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RANDALL D. CHESNUTT 405<br />

However, <strong>the</strong>re is nothing here so distinctive as to suggest a direct connection.<br />

As we shall emphasize below, <strong>the</strong> solemnity of mealtime, <strong>the</strong><br />

concern to avoid impure food, <strong>the</strong> pronouncing of blessings over meals,<br />

<strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> role of meal practices as consummate expressions of a whole way<br />

of life are characteristic of many Jewish circles in antiquity. Moreover,<br />

<strong>the</strong>re are striking differences between <strong>the</strong> Qumran meals <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> meal<br />

formula in Joseph <strong>and</strong> Aseneth that attenuate <strong>the</strong> alleged connections.<br />

The two meal traditions are poles apart in terms of rules for eligibility<br />

<strong>and</strong> order. 1QS 6.2–5 specifies that wherever ten members of <strong>the</strong> sect<br />

reside <strong>the</strong>y are to eat toge<strong>the</strong>r, that <strong>the</strong>y are to sit according to rank, <strong>and</strong><br />

that a priest must be present to bless <strong>the</strong> first portion of bread <strong>and</strong> wine.<br />

According to 1QS 6.13–23, before one could even be admitted to <strong>the</strong><br />

communal meals, he had to be examined by <strong>the</strong> community’s Overseer<br />

(dyqp), instructed in <strong>the</strong> sect’s teachings, approved by <strong>the</strong> plenary<br />

assembly (“<strong>the</strong> Many,” Mybrh), <strong>and</strong> examined yet again at <strong>the</strong> end of a<br />

one year novitiate. Only <strong>the</strong>n was he granted provisional membership<br />

<strong>and</strong> admitted to <strong>the</strong> community’s solid food (Mybrh trhw+). After<br />

ano<strong>the</strong>r provisional year he was again examined by <strong>the</strong> Many, <strong>and</strong>, if<br />

voted suitable for full membership, assigned a rank <strong>and</strong> granted access to<br />

<strong>the</strong> sect’s pure liquids (Mybrh hq#m) as well as <strong>the</strong> solid foods. 32<br />

Anyone allowed to return after being banned from participation had to<br />

repeat <strong>the</strong> full progression of initiatory stages (1QS 7.18–21; 8.16–19).<br />

Joseph <strong>and</strong> Aseneth knows nothing of such regimen. Aseneth is a beneficiary<br />

of <strong>the</strong> bread of life <strong>and</strong> cup of blessing immediately upon her<br />

renunciation of idols <strong>and</strong> penitent turning to <strong>the</strong> God of Israel, <strong>and</strong> this<br />

advancement <strong>and</strong> its heavenly confirmation occur independently of any<br />

contact with <strong>the</strong> Israelite community. The rigid system of seniority<br />

observed in <strong>the</strong> Qumran meals (1QS 5.23–24; 6.2, 8–11, 22; 1Q28a [=<br />

1QSa]; Josephus, J.W. 2.8.10) clashes with Joseph <strong>and</strong> Aseneth’s emphasis<br />

on <strong>the</strong> privileged status of every “worshiper of God” (qeosebh&v); <strong>the</strong><br />

anonymous author is concerned to distinguish between idolaters <strong>and</strong><br />

“worshipers of God,” but not to make distinctions among <strong>the</strong> latter (8:5–7;<br />

Nickelsburg; SBLSCS 12; Chico, CA: Scholars Press, 1980), 135–36; <strong>and</strong> more<br />

recently Devorah Dimant, “Men as Angels: The Self-Image of <strong>the</strong> Qumran<br />

Community,” in Religion <strong>and</strong> Politics in <strong>the</strong> Ancient Near East, Studies <strong>and</strong> Texts in Jewish<br />

History <strong>and</strong> Culture (ed. A. Berlin; Be<strong>the</strong>sda, MD: University of Maryl<strong>and</strong> Press, 1996),<br />

93–103; <strong>and</strong> Crispin H. T. Fletcher-Louis, All <strong>the</strong> Glory of Adam: Liturgical Anthropology in<br />

<strong>the</strong> Dead Sea Scrolls (STDJ 42; Leiden: Brill 2002).<br />

32. Variations in detail between this scheme <strong>and</strong> that described in CD 15.7–15 <strong>and</strong><br />

Josephus J.W. 2.8.7 have been much discussed but do not affect <strong>the</strong> argument here.<br />

For a helpful critique of alternative interpretations of hrh+ <strong>and</strong> hq#m, see Schiffman,<br />

Sectarian Law in <strong>the</strong> Dead Sea Scrolls, 161–65.

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