Probably the Dead Sea Scrolls have had the greatest Biblical impact.
They have provided Old Testament manuscripts approximately 1,000 years
older than our previous oldest manuscript. The Dead Sea Scrolls
have demonstrated that the Old Testament was accurately transmitted
during this interval. In addition, they provide a wealth of
information on the times leading up to, and during, the life of Christ.
—Dr. Bryant Wood, archaeologist
Juma was beginning to get nervous. Some of his goats were climbing too
high up the cliffs. He decided to climb the face of the cliff himself to
bring them back. Little did Juma realize as he began his climb on that
January day in 1947 that those straying goats would eventually involve
him in “the greatest archaeological discovery in the twentieth century.”
Such thoughts were far from his mind when he saw two small openings to
one of the thousands of caves that dot those barren cliffs overlooking
the northwestern shore of the Dead Sea.
He threw a rock into one of the openings. The unexpected cracking sound
surprised him; what else could be in those remote caves but treasure? He
called to his cousins, Khalil and Muhammed, who climbed up and heard the
exciting tale. But it was getting late, and the goats had to be
gathered. Tomorrow they would return—perhaps their days of following
goats would come to an end once the treasure was uncovered!
The youngest of the three, Muhammed, rose the next day before his two
fellow “treasure-seekers” and made his way to the cave. The cave floor
was covered with debris, including broken pottery. Along the wall stood
a number of narrow jars, some with their bowl-shaped covers still in
place. Frantically, Muhammed began to explore the inside of each jar,
but no treasure of gold was to be found… only a few bundles wrapped in
cloth and greenish with age. Returning to his cousins, he related the
sad news—no treasure.
No treasure indeed! The scrolls those Bedouin boys removed from that
dark cave that day and the days following would come to be recognized as
the greatest manuscript treasure ever found—the first seven manuscripts
of the Dead Sea Scrolls!
Such was the discovery of a group of manuscripts which were a thousand
years older than the then-oldest-known Hebrew texts of the Bible
(manuscripts, many of which were written more than 100 years before the
birth of Jesus). These manuscripts would excite the archaeological world
and provide a team of translators with a gigantic task that even to this
day has not been completed.
The story of how those scrolls traveled from the hands of young Bedouin
goat herders to be under the scrutinous eyes of international scholars
is stranger than fiction. Although all the details of the next few years
will probably never be known for sure, this much is clear. After hanging
from a pole in a Bedouin tent for a period of time, the seven original
scrolls were sold to two separate Arab antiquities dealers in Bethlehem.
From there, four were sold (for a small amount) to Athanasius Samuel,
Syrian Orthodox Metropolitan at St. Mark's Monastery in the Old City of
Jerusalem. Scholars at the American School of Oriental Research, who
examined them, were the first to realize their antiquity. John Trever
photographed them in detail, and the great archaeologist William F.
Albright soon announced that the scrolls were from the period between
200 BC and AD 200. The initial announcements were then made that the
oldest manuscripts ever discovered had been found in the Judean desert!
Three of the other original scrolls found by the Bedouin boys were sold
to E. L. Sukenik, archaeologist at Hebrew University and father of Yigal
Yadin (a general in the Israeli army who later became a famous
archaeologist and excavator of Masada and Hazor). It should be noted
that the drama of these events was heightened because these were the
last days of the British Mandate period in Palestine, and tensions
between the Arab and Jewish population were great. This made examination
of the scrolls by scholars extremely dangerous.
All of the scrolls finally came together at Hebrew University under
another strange set of circumstances. After touring the U.S. with his
four scrolls and not being able to find an interested buyer,
Metropolitan Samuel placed an ad in the Wall Street Journal. By
coincidence (or divine providence?) Yigal Yadin happened to be lecturing
in New York and saw the advertisement. Through intermediaries, he was
able to purchase these priceless scrolls for around $250,000. In
February of 1955, the Prime Minister of Israel announced that the State
of Israel had purchased the scrolls, and all seven (including the three
purchased earlier by Professor Sukenik) were to be housed in a special
museum at Hebrew University named the Shrine of the Book, where they can
be seen today.
