Early Judaism- A Comprehensive Overview

(Grace) #1
Samuel like 4QSama, since he also narrates the content, details, and word-
ing of that otherwise lost paragraph (Ant.6.68-69).

Isaiah


The Great Isaiah Scroll (1QIsaa; see fig. 44) was the first and most dramatic
biblical manuscript to gain widespread fame. Especially because the text
displays multifaceted disagreement with the traditional MT, the assump-
tion was made that it was a Qumran text of Isaiah, that is, that its unusual
features were specifically due to the “sect” that lived at Qumran and copied
it there. A second Isaiah scroll (1QIsab) was also found in Cave 1 and by
contrast was quite close to the MT. It did indeed show that the medieval
MT of Isaiah had been copied with great accuracy over the intervening
thousand years. But whereas the two scrolls were first categorized as one
authentic text and one “vulgar” Qumran text, in fact they demonstrated —
though scholars could not yet realize it — the two principal lessons for the
biblical text from the new discoveries. The MT is, for the most part, an ac-
curate copy of some ancient text for each book; but importantly, there
were also valuable variant editions of many books in antiquity that had
been lost or discarded. Though the linguistic and orthographic profile of
1QIsaais generally secondary to that of the MT, its textual profile is earlier
in numerous cases. 1QIsaademonstrates that the MT displays a recurring
pattern of a sentence or more added to the text; in seven instances the MT
inserts secondary expansions of up to four verses where 1QIsaapreserves
the earlier short text.

Jeremiah


While several scrolls show that the edition they represent is at variance
with the MT, the scrolls of Jeremiah provide an example of two variant,
successive editions of the book visible among the scrolls themselves. Small
fragments of two manuscripts, 4QJerband 4QJerd, both from the second
centuryb.c.e., display in Hebrew the earlier, shorter edition with one ar-
rangement of the book that formed the basis of the OG translation. In
contrast, both 4QJera, from ca. 225-175b.c.e., and 4QJerc, from the latter
part of the first centuryb.c.e., have the later, more expanded edition with
a variant arrangement in agreement with the MT. Just as 4QJerband the

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eugene ulrich

EERDMANS -- Early Judaism (Collins and Harlow) final text
Tuesday, October 09, 2012 12:03:58 PM

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