The Laws of the Damascus Document and 4QMMT
Charlotte Hempel
Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge University
INTRODUCTION
In the light of the recent publication of the cave 4 manuscripts of
the Damascus Document the balance of admonitory material vis-à-vis
Laws has changed considerably in favour of its legal components. Whereas
the first hundred years or so of research on the Damascus Document have
focused primarily though not exclusively on the Admonition it is foreseeable
that the next centenary celebration will look back on a substantial increase
of studies dealing with the legal part of the document. In this paper I
will attempt a preliminary comparative study of the Laws of the Damascus
Document and the halakhic portion of 4QMMT, a question that has recently
been addressed by Lawrence Schiffman in a paper entitled 'The Place of
4QMMT in the Corpus of Qumran Manuscripts' and, more briefly, by Philip
Callaway.1
Before addressing the particular issues at stake let me briefly outline
where I am approaching this question from. In my forthcoming book on the
Laws of the Damascus Document I propose a source- and redaction critical
analysis of this corpus.2 In the wake of my source critical work on the
Laws I have undertaken a number of comparative studies to which this paper
may now be added.3 I have come to the view that since the Laws of the Damascus
Document comprise a disparate collection of material some of its components
may be fruitfully compared with a collection such as preserved in the Community
Rule whereas others have a great deal more in common with a work such as
4QOrdinancesa or the halakhic part of 4QMMT.
Apart from a number of miscellaneous traditions and traces of redactional
activity I distinguish two main literary strata in the Laws of the Damascus
Document: a stratum of halakhah and a stratum of community organization.
I am well aware that some are uncomfortable with the use of the term halakhah
in the context of the Dead Sea Scrolls.4 I retain the terminology because
it expresses the distinction I am trying to make very well. The alternative
of speaking simply of 'laws' with lower case 'l' seems unsatisfactory to
me because that term is customarily used with upper case 'L' to refer to
the part of the Damascus Document that is distinguished from the Admonition.
4QMMT AND COMMUNAL LEGISLATION IN D
Turning now to the specific question at hand it seems that when it comes
to establishing the relationship between the Laws of D and 4QMMT we can
safely exclude the communal legislation stratum. There is nothing in MMT
that refers to matters pertaining to the organization and authority structure
of a particular community.5 By contrast the point of reference seems to
be Israel at large with particular emphasis on the distinctive position
of the priesthood vis-à-vis the laity.
It is worth noting that the Laws of the Damascus Document are virtually
unique among the Qumran documents as well as the wider body of intertestamental
literature in combining almost seamlessly communal legislation with halakhic
material that lacks reference to a particular organized community. Thus,
we have the Community Rule and the Rule of the Congregation6 as the two
main representatives besides the Damascus Document that preserve communal
legislation on the one hand, and a host of writings that preserve halakhic
traditions on the other hand. Almost uniquely the Laws of the Damascus
Document preserve both elements side by side. I say almost uniquely because
the curious text 4QSerekh Damascus (4Q265), at least on my understanding
of it which is a topic for another occasion, comprises the only further
example that I can think of and I am open to correction on this.
A further feature that deserves to be mentioned here is the shared employment
of camp-terminology in MMT and in the communal legislation of D.7 It seems
to me that the use and meaning of the terminology is quite distinct in
both documents. In the Damascus Document the term camp (hnxm) appears as
a unit in the organization of the movement described in the communal legislation.
The terminology is used in this sense very unselfconsciously in this text
and no need was felt, it seems, to offer a definition. In 4QMMT camp-terminology
occurs in two passages.8 In the section dealing with the place of slaughter
(4Q394 3-7 ii 14b-19 par.) the references to the camp occur in an exegetical
context.9 The passage in question, though fragmentary, constitutes a piece
of halakhic exegesis based on Lev. 17,3-4 as noted by Qimron.10 The scriptural
base text includes a reference to the camp which is identified with Jerusalem
in the interpretation offered subsequently. The exegetical context of the
references to the camp are accentuated by the technical term bw%tkf@11 introducing
the reference to Lev. 17 as well as the multiple occurrence of the third
person singular pronoun in the technical sense attested frequently in exegetical
texts from Qumran. The second section that employs camp terminology is
found in 4Q394 8 iv 8b-12a par. and begins with the prohibition of dogs
entering Jerusalem.12 Although the original prohibition is not scriptural
the subsequent justification beginning with yk is written in the same exegetical
style as the previous section on camps. That is, an element of the prohibition,
'the camp of holiness' (#dwqh hnxm), is identified with Jerusalem, and
the third person singular pronoun is used repeatedly. It seems possible
that the term 'the camp of holiness' and the exegetical leap to identify
this with Jerusalem are based on Dt. 23,15 where the notion of the holiness
of the camp is developed. Finally, it is worth noting that in both sections
in MMT that employ camp terminology Jerusalem is identified as the camp,
and that this identification is followed in both cases by an affirmation
in deuteronomic style of the election of Jerusalem as 'the place which
He has chosen from all the tribes of Israel'.13 In sum, the Laws of the
Damascus Document and MMT employ camp-terminology in a distinct manner.
In the Laws of D camp-terminology is used to refer to what appear to be
well-established administrative and organizational units whereas in MMT
camp-terminology occurs in two passages in an exegetical/definitional context
with a Jerusalem-centric perspective.14
4QMMT AND HALAKHAH IN D
Let me now turn to the halakhah stratum of the Damascus Document and
its relationship to the halakhic section of MMT. Here correspondences can
be observed on a number of levels. I will begin with three observations
of a general kind and then turn to a number of specific texts.
General Observations
1. The halakhah stratum of the Laws of D shares with the halakhic section
of MMT a lack of reference to a particular community that defines itself
in distinction from society at large.
