Clearer Insight into the Development of the Bible -- A Gift of the Scrolls

Full title
Clearer Insight into the Development of the Bible -- A Gift of the Scrolls
Updated By
Research notes

Reader Checked|17/07/2011 OA|Revised Reader keywords - AK - 17/06/2012

Reference type
Author(s)
Ulrich, Eugene C.
Editor(s)
Roitman, Adolfo D.
Schiffman, Lawrence H.
Tzoref, Shani
Year
2011
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
The Dead Sea Scrolls and Contemporary Culture: Proceedings of the International Conference Held at the Israel Museum, Jerusalem (July 6-8, 2008)
Volume
93
Issue / Series Volume
93
Series Title
Studies on the Texts of the Desert of Judah
Publisher
Brill
Place of Publication
Leiden
Pages
119-137
Alternative title
STDJ
Label
25/07/2011
Abstract

The past decade has seen a paradigm shift in our understanding of the development of the texts that eventually became the Bible. Almost sixty years ago, the first biblical scroll discovered – the Great Isaiah Scroll – was judged “vulgar” or “worthless.” During the latter half of the twentieth century, the many “biblical” scrolls were all judged according to the “standards” of the Masoretic, Samaritan, and Septuagintal texts, and the canons represented by those texts.
|With the full publication of the Scrolls, the past decade has seen a Copernican shift: a decentralization of the three texts mentioned above, and an appreciation that they were but three fortunately preserved stars in a vast, otherwise lost, galaxy of ancient texts. This paper will attempt to review recent advances. The later categories of “biblical,” “parabiblical,” and “canonical” need to be refocused. There is nothing “sectarian” about the corpus. The development of the successive editions that form the received biblical books can be traced with greater accuracy. There never was an “unreworked Pentateuch,” and so 4Q364-367 will probably eventually be recognized as “4QPentateuch.”

Notes

Differant version appeared as: Ulrich, Eugene C. "Methodological Reflections on Determining Scriptural Status in First Century Judaism." In Rediscovering the Dead Sea Scrolls: An Assessment of Old and New Approaches and Methods, ed. Maxine L. Grossman. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2010.