THE NEW WORLD ORDER vs.
THE DEAD SEA SECT
The article below
was posted on a List today.
I've heard a few
oblique references to the
It was only
reasonable to assume that so powerful an instrument is going to be manipulated.
I believe the
following is the beginning of that manipulation.
Tablet Ignites Debate on Messiah and Resurrection
By Ethan Bronner
If such a
messianic description really is there, it will contribute to a developing
re-evaluation of both popular and scholarly views of Jesus, since it suggests
that the story of his death and resurrection was not unique but part of a
recognized Jewish tradition at the time.
The tablet,
probably found near the Dead Sea in Jordan according to some scholars who have
studied it, is a rare example of a stone with ink writings from that era in
essence, a Dead Sea Scroll on stone.
It is written,
not engraved, across two neat columns, similar to columns in a Torah. But the
stone is broken, and some of the text is faded, meaning that much of what it
says is open to debate.
Still, its
authenticity has so far faced no challenge, so its role in helping to
understand the roots of Christianity in the devastating political crisis faced
by the Jews of the time seems likely to increase.
Daniel Boyarin, a professor of Talmudic culture at the University
of California at Berkeley, said that the stone was part of a growing body of
evidence suggesting that Jesus could be best understood through a close reading
of the Jewish history of his day.
"Some
Christians will find it shocking a challenge to the uniqueness of their
theology while others will be comforted by the idea of it being a traditional
part of Judaism," Boyarin said.
Given the highly
charged atmosphere surrounding all Jesus-era artifacts and writings, both in
the general public and in the fractured and fiercely competitive scholarly
community, as well as the concern over forgery and charlatanism, it will
probably be some time before the tablet's contribution is fully assessed. It
has been around 60 years since the
The scrolls,
documents found in the Qumran caves of the West Bank, contain some of the only
known surviving copies of biblical writings from before the first century AD In
addition to quoting from key books of the Bible, the scrolls describe a variety
of practices and beliefs of a Jewish sect at the time of Jesus.
How
representative the descriptions are and what they tell us about the era are
still strongly debated. For example, a question that arises is whether the
authors of the scrolls were members of a monastic sect or in fact mainstream. A
conference marking 60 years since the discovery of the scrolls will begin on
Sunday at the
Oddly, the stone
is not really a new discovery. It was found about a decade ago and bought from
a Jordanian antiquities dealer by an Israeli-Swiss collector who kept it in his
"I couldn't
make much out of it when I got it," said David Jeselsohn,
the owner, who is himself an expert in antiquities. "I didn't realize how
significant it was until I showed it to
Much of the text,
a vision of the apocalypse transmitted by the angel Gabriel, draws on the Old
Testament, especially the prophets Daniel, Zechariah and Haggai.
Yardeni,
who analyzed the stone along with Binyamin Elitzur,
is an expert on Hebrew script, especially of the era of King Herod, who died in
4 BC The two of them published a long analysis of the stone more than a year
ago in Cathedra, a Hebrew-language quarterly devoted to the history and
archaeology of Israel, and said that, based on the shape of the script and the
language, the text dated from the late first century BC
A chemical
examination by Yuval Goren, a professor of
archaeology at
It was in
Cathedra that
When he read
"Gabriel's Revelation," he said, he believed he saw what he needed to
solidify his thesis, and he has published his argument in the latest issue of
The Journal of Religion.
Knohl
is part of a larger scholarly movement that focuses on the political atmosphere
in Jesus' day as an important explanation of that era's messianic spirit. As he
notes, after the death of Herod, Jewish rebels sought to throw off the yoke of
the Rome-supported monarchy, so the rise of a major Jewish independence fighter
could take on messianic overtones.
In Knohl's interpretation, the specific messianic figure
embodied on the stone could be a man named Simon who was slain by a commander
in the Herodian army, according to the first-century
historian Josephus. The writers of the stone's passages were probably Simon's
followers, Knohl contends.
The slaying of
Simon, or any case of the suffering messiah, is seen as a necessary step toward
national salvation, he says, pointing to lines 19 through 21 of the tablet
"In three days you will know that evil will be defeated by justice"
and other lines that speak of blood and slaughter as pathways to justice.
