Enoch and the Mosaic Torah- The Evidence of Jubilees

(Nora) #1

Purity and Impurity in the Book of Jubilees


Lutz Doering

The issue of purity and impurity in Jubilees has provoked recent debate.
While some scholars assign Jubilees and the Temple Scroll "to the same legal
and exegetical tradition"^1 and place them, together with the texts from
Qumran, within the ancient priestly halakah,^2 others perceive profound dif­
ferences.^3 L. Ravid concludes from the absence of ritual defilement in the
story of Abraham's death in Jub 23:1-7 that "it does not seem probable that
the author agreed with the Pentateuchal concepts of purity and impurity, or
with those represented in the Judean Desert scrolls."^4 According to Ravid,
Jubilees is a polemic against the priesthood who then controlled the temple.
In response, J. VanderKam suggests reading Jubilees in line with the putative
setting of the book in a period without a sanctuary and indebted to the tra­
ditions this book reworks.^5 My own reading of Jubilees is closer to the latter,



  1. Thus the classic formulation by J. C. VanderKam, "The Temple Scroll and the Book
    of Jubilees," in Temple Scroll Studies, ed. G. J. Brooke, JSPSup 7 (Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1989),
    211-36, 232.

  2. E.g., C. Werman, "The Rules of Consuming and Covering the Blood in Priestly and
    Rabbinic Law," RevQ 16, no. 64 (1995): 621-36.

  3. E.g., J. Klawans, Impurity and Sin in Ancient Judaism (Oxford: Oxford University
    Press, 2000); M. Himmelfarb, "Sexual Relations and Purity in the Temple Scroll and the
    Book of Jubilees," DSD 6 (1999): 11-36.

  4. L. Ravid, "Purity and Impurity in the Book of Jubilees," JSP 13 (2002): 61-86, 63.

  5. J. VanderKam, "Viewed from Another Angle: Purity and Impurity in the Book of
    Jubilees? JSP 13 (2002): 209-15.

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