Difference between revisions of "Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls (1994 Schiffman), book"

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Schiffman’s ''Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls'' is perhaps most noteworthy for its insistence that non-Jewish scholars hijacked the scrolls, slowing down the publication process, whereas Qumran scholarship (and its readers) would be much better off if Jewish scholars, who spoke, wrote, and understood Hebrew, took over the responsibilities for translating, publishing and analyzing the scrolls.  Schiffman presents his unique thesis that the Qumran community was comprised of schismatic Sadducees, who brought many of the scrolls to the community.
Schiffman’s ''Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls'' is perhaps most noteworthy for its insistence that non-Jewish scholars hijacked the scrolls, slowing down the publication process, whereas Qumran scholarship (and its readers) would be much better off if Jewish scholars, who spoke, wrote, and understood Hebrew, took over the responsibilities for translating, publishing and analyzing the scrolls.  Schiffman presents his unique thesis that the Qumran community was comprised of schismatic Sadducees, who brought many of the scrolls to the community.
==Table of Contents==
Part 1:  Discovery and Disclosure:  Liberating the Scrolls
1. Shepherds and Scholars:  Secrets of the Cave
2. Scholars, Scrolls and Scandals
3. The Archaeology of Qumran
Part 2:  The Community at Qumran
4. Judaism, Hellenism and Sectarianism
5. Origins and Early History
6. The Character of the Community
7. Leadership
8. Women in the Scrolls
9. Faith and Belief
Part 3:  Closing the Canon:  Biblical Texts and Interpretation
10. Bible, Canon and Text
11. Apocryphal Literature
12. Wisdom and the Mysteries of Creation
13. Biblical Interpretation
14. The Prophets in the Hands of Men
Part 4:  To Live as a Jew
15. The Theology of Jewish Law
16. The Enigma of the Temple Scroll
17. The Law of the Sect
18. Prayer and Ritual
Part 5:  Mysticism, Messianism, and the End of Days
19. The Messianic Idea
20. The Community at the End of Days
21. The Pierced Messiah and Other Controversial Texts
22. Mysticism and Magic
Part 6:  Sectarianism, Nationalism, and Consensus
23. Israel and the Nations
24. Jerusalem, the Holy City
25. The Decline of Sectarianism and the Emergence of Rabbinic Judaism


==Editions and translations==
==Editions and translations==

Revision as of 17:27, 3 December 2009

Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls: The History of Judaism, the Background of Christianity, the Lost Library of Qumran (1994) is a book by Lawrence H. Schiffman.

Abstract

Schiffman’s Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls is perhaps most noteworthy for its insistence that non-Jewish scholars hijacked the scrolls, slowing down the publication process, whereas Qumran scholarship (and its readers) would be much better off if Jewish scholars, who spoke, wrote, and understood Hebrew, took over the responsibilities for translating, publishing and analyzing the scrolls. Schiffman presents his unique thesis that the Qumran community was comprised of schismatic Sadducees, who brought many of the scrolls to the community.


Table of Contents

Part 1: Discovery and Disclosure: Liberating the Scrolls

1. Shepherds and Scholars: Secrets of the Cave 2. Scholars, Scrolls and Scandals 3. The Archaeology of Qumran

Part 2: The Community at Qumran

4. Judaism, Hellenism and Sectarianism 5. Origins and Early History 6. The Character of the Community 7. Leadership 8. Women in the Scrolls 9. Faith and Belief

Part 3: Closing the Canon: Biblical Texts and Interpretation

10. Bible, Canon and Text 11. Apocryphal Literature 12. Wisdom and the Mysteries of Creation 13. Biblical Interpretation 14. The Prophets in the Hands of Men


Part 4: To Live as a Jew

15. The Theology of Jewish Law 16. The Enigma of the Temple Scroll 17. The Law of the Sect 18. Prayer and Ritual


Part 5: Mysticism, Messianism, and the End of Days

19. The Messianic Idea 20. The Community at the End of Days 21. The Pierced Messiah and Other Controversial Texts 22. Mysticism and Magic

Part 6: Sectarianism, Nationalism, and Consensus

23. Israel and the Nations 24. Jerusalem, the Holy City 25. The Decline of Sectarianism and the Emergence of Rabbinic Judaism

Editions and translations

Published in Philadelphia, PA: Jewish Publication Society, 1994. Reprinted in New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007. Translated into French (2003).

External links