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Dead Sea Scrolls Uncovered - The Preterist Archive

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the thirtieth = the seventh of the sixth month.] (10) <strong>The</strong> first of Je[shua = the twenty-ninth = the fifth<br />

of the seventh month.] (11) <strong>The</strong> third of Huppah = the thirtieth = the fifth of the eighth month. (12)<br />

<strong>The</strong> fourth of Hezir = the twenty-ninth = the fourth of the ninth month. (13) <strong>The</strong> sixth of Jachin = the<br />

thirtieth = the third of the tenth month. (14) <strong>The</strong> Sabbath of Jedaiah = the twenty-ninth = the second of<br />

the eleventh month. (15) [<strong>The</strong> second of] Mijamin = the thirtieth = day [two] of the twelfth month.<br />

24. Priestly Courses III - Aemilius Kills (Manuscripts A-E - 4Q323-324A-B) (Plate 8)<br />

Though extremely fragmentary, this series of manuscripts provides another record of the proper<br />

rotation of priestly courses in the sexennial cycle. This is fairly straightforward and similar to the two<br />

preceding ones, though in this one no attempt is made at lunisolar harmonization. It is worth<br />

mentioning, too, that its Hebrew is closer to that of early Rabbinic literature than many texts at<br />

Qumran. But what is unique about these fragments is that they belong to a select group of Qumran<br />

documents mentioning identifiable historical personages, as the Nahum Commentary does with<br />

Antiochus Epiphanes and Demetrius and the Paean to King Jonathan below appears to do with<br />

Alexander Jannaeus (c. 104-76 BC).<br />

In this text, amid over a dozen references to historical events commemorated in the record of<br />

rotations, these figures include: 'Aemilius' (Aemilius Scaurus, Pompey's general in Syria and<br />

Palestine), 'Shelamzion' (Salome Alexandra, d. 67 BC - Phariseeizing widow of Alexander Jannaeus),<br />

her eldest son Hyrcanus II (executed in 30 BC on Herod's orders also a Pharisee) and possibly<br />

Shelamzion's younger son Aristobulus (d. 49 BC, poisoned on his way back from Rome to regain his<br />

kingdom by supporters of Pompey - a Sadducee). In addition, too, in Manuscript E, the text possibly<br />

contains a reference to John Hyrcanus, Alexander Jannaeus' father (c. 134-104 BC), though Hyrcanus<br />

II was also known as John. <strong>The</strong> text also contains fairly negative references to 'Gentiles' and 'Arabs',<br />

which increase the sense of its authenticity.<br />

Like others, this text has been known since the 1950s, but for some reason, never published.<br />

Withholding it is really quite inexplicable, because we have here a view, however tenuous, of one of<br />

the most crucial periods in the Second Temple period. Scaurus was Pompey's adjutant at the time of<br />

the conquest of Jerusalem in 63 BC. After it fell and Pompey attached it to Syria, he was left behind<br />

as governor.<br />

In turn, Scaurus was closely connected with Herod's father Antipater, who became one of the first<br />

Roman procurators in Jerusalem. At one point Scaurus led a campaign on his behalf against the<br />

Arabian king at Petra, a locale Paul also refers to as 'Arabia' when describing his own sojourn there in<br />

Gal. 1:17. Antipater, who was the intermediary between Hyrcanus II and the Romans, probably began<br />

his rise some time earlier under Shelamzion and her Pharisee supporters (War 1.110-114).<br />

Of Greco-Idumaean background and married to an Arab (a relative of this same Arab king), Antipater<br />

connived at Hyrcanus' survival, played a key role in Aristobulus' discomfiture, and through his<br />

intimacies with Pompey and Scaurus, and Mark Antony thereafter, placed his son Herod in a position<br />

both to destroy the Maccabeans and succeed them.<br />

For his part, Aristobulus was more hot-headed and popular than his accommodating brother

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