Holy Scripture in the Qumran Commentaries and Pauline Letters
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:18th Sep '97
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
What was the ancient exegetes' attitude to the biblical texts? Did they consider them `sacred' in the sense that the words were the inviolable utterances of God? Or did they when necessary modify and adapt holy writ for their own purposes? This book examines the question of exegetical modifications from the post-Qumran perspective of textual pluriformity of literalism that runs through ancient exegeses and translations. The Qumran Commentators and Paul complemented their fulfilment-exegeses by paying close attention to the verbal formations of the biblical texts. The hermeneutical principles underlying their exegeses involved a multiplex of competing forces that at the same time sought to make scripture relevant while guarding it from changes. In so far as the label 'post-biblical exegesis' describes a clear separation between the written, authoritative texts and its interpretation, the distinction is overdrawn, for the ancients were not merely commentators, but also in some sense authors of the biblical texts.
Lim's book is a helpful stage along the way of understanding the role and authority of the biblical text in the Second Temple period. * Journal of Semitic Studies *
ISBN: 9780198262060
Dimensions: 225mm x 144mm x 18mm
Weight: 425g
240 pages