To make his case
about the importance of the stone, Knohl focuses
especially on line 80, which begins clearly with the words "L'shloshet yamin," meaning
"in three days." The next word of the line was deemed partially
illegible by Yardeni and Elitzur,
but Knohl, who is an expert on the language of the
Bible and Talmud, says the word is "hayeh,"
or "live" in the imperative. It has an unusual spelling, but it is
one in keeping with the era.
Two more
hard-to-read words come later, and Knohl said he
believed that he had deciphered them as well, so that the line reads, "In
three days you shall live, I, Gabriel, command you."
To whom is the
archangel speaking? The next line says "Sar hasarin," or prince of princes. Since the Book of
Daniel, one of the primary sources for the Gabriel text, speaks of Gabriel and
of "a prince of princes," Knohl contends
that the stone's writings are about the death of a leader of the Jews who will
be resurrected in three days.
He says further
that such a suffering messiah is very different from the traditional Jewish
image of the messiah as a triumphal, powerful descendant of King David.
"This should
shake our basic view of Christianity," he said as he sat in his office of
the Shalom Hartman Institute in
Yardeni
said she was impressed with the reading and considered it indeed likely that
the key illegible word was "hayeh," or
"live." Whether that means Simon is the messiah under discussion, she
is less sure.
Moshe Bar-Asher,
president of the Israeli Academy of Hebrew Language and emeritus professor of
Hebrew and Aramaic at the Hebrew University, said he spent a long time studying
the text and considered it authentic, dating from no later than the first
century BC His 25-page paper on the stone will be published in the coming
months.
Regarding Knohl's thesis, Bar-Asher is also respectful but cautious.
"There is one problem," he said. "In crucial places of the text
there is lack of text. I understand Knohl's tendency
to find there keys to the pre-Christian period, but in two to three crucial
lines of text there are a lot of missing words."
Moshe Idel, a professor of Jewish thought at Hebrew University
who has just published a book on the son of God, said that given the way every
tiny fragment from that era yielded scores of articles and books,
"Gabriel's Revelation" and Knohl's analysis
deserved serious attention. "Here we have a real stone with a real
text," he said. "This is truly significant."
Knohl
said that it was less important whether Simon was the messiah of the stone than
the fact that it strongly suggested that a savior who died and rose after three
days was an established concept at the time of Jesus. He notes that in the
Gospels, Jesus makes numerous predictions of his suffering and New Testament
scholars say such predictions must have been written in by later followers
because there was no such idea present in his day.
But there was, he
said, and "Gabriel's Revelation" shows it.
"His mission
is that he has to be put to death by the Romans to suffer so his blood will be
the sign for redemption to come," Knohl said.
"This is the sign of the son of Joseph. This is the conscious view of
Jesus himself. This gives the Last Supper an absolutely different meaning. To
shed blood is not for the sins of people but to bring redemption to
http://www.iht.com/bin/printfriendly.php?id=14258738
BIBLICAL STONE CAUSES STIR; Re-evaluation of Jesus story?
I didn't, and
don't, see anything about this in the Hebrew press, or even in the English-language
Israeli newspaper The
I could have
missed it, but this should have been an item in the headlines. I've been
reading the Hebrew news regularly.
The idea of writing with ink, not
engraving, on stone sounded a bit odd.
I mentioned the
above article to my husband, Dani'el, and the claim
of some to be in possession of a tablet of stone from
I'd like to bring
the following excerpt to the reader's attention at this juncture.
"It has been
around 60 years since the
I own a
complete Concordance of all of the known non-Biblical
There is no
mention of any such stone. I have never heard any mention of any such stone
tablets, neither has Dani'el.
More importantly,
Emmanu'el Tov is the
world's expert on the scrolls. The fact that his name is not even
mentioned in the article is suspect.
The 2012 Brigade are hard at
work staging the Disney-Pomo World Productions
Armageddon Spectacular.
I've heard a few
oblique references to the
It was only
reasonable to assume that so powerful an instrument is going to be manipulated.
It was just a
matter of time.
My suspicion is
that the next
This is a time of
need for great balance and restraint. We all want a better world. HaShem has infinite ways at It's
disposal for bringing that about. There need not be Armageddon.
Doreen Ellen Bell-Dotan,
DoreenDotan@gmail.com