Since their discovery in 1947, the Dead Sea Scrolls have become an icon in popular culture that transcends their status as ancient Jewish manuscripts. Everyone has heard of the Scrolls, but amidst the conspiracies, the politics, and the sensational claims, it can be difficult to separate the myths from the reality. In this Very Short introduction, Timothy Lim discusses the cultural significance of the finds, and the religious, political and legal controversies during the seventy years of study since the discovery. He also looks at the contribution the Scrolls have made to our understanding of the Old Testament or Hebrew Bible, and the origins of early Christianity. Exploring the most recent scholarly discussions on the archaeology of Khirbe...
The aim of the Encyclopedia of the Dead Sea Scrolls, according to its editors, is “to encompass all ...
The article surveys recent scholarship on the Dead Sea Scrolls and traces the contours of interpreta...
The article demonstrates why the Dead Sea Scrolls are important for NT scholarship. After a sketch o...
These two massive volumes comprise the proceedings of a conference of the same name held at the Univ...
James VanderKam and Peter Flint set out to write, in their own words, “a new, comprehensive, and up-...
Edward M. Cook\u27s new book makes an excellent addition to the growing list of introductions to t...
The Dead Sea Scrolls Today is the best of the new “introductions” to the Dead Sea Scrolls which have...
Occasionally a volume appears that is almost impossible to review, whether because the material it p...
The Hidden Scrolls: Christianity, Judaism, and the War for the Dead Sea Scrolls, by Neil Asher Silbe...
The last sixty years afford us a remarkable, though largely unexplored, opportunity to examine the D...
James McGrath\u27s review of Lawrence H. Shiffman Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls. The History of ...
This volume brings together the papers given at a conference on the Dead Sea Scrolls held under the ...
This volume is part of a series entitled Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature, edi...
The purpose of this volume by the late Hanan Eshel is to “summarize the contributions of the scrolls...
The Bible and the Dead Sea Scrolls:Vol. I, Scripture and the Scrolls: Vol. II, The Dead Sea Scrolls ...
The aim of the Encyclopedia of the Dead Sea Scrolls, according to its editors, is “to encompass all ...
The article surveys recent scholarship on the Dead Sea Scrolls and traces the contours of interpreta...
The article demonstrates why the Dead Sea Scrolls are important for NT scholarship. After a sketch o...
These two massive volumes comprise the proceedings of a conference of the same name held at the Univ...
James VanderKam and Peter Flint set out to write, in their own words, “a new, comprehensive, and up-...
Edward M. Cook\u27s new book makes an excellent addition to the growing list of introductions to t...
The Dead Sea Scrolls Today is the best of the new “introductions” to the Dead Sea Scrolls which have...
Occasionally a volume appears that is almost impossible to review, whether because the material it p...
The Hidden Scrolls: Christianity, Judaism, and the War for the Dead Sea Scrolls, by Neil Asher Silbe...
The last sixty years afford us a remarkable, though largely unexplored, opportunity to examine the D...
James McGrath\u27s review of Lawrence H. Shiffman Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls. The History of ...
This volume brings together the papers given at a conference on the Dead Sea Scrolls held under the ...
This volume is part of a series entitled Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature, edi...
The purpose of this volume by the late Hanan Eshel is to “summarize the contributions of the scrolls...
The Bible and the Dead Sea Scrolls:Vol. I, Scripture and the Scrolls: Vol. II, The Dead Sea Scrolls ...
The aim of the Encyclopedia of the Dead Sea Scrolls, according to its editors, is “to encompass all ...
The article surveys recent scholarship on the Dead Sea Scrolls and traces the contours of interpreta...
The article demonstrates why the Dead Sea Scrolls are important for NT scholarship. After a sketch o...