30.05.2014 Views

Dead Sea Scrolls Uncovered - The Preterist Archive

Dead Sea Scrolls Uncovered - The Preterist Archive

Dead Sea Scrolls Uncovered - The Preterist Archive

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Translation<br />

Fragment 1 Column 1 (1) . . . heart . . . (2) a new mother, the punishment of those giving birth, a<br />

command (of) evil . . . (3) the male poisoning demon and the female poisoning-demon (is forbidden)<br />

[to] enter the body . . . (4) [(I adjure you) by the Name of He who for]gives sins and transgression, O<br />

fever and chills and heartburn (5) [. . .and forbidden to disturb by night in dreams or by day] in sleep,<br />

the male PRK-demon and the female PRK-demon, those who breach (?) . . .<br />

Fragment 1 Column 2 (2) . . . before h[im . . .] (4) before him and . . . (5) and I adjure you, O spirit . . .<br />

(6) 1 adjure you, O spirit ... (7) upon the earth, in the clouds . . .<br />

48. <strong>The</strong> Era Of Light Is Coming (4Q462)<br />

This narrative evidently takes as its starting point the prophecy given by Noah in Gen. 9:25-27:<br />

'Cursed be Canaan; he shall be his brothers' meanest slave . . . Blessed by the Lord my God be Shem .<br />

. . May God make space for Japheth, and let him live in the tents of Shem.' Shem, of course, was<br />

understood as the ancestor of the Jews, while his brothers were regarded as the ancestors of<br />

neighbouring peoples. Noah's words, which were read as prophecy, probably relate to the Davidic<br />

period. <strong>The</strong>y predict the ultimate supremacy of the Jews over their neighbours, an inspiring thought in<br />

any time of oppression.<br />

<strong>The</strong> text could have been placed in Chapter 2 under Prophets and Pseudo-Prophets, but because of its<br />

unclear attribution, we place it here. It should be read as a kind of 'Holy History'. Beginning with<br />

prophecy, it moves on to judgement, a judgement centred, it seems, on Jerusalem. Lines 6-8, '<strong>The</strong><br />

Lord is the Ruler . . . to Him alone belongs the sovereignty', are noteworthy in the light of similar<br />

slogans attributed by Josephus to 'Zealot' revolutionaries who proliferated before and during the<br />

period of the uprising against Rome (AD 6670).

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!