2. On a formal level both the halakhah stratum of the Laws of D and
the halakhic section of MMT frequently employ headings introduced by the
preposition l( 'concerning'.15 This preposition seems to have been the
standard way of compiling strings of halakhic statements or expositions
in the late Second Temple period. Baumgarten has drawn attention to the
historical significance of this phenomenon.16 Outside of D and MMT it is
found also in 4QOrdinancesa and the still unpublished 4QHalakhah A.17
3. A particular sub-category of halakhah in D deals with matters pertaining
to the priesthood. I have chosen the term torot to identify this sub-category,
a term derived from Jacob Milgrom's analysis of Lev. 1-16 where he defines
torot as 'the special lore of the priesthood'.18 Moreover, in a paper on
the origins of the Temple Scroll Hartmut Stegemann has applied the term
torot to the laws contained in the Temple Scroll.19 I have assigned the
two sizeable blocks of additional legal material from 4QD that deal with
the disqualification of certain categories of priests20 and the section
dealing with the diagnosis of skin disease21 to this category. As I will
argue below a great deal of the additional legal material in 4QD reflects
priestly concerns. However, what seems to set apart the sections on priestly
disqualifications and skin disease is that whereas much of 4QD gives the
impression of having been written by priests these particular sections
seem to have been written by priests as well as for priests and, one might
add, about priests. It is of course well known that priestly concerns lie
at the heart of the halakhot in MMT also.
Specific Texts
1. The 4QD Material on The Disqualification of Priests The material
on the disqualification of certain categories of priests preserved in 4QDa
5 ii 1-16; 4QDb 5 iii 1-8; 4QDh 2,1-2; 4 i 5-11 shares with the halakhic
portion of MMT an explicit focus on priestly concerns. This hardly needs
spelling out for the disqualification material and is equally beyond dispute
regarding MMT. In the latter case one need only look at the refrain 'For
the priests shall take heed concerning x so as not to cause the people
to bear sin' which occurs three times in MMT (4Q394 3-7 i 14-16; 4Q394
3-7 i 19 - ii 1a; 4Q394 3-7 ii 13-14)22 and is based on Lev. 22,16.23 Related
to this priestly flavour is the common concern articulated in both texts
with the purity of the sanctuary and the offerings. Furthermore, both texts
include statements that describe the conduct of some priests as falling
short of the expected standard, cf. 4QDa 5 ii 10-11 which refers to a priest
who has caused his name to fall from the truth and the critique of intermarriage
with Israelites (on Qimron's interpretation24) or with gentiles (on Baumgarten's
interpretation25) practised by some priests according to 4Q396 1-2 iv 4-11.
Whatever interpretation one favours for the latter fragmentary passage
it seems clear from 4Q396 1-2 iv 9-11 that some priests are being criticised
for their nuptial practices. To be sure, the shortfall in the behaviour
of priests criticised in each text is of a different kind, and there is
nothing to indicate in 4QDa 5 ii that priestly marital practices are an
issue in D. It is nevertheless noteworthy that both texts seem to contain
material commenting on priestly misconduct of some kind. This overlap,
though general, suggests that both texts reflect inner-priestly disputes.
It has already been convincingly suggested by Schiffman that inner-priestly
disputes form the background to 4QMMT.26 I would like to add to this that
this particular part of the Laws of D points in a similar direction. I
would not want to attach any further labels to these priestly groups since
it seems to me that the debates about the names to be given to the Qumran
groups, legitimate though they may be, should not dominate the discussion
of the issues raised by their writings.27 Finally, the theological rationale
given for the disqualification of priests with imperfect pronunciation
from reading the torah in 4QDa 5 ii 1-3 reflects a broadly equivalent approach
to physical defects as is expressed with regard to the blind and the deaf
in 4QMMT (4Q394 8 iii 19 - iv 4). According to 4QD priests with defective
pronunciation are barred from reading the torah in case they mislead in
a capital matter. 4QMMT seems to criticize the presence of blind and deaf
people in the vicinity of the purity of the temple because the deaf are
unable to hear the commandments and the blind may inadvertently fail to
act according to the laws on mixtures.28 Thus, in all three cases the theological
concern is obedience to the torah which may be put in jeopardy by physical
imperfections.29 A rather different rationale for excluding the blind and
the deaf from the congregation is expressed in CD 15,15b-17a par. 4QDa
8 i 6-7 and 1QSa 2,4b-9. Both texts include the blind and the deaf in lists
of persons to be excluded from the congregation because of the presence
of angels.30 On my analysis of the Laws of D the exclusion passage in CD
15 par. occurs in the context of a piece of communal legislation on the
admission into the covenant community. It suffices to stress here that
the theological emphases reflected in the material on the disqualification
of priests and the exclusion of the blind and the deaf in 4QMMT overlap.
2. The 4QD Material on Skin Disease, Flux31 and Childbirth A similar
relationship exists between the block of material dealing with skin disease,
flux and childbirth in 4QDa 6 i-iii; 4QDd 7; 4QDg 1 i-ii; 4QDh 4 ii and
the halakhic portion of MMT. This part of the Laws of D is heavily based
on Lev. 12-15 and, as noted above, particularly the portion dealing with
skin disease has a pronounced and explicit priestly character. A concern
for the purity of the sanctuary, a dominant theme in MMT, is reflected
in 4QDa 6 ii 4 where women with a discharge are prohibited from entering
the sanctuary. As noted by Baumgarten such a prohibition is not scriptural
and was probably derived in analogy to the legislation on childbirth in
Lev. 12,4.32 Finally, 4QDa 6 ii 4 reflects the same halakhic position on
the question of purification as is expressed in MMT as has been noted already
by Schiffman.33 Thus, both 4QDa 6 ii 4 and 4Q396 1-2 iv 1a insist that
an impure person (a woman with a discharge in the case of D and a person
with leprosy in the case of MMT) remains so until sunset on the eighth
day.34 The same halakhic position comes to the fore in 4QDd 8 ii 3b-6 par.
