| |
Dead
Sea Scrolls
Collections of manuscript
material found at various sites west of the Dead Sea in Palestine in 1947 and the
following years.
The most important of these sites are the regions near Qumran, Murabba'at
and Engedi. From caves in the last two areas documents were recovered relating to the
Second Jewish Revolt against the Romans
(132-135 AD). But the most interesting of the documents are those of a rather earlier
date, found in 11 caves in the Qumran district, a few miles south of Jericho.
|

|
|
|
|
|
In one of these 11 caves an Arab
goatherd, Muhammad adh-Dhib, lighted by chance in 1947 on the first lot of 'Dead Sea
Scrolls' to be publicized, amounting to seven in all. Most of these were in fairly good
condition, having been wrapped in linen and placed in earthenware jars for safe keeping.
The vast majority of the manuscripts found in the other Qumran caves, however, whether by
Bedouin or by trained archeologists, were in a sadly fragmentary condition. Many of the
pieces were no larger than postage stamps. Only by an effort of the imagination,
envisaging them in their original state, could these be called 'Scrolls'. The task of
piecing them together so as to reconstruct as far as possible the original text lasted for
several painstaking years.
Most of the documents are written in
Hebrew, some in Aramaic (another Semitic language), a few in Greek. The fragments
represent over 500 books which apparently belonged to the library of a Jewish religious
community. About 100 of these are copies of books of the Hebrew Bible; several Old
Testament books are represented several times over, and all of them have been identified
except that no trace has been found of the book of Esther. Others are commentaries on Old
Testament books, showing how these were understood in the community which owned them.
Others again give valuable information about the organization of the community, including
one in particular which was found in Cave 1 in 1947, variously called the 'Rule of the
Community' or the 'Manual of Discipline'. Yet others are liturgical documents which throw
light on the community's order of worship. One thing that emerges clearly from these
liturgical texts is that the community regulated its religious life by a different
calendar from that which was officially followed in the Jerusalem Temple and which is
still the calendar used by orthodox Jews for religious purposes. The Qumran calendar, of
which we had previous knowledge from a work entitled the Book of Jubilees (circa 100 BC),
ignored the phases of the moon completely and
aimed at being entirely solar. It consisted of 364 days, so that any given day of a
particular month must have fallen on the same day of the week year by year. This calendar
must have become progressively out of step with the real solar year of 365 days, but we
have no idea what provision, if any, was made to correct the error. The use of a different
calendar was one factor preventing the community from participating in the Temple
festivals in Jerusalem, but not the only one.
As for the bearing of the Scrolls on
the Bible, the interest which attended their first discovery arose from the fact that here
were manuscripts of the Old Testament books in Hebrew reliably dated 1000 years earlier
than the oldest datable manuscripts of Hebrew Scripture previously known to be extant. The
earlier textual history of the Hebrew Bible has thus been enriched by a wealth of new
evidence, although the ordinary reader of the English Old Testament can be assured that no
significant changes in the essential message of the books are involved.
It has become clear, however, that the
bearing of the Scrolls on the New Testament and the origins of Christianity is even more important.
Estimates of their relevance in this respect have varied greatly, from those who find no
connection at all to the minority that would go so far as to recognize Jesus himself in
the Teacher of Righteousness. We may forget such extreme positions and welcome in the
Scrolls an abundance of new background material against which the New Testament can be
read with greater understanding. It is difficult to think of any part of the New Testament
which is not illuminated in some way by this discovery.
Whereas the New Testament is dominated
by the proclamation that in Jesus the Kingdom of God or age of the Messiah has arrived,
the Scrolls (even the latest of them) still look forward to its coming, although it is
regarded as imminent. Its advent, in the community's expectation, would be marked by the
appearance of three figures foretold in Old Testament prophecy a prophet (a second Moses), an anointed priest
(a second Aaron) and an anointed king (a second David, a great military leader). While the
early Christians regarded Jesus as the promised Messiah (or 'Anointed One'), the Teacher
of Righteousness does not appear to have been a messianic personage either in his own eyes
or in those of his followers, but rather a preparer of the way for the messianic age. His
role is thus more comparable to that of John the Baptist in the New Testament narrative;
and while identity is out of the question, the life and activity of John the Baptist offer
one of the most promising areas of common ground between the Scrolls and the New
Testament. Another such area may be found in Paul's sojourn in Damascus, a place which
figures in one of the most important texts (the 'Zadokite Work') as an outpost of the
community.
While the Qumran community's ideal of
holiness involved insulation from sinners, the ideal of Jesus and his disciples involved
association with them. The rapid spread of Christianity through the Mediterranean world
between 30-70 AD meant that it could not be suppressed by the extermination of any one
center of its life, as the Qumran community came to an end with the destruction of its
headquarters. See Gnosticism.
Related
videos:
Dead Sea Scrolls:
Mysteries,Controversies and Revelations.
Enigma of the
Dead Sea Scrolls.
Mysteries of the
Dead Sea Scrolls.
Mysteries of the
Holy Land.
Revelations of
the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Related
books:
Apocalypticism in
the Dead Sea Scrolls (The Dead Sea Scrolls Series).
Dead Sea Scrolls: The Complete Story.
Reclaiming the
Dead Sea Scrolls: The History of Judaism, the Background of Christianity, and the Lost
Library of Qumran (Anchor Bible Reference Libr).
Secrets of the
Dead Sea Scrolls.
The Ancient
Library of Qumran.
The Complete Dead
Sea Scrolls in English.
The Dead Sea
Scrolls and the First Christians: Essays and Translations.
The Dead Sea
Scrolls Bible: The Oldest Known Bible.
The Dead Sea
Scrolls Deception.
The Dead Sea
Scrolls Today.
The Dead Sea
Scrolls Translated: The Qumran Texts in English.
The Mystery and
Meaning of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Understanding the
Dead Sea Scrolls: A Reader from the Biblical Archaeology Review.
Click
here for more related
books.
Further
info:
The Shrine of the Book.
| |