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Re: orion Bible quotes in the Temple scroll?
From: Tom Simms <tsimms@quartz.nbnet.nb.ca>
Subject: Re: orion Bible quotes in the Temple scroll?
Date: Thu, 18 Sep 1997 18:27:17 AST
On Wed, 17 Sep 1997 22:23:36 -0500, jpman@accesscomm.net writes:
>dwashbur@nyx.net wrote:
>> Does anyone know of a source that lists actual biblical quotes in the
[... snip ... data already seen ...]
> Schiffman covers biblical exegesis in the Temple Scroll beginning
>onPage 258 and its midrashic style to the Pentateuch. He mentions
>specifically the paraphrases of Deuteronomy at Temple Scroll 51:11 through
>56:21 and 60:1 through 66:17 and points out that the biblical substratum was
>not Masoretic.
>
>Jack
>
My first contact with the Temple Scroll was from Yigael Yadin's
article on it in the pages of _Biblical Archaeology Review_,1984,
X(5), pp. 33Ä49. It soon wasn't my last. I had much earlier read
Yadin's text on ANE Arms and knew of his name and what he was doing
through the pages of Hugh Schonfield. But I never heard mentioned
again the idea that the Temple Scroll was, as Yadin had noted, a
new Deuteronomy written not in the third person but in the First
Person by Yahweh Himself. Your comment above, distancing the
Scroll from the Massora, is as near as anyone on this list has come
to repeating what my 1990 book, _Behind The Bible_, summed up on p,
249 from the sources noted above, vide: Yadin
"completed the publication of The Temple Scroll shortly before
his recent sudden death. The results are astounding! The
plan of the Temple has much in common with the open model of
Akhu En Aten's Temples to the Aten. Outside the Holy of
Holies, rising 40 cubits high (60 feet), a tower over 20
cubits square contained a staircase in its center rising to a
covered gate which led to a bridge to the top of the Holy of
Holies. All this, inside and out, was to be plated with gold!
The purpose of this extravagant creation decreed by Yahwah
himself was to worship the Sun!"
There are, needless to say, more comments in the Scroll itself than
my poor summary given above. In my book, I took the view this
Pseudo-Deuteronomic text was an Essene view. Seven years later, my
view is not made with such broad strokes. Nonetheless, the Temple
Scroll indicates there were many contemporary texts that do not
support the Massoretic Versions the Rabbis redacted and preserved
so faithfully.
In 1990, I wrote, as I argued from poor sources for a Post Exile
composition, "`Ezra imposed a solution. He suppressed every
version except the one he brought back from Babylon. The Temple
Scroll of Qumran, the Septuagint and the Samaritan Pentateuch teach
us that variants survived Ezra's imposition. We may have lost
other versions.
Today, I would stand by my statement though I would argue for a
later completion. I took the historical reality of Ezra seriously
in the 1980's when I was writing my text.
I wonder why this data never gets mentioned.
Frankly, I had forgotten my own conclusions in the plethora of
conflicting ideas of this and other Lists.
Thank you, Jack, for bringing these thoughts back.
Tom Simms