The recovery of 800 documents in the eleven caves on the northwest shores of the Dead Sea is one of the most sensational archeological discoveries in the Holy Land to date. These three volumes, the very best of critical scholarship, demonstrate in detail how the scrolls have revolutionized our knowledge of the text of the Bible, the character of Second Temple Judaism, and the Jewish beginnings of Christianity.
قائمة المحتويات
Introduction: The Dead Sea Scrolls:
Their Discovery and Challenge to Biblical Studies, James H. Charlesworth
Chapter 1: The Impact of the Judean Desert Scrolls on Issues of Text and Canon of the Hebrew Bible, James A. Sanders
Chapter 2: Qumran and the Enoch Groups:
Revisiting the Enochic-Essene Hypothesis, Gabriele Boccaccini
Chapter 3: The Biblical Scrolls from Qumran and the Canonical Text, Frank Moore Cross
Chapter 4: The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Hebrew Scriptural Texts, Eugene C. Ulrich
Chapter 5: The Formation and Re-Formation of Daniel in the Dead Sea Scrolls, Loren T. Stuckenbruck
Chapter 6: The Rewritten Bible at Qumran, Sidnie White Crawford
Chapter 7: Qumran and a New Edition of the Hebrew Bible, Ronald S. Hendel
Chapter 8: 4QSama (= 4Q51), the Canon, and the Community of Lay Readers, Donald W. Parry
Chapter 9: Three Sobriquets, Their Meaning and Function: The Wicked Priest, Synagogue of Satan, and the Woman Jezebel, Håkan Bengtsson
Chapter 10: The Biblical and Qumranic Concept of War, Philip R. Davies
Chapter 11: Psalms and Psalters in the Dead Sea Scrolls, Peter W. Flint
Chapter 12: The Importance of Isaiah at Qumran, J. J. M. Roberts
Chapter 13: Biblical Interpretation at Qumran, George J. Brooke
عن المؤلف
J.H. Charlesworth is the George L. Collord Professor of New Testament Language and Literature and Editor and Director of the Princeton Theological Seminary Dead Sea Scrolls Project.