The Story of the Scrolls
Worship at the sacred Jerusalem Temple had become corrupt,
with seemingly little hope for reform. A group of devoted Jews removed
themselves from the mainstream and began a monastic life in the Judean desert. Their
studies of the Old Testament Scriptures led them to believe that God’s judgment
upon Jerusalem was imminent and that the anointed one would return to restore
the nation of Israel and purify their worship. Anticipating this moment, the
Essenes retreated into the Qumran desert to await the return of their Messiah. This
community, which began in the third century B.C., devoted their days to the
study and copying of sacred Scripture as well as theological and sectarian
works.
As tensions between the Jews and Romans increased, the
community hid their valuable scrolls in caves along the Dead Sea to protect
them from the invading armies. Their hope was that one day the scrolls would be
retrieved and restored to the nation of Israel. In A.D. 70, the Roman general
Titus invaded Israel and destroyed the city of Jerusalem along with its
treasured Temple. It is at this time that the Qumran community was overrun and
occupied by the Roman army. The scrolls remained hidden for the next two
thousand years.
In 1947, a Bedouin shepherd named Muhammad (Ahmed el-Dhib)
was searching for his lost goat and came upon a small opening of a cave. Thinking
that his goat may have fallen into the cave, he threw rocks into the opening. Instead
of hearing a startled goat, he heard the shattering of clay pottery. Lowering
himself into the cave, he discovered several sealed jars. He opened them hoping
to find treasure. To his disappointment, he found them to contain leather
scrolls. He collected seven of the best scrolls and left the other fragments scattered
on the ground.
Muhammad eventually brought some of the scrolls to a cobbler
and antiquities dealer in Bethlehem named Khando. Khando, thinking the scrolls
were written in Syriac, brought them to a Syrian Orthodox Archbishop named Mar (Athanasius)
Samuel. Mar Samuel recognized that the scrolls were written in Hebrew and
suspected they may be very ancient and valuable. He eventually had the scrolls
examined by John Trevor at the American School of Oriental Research (ASOR).
Trevor contacted the world’s foremost Middle East archaeologist, Dr. William
Albright, and together these men confirmed the antiquity of the scrolls and
dated them to sometime between the first and second century B.C.
After the initial discovery, archaeologists searched other
nearby caves between 1952 and 1956. They found ten other caves that contained
thousands of ancient documents as well. One of the greatest treasures of
ancient manuscripts had been discovered: the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Date and Contents of the Scrolls
Scholars were anxious to confirm that these Dead Sea Scrolls
were the most ancient of all Old Testament manuscripts in the Hebrew language. Three
types of dating tools were used: tools from archaeology, from the study of
ancient languages, called paleography and orthography, and the carbon-14 dating
method. Each can derive accurate results. When all the methods arrive at the
same conclusion, there is an increased reliability in the dating.
Archaeologists studied the pottery, coins, graves, and
garments at Khirbet Qumran, where the Essenes lived. They arrived at a date
ranging from the second century B.C. to the first century A.D. Paleographers
studied the style of writing and arrived at dates raging from the third century
B.C. to the first century A.D. Scientists, using the radiocarbon dating method,
dated the scrolls to range from the fourth century B.C. to the first century A.D.
Since all the methods came to a similar conclusion, scholars are very confident
in their assigned date for the texts. The scrolls date as early as the third
century B.C. to the first century A.D.{1}
Eleven caves were discovered containing nearly 1,100 ancient
documents which included several scrolls and more than 100,000 fragments.{2}
Fragments from every Old Testament book except for the book of Esther were
discovered. Other works included apocryphal books, commentaries, manuals of
discipline for the Qumran community, and theological texts. The majority of the
texts were written in the Hebrew language, but there were also manuscripts
written in Aramaic and Greek.{3}
Among the eleven caves, Cave 1, which was excavated in 1949,
and Cave 4, excavated in 1952, proved to be the most productive caves. One of
the most significant discoveries was a well-preserved scroll of the entire book
of Isaiah.
