The Dead Sea Scrolls: A New Translation

by Michael O. Wise

Hardcover, 1996

Status

Available

Collection

Description

This landmark work comes from a new generation of Dead Sea Scrolls scholars. Wise, Abegg and Cook bring the long-inaccessible ancient scrolls of Qumran to life, translating and deciphering virtually every legible portion of the fragmented scrolls. This book contains: intriguing revelations about biblical history and the roots of Christianity; new stories about Abraham, Jacob, and Enoch--including a text explaining why God demanded the sacrifice of Isaac; twelve texts not included in the Bible that claim Moses as their author; new psalms attributed to King David and to Joshua; texts illuminating ancient doctrines about angels and writings claiming to be revelations of angels themselves -- including the Archangel Michael. The translators provide commentary throughout placing the scrolls in their true historical context, while the introduction discusses what is perhaps their greatest mystery--who authored them and why. --… (more)

Publication

HarperOne (1996), Edition: 1st, 513 pages

Rating

½ (53 ratings; 3.8)

User reviews

LibraryThing member justmeRosalie
Divided into chapters as subjects.

topics listed and briefly explained within those chapters.

the scrolls are printed as they were deciphered including lots of blank spaces. these are filled in somewhat as is obvious.
LibraryThing member JVioland
I've become somewhat of an expert - as to a reader, that is - on the Dead Sea Scrolls. This summary is not as captivating as that by Millar Burrows - one of the first archaeologists involved with the Bedouin, Kando and Shaia when scraps of velum were offered for sale to the world in 1946/47. The
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reader is introduced to the Essenes one of three branches of Judaism in the first century - along with the Pharisees and Sadducees. See similarities to the early Christians. You'll wonder if John the Baptist had been an Essene.
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