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Dead Sea Scrolls Uncovered - The Preterist Archive

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'archapostles' who call themselves 'apostles of Christ', but whom he rather calls 'lying workmen'.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se, like 'Satan disguising himself as an Angel of Light', disguise themselves as 'servants of<br />

Righteousness'. He ends in a parody of the presumed 'works Righteousness' of 'those proclaiming<br />

another Jesus' of the kind we have seen above with regard to 'cursing', namely their 'end shall be<br />

according to their works' (11:16).<br />

<strong>The</strong> second allusion, 'the Perfection of their works' recapitulates one of the most important doctrines at<br />

Qumran, 'Perfection'. This term is used in the Damascus Document, viii. 28-30, as it is in 2 Cor. 7:11,<br />

in conjunction with 'Holiness': 'Perfect Holiness' or 'the Perfection of Holiness'. It is also used, as in the<br />

numerous allusions to 'Perfection of the Way' or 'the Perfect of the Way', as a term of self-designation.<br />

As such, it resonates with similar allusions in Matthew's Sermon on the Mount. Here, it is combined<br />

with the 'works' ideology in a new and different way (10).<br />

Manuscript A Fragment 2 should perhaps be referred to as the Ecology Hymn. It is a veritable Hymn<br />

to Nature, one of the most beautiful pieces of nature poetry found at Qumran. On the whole the<br />

Qumran literature we have seen thus far has been interested either in Eternal Holy Things or worldly<br />

problems related to approaching Eternal Holy Things. In this little fragment, we have one of the first<br />

expressions of a sensitivity to nature hitherto missing from the literature. Here the 'hills', 'valleys' and<br />

'streams', 'the land of beauty', 'the depths of forests', 'the wilderness of the desert', 'its wilds' and 'deep<br />

wells', 'the highland woods and the cedars of Lebanon' are praised together with 'all their produce' - in<br />

a manner one felt had to be present at Qumran, but up to now was not.<br />

We have entitled Fragment 3.2 '<strong>The</strong> Community Council Curses Belial'. It is an almost perfect<br />

excommunication text of the kind at the end of the Damascus Document encountered in Chapter 6.<br />

Though that text was assigned, as we have seen, to 'the priest commanding over the Many'<br />

(presumably the high priest designate of the Community) and possibly the Mebakker / Bishop, this text<br />

is actually assigned to the Community Council. Once again the homogeneity of the literature at<br />

Qumran is demonstrated, i.e. this must be the very same Community Council so lovingly detailed in<br />

the Community Rule and other texts. It is to be recited by the Community Council in unison, but this<br />

Council according to other work is commanded by the Mebakker. If the latter is to be equated with 'the<br />

priest commanding the Many', then once again all our allusions have come full circle.<br />

Like the last column of the Damascus Document, the vehemence and militancy of this text is quite<br />

startling. <strong>The</strong>se are no peaceful Essenes, nor do the practitioners of this kind of hatred love their<br />

enemies; rather in the style of 1QS,ix.21-2 and CD,vi.l4-15, they hate 'the sons of the Pit'. <strong>The</strong>re is the<br />

usual vocabulary of 'Belial' and 'the sons of Belial', 'cursing', 'Darkness', 'the Pit', 'Evil', all punctuated,<br />

as in 1QS,ii, by repetitions of 'Amen, Amen'. In addition one gets new formulations, like 'the Angel of<br />

the Pit', 'the Spirit of Destruction', 'the abominations of Sheol'. An allusion to mastemato also occurs in<br />

3.2.2, here descriptive of Belial, further confirming the basic circularity of these references to Satan,<br />

Belial and Mastemoth. Nor is there any sense of forgiveness here, but rather 'the fury of God's wrath'<br />

will last forever (3.2.10).<br />

Throughout the document as we have reconstructed it, one encounters additional familiar vocabulary<br />

like 'the Way' imagery, 'Glory', 'the Holy Names', 'the Glorious Names of God', 'mighty works',<br />

'healing' and 'miraculous works'. <strong>The</strong>se last are particularly interesting where the history of Christianity<br />

is concerned. But in addition, one has the paraphernalia of Jewish mysticism: 'wondrous Palaces', 'their

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