2) Norman Golb, "Who Wrote the Dead Scrolls? The Search for the Secret of Qumran" (New York; Touchstone, 1995). (His Glossary is very comprehensive in its coverage of numerous terms relevant to broad aspects of Judaism and the specialized language of scroll scholarship, in general, as well as to Dead Sea Scroll scholarship, in particular.)
3) W. Harold Mare, "The Archaeology of the Jerusalem Area" (Grand Rapids, 1987), which contains a good sampling of the specialized archaeological terminology applicable to sites in the Eastern Mediterranean dating to the Old Testament and intertestamental periods.
4) Josephus, "The Jewish War", G. A. Williamson (trans. 1959 & 1970), E. Mary Smallwood (revised with a new introduction, notes and appendixes) (London; Penguin, 1981).
In addition I have liberally interpreted information from a variety of sources to create new entries for this glossary. These are simply my own first attempts to catalog an evolving understanding of the underlying topic. All of it is subject to change without notice, of course. None of these authors are in any way responsible for my own additions, omissions, and errors or for my inability to understand their meaning or the contents of their works. Constructing this Glossary was one of the simpler exercises which I felt was necessary in order to make any headway along the steep learning curve for this topic. I still refer to it often and continue to find it useful on a regular basis.
Note: There is another interesting glossary on the University of Notre Dame web site constructed by Notre Dame undergraduates. While I have not consulted this glossary very often, and many of its entries are not strictly within the limits set for this site, it may well be of interest to those interested in biblical history from a christian perspective.
The Intertestamental Period
The period 200 BC to 200 CE was a time of history-making changes in Jewish
culture and religious and political philosophy. It also harbors the beginnings of the
development of Christian philosophy, culture and beliefs. For these reasons events of
that period still
exerts considerable influence on large segments of Western philosophy and culture
today. That is what makes it such an interesting period to study. The relative dearth
of original documents from Palestine during that period is what gives the Dead Sea
Scrolls, in particular, their special allure. They are also fascinating and important
documents from a period that offers too few original documents to satisfy the curiosity
of a growing audience of scholars and non-specialists interested in pre-Christian and
pre-Rabbinic religion and religious practice of Palestine.
The Dead Sea Scrolls
deserve a careful and dispassionate preservation, reconstruction and analysis. Nothing
less will satisfy the demands of the diverse interests that seek to examine and
understand their contents.
This Glossary includes a wide assortment of terms,
references to locations, documents, and books to enable everyone interested in probing
the messages and meanings of the Dead Sea Scrolls.
One clear message from the Dead
Sea Scrolls is that we have not had a sufficient understanding of the diversity of the
currents in religious philosophy that were influencing the daily lives of the citizenry
at that time. Contemporary but distant historians writing primarily for a Roman
audience had not sufficiently prepared the world's scholars for the diversity of the
ideas and beliefs described in the Dead Sea Scrolls. About one-third of the scrolls
seem to have left no other trace of themselves in the historical record and except for
this amazing find would still not be known to this day.
The mythic simplicity of
most biblical stories has disconnected the Old and New Testaments from the historical
events that were known to have taken place in Jerusalem and elsewhere in the region
during that time. This makes the Bible an unreliable historical document if one is
looking for the roots of Rabbinic Judaism or early Christianity in previously known
histories of the period.
It remains to be seen if any of the Dead Sea Scrolls will
shed new light of those historical roots. It is already certain that they shed new
light on the evolution of Jewish thought and religious practices that preceded the
Christian era. In that sense they already provide some insight into the turmoil the
eventually produced the early Christian Church. For the same reasons, they should also
provide fresh insights into the evolution of Rabbinic Judaism which emerged alongside
the Christian Church over several centuries.
In order to use the Dead Sea Scrolls
as fruitfully as possible it is first necessary to recognize what they are and what they
are not. The shear number of separate scrolls, the diversity of their handwriting, the
variety of their philosophies, the complete lack of original autographs (deeds of
ownership, correspondence, first hand commentaries by the original author, etc.), and
the philosophical incompatibilities among some of the manuscripts all make it seem
highly unlikely that these are the exclusive works of one small group of sectarian
scribes working in the desert in total isolation from the majority of Jews living in
Judaea at that time. Not impossible, just unlikely.
On the other hand, there are
many reasons to reasonably suppose that these are not part of the collected works of the
Temple. Individual priests and citizens of Jerusalem could possibly have contributed
various parts of this library. Manuscripts could have to have been removed from the city
and stored in the desert prior to the sack of the city by the Roman Army in 70 CE. This
presupposes that Qumran was not taken by the Roman Army until after the fall of
Jerusalem, of course.
Hiding
scrolls in caves in the desert has a long and distinguished history.
Origen puts one
find ("with other Hebrew and Greek books in a jar near Jericho."), which he personally
examined, between 211 and 217 CE. Clearly, scrolls have been found in caves since at
least the third century CE and others have even been discovered since the Dead Sea
Scrolls were themselves first announced. There is no reason to assume that this one
group of caves holds all the scrolls that were saved from the Roman army during the
first Jewish revolt against Rome.
