JEWISH INTERTESTAMENTAL AND EARLY RABBINIC LITERATURE: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHIC RESOURCE UPDATED AGAIN (PART 2)
Recent archaeological efforts seeking further scrolls from surrounding caves (esp. at Qumran) have yet to yield substantive texts. Andreas Köstenberger is research professor of New Testament and Biblical Theology and director of the Center for Biblical Studies at Midwestern Baptist Theological Semin...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 2020-12, Vol.63 (4), p.789-843 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Recent archaeological efforts seeking further scrolls from surrounding caves (esp. at Qumran) have yet to yield substantive texts. Andreas Köstenberger is research professor of New Testament and Biblical Theology and director of the Center for Biblical Studies at Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 5001 North Oak Trafficway, Kansas City, Missouri 64118. The early DSS publications of community rules, hymns, and biblical interpretation (esp. pesharim) have been supplemented by the completed publication of known MSS with halakhic, calendrical, wisdom, liturgical, apocalyptic, and rewritten Bible texts. Qumran scrolls are cited by cave number (e.g. 11Q = cave 11) along with a document number (e.g. 11Q19) or title (e.g. 11QTemple); this is followed by fragment, column, and line numbers (column numbers are often in Roman numerals; e.g. 4QpNah 3-4 i 6 = Pesher Nahum from Cave 4, fragments 3 and 4, column 1, line 6). |
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ISSN: | 0360-8808 |