Needless to say, the initial announcement about the scrolls prompted
feverish searches in the area of the original discoveries. An official
archaeological expedition was begun in 1949 which eventually resulted in
the discovery of ten additional caves in the surrounding area also
containing scrolls. The archaeologists then directed their attention to
a small ruin nearby called "Khirbet (ruins of) Qumran," which had been
thought of as the remains of an old Roman fortress. After six seasons of
intensive excavation, the scholars were sure beyond any reasonable doubt
that the scrolls found their origin in this community which flourished
between 125 BC and AD 68. The scrolls had been stored in haste in the
caves as the community fled the encroaching Roman army, which was in
Judea to put down the Jewish Revolt of AD 66-70.
The ruins of Qumran, which can be visited today, revealed that a
substantial group of Jewish ascetics inhabited this community.
Storehouses, aqueducts, ritual baths and an assembly hall were all
uncovered. One of the most interesting rooms uncovered was a
scriptorium, identified by two ink wells discovered there along with
some benches for scribes. It was in this room that many, if not all, of
the discovered manuscripts were copied.
As soon as the announcement of the scrolls' discovery was made, the
scholarly debates about their origin and significance began. The debates
increased when the amazing contents of the scrolls were successively
revealed.
The seven original scrolls, from what came to be called “Cave One,”
comprised the following:
...a well-preserved copy of the entire prophecy of Isaiah—the oldest copy
of an Old Testament book ever to be discovered
...another fragmentary scroll of Isaiah
...a commentary on the first two chapters of Habakkuk—the commentator
explained the book allegorically in terms of the Qumran brotherhood
...the “Manual of Discipline” or “Community Rule”—the most important source
of information about the religious sect at Qumran—it described the
requirements for those aspiring to join the brotherhood
...the “Thanksgiving Hymns,” a collection of devotional “psalms” of
thanksgiving and praise to God
...an Aramaic paraphrase of the Book of Genesis
...the “Rule of War” which dealt with the battle between the “Sons of
Light” (the men of Qumran) and the “Sons of Darkness” (the Romans?) yet
to take place in the “last days,” which days the men of Qumran believed
were about to arrive.
Those seven original scrolls were just the beginning. Over six hundred
scrolls and thousands of fragments have been discovered in the 11 caves
of the Qumran area. Fragments of every Biblical book except Esther have
been found, as well as many other non-Biblical texts.
One of the most fascinating of the finds was a copper scroll which had
to be cut in strips to be opened and which contained a list of 60
treasures located in various parts of Judea (none of which have been
found)! Another scroll, which Israeli archaeologists recovered in 1967
underneath the floor of a Bethlehem antiquities dealer, describes in
detail the community's view of an elaborate Temple ritual. This has been
appropriately called the “Temple Scroll.”
The contents of the Dead Sea Scrolls indicate that their authors were a
group of priests and laymen pursuing a communal life of strict
dedication to God. Their leader was called the “Righteous Teacher.” They
viewed themselves as the only true elect of Israel—they alone were
faithful to the Law.
They opposed the “Wicked Priest”—the Jewish High Priest in Jerusalem who
represented the establishment, and who had persecuted them in some way.
This wicked priest was probably one of the Maccabean rulers who had
illegitimately assumed the high priesthood between 150-140 BC. Most
scholars have identified the Qumran brotherhood with the Essenes, a
Jewish sect of Jesus' day described by Josephus and Philo.
Whoever the men of Qumran were, their writings provide us with a
marvelous background picture of one aspect of the religious world into
which Jesus came. Some have sought to draw parallels between figures in
the scrolls and John the Baptist or Jesus, but an objective examination
of such parallels reveals that the differences are greater than the
similarities. Any contact of Jesus with Qumran is entirely speculative
and most improbable. The suggestion that John the Baptist may have spent
some time with the Qumran community is possible, since the Gospels tell
us that he spent considerable time in the wilderness near the area where
the Qumran community is located (Mt. 3:1-3; Mk. 1:4; Lk. 1:80; 3:2-3).
John's message, however, differed markedly from that of the Qumran
brotherhood. The only real common point was that they both taught that
the "kingdom of God" was coming.
One of the most important contributions of the Dead Sea Scrolls is the
numerous Biblical manuscripts which have been discovered. Until those
discoveries at Qumran, the oldest manuscripts of the Hebrew Scriptures
were copies from the 9th and 10th centuries AD by a group of Jewish
scribes called the Massoretes. Now we have manuscripts around a thousand
years older than those. The amazing truth is that these manuscripts are
almost identical! Here is a strong example of the tender care which the
Jewish scribes down through the centuries took in an effort to
accurately copy the sacred Scriptures. We can have confidence that our
Old Testament Scriptures faithfully represent the words given to Moses,
David and the prophets.