The famous Copper Scrolls were discovered in Cave 3 in 1952.
Unlike most of the scrolls that were written on leather or parchment, these
were written on copper and provided directions to sixty-four sites around
Jerusalem that were said to contain hidden treasure. So far, no treasure has
been found at the sites that have been investigated.
The oldest known piece of biblical Hebrew is a fragment from
the book of Samuel discovered in Cave 4,
and is dated from the third century B.C.{4}
The War Scroll found in Caves 1 and 4 is an eschatological text describing a
forty-year war between the Sons of Light and the evil Sons of Darkness. The Temple Scroll discovered in Cave 11 is the largest and describes a future Temple in Jerusalem that will be built at the end of the age.
Indeed, these were the most ancient Hebrew manuscripts of
the Old Testament ever found, and their contents would yield valuable insights
to our understanding of Judaism and early Christianity.
The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Masoretic Text
The Dead Sea Scrolls play a crucial role in assessing the
accurate preservation of the Old Testament. With its hundreds of manuscripts
from every book except Esther, detailed comparisons can be made with more
recent texts.
The Old Testament that we use today is translated from what
is called the Masoretic Text. The Masoretes were Jewish scholars who between A.D.
500 and 950 gave the Old Testament the form that we use today. Until the Dead Sea Scrolls were found in 1947, the oldest Hebrew text of the Old Testament was the Masoretic Aleppo Codex which
dates to A.D. 935.{5}
With the discovery of
the Dead Sea Scrolls, we now had manuscripts that predated the Masoretic Text
by about one thousand years. Scholars were anxious to see how the Dead Sea documents would match up with the Masoretic Text. If a significant amount of
differences were found, we could conclude that our Old Testament Text had not
been well preserved. Critics, along with religious groups such as Muslims and
Mormons, often make the claim that the present day Old Testament has been
corrupted and is not well preserved. According to these religious groups, this
would explain the contradictions between the Old Testament and their religious
teachings.
After years of careful
study, it has been concluded that the Dead Sea Scrolls give substantial
confirmation that our Old Testament has been accurately preserved. The scrolls
were found to be almost identical with the Masoretic text. Hebrew Scholar
Millar Burrows writes, “It is a matter of wonder that through something like
one thousand years the text underwent so little alteration. As I said in my
first article on the scroll, ‘Herein lies its chief importance, supporting the
fidelity of the Masoretic tradition.’”{6}
A significant comparison
study was conducted with the Isaiah Scroll written around 100 B.C. that was
found among the Dead Sea documents and the book of Isaiah found in the
Masoretic text. After much research, scholars found that the two texts were
practically identical. Most variants were minor spelling differences, and none
affected the meaning of the text.
One of the most
respected Old Testament scholars, the late Gleason Archer, examined the two
Isaiah scrolls found in Cave 1 and wrote, “Even though the two copies of Isaiah
discovered in Qumran Cave 1 near the Dead Sea in 1947 were a thousand years
earlier than the oldest dated manuscript previously known (A.D. 980), they
proved to be word for word identical with our standard Hebrew Bible in more
than 95 percent of the text. The five percent of variation consisted chiefly of
obvious slips of the pen and variations in spelling.”{7}
Despite the thousand
year gap, scholars found the Masoretic Text and Dead Sea Scrolls to be nearly
identical. The Dead Sea Scrolls provide valuable evidence that the Old
Testament had been accurately and carefully preserved.
The Messianic Prophecies and the Scrolls
One of the evidences used in defending the deity of the
Christ is the testimony of prophecy. There are over one hundred prophecies
regarding Christ in the Old Testament.{8} These prophecies were made centuries
before the birth of Christ and were quite specific in their detail. Skeptics
questioned the date of the prophecies and some even charged that they were not
recorded until after or at the time of Jesus, and therefore discounted their
prophetic nature.
