Beyond the Essene Hypothesis

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 1998-02-01
Publisher(s): Eerdmans Pub Co
List Price: $29.50

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Summary

Respected scholar Gabriele Boccaccini here offers readers a new and challenging view of the ideology of the Qumran sect, the community closely related with the Dead Sea Scrolls. Boccaccini moves beyond the Essene hypothesis and posits a unique relationship between what he terms "Enochic Judaism" and the group traditionally known as the Essenes. Building his case on what the ancient records tell us about the Essenes and on a systematic analysis of the documents found at Qumran, Boccaccini argues that the literature betrays the core of an ancient and distinct variety of Second Temple Judaism. Tracing the development of this tradition, Boccaccini shows that the Essene community at Qumran was really the offspring of the Enochic party, which in turn contributed to the birth of parties led by John the Baptist and Jesus. Convincingly argued, this work will surely spark fresh debate in the discussion on the Qumran community and their famous writings.

Author Biography

Gabriele Boccaccini teaches in the Department of Near Eastern Studies at the University of Michigan

Table of Contents

Preface x(7)
Abbreviations and Sigla xvii
1. Introduction: Beyond the Essene Hypothesis
1(18)
The Calm after the Storm
1(7)
Historiographical Analysis and Systemic Analysis
8(3)
Moving Forward: From the Essene Hypothesis to the Enochic/Essene Hypothesis
11(8)
PART I HISTORIOGRAPHICAL ANALYSIS 19(32)
2. The Essenes in Ancient Historiography
21(30)
First-Century Jewish and Non-Jewish Sources
21(1)
Location, Extent, and Antiquity of the Essenes
22(9)
Communal Ownership
31(7)
Marriage and Celibacy
38(8)
Summary: The Palestinian Communities and the Community of the Dead Sea
46(5)
PART II SYSTEMIC ANALYSIS 51(112)
3. The Prehistory of the Sect
53(28)
The "Qumran Library"
53(6)
The Sectarian Texts of the Community of the Dead Sea Scrolls
59(9)
Pre-Maccabean Texts in the Qumran Library: Enochic and Zadokite Documents
68(13)
4. The Formative Age
81(38)
Daniel and the Book of Dream Visions
81(5)
The Book of Jubilees
86(12)
The Temple Scroll (11QT)
98(6)
The Proto-Epistle of Enoch, Including the Apocalypse of Weeks
104(9)
The Halakhic Letter (4QMMT)
113(6)
5. The Schism between Qumran and Enochic Judaism
119(44)
The Damascus Document (CD)
119(10)
Missing Texts (I): Sectarian Censorship
129(2)
Enochic Documents Unknown at Qumran; or, Enoch vs. Qumran
131(19)
Sectarian Documents in Context; or, Qumran vs. Enoch
150(6)
Missing Texts (II): Sectarian Documents outside Qumran
156(4)
Summary: A Bifurcation in the Chain of Enochic Documents
160(3)
PART III COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS 163(34)
6. Conclusion: The Enochic/Essene Hypothesis
165(32)
Enochic Judaism and Essene Judaism
165(1)
Common Roots: Both Moses and Enoch
166(4)
Common Ideology: Rejection of Individual Predestination
170(8)
Common Sociology: Diverse People, Yet Not Set Apart
178(7)
A Composite Picture of the Enochic/Essene Movement
185(6)
Summary: The Enochic/Essene Hypothesis and Its Implications
191(6)
Bibliography: The Dead Sea Scrolls and Second Temple Judaism 197(22)
From Late Judaism to Middle Judaisms 197(2)
General Introductions to the History and Religion of Second Temple Judaism 199(5)
Studies on the Old Testament Pseudepigrapha 204(4)
Studies on the Dead Sea Scrolls 208(11)
Indexes 219
Main Subjects 219(4)
Ancient Sources 223(3)
Modern Interpreters 226

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