How Hard is it to Get into the Community Rule? Exploring Transmission in 1QS from the Perspective of the Modes of Religiosity

Updated by: 
Shlomo Brand
Research notes: 
SB/not checked/11/01/2023
Reference type: 
Journal Article
Author(s): 
Sayyad Bach, Melissa
year: 
2021
Full title: 

How Hard is it to Get into the Community Rule? Exploring Transmission in 1QS from the Perspective of the Modes of Religiosity

Journal / Book Title || Series Title: 
Scandinavian Journal of the Old Testament
Volume: 
35
Issue / Series Volume: 
2
Pages: 
159-186
Work type: 
Essay/Monograph
Abstract: 

The Community Rule from Qumran (1QS) communicates its message to its recipients by employing a variety of genres (e.g., instructions, rules, rituals, myth, hymn). This article attempts to explore some of the underlying cognitive mechanisms involved in the process of transmission by drawing on insights from cognitive science in terms of Harvey Whitehouse’s Modes of Religiosity theory. According to this approach, certain religious ideas and concepts are “cognitively optimal” (i.e., relatively simple and straightforward, often minimally counterintuitive) and therefore easy to remember, while others are “cognitively costly” (i.e., requiring greater conscious effort to be preserved and transmitted). Two different “modes” are the typical ways to preserve and transmit such contents: The “imagistic” mode relies on low-frequency and high-arousal rituals, whereas the “doctrinal” mode is associated with high-frequency and low-arousal rituals. Through the usage of different genres, each of which shed light on 1QS’s agenda, the costly and demanding nature of the 1QS content is highlighted. Analyses of selected passages from 1QS show how elements of the doctrinal and the imagistic modes are involved in facilitating the transmission of the content.

Primary Texts: Judean Desert Documents: 
Scroll / Document: 
1QS
URL: 
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09018328.2021.1976516
Label: 
16/01/2023
Record number: 
110 720