which deals with the topic of purification after contracting corpse impurity
and the passage laying down the requirements for those preparing the red
cow in MMT (4Q394 4-7 i 16b-19 - ii 1a par.). Both passages insist on the
sprinkler waiting for sundown.35 Finally, Avi Solomon has recently argued
that CD 11,21-12,1 is best understood on the background of the tevul
yom debate.36
3. 4QD Halakhah Dealing with Agricultural Matters Legal questions relating
to the agricultural sphere, particularly the harvest, make up a large proportion
of the additional legal material from cave 4 in D (cf. 4QDa 6 iii a; 4QDe
3 i; 4QDa 6 iii par. 4QDb 6 and 4QDe 3 ii37; 4QDa 6 iv; 4QDf 2,1-5 par.
4QDe 3 iii 13-15). In an article on 4QOrda (4Q159) Francis Weinert suggested
some years ago that the agricultural questions dealt with in 4Q159, particularly
the material on the rights of the poor to gather grapes and grain in 4Q159
1 ii 2-5, suggest an agricultural milieu. Thus, he argues, "4Q159
would seem to presume an agricultural situation where poverty lies in the
background."38 Should the same be said about D? I think not. Rather,
it seems to me that the agricultural issues raised in D are dealt with
from the particular point of view of the priesthood. The key issue is the
harvest and the appropriate contributions to the priests and the sanctuary.
Thus, on a general level this very substantial portion of 4QD shares the
priestly character of the halakhic portion of MMT. Incidentally, I do not
agree with Weinert's assessment of the situation behind 4Q159 as indicative
of poverty and agriculture either since the topic of gleanings addressed
there is based on scripture (cf. Dt. 23,25-26), and the writer's concern
is exegetical rather than a social comment.
A specific topic that is addressed both in 4QDa 6 iv 4 and 4Q396 1-2
iii 2b-3a is the fourth year produce.39 Although the legislation in 4QMMT
does not explicitly refer to the fourth year Qimron has shown that 4QMMT
is closely based on Lev. 19,23-24, the biblical text on the produce of
the fourth year.40 According to Lev. 19,23-25 the fourth year produce from
the fruit trees is to be offered to the Lord. In addition to 4QD and 4QMMT
a host of post-biblical sources interpret this law to mean that the fourth
year produce belongs to the priests, cf. Jub. 7,35-37, 11QTa 60,3-4; 1QapGen
12,13-15.41 As far as this paper is concerned it is of interest that the
position advanced with regard to the fourth year produce is shared by 4QMMT
and D.
4. Texts Expressing Concern about Defilement through Contact with Gentiles
Concern to avoid defilement through contact with gentiles, particularly
the pagan cult, is voiced in a number of passages in the Laws of D.42 CD
12,6b-11 provides a series of restrictions in dealings with gentiles43
which includes a prohibition of selling clean animals or birds to the gentiles
lest they sacrifice them as well as a prohibition of selling untithed produce
to the gentiles following the interpretation of Ginzberg and Schiffman
of CD 12,9b-10a.44 In the additional legal material from cave 4 4QDa 5
ii 5-6 seems to refer to the impurity of priests taken captive by the gentiles.45
Finally 4QDd 8 ii 1-3 refers to the dangers of defilement through gentile
sacrifices, if we accept Baumgarten's interpretation of the third person
masc. pl. suffix in line 1,46 as well as metals that have been used in
pagan cults. As far as 4QMMT is concerned, as restored in the editio princeps
4Q394 3-7 i 6b-8a prohibits bringing gentile wheat into the temple. However,
too little text is preserved to allow us even to be certain about the subject
matter addressed, and in a review article of DJD 10 Baumgarten has rightly
drawn attention to the textual uncertainties of this ruling.47 We are on
slightly firmer ground in 4Q394 3-7 i 11b-12a par. which deals with the
sacrifices of gentiles. Whatever the exact scenario envisaged here it is
clear that this part of 4QMMT as well as a number of passages in the Laws
of D address the danger of defilement through contact with gentiles.
5. The Catalogue of Transgressions in 4QDe
A fragmentary catalogue of
transgressions preserved in 4QDe 2 i 9 - ii 21 is particularly instructive
for an analysis of the relationship between the Laws of the Damascus Document
and the halakhic portion of MMT.48 It is instructive to distinguish between
the body of the catalogue, the actual list of transgressions, and the conclusion
found at the end of the catalogue. The conclusion to the catalogue is found
in 4QDe 2 ii 17b-18 in the form of a warning against transgressors of the
consequences of provoking the divine wrath. Immediately following on from
this conclusion lines 19-21 begin with a call to hearken reminiscent of
similar calls in the Admonition and read 'And now listen to me all who
know righteousness' (qdc y(dwy lk yl w(m# ht(w). In particular this call
to hearken may be compared to 4QDa 1 a-b 5; CD 1,1; 2,2.14.49 In his outline
of the contents of the Damascus Document Baumgarten has placed the fragments
containing this catalogue at the end of the Admonition rather than taking
it as part of the legal portion of D, and I believe he was following Milik's
placement here. It seems likely that the presence of the call to hearken
influenced this editorial decision. Furthermore, in an outline of the contents
of 4QD that appeared some years before his official edition Baumgarten
notes in his description of the catalogue of transgressions, 'The author
concludes (emphasis mine) with an appeal to the qdc y(dwy to choose between
the "ways of life" and the "paths of perdition".'50
Rather than taking this call to hearken and the subsequent admonition to
follow the ways of life and to avoid the paths of destruction as a conclusion
to the preceding catalogue of transgressions, it seems preferable to understand
the call to hearken as an introduction to what follows as is indeed the
case in all the other instances where a similar call to attention occurs
in the Admonition of the Damascus Document. I am delighted to learn that
Prof. Stegemann is thinking along the same lines and has gone further in
his contribution to this volume by thinking through the probable consequences
of the presence of admonitory material at this point for the overall structure
of D. He is surely right when he argues that we should reckon with a substantial
admonitory section to have followed this call. An initial understanding
of this call to attention as a conclusion can be accounted for by the fragmentary
nature of the material. Because of accidents of preservation virtually
everything that followed our call to hearken has been lost so that as the
fragments now stand it looks at first sight as if this call concludes the
preceding list of transgressions.