There is strong evidence that the Old Testament canon was
completed by 450 B.C. The Greek translation of the Old Testament, the Septuagint,
is dated about two hundred fifty years before Christ. The translation process
occurred during the reign of Ptolemy Philadelphus who ruled from 285 to 246 B.C.{9}
It can be argued that a complete Hebrew text from which this Greek translation
would be derived must have existed prior to the third century B.C.
The Dead Sea Scrolls provided further proof that the Old
Testament canon existed prior to the third century B.C. Thousands of manuscript
fragments from all the Old Testament books except Esther were found predating
Christ’s birth, and some date as early as the third century B.C. For example,
portions from the book of Samuel date that early, and fragments from Daniel
date to the second century B.C.{10} Portions from the twelve Minor Prophets
date from 150 B.C to 25 B.C.{11} Since the documents were found to be
identical with our Masoretic Text, we can be reasonably sure that our Old
Testament is the same one that the Essenes were studying and working from.
One of the most important Dead Sea documents is the Isaiah
Scroll. This twenty-four foot long scroll is well preserved and contains the
complete book of Isaiah. The scroll is dated 100 B.C. and contains one of the
clearest and most detailed prophecies of the Messiah in chapter fifty-three,
called the “Suffering Servant.” Although some Jewish scholars teach that this
refers to Israel, a careful reading shows that this prophecy can only refer to
Christ.
Here are just a few reasons. The suffering servant is called
sinless (53:9), he dies and rises from the dead (53:8-10), and he suffers and
dies for the sins of the people (53:4-6). These characteristics are not true of
the nation of Israel. The Isaiah Scroll gives us a manuscript that predates the
birth of Christ by a century and contains many of the most important messianic
prophecies about Jesus. Skeptics could no longer contend that portions of the
book were written after Christ or that first century insertions were added to
the text.
Thus, the Dead Sea Scrolls provide further proof that the
Old Testament canon was completed by the third century B.C., and that the
prophecies foretold of Christ in the Old Testament predated the birth of
Christ.
The Messiah and the Scrolls
What kind of Messiah was expected by first century Jews? Critical
scholars allege that the idea of a personal Messiah was a later interpretation
made by Christians. Instead, they believe that the Messiah was to be the nation
of Israel and represented Jewish nationalism.
The Dead Sea Scrolls, written by Old Testament Jews, reveal
the messianic expectations of Jews during the time of Christ. Studies have
uncovered several parallels to the messianic hope revealed in the New Testament
as well as some significant differences. First, they were expecting a personal
Messiah rather than a nation or a sense of nationalism. Second, the Messiah
would be a descendant of King David. Third, the Messiah would confirm His
claims by performing miracles including the resurrection of the dead. Finally,
He would be human and yet possess divine attributes.
A manuscript found in Cave 4 entitled the Messianic
Apocalypse, copied in the first century B.C., describes the anticipated
ministry of the Messiah:
For He will honor the pious upon
the throne of His eternal kingdom, release the captives, open the eyes of the
blind, lifting up those who are oppressed… For He shall heal the critically
wounded, He shall raise the dead, He shall bring good news to the poor.
This passage sounds very similar to the ministry of Jesus as
recorded in the Gospels. In Luke chapter 7:21-22, John the Baptist’s disciples
come to Jesus and ask him if He is the Messiah. Jesus responds, “Go tell John
what you have seen and heard: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, the
lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, the poor have the good
news brought to them.”
But, with the similarities there are also differences. Christians
have always taught that there is one Messiah while the Essene community
believed in two, one an Aaronic or priestly Messiah and the other a Davidic or
royal Messiah who leads a war to end the evil age.{12}
The Essenes were also strict on matters of ceremonial purity
while Jesus criticized these laws. He socialized with tax collectors and lepers
which was considered defiling by the Jews. Jesus taught us to love one’s
enemies while the Essenes taught hatred towards theirs. They were strict
Sabbatarians, and Jesus often violated this important aspect of the law. The Qumran community rejected the inclusion of women, Gentiles, and sinners, while Christ
reached out to these very groups.
