Who Wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls?
Resolving the dispute over authorship of the ancient manuscripts could have far-reaching implications for Christianity and Judaism
- By Andrew Lawler
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2010, Subscribe
Israeli archaeologist yuval peleg halts his jeep where the jagged Judean hills peter out into a jumble of boulders. Before us, across the flat-calm Dead Sea, the sun rises over the mountains of Jordan. The heat on this spring morning is already intense. There are no trees or grass, just a few crumbling stone walls. It is a scene of silent desolation—until, that is, tourists in hats and visors pour out of shiny buses.
They have come to this harsh and remote site in the West Bank, known as Qumran, because this is where the most important religious texts in the Western world were found in 1947. The Dead Sea Scrolls—comprising more than 800 documents made of animal skin, papyrus and even forged copper—deepened our understanding of the Bible and shed light on the histories of Judaism and Christianity. Among the texts are parts of every book of the Hebrew canon—what Christians call the Old Testament—except the book of Esther. The scrolls also contain a collection of previously unknown hymns, prayers, commentaries, mystical formulas and the earliest version of the Ten Commandments. Most were written between 200 B.C. and the period prior to the failed Jewish revolt to gain political and religious independence from Rome that lasted from A.D. 66 to 70—predating by 8 to 11 centuries the oldest previously known Hebrew text of the Jewish Bible.
Tour guides shepherding the tourists through the modest desert ruins speak of the scrolls’ origin, a narrative that has been repeated almost since they were discovered more than 60 years ago. Qumran, the guides say, was home to a community of Jewish ascetics called the Essenes, who devoted their lives to writing and preserving sacred texts. They were hard at work by the time Jesus began preaching; ultimately they stored the scrolls in 11 caves before Romans destroyed their settlement in A.D. 68.
But hearing the dramatic recitation, Peleg, 40, rolls his eyes. “There is no connection to the Essenes at this site,” he tells me as a hawk circles above in the warming air. He says the scrolls had nothing to do with the settlement. Evidence for a religious community here, he says, is unconvincing. He believes, rather, that Jews fleeing the Roman rampage hurriedly stuffed the documents into the Qumran caves for safekeeping. After digging at the site for ten years, he also believes that Qumran was originally a fort designed to protect a growing Jewish population from threats to the east. Later, it was converted into a pottery factory to serve nearby towns like Jericho, he says.
Other scholars describe Qumran variously as a manor house, a perfume manufacturing center and even a tannery. Despite decades of excavations and careful analysis, there is no consensus about who lived there—and, consequently, no consensus about who actually wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls.
“It’s an enigmatic and confusing site,” acknowledges Risa Levitt Kohn, who in 2007 curated an exhibit about the Dead Sea Scrolls in San Diego. She says the sheer breadth and age of the writings—during a period that intersects with the life of Jesus and the destruction of the Second Jewish Temple in Jerusalem—make Qumran “a powder keg” among normally placid scholars. Qumran has prompted bitter feuds and even a recent criminal investigation.
Nobody doubts the scrolls’ authenticity, but the question of authorship has implications for understanding the history of both Judaism and Christianity. In 164 B.C., a group of Jewish dissidents, the Maccabees, overthrew the Seleucid Empire that then ruled Judea. The Maccabees established an independent kingdom and, in so doing, tossed out the priestly class that had controlled the temple in Jerusalem since the time of King Solomon. The turmoil led to the emergence of several rival sects, each one vying for dominance. If the Qumran texts were written by one such sect, the scrolls “help us to understand the forces that operated after the Maccabean Revolt and how various Jewish groups reacted to those forces,” says New York University professor of Jewish and Hebraic studies Lawrence Schiffman in his book Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls. “While some sects were accommodating themselves to the new order in various ways, the Dead Sea group decided it had to leave Jerusalem altogether in order to continue its unique way of life.”
And if Qumran indeed housed religious ascetics who turned their backs on what they saw as Jerusalem’s decadence, then the Essenes may well represent a previously unknown link between Judaism and Christianity. “John the Baptizer, Jesus’ teacher, probably learned from the Qumran Essenes—though he was no Essene,” says James Charlesworth, a scrolls scholar at Princeton Theological Seminary. Charlesworth adds that the scrolls “disclose the context of Jesus’ life and message.” Moreover, the beliefs and practices of the Qumran Essenes as described in the scrolls—vows of poverty, baptismal rituals and communal meals—mirror those of early Christians. As such, some see Qumran as the first Christian monastery, the cradle of an emerging faith.
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Comments (34)
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May I know how did the scroll came to Ft. Worth, Tx
Posted by Arsenia Carino on December 7,2012 | 04:43 PM
what ann indept understanding of events in historical times!!