For our present purposes it is most instructive to focus on the fragmentary
list of transgressions preserved in 4QDe 2 i 9-ii 17a. This list includes
a number of issues that are developed in more detail elsewhere in the Laws
of D, and, what is more, several of the topics addressed in the catalogue
are included in the halakhic portion of 4QMMT as well as in 11QT. This
overlap between 4QD, 4QMMT, and 11QT has been noted by a number of scholars.51
It is noteworthy, furthermore, that the catalogue does not raise any topic
dealt with in the communal legislation stratum of the Laws and that the
overlap is restricted to the halakhah stratum. That is to say, there is
nothing in the list of transgressions that speaks in terms of a particular
organized community. Baumgarten takes the reference to 'those anointed
with the holy spirit' in 4QDe 2 ii 14 as a reference to "inspired
teachers of the community."52 It seems more likely to me, however,
that this expression refers to the prophets as is the case in CD 2,12-13.
Such an identification is suggested by a number of biblical passages, esp.
Ps. 105,15.53 Moreover, the reference to the offence of revealing a secret
of his people to the nations in 4QDe 2 ii 13 clearly reflects a national
perspective.54 As far as the literary growth of the Laws of the Damascus
Document is concerned two alternatives seem possible to me. Either this
list was a pre-existent document that was incorporated into the Laws, and
a number of issues were spelt out in more detail subsequently; or the list
of transgressions is a kind of summary of the topics dealt with in the
halakhic stratum of the Laws of D. The former seems more likely to me.
It seems less likely that we are dealing with a summary of halakhic points
that was composed at a late stage in the development of the halakhah stratum
since not all the material mentioned in the catalogue is dealt with elsewhere,
although because of the fragmentary nature of both the catalogue and the
rest of the Laws it is difficult to be sure.
If the catalogue of transgressions pre-dates the rest of the Laws it
could be of central importance for our understanding of the growth of the
Laws, or at least for the literary growth of the halakhic component of
the Laws. It may have served as a skeleton parts of which were subsequently
fleshed out. Moreover, the largest number of thematic correspondences between
the Laws of D and the halakhic portion of 4QMMT can be traced to this catalogue
of transgressions.55 1. 4QDe 2 ii 6 as read and partly restored by Baumgarten
deals with the fourth year produce. This topic is dealt with again in 4QDa
6 iv 4 and in 4Q396 1-2 iii 2b-3a, and both passages were briefly dealt
with above. 2. 4QDe 2 ii 7-8 is partially preserved and as plausibly completed
by Baumgarten deals with the tithe of cattle and sheep, an issue referred
to also in 4Q396 1-2 iii 3b-4a. 3. Skin disease is mentioned in the catalogue
in 4QDe 2 ii 12, taken up in the body of the Laws of D in 4QDa 6 i par.
as well as in 4Q396 1-2 iii 4b-11; iv 1a par. 4. Slaughtering pregnant
animals is referred to as a contentious issue in 4QDe 2 ii 15 as well as
in 4Q396 1-2 i 2-4 par.56
In sum, the relatively small amount of text preserved of the list of
transgressions in 4QDe deals with four issues that are paralleled in the
halakhot in MMT.
CONCLUSION
By way of conclusion let me sum up the results of these comparative
remarks as well as offer a number of further reflections. Rather than comparing
the Laws of the Damascus Document in toto to 4QMMT I have focused on those
parts of both documents that resemble each other most closely, i.e. the
halakhah stratum of the Laws of D and the halakhic portion of 4QMMT. Correspondences
of various kinds (theological, halakhic, formal, and thematic) between
the halakhah stratum in the Laws of D and the halakhic portion of MMT were
identified. Priestly concerns were seen to lie behind a substantial portion
of the Laws of D and virtually all of the halakhot in MMT. The priestly
character of the latter is widely acknowledged,57 and I hope to have been
able to show that a considerable portion of the Laws of D shares such concerns.
A concentration of thematic overlap was noted between the halakhot listed
in 4QMMT and the catalogue of transgressions in 4QDe. On the negative side
4QMMT's focus on Jerusalem and the Temple is more pronounced than in the
halakhic parts of D. Moreover, MMT's characteristic references to the practice
of opponents distinguishes the way its halakhot are presented from the
Laws of D.
