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1 - Authoritative Texts in the Hebrew and Cuneiform Traditions

Russell Hobson
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
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Summary

The Stabilization of Texts in Authoritative Collections

It is widely recognized that the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls has changed our understanding of the development of Jewish sacred literature. In particular, the vigorous study of the biblical scrolls from Qumran has brought to light a stage in the formation of the Hebrew Scriptures that was unimagined by scholars before the discovery and subsequent analysis of these texts in the second half of the twentieth century. The wealth of manuscript evidence from the caves near Qumran has revealed that our concept of a “Hebrew Bible,” with its closed list of books and fixed textual form, was entirely absent in the late Second Temple period. Rather, this period represents a stage in which the biblical texts were still in the final stages of production, and were decidedly fluid both in terms of their position in the recognized collections of authoritative scrolls, and in terms of their literary editions and precise textual forms.

Indeed, scholars of canonical criticism no longer talk of a definitive event, once thought to have occurred in the first century ce, in which the canonization of the Hebrew Bible was finally decided. Instead, they describe a centuries long “canonical process” which centred around “a collection of authoritative scriptures.” Similarly, the terminology that surrounds the textual form of individual biblical texts has undergone a transformation.

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Chapter
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Transforming Literature into Scripture
Texts as Cult Objects at Ninevah and Qumran
, pp. 1 - 7
Publisher: Acumen Publishing
Print publication year: 2012

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