РефератыИностранный языкDeDead Sea Scrolls Essay Research Paper While

Dead Sea Scrolls Essay Research Paper While

Dead Sea Scrolls Essay, Research Paper


While pursuing one of his goats into a cave near the Dead Sea in the Jordan


Desert, in 1947, a fifteen year old boy by the name of Muhammad adh-Dhib,


stumbled on to a great discovery. Inside the cave, he found broken jars that


contained scrolls written in a strange language, wrapped in linen cloth and


leather.1 This first discovery produced seven scrolls and started an


archaeological search that produced thousands of scroll fragments in eleven


caves. The Dead Sea is located in Israel and Jordan, east of Jerusalem. The dead


sea is very deep, salty, and it?s the lowest body of water in the world.


Because the dead sea is at such a low elevation, the climate has a high


evaporation rate but a very low humidity which helped to preserve the scrolls.2


Archaeologists searched for the dwelling of the people that may have left the


scrolls in the caves. The archaeologist excavated a ruin located between the


cliffs where the scrolls were found and the dead sea. This ruin is called


Qumran. The ruins and the scrolls were dated by the carbon 14 method and found


to be from the third century which made them the oldest surviving biblical


manuscript by at least 1000 years. Since the first discoveries archaeologists


have found over 800 scrolls and scroll fragments in 11 different caves in the


surrounding area. In fact, there are about 100,000 fragments found in all. Most


of which were written on goat skin and sheep skin. A few were on papyrus, a


plant used to make paper, but one scroll was engraved on copper sheeting telling


of sixty buried treasure sites.3Because the scrolls containing the directions to


the treasures is unable to be fully unrolled, the treasures have not been found


yet. In all, the texts of the scrolls were remarkable. They contained unknown


psalms, Bible commentary, calendar text, mystical texts, apocalyptic texts,


liturgical texts, purity laws , bible stories, and fragments of every book in


the Old Testament except that of Esther, including a imaginative paraphrase of


the Book of Genesis. Also found were texts, in the original languages, of


several books of the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha. These texts?none of which


was included in the Hebrew canon of the Bible?are Tobit, Sirach, Jubilees,


portions of Enoch, and the Testament of Levi, up to this time known only in


early Greek, Syriac, Latin, and Ethiopic versions.4 John Trever of the W.F.


Albright Institute of Archaeological Research, was allowed to investigate the


scrolls and was stunned to find that the scrolls closely resemble the Nash


Papyrus, the once known oldest fragment of the Hebrew Bible dated at or around


150 BC. One of the scrolls was a complete copy of the book of the prophet


Isaiah. Trever also examined three other scrolls; the Manual of Discipline, a


commentary on the book of Habbakuk, and one called the Genesis Apocryphon.


Trever took photographs of the texts to William Foxwell Albright ; of John


Hopkins University in Baltimore, who declared the scrolls dated back to around


100 BC.5 The scroll and fragments found in the Qumran is a library of


information that contains books or works written in three different languages:


Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek. Many scholars separated the scrolls into three


