Purity and Impurity in the Book of Jubilees

Full title
Purity and Impurity in the Book of Jubilees
Updated By
Research notes

Reader Checked|19/06/2013 SE

Reference type
Author(s)
Ravid, Liora
Louvish, David
Year
2002
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Journal for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha
Volume
13
Issue / Series Volume
1
Pages
61-86
Alternative title
JSP
Label
18/10/2004
Abstract

The book of Jubilees contains a considerable number of laws. The content of these laws presents a puzzle: Why is there no reference to matters of ritual impurity, the sole exception being impurity of a woman after giving birth? Strangely, Jubilees, a rewrite of the book of Genesis, seems not to accept the laws of purity and impurity so prominent in the Torah. In an attempt to explain this apparent lacuna, this article discusses several questions, including: What does Jubilees consider as ritually impure? How, in the view of the book, could Jews, having become impure, purify themselves in the absence of suitable instructions? It is shown that the author of Jubilees was hostile to the High Priest and the contemporary leadership of the Temple. In addition, a significant difference between the author of Jubilees' conception of purity and impurity and that of the Qumran sect is detected. This leads to the question of why the sectarians considered Jubilees as a canonical work, despite its neglect of the laws of purity and impurity.

Primary Texts: Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha
Composition / Author
Passage
3