Question:
What are the Dead Sea scrolls exactly? What does it say about Christanity?
?
2013-04-06 12:36:01 UTC
I know they prove the validity of the OT, but why do I hear so many arguments about Christians' conveniently omitting scrolls to better fit them. Is this true? If so, what are these scroll that are omitted?
Ten answers:
?
2013-04-06 12:42:49 UTC
The scrolls are all Jewish era texts which were probably stored by a Jewish sect. There are none that deal with Christianity. I don't know why so many Christians can't seem to get that straight.
2013-04-06 12:40:44 UTC
They are a collection of scrolls, found in a cave near Qumran, and thought to have belonged to an ancient Jewish sect known as the Essenes.



Their direct relevance to Christianity is that scrolls include some of the books of the Old Testament, preserved in whole or in part. When those scrolls are compared with the Masoretic Text, from which the Old Testament is translated, there are no substantive differences.





" If so, what are these scroll that are omitted?"



The scrolls contain nothing relevant to the New Testament. Atheists are fond of saying that, because the New Testament doesn't contain every single text written by Christians in the first century, they have been "edited" or "left out". Those same atheists also try to make a big thing about second century texts not being included, but they were not included for the very good reason that they were written in the second century. Many of the first century texts which are not in the New Testament are unimpeachably orthodox, but not everything could have been included in the New Testament without needing a forklift truck to pick it up.
?
2013-04-06 12:41:29 UTC
There is only one rather weak claim to there being any Christian writings in the Dead Sea Scrolls. The scrolls were found in Qumran, in the country of Jordan. Not far from the Dead Sea. If I remember right, there were 11 caves with various ancient scrolls in them, not all were of biblical writings, but almost all the Old Testament books were a part of the collection, sometimes in multiples.



Other writings found included things like "The Heavenly Prince, Melchizedek", which oddly connected Melchizedek to the sons of God and the forgiveness of sins. Which is a rather Christian theology, and it also quotes Isaiah 61:1, which Jesus did as well concerning the reason he came the first time.



There were other writings in the Dead Sea Scrolls that I found amazing. It told me that 1) today's Judaism is not the same as those early centuries, and 2) Christian thought in those centuries was not far away, and 3) God wasn' silent in those years, as some seem to think. Those people had to know things modern Jews would not like.
Mr. I
2013-04-08 05:02:41 UTC
Actually, the dead sea scrolls don't prove any authenticity of the Bible. The Dead Sea scrolls are from after the Babylonian times, the time where it was destroyed. Many things changed after that, even today translations are continuously changing the true meaning.



There are many Gospels which have been thrown out due to it being 'falsely' written, funny thing is, these Gospels have been SIGNED with the names of who wrote them, and even today scholars agree the 4 Gospels, and many other NT books have been written by ANONYMOUS writers.
?
2013-04-06 12:51:57 UTC
They're a collection of *copies* of *some* OT books that were made by a breakaway Jewish sect somewhere between about 200 BCE and 50 CE.



They don't "prove the validity of the OT." There are very few full copies of any OT book in them, and the copies that are there differ from each other and from OT books rather significantly; one (christian) DSS scholar says the DSS documents show that "what we consider final versions of OT texts was still in flux before the first century AD." They *do* show that there were copies of some OT books, in various forms and with numerous differences, around the time period of the DSS.



They say nothing of any kind about christianity. Not a single word.



There are also a number of copies of what this sect considered "holy books" that are not in the christian bible.
?
2013-04-06 12:39:58 UTC
The Dead Sea scrolls just prove the authenticity of the OT. christians don't read the Ot so it matters not to them. They are stuck in the business of the pagan christian churches, so they can't relate at all to the truth of the Torah. They are, and always have been, as phony as a three dollar bill. Those who actually believe and follow the God of the Bible know how important the scrolls are.
Shahar
2013-04-10 01:28:16 UTC
The dead sea scrolls are simply an ancient version of the OT.

you can read it yourself and have it sent to you :

http://www.israel-catalog.com/art-collectables/dead-sea-scrolls-replica
skowronski
2017-01-13 11:16:22 UTC
The "lifeless Sea Scrolls" are historical manuscript copies cutting-edge in and around the lifeless Sea of the midsection east. even as they normally point out a set of scrolls stumbled on in a crumple the past due Nineteen Forties, the time era has come to imply any historical manuscript discovered contained in the encompassing hills of the location. "They comprise the oldest known surviving copies and extra suitable-biblical information and guard info of serious selection in past due 2d Temple Judaism. they're written in Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek, normally on parchment, yet with some written on papyrus. these manuscripts normally date among one hundred fifty BCE and 70 CE. The scrolls are historically pointed out with the classic Jewish sect called the Essenes, nonetheless some latest interpretations have challenged this affiliation and argue that the scrolls were penned with assistance from clergymen in Jerusalem, Zadokites, or diverse unknown Jewish communities. "The lifeless Sea Scrolls are historically divided into 3 communities: "Biblical" manuscripts (copies of texts from the Hebrew Bible), which incorporate extra or less 40% of the pointed out scrolls; "Apocryphal" or "Pseudepigraphical" manuscripts (known information from the 2d Temple era like Enoch, Jubilees, Tobit, Sirach, non-canonical psalms, etc., which were no longer finally canonized contained in the Hebrew Bible), which incorporate extra or less 30% of the pointed out scrolls; and "Sectarian" manuscripts (formerly unknown information that talk to the regulations and ideology of a plain team or communities interior extra suitable Judaism) just like the neighborhood Rule, struggle Scroll, Pesher on Habakkuk, and the rule of thumb of the Blessing, which incorporate extra or less 30% of the pointed out scrolls." excessive-decision pictures of all the lifeless Sea scrolls are quite accessible online, and might actual be discovered with a internet search for. they are in a position to even be presented in low fee multi-volumes - on disc media or in e book kind - or considered in specific university and university libraries. The Wikipedia article is a reliable commencing position for extra suitable reference with quite some hyperlinks to diverse resources, alongside with the students in touch with the challenge. the countless scrolls toured the usa various years in the past, which i replaced into privileged to ensure.
2013-04-06 12:40:51 UTC
The teacher of righteousness was James Zebedee who was a priest!
?
2013-04-06 12:52:42 UTC
Just came to say Yahwach is an idiot. lol


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