different categories: Biblical – Books found in the Hebrew Bible. Apocryphal or


psuedepigraphical – Works not in some Bibles but included in others. Sectarian -


ordinances, biblical commentaries, apocalyptic visions, and sacred works.6 One


of the longer text, found in Qumran is the Tehillim or Psalms Scroll. It was


found in 1956 in cave 11 and unrolled in 1961. It is a assortment of Psalms,


hymns and an indifferent passage about the psalms authored by King David. It is


written on sheep skin parchment and it has the thickest surface of any of the


scrolls.7 The Manual Of Discipline or Community Rule contains rules, warnings


and punishments to violators of the rules of the desert sect called Yahad. It


also contains the methods of joining the community, the relations among the


members, their way of life , and their beliefs. The sect believed that human


nature and all that happens in the world is predestined. The scroll ends with


songs of praise of God. The scroll was found in cave 4 and cave 5 and It was


written on parchment. The longest version was found in cave 4.8 The War Rule is


commonly referred to as the ?Pierced Messiah? text. It refers to a Messiah


who came from the line of David, to be brought to a judgment and then to a


killing. It anticipates the New Testament view of the preordained death of the


messiah. It is written in a Hebrew script and is only a six line fragment.9 Most


of the scrolls were found in caves near Qumran. The Qumran site was excavated to


fi

nd the habitation of those who deposited the scrolls in the nearby caves. The


excavations uncovered plates bowls and cemeteries with over twelve hundred


graves that have the same characteristics which suggest religious uniformity,


along with a complex of structures which suggested that they were communal in


presentation.10 Many believe this is where a community of a distant Jewish sect


called the Essenes may have once lived. The Essenes were members of a Jewish


religious brotherhood, organized on a communal basis who practiced strict


disciplines. The order had around 4000 members and they existed in Palestine and


Syria from the 2nd century BC to the 2nd century AD. The sects main settlements


were on the shores of the Dead Sea.11 In some scholars views the site was the


wilderness retreat of the Essenes. According to these scholars, the Essenes or


another religious sect resided in neighboring locations, most likely caves,


tents, and solid structures, but depended on the center for community facilities


such as stores of food and water. 12 Many scholars believe the Essene community


wrote, copied, or accumulated the scrolls at Qumran and deposited them in the


caves of the neighboring hills. Others question this explanation, claiming that


the site was no monastery but rather a Roman fortress or a winter residence.


Some also believe that the Qumran site has little if anything to do with the


scrolls and the evidence available does not support a definitive answer. 13 A


lapse in the use of the site is linked to evidence of a huge earthquake. Qumran


was abandoned about the time of the Roman invasion of 68 A.D.,14 two years


before the collapse of Jewish self-government in Judea and the destruction of


the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 A.D. The scrolls are believed to have been brought


from Jerusalem the Judean wilderness for safekeeping when Jerusalem was


threatened by Roman armies. This was the time that Qumran was a judean military


fortress which was destroyed in a battle with the Romans Since their discovery,


the Dead Sea Scrolls have been the subject of great scholarly and public


interest. For scholars they represent an invaluable source for exploring the


nature of post- biblical times and probing the sources of two of the world’s


great religions. For the public, they are artifacts of great significance,


mystery, and drama. 15 The Dead Sea Scrolls give us a better view of a crucial


period in the history of Judaism. Judaism was divided into numerous religious


sects and political parties. With the destruction of the Temple in 70 AD., all


that came to an end. Only the Judaism of the Pharisees; the most powerful Jewish


sect–Rabbinic Judaism–survived. Qumran literature shows a Judaism in the midst


of change from the religion of Israel as described in the Bible to the Judaism


of the rabbis as explained in the Talmud, which tells the rules that Jews live


by.16 Scholars have emphasized similarities between the beliefs and practices


shown in the Qumran material and those of early Christians.17 These similarities


include rituals of baptism, communal meals, and property.18 One of the most


fascinating similarities is how the people divided themselves into twelve tribes


led by twelve chiefs. This is very similar to how Jesus had twelve apostles who


would sit on thrones and judge the twelve tribes of Israel. 19 The Dead Sea


Scrolls were written during the birth of Christianity and an important time in


Jewish history. The scrolls have giving an insight into the lives and customs of


the people who lived in a time of Roman invasion and Jewish history. Although


the text do not hold all the answers, they do give people a tool to use when


studying biblical history. Only a very few scholars had access to the scrolls


before copies of the scrolls were published in the 1990?s; now we all have a


chance to read an come to our own conclusions about the text. Whether the


scrolls uphold Jewish or Christian beliefs is not the only interesting part of


the scrolls. The text also give a more personal look at the people who lived in


a major part of Jewish history.


Burrows, Millar. (1955). The Dead Sea Scrolls. New York: Grammercy Publishing


Company Roth, Cecil. (1965). The Dea Sea Scrolls. A New Historical Approach. New


York: W.W. Norton & Company. Schubert, Kurt . (1959). The Dead Sea


Community. Great Britain: Bowering Press Plymouth. Shanks, Hershel. (1998). The


Mystery And Meaning Of The Dead Sea Scrolls. New York: Random House. Project


Judaica Foundation, Inc.(1996-1999) . Welcome to SCROLLS FROM THE DEAD SEA. The


Ancient Library of Qumran and Modern Scholarship, an Exhibit at the Library of


Congress, Washington,DC http://metalab.unc.edu/expo/deadsea.scrolls.exhibit/intro.html,


Site design by New Connections.

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: Dead Sea Scrolls Essay Research Paper While

Слов:1720
Символов:11232
Размер:21.94 Кб.