הנסתרות וגילוים

Updated by: 
Un Sung Kwak
Research notes: 
reader checked 30/12/2011 AL/ Updated by USK / 19 / 05 / 2016 / to add online link for CD A
Reference type: 
Journal Article
Author(s): 
Shemesh, Aharon
Werman, Cana
year: 
1997
Full title: 

הנסתרות וגילוים

Translated title: 
The Hidden Things and their Revelation
Journal / Book Title || Series Title: 
Tarbiz
Volume: 
66
Issue / Series Volume: 
4
Pages: 
471-482
Abstract: 

The verse 'The hidden things belong unto the Lord our God: but those things which are revealed belong unto us and to our children forever that we may do all the words of this law' (Deuteronomy 29:28) is the source of the pivotal concepts of revealed and hidden found in the Qumran literature. The Qumran Community claimed that the hidden were reserved to God at the time of the First Temple, but that during the period of the Second Temple the hidden were made available to the members of the Community (CD 3:9-20; 5:20-6:11). This claim is based on a double reading of the verse: once with the words 'unto the Lord our God', and once without these words. Moreover, members of the Community believed that Chapters 29 and 30 of Deuteronomy referred to them and not to Israel as a whole; indeed, the description of return and redemption found in Chapter 30 are read by them as referring specifically to the Community. We find a double reading of the verse in Chapter 29 in the writings of the rabbinical Sages, too. The Sages, however, do not specify the time of revelation, nor do they indicate that the revelations will be confined to any restricted group. Despite emphasizing that the revelation of the hidden is based on God-given inspiration, members of the Community accepted the decisive contributions of their exegesis of the Biblical verses in the development of halakhah. The similarity of the view of the Community to the view of the Sages is obvious; both emphasized the centrality of exegesis (drashah) in the development of halakhah. Since the two groups made use of a similar method, the use of drashah to derive halakhah, and since the results were strikingly different, each group was compelled to defend its own approach. Thus, the Community refers to the explications (drashot) of the Sages as slick interpretations, and the Sages accuse the Community of barefaced defiance of the Torah.

Notes: 
CD A Online Link: http://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-TS-00010-K-00006/1
Language: 
Hebrew
Hebrew bible: 
Book: 
Deuteronomy
Chapter(s): 
29
Primary Texts: Judean Desert Documents: 
Scroll / Document: 
CD
Passage: 
3
Scroll / Document: 
CD
Passage: 
5^6
Scroll / Document: 
1QS
Section type: 
Column
Passage: 
8
Scroll / Document: 
1QS
Section type: 
Column
Passage: 
5
URL: 
http://www.jstor.org/pss/70018703
Label: 
28/04/1998
Record number: 
9 980