The Dead Sea Scrolls are to be seen as a subset of the collective library of Jewish religious,
cultural and philosophical writings extant at the time of the First Jewish Revolt in and around
Jerusalem. Only after that is finally understood will we be able to make any worthwhile
progress toward sorting out what, if anything, they can tell us about the division of first
century Judaism into its Christian and Rabbinic successors. That is a story that many
people are waiting to hear.
This Glossary of Terms has been assembled to assist me, and anyone who is interested, in
tracing two of the Worlds most influential modern religions to their Biblical roots. Because
many of the Dead Sea Scrolls, especially the so-called non-biblical manuscripts, have
avoided the intermediate redactors, they are as direct a communication from the
intertestamental period as we are likely to get. As such, their importance is difficult to
overstate. On the other hand, it is important to consider both the words and the source
before attempting to read too much into their messages. This is the point of contention
that has developed over what to make of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Who wrote them, why and
when are questions that need to be definitively answered before their impact can be fully
gauged or appreciated.
Among the extra-Biblical Books included among the Apocrypha, along with the
relevant references, are the following:
The Book of the Covenant (Ex. 24:7);
The Apocrypha has been part of English Bibles since 1382. They were also
included in the King James Version of 1611. The Septuagint (Greek version of
the Jewish Bible), contained these books, and from the Septuagint they found
their way into the Latin Vulgate of St. Jerome.
Catholics gave the name of Apocrypha to all books of uncertain date and
unknown authorship. Some of the books exist only in fragments, and some
have entirely disappeared and are known only through references in other
works.
Among the Old Testament Apocrypha are included:
The Sibylline Books,
The Gospel of Nicodemus,
a large body of apocalyptic writings, including: All of this cannot be true. In fact, none of it necessarily has
to be true. It is clear, however, that it is much easier to define Christianity in
terms of its current Canon, complex as that may be, than in terms of its historical
roots which are vague at their best, propagandist at their worst, and clouded by the
effects of time, mishap and generations of intervening redactors.
At the time of the discovery of the scrolls the
available scientific community able to handle the tasks of excavating the caves and the
Qumran environs, conserve, translate and publish the scrolls, and interpret their larger
significance was limited and, in fact, included no world recognized authorities in any
requisite field; not scroll scholarship, not archaeology, not stratigraphy, not Jewish
history, not ancient middle eastern languages, not even classical Roman history.
Nevertheless, the local group headed by Pere de Vaux determined to keep it a local and
to the extent possible a limited and united effort. That group had almost fifty years
to generate their consensus while denying any else access to their cache of material.
A well organized and modern attack on the same problem, if it were to be undertaken
today, would include many authorities from many disciplines from the very beginning.
Instead what the world got was an amateurish and ultimately incompetent effort whose 50
year reign of non-communication is only now coming to an end with the wider
dissemination of photographs of the the scrolls that for so long have remained hidden.
In spite of that, it is difficult to undo or properly redo the excavations that were
undertaken so long ago or even to force the wider community of scholars to rethink the
widely promulgated assumptions disguised as scientific discoveries by a lazy band of
third rate scholars with an agenda that they do not acknowledge to this day.
The ages of the linen in
which some scrolls were wrapped and the ages of the pottery jars in which some were
stored have also to be determined. These can affect our understanding of the age and
meaning of the scrolls. There are other interesting items to consider. For
example, it is likely though hardly certain,
All of these are
mere likelihoods, not certainties. A common date is impossible, a narrow range of dates
is unlikely. A diversity of dates is almost a certainty. Until much more is known,
however, the question of dates for the scrolls will remain an area of active scholarly
interest and speculation. Questions such as the following may never be answered in
a fully satisfactory manner.
Glossary of Terms
A,
B,
C,
D,
E,
F,
G,
H,
I,
J,
K,
L,
M,
N,
O,
P,
Q,
R,
S,
T,
U,
V,
W,
XYZ
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Apocrypha
and
Missing Books of the BibleMissing Books listed among the Apocrypha
There are many books mentioned in the Bible which are not found in the
current biblical canon. Some of them are known in various languages and
versions today, but most are not. They are usually classed with the
Apocrypha, implying that they were written by someone pretending to be the
ancient and more famous author of the title. The adopted persona was
intended to add authority to the text. It is not clear that such was
always the case. Early Church councils were clearly interested in clarifying
and systematizing the Biblical Canon. That meant removing any untidy or
inconsistent writings which contradicted any of the more prestegious books,
which clearly could not be removed from the Bible or significantly emended.
The Book of the Wars of the Lord (Num. 21: 14);
THe Book of Jasher (Josh. 10: 13);
The Book of the Statutes (1 Sam. 10:25);
The Book of Enoch (Jude 14);
The Book of the Acts of Solomon (1 Kgs. 11:41);
The Book of Nathan the Prophet (1 Chr. 29:29);
The Book of Gad the Seer (1 Chr. 29:29);
The Book of Ahijah the Shilonite (2 Chr. 9:29)
Visions of Iddo the Seer (2 Chr. 9:29);
The Book of Shemaiah (2 Chr. 12:15);
The Story of the Prophet Iddo (2 Chr. 13:22);
The Book of Jehu (2 Chr. 20:34);
Acts of Uzziah, by Isaiah, the son of Amoz (2 Chr. 26:22);
Sayings of the Seers (2 Chr. 33:19);
a missing epistle of Paul to the Corinthians (1 Cor. 5:9);
a missing epistle to the Ephesians (Eph. 3:3);
a missing epistle to the Colossians, written from Laodicea (Col. 4:16);
a missing epistle of Jude (Jude 3).
