Mantic Sages in the Ancient Near East, Israel, Early Judaism, and the Dead Sea Scrolls

Full title
Mantic Sages in the Ancient Near East, Israel, Early Judaism, and the Dead Sea Scrolls
Updated By
Research notes

reader checked|20/04/2012 AL

Reference type
Author(s)
Perdue, Leo G.
Editor(s)
De Troyer, Kristin
Lange, Armin
Schulte, L. L.
Year
2009
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Prophecy after the Prophets? The Contribution of the Dead Sea Scrolls to the Understanding of Biblical and Extra-Biblical Prophecy
Issue / Series Volume
52
Series Title
Contributions to Biblical Exegesis & Theology
Publisher
Peeters
Place of Publication
Leuven
Pages
133-189
Label
04/01/2011
Abstract

It is often said that prophecy came to an end in the early Second Temple period. This volume investigates how the Dead Sea Scrolls help to better understand Israelite Jewish prophecy and Israelite-Jewish prophetic texts. However, it not only contributes to the study of prophecy and the prophetic books of the Hebrew Bible by analyzing the textual history and interpretative history of prophetic books - the former being concerned with the manuscripts of prophetic books found in Qumran and elsewhere, the latter being focused on para-prophetic texts and commentaries - it also investigates the phenomenon of active prophecy, i.e. ongoing prophetic activities, after the early Second Temple period, long after prophecy came to its so-called end.
|Leo G. Perdue demonstrates that apocalyptic developed out of both prophecy and mantic wisdom. Perdue also provides a survey of mythical mantic sages in the Ancient Near Eeast and mantic sages and mantic wisdom in biblical, and ancient Jewish literature.