A More Perfect Torah: At the Intersection of Philology and Hermeneutics in Deuteronomy and the Temple Scroll

Updated by: 
Oren Ableman
Research notes: 
Reader Checked OA 29/06/2014 hw/not checked/11/08/2013
Reference type: 
Book
Author(s): 
Levinson, Bernard M.
year: 
2013
Full title: 

A More Perfect Torah: At the Intersection of Philology and Hermeneutics in Deuteronomy and the Temple Scroll

Journal / Book Title || Series Title: 
Critical Studies in the Hebrew Bible
Issue / Series Volume: 
1
Abbreviated Series Name: 
CSHB
Collaborating Author: 
Zahn, Molly M.
Place of Publication: 
Winona Lake, IN
Publisher: 
Eisenbrauns
Abstract: 

The historical-critical method that characterizes academic biblical studies too often remains separate from approaches that stress the history of interpretation, which are employed more frequently in the area of Second Temple or Dead Sea Scrolls research. Inaugurating the new Eisenbrauns series, Critical Studies in the Hebrew Bible, A More Perfect Torah explores a series of test-cases in which the two methods mutually reinforce one another. The volume brings together two studies that investigate the relationship between the composition history of
the biblical text and its reception history at Qumran and in rabbinic literature.
The Temple Scroll is more than the blueprint for a more perfect Temple. It also represents the attempt to create a more perfect Torah. Its techniques for doing so are the focus of part 1, entitled "Revelation Regained: The Hermeneutics of KI and 'IM in the Temple Scroll." This study illuminates the techniques for marking conditional clauses in ancient Near Eastern literature, biblical law, and the Dead Sea Scrolls. It also draws new attention to the relationship between the Temple Scroll's use of conditionals and the manuscript's carefully organized spacing system for marking paragraphs. Syntax serves as a technique, no less than pseudepigraphy, to advance the Temple Scroll's claim to be a direct divine revelation.
Part 2 is entitled "Reception History as a Window into Composition History: Deuteronomy's Law of Vows as Reflected in Qoheleth and the
Temple Scroll." The law of vows in Deut 23:22-24 is difficult in both its syntax and its legal content. The difficulty is resolved once it is recognized that the law contains an interpolation that disrupts the original coherence of the law. The reception history of the law of vows in Numbers 20, Qoh 5:4-7, 11QTemple 53:11-14, and Sipre Deuteronomy confirms the hypothesis of an interpolation. Seen in this new light, the history of interpretation offers a window into the composition history of the biblical text.
The volume shows the significance of syntax and historical linguistics for understanding how ancient scribes established claims of religious and textual authority. Appendixes on the use of conditionals in biblical law and the Dead Sea Scrolls provide resources for further research.

Hebrew bible: 
Book: 
Deuteronomy
Chapter(s): 
23
Verse(s): 
22^24
Book: 
Qoheleth / Ecclesiastes
Chapter(s): 
5
Verse(s): 
3^4
Book: 
Numbers
Chapter(s): 
30
Verse(s): 
2^17
URL: 
http://www.eisenbrauns.com/item/LEVMOREPE
Label: 
12/08/2013
Record number: 
19 265