Jerry,

I'm with Yigal on this one. The evidence is scant, so it's difficult to know 
what to say. Given the manuscript evidence from Qumran, Hebrew texts abound, so 
I think it's fair enough to deduce a plausibility that synagogues in Judea, 
Perea, and Galilee had Hebrew scrolls. I suspect this is what Jesus cut his 
teeth on. However, we can't rule out the possibility of there being Greek 
scrolls. Given there was no centralisation or 'denominational' institutions, 
most synagogues would have been run independently and, therefore, have gone 
with an 'anything goes' attitude in terms of stocks of scrolls. By the first 
century there is certainly a canonical consciousness, so they may have tried to 
compile scriptural libraries, but in which language, it's hard to say. Perhaps 
they had a mixture. I think the possibility of Greek scrolls in Galilee is more 
likely than in Judea. But then we're back to the evidential question: what hard 
data do we have?



GEORGE ATHAS
Dean of Research,
Moore Theological College (moore.edu.au)
Sydney, Australia

_______________________________________________
b-hebrew mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/b-hebrew

Reply via email to