The Apocrypha Defined
The Apocrypha is a name applied to one or more books missing from the Hebrew
scriptural canon. The Greek version of the canon of early Christianity,
however, has some of these "extra-biblical" books in it. Apocrypha is applied
to all quasi-scriptural books which are excluded from Holy Writ. For
Protestants, Apocrypha refers specifically to those fourteen books included
in the Septuagint (Greek canon), the Bible of the early Christian church, but
excluded from the Hebrew canon. The name Apocrypha was given to these books
by St. Jerome, whose Latin version of the Bible is known as the Vulgate.
The Book of Moses
The Book of Enoch,
From the account in the Book of Moses, Enoch
performed one of the greatest and most spectacular works of any prophet.
(Moses 6; 7.) How much the Book of Enoch contains about his teachings
no one knows. It appears from Paul's writings that he
had information about Enoch which is not contained in the Old Testament as
that document appears today (Heb. 11:5.). Jude recorded in his epistle a
prophecy made by Enoch, thus indicating that some of Enoch's writings may
have been extant in New Testament times. (Jude 14:15.)
The Assumption of Moses,
The Syriac Apocalypse of Baruch,
The Greek Apocalypse of Baruch,
The Book of Jubilees,
The Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs,
The Martyrdom of Isaiah,
The Testament of Job, and some writings about Adam and Eve, etc.
Among the New Testament Apocrypha are a number of gospels, including
The Gospel of Thomas,
The Gospel of Phillip
The Protevangel of James,
The Gospel According to the Egyptians,
The Gospel According to the Hebrews;
Acts, including those of
John,
the Didache, books on the teachings of the Twelve Apostles;
Thomas, and
Paul,
various epistles ascribed to
Clement,
Ignatius,
Polycarp,
Paul, and others;
the Christian portions of the Sibylline Books,
The Shepherd of Hermas,
The Apocalypse of Peter,
The Apocalypse of Paul, and
The Testament of Abraham.
- B -- C -
- D -
Most of the scrolls are of leather (parchment) and many were wrapped in linen and stored in earthenware jars with 'bowl-like' lids. One scroll on copper was eventually discovered. Some were written on papyrus.
The total number of scrolls collected in this initial round of discovery is uncertain. Various sources claim that from three to seven or eight complete parchment scrolls were eventually taken to a local sheik. He directed the Bedouin to a shopkeeper named Khalil Iskander Shahin (Kando) a member of the Syrian Jacobite Church. Kando contacted another Church member named George Isaiah. Kando and Isaiah then visited the original cave themselves and removed additional scrolls or fragments.
George Isaiah reported the discoveries to his ecclesiastical leader, the Archimandrite of the Syrian-Orthodox Monastery of St. Mark in Jerusalem, Mar Athanasius Yeshua Samuel, the spiritual leader of the Syrian Jacobite Church in Jerusalem. Just when this occurred is not clear, although April 1947 has been suggested.
Part of the Bedouin's share of the Scrolls was sold to the Muslim sheik of Bethlehem. Kando purchased the remaining scrolls and in turn sold them to Mar Athanasius Yeshua Samuel for £24. This consisted of four scrolls originally thought to be five, but one of them was merely broken in half. These four scrolls consist of one twenty-four foot long copy of the book of Isaiah, the "Genesis Apocryphon', a commentary on the "Book of Habakkuk', and the so-called 'Community Rule'.
Other subsequent discoveries by bedouin and others are also included under this rubric, whether on parchment, papyrus or copper. Most of the known scrolls are now housed either in the Shrine of the Book or in the Rockefeller Museum in East Jerusalem.
Rumors of an underground scroll market for private collectors cannot be discounted and it is entirely possible that the entire library from the West Bank caves, if it could be collected together, would exceed the size of the known library by a wide margin. How the privately held scrolls might be located and purchased remains an interesting dilemma for modern scholars and presumably for the 'investors'who originally purchased them.
Top of
Page
As described by
Josephus, Philo and Pliny the Elder they are noted for their communal way of life, their
ascetic conduct, and their ideas about fate and immortality. Only Pliny the Elder among
these three mentions that a group of Essenes lived near the Dead Sea. The smallest of
the three main Jewish sects during the first century CE, numbering about four thousand
according to both Josephus and Philo. They were very strict in avoidance of every form
of commerce, owned no slaves, observed a strict Sabbath, avoided all oaths and
maintained ritual purity.
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The
museum was opened in 1938 during the British mandate and was built with funds donated by
John D. Rockefeller. Long an independently endowed institute, it was nationalized by
the Jordanian Government in 1966 and captured by the Israelis in 1967.
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