Posted by niko on October 18,2012 | 05:43 PM
http://thedeadsea1.blogspot.co.il/ in this site there is some more info :) have fun
Posted by dani on October 10,2012 | 11:29 AM
not right
Posted by Riley on March 22,2012 | 09:44 AM
Good article, I see from the comment board that Joe Kim sees the significance of this and "Trevor" hasn't found Jesus yet so he's still looking to fill the void. Hint: Mocking others views won't do it.
Posted by Luke on February 7,2012 | 05:47 PM
Christ Crucifixion site and the Ark of the Covenant found burred under a trash pile in Jerusalem. http://arkofthecovenant2.blogspot.com/
Posted by Kevin Quinn on February 4,2012 | 07:06 AM
Trevor, Thanks for pointing out that DNA analysis confirms that Arabs and Jews are related, just as the Bible says. The story of a flood appears in many ancient mythologies in both the Eastern and Western hemispheres. I wonder why such a widespread ancient myth originated. Have you ever read the Babylonian creation story and compared it to Genesis? If not, I would encourage you to do so and draw your own conclusions about which account is superior. You are very absolute in the conclusions you have drawn. Many scholars who wrote similar things about the historical reliability of the Bible fifty or a hundred years ago have egg on their faces today in light of subsequent archeological discoveries.
Posted by Steve on September 30,2010 | 10:56 PM
Having just picked up this thread over a month since the last posting doesn't give me much hope of publication but here goes.
Joseph Kim, you are wrong about the archaeological spade. At the time of Abraham, Canaan was a defended Egyptian province. Do you think they would have allowed a motley bunch of Hebrews to settle there? Archaeology proves that Hebrews were indigenous in Canaan, there was no influx of hordes of people, ever. DNA testing proves arabs and indigenous Jews are related. There is not a scrap of evidence in Egyptian records of the Jews in bondage. The plagues brought on the Egyptians by God might have prompted a scribe to make note of them. The Egyptian workforce reducing by that number might have been noticed too.
Neither is there any evidence of up to two million Jews wandering in the Sinai desert for forty years. You would have thought they would have left some trace. It was discovered in the 1950's that Jericho's wall had been destroyed centuries before Joshua got there. Nazareth didn't exist until the 4th century CE.There is no evidence of David or Solomon's cities, merely small villages (including Jerusalem).
The fact that the Jews had six hundred rules means nothing in terms of the authenticity of the bible. The bible is a work of fiction, full of flaws, contradictions and inconsistencies created over centuries to create and edify a god figure.
The Creation Myth was stolen from the Babylonians and of course this myth has been transcended by the science of evolution and DNA sequencing. The Flood was stolen from Sumerian myth and is as preposterous a story you will find anywhere. Etc etc etc. Get a life Mr Kim.
Posted by Trevor on March 16,2010 | 02:33 PM
IM sure you could ask the egyptians,they would know since there writing is so close to the dead sea scrolls.
Posted by David Schommer on February 5,2010 | 01:38 AM
To Laszlo, the Philistines never controlled more than the Gaza area, then they were absorbed into other cultures, disappearing as a people group from the pages of history circa 700 B.C., while the Jews, who took the Holy Land from the Canaanites, can today trace their lineages back for millennia, the Cohens for instance, all the way back to the time of Moses and Joshua, so if anybody has the right to the Holy Land over the Jews, it would be the Canaanites, but who today identifies themselves as Canaanites?
Posted by James I. Nienhuis on February 4,2010 | 05:48 AM
Over 2000 years of history in that area I think at this time it is hard pressed to definitivly say one way or the other who wrote the scrolls and where, whether it was in Qumran or close by, I think there's alot more to the history of the Dead Sea Scrolls than we know but someday we might.
Posted by D.G. on February 1,2010 | 06:40 PM
Joseph Kim, Thank you for your comments, I could not agree more.
Posted by Rusty on February 1,2010 | 03:37 PM
Skeptics of the amazing prophecies in the Old Testament detailing the Messiah's first coming, which were fulfilled, have said that those many prophetic scriptures were tailored after the fact to match the circumstances of Jesus' life, physical death, and resurrection, but the Scrolls' dates now prove that the prophecies were established in writing before Jesus incarnated, truly a miraculous book that Bible, nothing at all like it.
Posted by James I. Nienhuis on January 31,2010 | 08:11 PM
Lawler’s treatment of the theory that Qumran was a fort unfair. He did not really explain how marginal Peleg’s view that Qumran was, nor did he discuss Magness’s evidence against the fort theory. If it was a fort its, layout is without president, the walls are too thin, and the water source is too exposed.
Posted by Justin James King on January 10,2010 | 10:15 PM
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