It seems to me that the close relationship between the halakhah stratum
of D, particularly the catalogue of transgressions, and the halakhic portion
of MMT is beyond doubt. I would like to end by attempting to relate these
results to the literary and compositional history of both documents. As
far as the Laws of the Damascus Document are concerned I suggest that the
compiler of that corpus made use of a body of halakhic traditions and incorporated
these into the Laws as we know them today alongside a variety of other
material most notably a sizeable amount of communal legislation. I have
argued elsewhere that 4Q159 constitutes an example of the kind of source
used by the compiler of the Laws of D.58 Moreover, I noted above that the
list of transgressions fragmentarily preserved in 4QDe may well constitute
an important witness to the growth of the halakhah stratum of D. Turning
to 4QMMT, the excitement over the initial assessment of it as a letter
by the teacher of righteousness to the wicked priest, still held by some59
and questioned by others,60 may have prevented us from thinking in terms
of a compositional history of 4QMMT. An exception is the much debated question
of the relationship of the calendric section to the rest of the work.61
I see no reasons to believe that the compositional history of 4QMMT is
any less complex than is increasingly taken for granted for other DSS.
It seems probable to me that its author(s) made use of earlier collections
of halakhot of the kind that lie behind the Laws of D.
NOTES
1 Cf. L. H. Schiffman, 'The Place of 4QMMT in the Corpus of Qumran Manuscripts',
in Reading 4QMMT. New Perspectives on Qumran Law and History ed. J. Kampen
and M. J. Bernstein, Georgia: Scholars Press, 1996, pp. 81-98, esp. pp.
90-94 and P. R. Callaway, '4QMMT and Recent Hypotheses on the Origin of
the Qumran Community', in Mogilany 1993. Papers on the Dead Sea Scrolls
ed. Z. J. Kapera, Kraków: Enigma, 1996, pp. 15-29, esp. p. 26. See
also J. Strugnell, 'MMT: Second Thoughts on a Forthcoming Edition', in
The Community of the Renewed Covenant. The Notre Dame Symposium on the
Dead Sea Scrolls ed. E. Ulrich and J. C. VanderKam, Notre Dame: University
of Notre Dame Press, 1994, pp. 57-73, p. 68. [Back to text]
2 C. Hempel, The Laws of the Damascus Document. Sources, Traditions and
Redaction, Leiden: Brill, 1998. [Back to text]
3 Cf. C. Hempel, 'The Earthly Essene Nucleus of 1QSa', DSD 3 (1996) 253-67;
eadem, 'The Penal Code Reconsidered', in Legal Texts and Legal Issues.
Proceedings of the Second Meeting of the International Organization for
Qumran Studies, Published in Honour of Joseph M. Baumgarten ed. M. Bernstein,
F. García Martínez, and J. Kampen, Leiden: Brill, 1997, pp.
337-48; and eadem, '4QOrda (4Q159) and the Laws of the Damascus Document',
in Proceedings of the International Congress The Dead Sea Scrolls. Fifty
Years after their Discovery, Jerusalem, July 1997, Jerusalem: Israel Exploration
Society, forthcoming. [Back to text]
4 Cf. Strugnell, 'Second Thoughts', pp. 65-66; also idem, 'More on Wives
and Marriage in the Dead Sea Scrolls: (4Q416 2 ii [Cf. 1 Thess 4:4] And
4QMMT §B)', RQ 17 (1996) 537-47, esp. p. 541 n. 7. Prof. Shemaryahu
Talmon has expressed similar reservations in a discussion at the Hebrew
University's Orion Centre in April 1996. [Back to text]
5 This has frequently been noted, cf. Y. Sussman 'The History of the
Halakhah and the Dead Sea Scrolls. Preliminary Talmudic Observations on
Miqsat Ma'ase ha-Torah (4QMMT)', Appendix 1 in E. Qimron and J. Strugnell,
Qumran Cave 4. V. Miqsat Ma'ase ha-Torah (DJD 10), Oxford: Clarendon,
1994, pp. 179-200, p. 186; also Qimron and Strugnell, Qumran Cave 4. V,
pp. 113 and 121; Stugnell, 'Second Thoughts', p. 68. [Back to text]
6 For the view that the bulk of 1QSa constitutes communal legislation
see my 'Earthly Essene Nucleus'. [Back to text]
7 This feature has been discussed previously by H. Stegemann,'The Qumran
Essenes - Local Members of the Main Jewish Union in Late Second Temple
Times', in The Madrid Qumran Congress ed. J. Trebolle Barrera and L. Vegas
Montaner, Leiden: Brill, 1992, 1. 83-166, esp. pp. 134-37. [Back to text]
8 Cf. L. H. Schiffman, 'The Temple Scroll and the Systems of Jewish Law
of the Second Temple Period', in Temple Scroll Studies ed. G. J. Brooke,
Sheffield: JSOT, 1989, pp. 239-55, esp. pp. 248-49. [Back to text]
9 See L. H. Schiffman, 'Sacral and Non-Sacral Slaughter According to
the Temple Scroll', in Time to Prepare the Way in the Wilderness. Papers
on the Qumran Scrolls by Fellows of the Institute for Advanced Studies
of the Hebrew University, Jerusalem, 1989-1990 ed. D. Dimant and L. H.
Schiffman, Leiden: Brill, 1995, pp. 69-84. Further, E. Eshel, '4QLevd:
A Possible Source for the Temple Scroll and Miqsat Ma'ase Ha-Torah',
DSD 2 (1995) 1-13. [Back to text]
10 Cf. Qimron and Strugnell, Qumran Cave 4. V, pp. 156-57. For a discussion
of the scriptural background see M. J. Bernstein, 'The Employment and Interpretation
of Scripture in 4QMMT: Preliminary Observations', in Reading 4QMMT., pp.
