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{en} [[Benjamin G. Wold]], '''''Qumran Wisdom and the New Testament: Exploring Early Jewish and Christian Textual Cultures''''' (Cambridge, UK - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, 2023).  
{en} [[Jörg Frey]] (in collaboration with Jacob N. Cerone), '''''Qumran and Christian Origins''''' (Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2022).  


==Abstract==
==Abstract==


In this book, Benjamin Wold builds on recent developments in the study of early Jewish wisdom literature and brings it to bear on the New Testament. This scholarship has been transformed by the discovery at Qumran of more than 900 manuscripts, including Hebrew wisdom compositions, many of which were published in critical editions beginning in the mid-1990s. Wold systematically explores the salient themes in the Jewish wisdom worldview found in these scrolls. He also presents detailed commentaries on translations and articulates the key debates regarding Qumran wisdom literature, highlighting the significance of wisdom within the context of Jewish textual culture. Wold's treatment of themes within the early Jewish and Christian textual cultures demonstrates that wisdom transcended literary form and genre. He shows how and why the publication of these ancient texts has engendered profound shifts in the study of early Jewish wisdom, and their relevance to current controversies regarding the interpretation of specific New Testament texts"--
"Among the archaeological discoveries of the modern era, the Qumran site and the Dead Sea Scrolls are some of the most significant. These finds offer rich understanding of not only Judaism but also the Christian New Testament. Jörg Frey, through careful study and insight, illuminates these texts for the modern reader. Qumran and Christian Origins examines the hermeneutical framework of Qumran scholarship, patterns for relating the scrolls to early Christianity, and the methodological challenges faced by comparisons between Qumran texts and New Testament writings. In a critical evaluation of earlier views, Frey provides a summary of the Scrolls' impact on our views of the historical Jesus, Paul and his language, and the Johannine literature. Frey then considers how the Scrolls inform our understanding of the origins and meaning of apocalypticism, ancient concepts of scriptural authority, and the growth of the biblical canon. The final chapters discuss the relationship between the Qumran texts and ancient testimonies about the Essenes and the connection between the Scrolls and the archaeological site of Qumran. Drawing on several decades of Frey's research, this book demonstrates why students of the New Testament must study early Jewish texts, and in particular the Qumran corpus, and how these texts can be aptly applied. In the end, the hope is that we will have learned to see the New Testament more in terms of contemporary Judaism. Such insights are of profound theological importance, enabling us to pay attention to a feature of Christianity that was fundamental in its beginnings and is still significant today."--


==Contents==
==Contents==


Cosmology and eschatology -- Universalism and particularism -- Wisdom as action -- Poverty and humility -- Debt remission in the Matthean Lord's Prayer -- Paul: spirit, flesh, and the household.
Introduction : the Dead Sea scrolls and the New Testament -- The Dead Sea scrolls and New Testament interpretation : history of scholarship, methodology of comparison, and two test cases -- Changing issues and hermeneutical horizons in Qumran research -- Qumran and the study of the New Testament : insights on the historical Jesus and the making of christology -- Paul's view of the spirit in the light of Qumran -- Flesh and spirit : Palestinian Jewish wisdom traditions and Paul's anthropological terms -- Contextualizing Paul's "works of the law" : MMT in New Testament scholarship -- The Johannine literature and the background of its dualistic language -- Communal meals in the Qumran texts and the quest for the context of the Last Supper -- The Dead Sea scrolls, scriptural authority, and the emerging canon -- Apocalyptic writings in Qumran and the community's idea of history -- Qumran and the Essenes : on the historical value of the ancient sources -- Qumran and archaeology -- Summary and concluding perspectives : the scrolls and the New Testament after seventy-five years - what have we learned?


==External links==
==External links==
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[[Category:Qumran Studies--2020s]]  
[[Category:Qumran Studies--2020s]]  
[[Category:Qumran Studies--English]]  
[[Category:Qumran Studies--English]]  
[[Category:Wisdom Studies--2020s]]
[[Category:Wisdom Studies--English]]


[[Category:Christian Origins Studies--2020s]]  
[[Category:Christian Origins Studies--2020s]]  

Revision as of 09:18, 14 April 2024

{en} Jörg Frey (in collaboration with Jacob N. Cerone), Qumran and Christian Origins (Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2022).

Abstract

"Among the archaeological discoveries of the modern era, the Qumran site and the Dead Sea Scrolls are some of the most significant. These finds offer rich understanding of not only Judaism but also the Christian New Testament. Jörg Frey, through careful study and insight, illuminates these texts for the modern reader. Qumran and Christian Origins examines the hermeneutical framework of Qumran scholarship, patterns for relating the scrolls to early Christianity, and the methodological challenges faced by comparisons between Qumran texts and New Testament writings. In a critical evaluation of earlier views, Frey provides a summary of the Scrolls' impact on our views of the historical Jesus, Paul and his language, and the Johannine literature. Frey then considers how the Scrolls inform our understanding of the origins and meaning of apocalypticism, ancient concepts of scriptural authority, and the growth of the biblical canon. The final chapters discuss the relationship between the Qumran texts and ancient testimonies about the Essenes and the connection between the Scrolls and the archaeological site of Qumran. Drawing on several decades of Frey's research, this book demonstrates why students of the New Testament must study early Jewish texts, and in particular the Qumran corpus, and how these texts can be aptly applied. In the end, the hope is that we will have learned to see the New Testament more in terms of contemporary Judaism. Such insights are of profound theological importance, enabling us to pay attention to a feature of Christianity that was fundamental in its beginnings and is still significant today."--

Contents

Introduction : the Dead Sea scrolls and the New Testament -- The Dead Sea scrolls and New Testament interpretation : history of scholarship, methodology of comparison, and two test cases -- Changing issues and hermeneutical horizons in Qumran research -- Qumran and the study of the New Testament : insights on the historical Jesus and the making of christology -- Paul's view of the spirit in the light of Qumran -- Flesh and spirit : Palestinian Jewish wisdom traditions and Paul's anthropological terms -- Contextualizing Paul's "works of the law" : MMT in New Testament scholarship -- The Johannine literature and the background of its dualistic language -- Communal meals in the Qumran texts and the quest for the context of the Last Supper -- The Dead Sea scrolls, scriptural authority, and the emerging canon -- Apocalyptic writings in Qumran and the community's idea of history -- Qumran and the Essenes : on the historical value of the ancient sources -- Qumran and archaeology -- Summary and concluding perspectives : the scrolls and the New Testament after seventy-five years - what have we learned?

External links

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