The many differences show that the Essenes were not the
source of early Christianity as some scholars propose. Rather, Christianity
derived its teachings from the Old Testament and the ministry of Jesus.
The Dead Sea Scrolls have proven to be a significant
discovery, confirming the accurate preservation of our Old Testament text, the
messianic prophecies of Christ, and valuable insight into first century
Judaism.
Two Major Prophets and the Dead Sea Scrolls
The Dead Sea Scrolls have been an asset in the debate
regarding two major and well disputed books of the Old Testament, Daniel and
Isaiah. Conservative scholars maintained that Daniel was written in the sixth
century B.C. as the author declares in the first chapter. The New Testament
writers treated Daniel as a prophetic book with predictive prophecies. Liberal
scholars began teaching in the eighteenth century that it was written in the
Maccabean Period or the second century B.C. If they are correct, Daniel would
not be a prophetic book that predicted the rise of Persia, Greece, and Rome.
Before the discovery of the scrolls, critical scholars
argued that the Aramaic language used in Daniel was from a time no earlier than
167 B.C. during the Maccabean period. Other scholars, such as well-respected
archaeologist Kenneth Kitchen, studied Daniel and found that ninety percent of
Daniel’s Aramaic vocabulary was used in documents from the fifth century B.C.
or earlier.{13} The Dead Sea Scrolls revealed that Kitchen’s conclusion was
well founded. The Aramaic language used in the Dead Sea Scrolls proved to be
very different from that found in the book of Daniel. Old Testament scholars
have concluded that the Aramaic in Daniel is closer to the form used in the
fourth and fifth century B.C. than to the second century B.C.
Critical scholars challenged the view that Isaiah was
written by a single author. Many contended that the first thirty-nine chapters
were written by one author in the eighth century B.C., and the final twenty-six
chapters were written in the post-Exilic period. The reason for this is that
there are some significant differences in the style and content between the two
sections. If this were true, Isaiah’s prophecies of Babylon in the later
chapters would not have been predictive prophecies but written after the events
occurred.
With the discovery of the Isaiah Scroll at Qumran, scholars
on both sides were eager to see if the evidence would favor their position. The
Isaiah Scroll revealed no break or demarcation between the two major sections
of Isaiah. The scribe was not aware of any change in authorship or division of
the book.{14} Ben Sira (second century B.C.), Josephus, and the New Testament
writers regarded Isaiah as written by a single author and containing predictive
prophecy.{15} The Dead Sea Scrolls added to the case for the unity and
prophetic character of Isaiah.
Inventory of the Scrolls
The following is a brief inventory provided by Dr. Gleason
Archer of the discoveries made in each of the Dead Sea caves.{16}
Cave 1 was the first cave discovered and excavated in 1949. Among
the discoveries was found the Isaiah Scroll containing a well-preserved scroll
of the entire book of Isaiah. Fragments were found from the other Old Testament
books which included Genesis, Leviticus, Deuteronomy, Judges, Samuel, Ezekiel,
and Psalms. Non-biblical books included the Book of Enoch, Sayings of Moses,
Book of Jubilee, Book of Noah, Testament of Levi and the Wisdom of Solomon. Fragments
from commentaries on Psalms, Micah, and Zephaniah were also discovered.
Cave 2 was excavated in 1952. Hundreds of fragments were
discovered, including remains from the Old Testament books of Exodus,
Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, Jeremiah, Job, Psalms and Ruth.
Cave 3 was excavated in 1952. Here archaeologists found the
famous Copper Scrolls. These scrolls contained directions to sixty-four sites
containing hidden treasures located around Jerusalem. So far, no treasure has
been found at the sites investigated.
Cave 4, excavated in 1952, proved to be one of the most productive.
