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90 MESSIANIC EXPECTATION AT QUMRAN<br />

Against this interpretation of 4Q521, some scholars have objected<br />

that since “his messiah” (xy#m) is in parallelism with “holy ones” it<br />

should be read as a plural (wyxy#m: anointed ones) spelled defectively,<br />

<strong>and</strong> so <strong>the</strong> reference is not to an individual “messiah” at all. 52 This argument<br />

is not necessarily compelling. There is a striking parallel to <strong>the</strong>se<br />

lines in Pss. Sol. 17:43, where it is said of <strong>the</strong> Davidic messiah that “his<br />

words are as <strong>the</strong> words of holy ones (ho4s logoi hagio4n) in <strong>the</strong> midst of sanctified<br />

peoples.” “Holy Ones” are normally angels in Jewish texts of this<br />

period. 53 The comparison exalts <strong>the</strong> authority of <strong>the</strong> messiah. It is quite<br />

plausible <strong>the</strong>n that <strong>the</strong> authority of an individual messiah is paralleled<br />

with that of angelic “holy ones” in 4Q521. But we should bear in mind<br />

Maier’s valid observation that in Jewish texts <strong>the</strong> focus is on <strong>the</strong> office<br />

ra<strong>the</strong>r than on <strong>the</strong> individual person. The purpose of 4Q521 is not to<br />

announce <strong>the</strong> coming of an eschatological prophet, but to proclaim <strong>the</strong><br />

“works of <strong>the</strong> Lord” which include <strong>the</strong> preaching of good news, which<br />

is usually accomplished through a prophet or herald. This is most probably<br />

<strong>the</strong> “messiah” or “anointed one” mentioned at <strong>the</strong> beginning of <strong>the</strong><br />

fragment, but this figure is not <strong>the</strong> focus of attention in 4Q521.<br />

There were two possible paradigms for an eschatological prophet in<br />

Second Temple Judaism: <strong>the</strong> prophet like Moses of Deuteronomy 18 <strong>and</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> return of Elijah, promised in Mal 4:5. We have seen that<br />

Deuteronomy 18 is cited in <strong>the</strong> Testimonia, <strong>and</strong> it is possible that <strong>the</strong><br />

“Interpreter of <strong>the</strong> Law” (hrwth #rd) is associated with this figure.<br />

The prophet like Moses, however, is not well attested in Jewish texts<br />

from <strong>the</strong> Second Temple period, apart from Qumran. 54 While Jesus is<br />

cast in this role in <strong>the</strong> Gospel of Mat<strong>the</strong>w, 55 <strong>the</strong> Torah never occupies as<br />

central a place in Christianity as it does in Judaism.<br />

Nei<strong>the</strong>r is <strong>the</strong> expectation of Elijah widely attested, although Ben<br />

Sira, who has little eschatological interest, says that “at <strong>the</strong> appointed<br />

time” he will return to calm <strong>the</strong> wrath of God, turn <strong>the</strong> hearts of parents<br />

to <strong>the</strong>ir children <strong>and</strong> restore <strong>the</strong> tribes of Jacob (Sir 48:10). His role is<br />

52. So Maier, “Messias oder Gesalbter?” 611–12; Karl-Wilhelm Niebuhr, “4Q521,<br />

2 II—Ein Eschatologischer Psalm,” in Mogilany 1995: Papers on <strong>the</strong> Dead Sea Scrolls<br />

Offered in Memory of Aleksy Klawek (ed. Z. J. Kapera; (ed. Z. J. Kapera; Proceedings of<br />

<strong>the</strong> Fifth International Colloquium on <strong>the</strong> Dead Sea Scrolls [Kraków-Zakrzówek,<br />

Pol<strong>and</strong>, 1995]; Qumranica Mogilanensia 15, Kraków: Enigma, 1998), 151–68; summarized<br />

in QC 5 (1995); Michael Becker, “4Q521 und die Gesalbten,” RevQ 18<br />

(1997): 73–96; Puech, “Some Remarks on 4Q246 <strong>and</strong> 4Q521,” 551–65.<br />

53. Collins, Daniel, 313–18.<br />

54. See Howard M. Teeple, The Mosaic Eschatological Prophet (Philadelphia: Society of<br />

Biblical Literature, 1957).<br />

55. Ibid., 74–82.

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