29-51, esp. pp. 39-40; G. J. Brooke, 'The Explicit Presentation of Scripture
in 4QMMT' in Legal Texts and Legal Issues, pp. 67-88, p. 72. Brooke shows
that on closer inspection Lev. 17,3 has been reordered here rather than
paraphrased, a term that implies rewording, as was argued previously. [Back to text]
11 On the use of bwtk in MMT see Brooke, 'Explicit Presentation of Scripture
in 4QMMT', p. 71. [Back to text]
12 E. Qimron has recently identified a fragment of a third copy of the
Temple Scroll (11QTc) that includes a prohibition of rearing chickens in
Jerusalem and noted its affinity to the attitude about dogs in Jerusalem
in 4QMMT, cf. E. Qimron, 'Chickens in the Temple Scroll (11QTc)', Tarbiz
64 (1995) 473-76 [Hebrew] and E. Qimron, The Temple Scroll. A Critical
Edition with Extensive Reconstructions. Bibliography by F. García
Martínez, Beer Sheva: Ben-Gurion University of the Negev Press /
Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society, 1996, p. 69. See also J. M. Baumgarten,
'The "Halakhah" in Miq×at MaÆa—e Ha-Torah (MMT)', JAOS
116 (1996) 512-16, p. 514 where he argues that the halakhic concern about
dogs articulated in MMT may bear upon the practice of burying animal bones
attested at Qumran. [Back to text]
13 The latter phrase is partly restored in the Composite Text (B32-33)
based on 4Q394 3-7 ii 19 par. 4Q397 3,5. Since the opening words of such
a statement are clearly preserved in 4Q394 3-7 ii 19 (Mwqmh r#) )yh)
the editors' restoration seems plausible. [Back to text]
14 For a discussion see Qimron, Qumran Cave 4. V, pp. 143-45. [Back to text]
15 Professor J. M. Baumgarten has drawn my attention to the difference
in length of the blocks of material introduced by l( headings in D and
MMT respectively. On closer inspection great variety in the length of the
blocks of material thus introduced exists already within D itself. One
need only compare the brief sections on women's oaths (CD 16,10-12) or
oaths (CD 9,8b-10a) to the long treatment of the sabbath (CD 10,14-11,18b). [Back to text]
16 Cf. J. M. Baumgarten, Qumran Cave 4. XIII. The Damascus Document (4Q266-273)
(DJD 18), Oxford: Clarendon, 1996, pp. 14-15 as well as his contribution
to the present volume. [Back to text]
17 For preliminary editions of the text see J. T. Milik in M. Baillet,
J. T. Milik and R. de Vaux, Les 'Petites Grottes' de Qumrân. Exploration
de la falaise. Les grottes 2Q, 3Q, 5Q, 6Q, 7Q à 10Q. Le rouleau
de cuivre (DJD 3), Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1962, p. 300 where the text
of fg. 5 only is transcribed; B. Z. Wacholder and M. G. Abegg eds., A Preliminary
Edition of the Unpublished Dead Sea Scrolls. The Hebrew and Aramaic Texts
from Cave Four. Fascicle Three, Washington D.C.: Biblical Archaeology Society,
1992, pp. 34-40; and most recently F. García Martínez and
E. J. C. Tigchelaar eds., The Dead Sea Scrolls Study Edition. Volume One
1Q1-4Q273, Leiden: Brill, 1997, pp. 496-501. [Back to text]
18 J. Milgrom, Leviticus 1-16. A New Translation with Introduction and
Commentary, New York: Doubleday, 1991, p. 2. [Back to text]
19 Cf. H. Stegemann, 'The Origins of the Temple Scroll', SupVT 40 (1988)
235-56, esp. p. 255 where he describes the laws of the Temple Scrolls as
"...old tôrôt originating among the priests at the temple
in Jerusalem." [Back to text]
20 Cf. J. M. Baumgarten, 'The Disqualifications of Priests in 4Q Fragments
of the "Damascus Document", a Specimen of the Recovery of pre-Rabbinic
Halakha' in The Madrid Qumran Congress, 2. 503-13. [Back to text]
21 Cf. J. M. Baumgarten, 'The 4Q Zadokite Fragments on Skin Disease',
JJS 41 (1990) 153-65 and E. Qimron, 'Notes on the 4Q Zadokite Fragments
on Skin Disease', JJS 42 (1991) 256-59. [Back to text]
22 The textual remains of this phrase are substantially preserved in
both the first and third instance. In 4Q394 3-7 i 19 - ii 1a remnants of
a further occurrence of this refrain may be preserved. [Back to text]
23 Cf. Qimron and Strugnell, Qumran Cave 4. V, p. 48 note ad B13. See
also Bernstein, 'Employment and Interpretation of Scripture in 4QMMT',
p. 36. [Back to text]
24 Cf. Qimron and Strugnell,Qumran Cave 4. V, pp. 171-75. [Back to text]
25 Baumgarten's position is spelt out by Qimron, Qumran Cave 4. V, p.
55 note ad B 75 and p. 171 n. 178a, and Baumgarten has argued his case
in 'The "Halakhah" in Miqsat Ma'ase Ha-Torah', pp. 515-16.
Grabbe has recently expressed his support for Baumgarten's interpreation,
cf. L. L. Grabbe, '4QMMT and Second Temple Jewish Society', in Legal Texts
and Legal Issues, pp. 89-108, p. 103 n. 53. See also R. A. Kugler, 'Halakic
Interpretative Strategies at Qumran: A Case Study', in Legal Texts and
Legal Issues, pp. 131-40, esp. pp. 135-36, who concludes his analysis "...
we are left with an ambiguous passage, at least with respect to precisely
whom priests may not marry.", p. 136. [Back to text]
26 Cf. L. H. Schiffman, 'The New Halakhic Letter (4QMMT) and the Origins
of the Dead Sea Sect', BA 53 (1990) 64-73. [Back to text]
27 A similar sentiment is expressed by Strugnell, 'Second Thoughts',
p. 65. See also J. M. Baumgarten's recent cautious assessment of this issue
in 'Sadducean Elements in Qumran Law', in The Community of the Renewed
Covenant, pp. 27-36 and the balanced and cautious argumentation by Y. Sussman,
'History of the Halakhah', pp. 192-96 and p. 200. Further, Grabbe, '4QMMT
and Second Temple Jewish Society'; L. H. Schiffman, 'The Sadducean Origins
of the Dead Sea Scroll Sect', in Understanding the Dead Sea Scrolls ed.