Thousands of fragments were recovered from nearly four hundred manuscripts. Hundreds
of fragments from every Old Testament book were discovered with the exception
of the Book of Esther. The fragment from Samuel labeled 4Qsam{17} is believed to be the oldest known piece of
biblical Hebrew, dating from the third century B.C. Also found were fragments
of commentaries on the Psalms, Isaiah, and Nahum. The entire collection of Cave
4 is believed to represent the scope of the Essene library.
Cave 5 was excavated in 1952 and fragments from some Old
Testament books along with the book of Tobit were found.
Cave 6 excavated in 1952 uncovered papyrus fragments of
Daniel, 1 and 2 Kings and some other Essene literature.
Caves 7-10 yielded finds of interest for archaeologists but
had little relevance for biblical studies.
Cave 11 was excavated in 1956. It exposed well-preserved
copies from some of the Psalms, including the apocryphal Psalm 151. In
addition, a well-preserved scroll of part of Leviticus was found, and fragments
of an Apocalypse of the New Jerusalem, an Aramaic Targum or paraphrase of Job,
was also discovered.
Indeed these were the most ancient Hebrew manuscripts of the
Old Testament ever found, and their contents would soon reveal insights that would
impact Judaism and Christianity.
Notes
- James Vanderkam and Peter Flint, The Meaning of the Dead Sea Scrolls (San Francisco, CA.: Harper Collins Publishers, 2002), 20-32.
- Randall Price, The Stones Cry Out (Eugene, OR.: Harvest House Publishers, 1997), 278.
- Gleason Archer, A Survey of Old Testament Introduction (Chicago, IL.: Moody Press, 1985), 513-517.
- Vanderkam and Flint, 115.
- Price, 280.
- Millar Burrows, The Dead Sea Scrolls (New York: Viking Press, 1955), 304, quoted in Norman Geisler and William Nix, General Introduction to the Bible (Chicago: Moody Press, 1986), 367.
- Archer, 25.
- J. Barton Payne, Encyclopedia of Biblical Prophecy (Grand Rapids, MI.: Baker Books, 1984), 665-670.
- Geisler and Nix, 503-504.
- Ibid., 137.
- Ibid., 138-139.
- Vanderkam and Flint, 265-266.
- Randall Price, Secrets of the Dead Sea Scrolls (Eugene, OR.: Harvest House, 1996), 162.
- Ibid., 154-155.
- Ibid., 156-157.
- Archer, 513-517.
- Price, 162.
Bibliography
Archer, Gleason. A Survey of Old Testament Introduction. Chicago: Moody Press, 1985.
Geisler, Norman and William Nix. General Introduction to the Bible. Chicago: Moody Press, 1986.
Payne, J. Barton. Encyclopedia of Biblical Prophecy. Grand Rapids, MI.: Baker Books, 1984.
Price, Randall Price, Secrets of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Eugene, OR.: Harvest House, 1996.
Scanlin, Harold. The Dead Sea Scrolls and Modern Translations of the Old Testament. Wheaton, IL.: Tyndale House Publishers, 1993.
Vanderkam, James and Peter Flint. The Meaning of the Dead Sea Scrolls. San Francisco,
CA.: Harper Collins Publishers, 2002.
© 2006 Probe Ministries
About the Author Patrick Zukeran is a research associate with Probe Ministries. He has a B.A. from Point Loma Nazarene University, a Master of Theology from Dallas Theological Seminary, and a doctorate from Southern Evangelical Seminary. He is an author, radio talk show host, and a national and international speaker on apologetics, comparative religions, Bible, and theology. Pat hosts a nationally syndicated radio show “Evidence and Answers” (www.evidenceandanswers.org) which also airs throughout Asia. Before joining Probe, Pat served for twelve years as an Associate Pastor. He can be reached via e-mail at
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. Pat currently resides in Plano, Texas.
What is Probe? Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at www.probe.org. Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by contacting us at: Probe Ministries 1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100 Richardson, TX 75081 (972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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