still more senselessly, if you follow vain conceits about the truth.
10 And you will, moreover, be despising me to your own punishment.
11 Will you not awake from your trifling philosophy? and give up the folly of your notions; and, regaining understanding worthy of your age, search into the truth of an expedient course?
12 and, reverencing my kindly admonition, have pity upon your own years?
13 For, bear in mind, that if there be any power which watches over this religion of yours, it will pardon you for all transgressions of the law which you commit through compulsion.
14 While the tyrant incited him in this manner to the unlawful eating of flesh, Eleazar begged permission to speak.
15 And having received power to speak, he began thus to deliver himself:
16 We, O Antiochus, who are persuaded that we live under a divine law, consider no compulsion to be so forcible as obedience to that law;
17 wherefore we consider that we ought not in any point to transgress the law.
18 And indeed, were our law (as you suppose) not truly divine, and if we wrongly think it divine, we should have no right even in that case to destroy our sense of religion.
19 think not eating the unclean, then, a trifling offense.

The Brenton translation of the Septuagint is in the public domain.