H. Shanks, London: SPCK, 1993, pp. 35-49; idem, 'New Halakhic Texts from
Qumran', Hebrew Studies 34 (1993) 21-33; J. C. VanderKam, 'The People of
the Dead Sea Scrolls: Essenes or Sadducees' in Understanding the Dead Sea
Scrolls, pp. 50-62. See also A. I. Baumgarten, 'Rabbinic Literature as
a Source for the History of Jewish Sectarianism in the Second Temple Period',
DSD 2 (1995) 14-57, esp. pp. 22-30. [Back to text]
28 The Hebrew term used is tbr[t, for linguistic comments see Qimron,
Qumran Cave 4. V, p. 96. [Back to text]
29 Cf. Qimron and Strugnell, Qumran Cave 4. V, p. 160 where Qimron observes
with reference to the blind and the deaf in 4QMMT "...none of them
are able to act in accordance with the laws of purity." See also A.
Shemesh, '"The Holy Angels are in their Council": The Exclusion
of Deformed Persons from Holy Places in Qumranic and Rabbinic Literature',
DSD 4 (1997) 179-206, p. 201 n. 60. [Back to text]
30 See also the material in 4Q396 1-2 i 5-6 par. and 4Q394 8 iii 12b-19a
par. which is critical of various categories of people entering the assembly
and marrying Israelites. Cf. further 1QM 7,4b-6a, 4QFlor 1,3b-5a and 11QTa
45,12-14. For scholarly discussions see J. M. Baumgarten, Studies in Qumran
Law, Leiden: Brill, 1977, pp. 75-87; G. J. Brooke, Exegesis at Qumran.
4QFlorilegium in its Jewish Context, Sheffield: JSOT, 1985, pp. 178-83;
M. J. Davidson, Angels at Qumran. A Comparative Study of 1Enoch 1-36, 72-108
and Sectarian Writings from Qumran, Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press,
1992, pp. 185-86; Qimron and Strugnell, Qumran Cave 4. V, pp. 145-47; L.
H. Schiffman, 'Exclusion from the Sanctuary and the City of theSanctuary
in the Temple Scroll', HAR 9 (1985) 301-320; idem, 'Purity and Perfection:
Exclusion from the Council of the Community in the Serekh Ha-(Edah' in
Biblical Archaeology Today ed. Janet Amitai, Jerusalem: Israel Exploration
Society, 1985, pp. 373-89; idem, The Eschatological Community of the Dead
Sea Scrolls. A Study of the Rule of the Congregation, Atlanta: Scholars
Press, 1989, pp. 47-48; Shemesh, '"The Holy Angels are in their Council"';
Y. Yadin The Temple Scroll, Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society, 1983,
1.289-91. [Back to text]
31 Cf. J. M. Baumgarten, 'The Laws about Fluxes in 4QTohoraa (4Q274)',
in Time to Prepare the Way in the Wilderness, pp. 1-8 and idem, 'Zab Impurity
in Qumran and Rabbinic Law', JJS 45 (1994) 273-77. See also J. Milgrom,
'4QTohoraa: An Unpublished Qumran Text on Purities', in Time to Prepare
the Way in the Wilderness, pp. 59-68. Whereas Baumgarten argues that lines
4Q274 1,1-4a deals with zab impurity Milgrom is of the opinion that the
same lines pertain to skin disease. [Back to text]
32 Baumgarten, Qumran Cave 4. XIII, p. 56. [Back to text]
33 See Schiffman, 'Place of 4QMMT', p. 90. [Back to text]
34 Cf. J. M. Baumgarten, 'Pharisaic-Sadducean Controversies about Purity',
JJS 31 (1980) 157-70; L. H. Schiffman, 'Miqsat Ma'ase Ha-Torah and
the Temple Scroll', RQ 14 (1990) 435-57, esp. pp. 438-42; idem, 'Pharisaic
and Sadducean Halakhah in the Light of the Dead Sea Scrolls. The Case of
the Tebul Yom', DSD 1 (1994) 285-299; and Qimron and Strugnell, Qumran
Cave 4. V, pp. 166-70. [Back to text]
35 Cf. Baumgarten, Qumran Cave 4. XIII, pp. 130-32; Qimron and Strugnell,
Qumran Cave 4. V, pp. 152-54 and the articles by Baumgarten and Schiffman
cited in the immediately preceding note. Cf. also M. Broshi, 'Anti-Qumranic
Polemics in the Talmud', in The Madrid Qumran Congress ed. J. Trebolle
Barrera and L. Vegas Montaner, Leiden: Brill, 1992, 2.589-600, esp. pp.