The men of Qumran fervently believed in a doctrine of “last things.”
They had fled to the desert and were readying themselves for the
imminent judgment, when their enemies would be vanquished and they,
God's elect, would be given final victory in accordance with the
predictions of the prophets. It was in connection with these end-time
events that one of the most fascinating teachings of the sect emerges.
The messianic hope loomed large in the thought of the brotherhood. As a
matter of fact, evidence shows that they actually believed in three
messiahs—one a prophet, another a priest and the third a king or prince.
In the document mentioned earlier called the “Manual of Discipline” or
the "Rule of the Community," it is laid down that the faithful should
continue to live under the rule "until the coming of a prophet and the
anointed ones [messiahs] of Aaron and Israel" (column 9, line 11). These
three figures would appear to usher in the age for which the community
was making preparation.
In another document found in Cave Four and referred to as the “Testimonia,”
a number of Old Testament passages are brought together which formed the
basis for their messianic expectations. The first is the citation from
Deuteronomy 18:18-19 where God says to Moses: "I will raise them up a
Prophet from among their brethren, like unto thee." Next comes a
quotation from Numbers 24:15-17, where Balaam foresees the rise of a
princely conqueror: "a Scepter shall rise out of Israel, and shall smite
the corners of Moab," etc. The third passage is the blessing pronounced
by Moses upon the tribe of Levi (the priestly tribe) in Deuteronomy
33:8-11. The way in which these three quotations are brought together
suggests that the writer looked forward to the advent of a great
prophet, a great prince and a great priest.
There were three individuals in the Old Testament writings that were
referred to as "my anointed ones"—the prophet, the priest and the king
(refer to Ex. 29:29; 1 Sam. 16:13, 24:6; 1 Kg. 19:16; Ps. 105:15). Each
of these was consecrated to his work by an anointing with oil. The
Hebrew word for "anointed" is meshiach, from which we get the word
Messiah.
The marvelous truth of the New Testament doctrine of the Messiah is that
each of these three offices found fulfillment in the person and work of
Jesus of Nazareth! The people were amazed at His feeding of the
multitude and said, "This is of a truth that prophet that should come
into the world" (Jn. 6:14; also Jn. 7:40; Acts 3:22, 7:37). Jesus also
was a priest, not from the order of Levi but from the order of
Melchizedek (Ps. 110:4; Heb. 7), who offered Himself as a sacrifice and
appears for us in the presence of His Father (Heb. 9:24-26; 10:11-12).
Also, Jesus was announced as the One who will receive "the throne of his
father, David. And he shall reign over the house of Jacob forever; and
of his kingdom there shall be no end" (Lk. 1:32-33). He will be
acclaimed "KING OF KINGS, AND LORD OF LORDS" (Rev. 19:16).
Thus, we have found an interesting point of contact between Qumran and
Christianity—a point of contact which is also a point of cleavage.
The
Qumran community and the early Christians agreed that in the days of the
fulfillment of Old Testament prophecies there would arise a great
prophet, a great priest and a great king. But these three figures
remained distinct in Qumran expectation, whereas the New Testament saw
them unified in the person of Jesus of Nazareth.
One more manuscript that has come to light in recent years provides a
fascinating background to the New Testament messianic hope. It has been
reconstructed from twelve small fragments, furnishing less than two
columns of writing; but this much can be ascertained from its brief
contents. It is a prediction of the birth of a Wonderful Child, possibly
drawing on Isaiah 9:6-7: "For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is
given... and his name shall be called Wonderful." This child will bear
special marks on His body and will be distinguished by wisdom and
intelligence. He will be able to probe the secrets of all living
creatures, and He will inaugurate the new age for which the faithful
fervently awaited.
Is it not striking that soon after this manuscript was composed, a child
was born who fulfilled the hopes of Israel and inaugurated a new age?
Although the men of Qumran were mistaken in the details of their
messiah, they did expect one whose general characteristics were
strikingly illustrated by Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of God and Messiah.
It is not known if some early Christian brought the message of Jesus to
this wilderness community. We are left only to speculate on how they
would have responded to the Wonderful Child born in Bethlehem who was
the Prophet, Priest and King of Israel.
( ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Dr. Will Varner is Professor
of Old Testament at The Master's College and Director of IBEX, the
college's campus in Israel. He previously served with the Friends of
Israel Gospel Ministry, and continues to contribute articles to their
publication, Israel My Glory )