Eschatological Failure as God’s Mystery: Reassessing Prophecy and Reality at Qumran and in Nascent Christianity

Full title
Eschatological Failure as God’s Mystery: Reassessing Prophecy and Reality at Qumran and in Nascent Christianity
Updated By
Research notes

SHS/not checked/17/11/2016 YKC/reader checked/09/01/2022

Reference type
Author(s)
Ruzer, Serge
Year
2016
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Dead Sea Discoveries
Volume
23
Issue / Series Volume
3
Abbreviated Series Name
DSD
Pages
347 – 364
Work type
Label
12/12/2016
Abstract

The article discerns in both Qumranic sources and in those coming from the nascent Jesus movement responses to their shared experience of disappointment vis-à-vis postponement of the expected redemption. The discussion, focusing on 1QpHab and a number of New Testament epistles, highlights the usage in this context of the language of God’s mystery, standing for reinterpretation of redemption-centered prophecies and their adjustment to a new timetable. While no clear direct links can be posited, the comparative study of the texts independently penned within the two eschatological groups allows to single out an underlying more general late Second Temple religious pattern of coping with delay in the anticipated end-of-days deliverance.

Primary Texts: Judean Desert Documents
Scroll / Document