591-92. The same halakhic position is expressed also in 4Q277 1,5-6. For
a preliminary transcription, translation, and commentary on this text see
J. M. Baumgarten, 'The Red Cow Purification Rites in Qumran Texts', JJS
46 (1995) 112-19. [Back to text]
36 See A. Solomon, 'The Prohibition Against Tevul Yom and Defilement
of the Daily Whole Offering in the Jerusalem Temple in CD 11:21-12:1: A
New Understanding', DSD 4 (1997) 1-20. [Back to text]
37 On this text and its parallels in 4QDa and b, cf. J. M. Baumgarten,
'A Qumran Text with Agrarian Halakhah', JQR 86 (1995) 1-8. Note that the
numeration of fragments has changed since this article appeared, and I
have adopted the numeration as it appears in Baumgarten's editio princeps
of the 4QD manuscripts. [Back to text]
38 F. D. Weinert, '4Q159: Legislation for an Essene Community Outside
of Qumran?', JSJ 5 (1974) 179-207, p. 206. [Back to text]
39 Cf. Schiffman, 'Place of 4QMMT', pp. 90-91. [Back to text]
40 Cf. Qimron and Strugnell, Qumran Cave 4. V, pp. 164-65. [Back to text]
41 For a comprehensive discussion see J. M. Baumgarten, 'The Laws of
cOrlah and First Fruits in the Light of Jubilees, the Qumran Writings,
and Targum Ps. Jonathan', JJS 38 (1987) 195-202; M. Kister, 'Some Aspects
of Qumranic Halakhah', in The Madrid Qumran Congress, 2. 571-88, esp. pp.
575-88; and Schiffman, 'Miqsat Ma'ase Ha-Torah and the Temple Scroll',
pp. 452-56. [Back to text]
42 See Schiffman, 'Place of 4QMMT', p. 92. [Back to text]
43 Cf. L. H. Schiffman, 'Legislation Concerning Relations with Non-Jews
in the Zadokite Fragments and in Tannaitic Literature', RQ 11 (1989) 379-89. [Back to text]
44 See L. Ginzberg, An Unknown Jewish Sect, New York City: Jewish Theological
Seminary of America, 1976, pp. 77-78 and Schiffman, 'Legislation Concerning
Relations with Non-Jews', pp. 387-88. [Back to text]
45 Following the interpretation of 4QDa 5 ii 6 proposed by Baumgarten,
Qumran Cave 4. XIII, p. 51. [Back to text]
46 Cf. Baumgarten, Qumran Cave 4. XIII, p. 131. [Back to text]
47 Cf. Baumgarten, 'The "Halakhah" in Miqsat Ma'ase Ha-Torah
, p. 512. [Back to text]
48 Cf. Baumgarten, Qumran Cave 4. XIII, pp. 142-46. [Back to text]
49 See also 4Q298 which attests similar calls to attention, cf. S. Pfann,
'4Q298: The Maskîl's Address to All Sons of Dawn', JQR 85 (1994)
203-35 and M. Kister, 'Commentary to 4Q298', JQR 85 (1994) 237-49. See
also 4Q185, cf. A. Lange, Weisheit und Prädestination. Weisheitliche
Urordnung und Prädestination in den Textfunden von Qumran, Leiden:
Brill, 1995, p. 253 n. 83. [Back to text]
50 J. M. Baumgarten, 'The Laws of the Damascus Document in Current Research',
in M. Broshi ed. The Damascus Document Reconsidered, Jerusalem: Israel
Exploration Society, 1992, pp. 51-62, p. 53. [Back to text]
51 Cf. Baumgarten, Qumran Cave 4. XIII, pp. 145-46; O. Betz, 'The Qumran
Halakhah Text Miqsat Ma'sê Ha-Tôr®h (4QMMT) and Sadducean,
Essene, and Early Pharisaic Tradition', in The Aramaic Bible. Targums in
Their Historical Context ed. D. R. G. Beattie and M. J. McNamara, Sheffield:
JSOT, 1994, pp. 176-202; and Schiffman, 'Place of 4QMMT'. [Back to text]
52 Qumran Cave 4. XIII, p. 146. [Back to text]
53 Cf. M. A. Knibb, The Qumran Community, Cambridge: CUP, 1987, p. 27. [Back to text]
54 A similar offence is found in 11QTa 64,6-9 and the En Gedi inscription,
see Baumgarten, Qumran Cave 4. XIII, p. 146 and M. Weinfeld, The Organizational
Pattern and the Penal Code of the Qumran Sect. A Comparison with Guilds
and Religious Associations of the Hellenistic-Roman Period, Göttingen:
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht / Fribourg: Éditions Universitaires,
1986, p. 25. [Back to text]
55 The overlap between the catalogue of transgressions and 4QMMT is noted
also by Baumgarten, Qumran Cave 4. XIII, p. 13. [Back to text]
56 See also 11QTa 52,5, cf. Schiffman, 'Miqsat Ma'ase Ha-Torah
and the Temple Scroll', pp. 448-51; idem , 'Place of 4QMMT', pp. 88 and
93. Further, J. M. Baumgarten, 'A Fragment on Fetal Life and Pregnancy
in 4Q270', in Pomegranates and Bells. Studies in Biblical, Jewish, and
Near Eastern Ritual, Law, and Literature in Honor of Jacob Milgrom ed.
D. P. Wright, D. N. Freedman and A. Hurvitz, Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns,
1995, pp. 445-48. [Back to text]
57 Cf., for example, the observations offered by Y. Sussman in 'History
of the Halakhah', p. 187. [Back to text]
58 See my '4QOrda (4Q159) and the Laws of the Damascus Document'. [Back to text]
59 This position has been restated recently by H. Eshel, '4QMMT and the
History of the Hasmonean Period', in Reading 4QMMT, pp. 53-65. [Back to text]
60 See, for example, Schiffman, 'New Halakhic Letter' and Strugnell,
'Second Thoughts', pp. 70-73. [Back to text]
61 Cf. García Martínez, 'Dos notas sobre 4QMMT', RQ 16
(2993) 293-97; Schiffman, 'Place of 4QMMT', pp. 82-86; Strugnell, 'Second
Thoughts', pp. 61-62; J. C. VanderKam, 'The Calendar, 4Q327, and 4Q394',
in Legal Texts and Legal Issues, pp. 179-94. [Back to text]
Please send comments or inquiries to the Orion Center at
msdss@mscc.huji.ac.il
|