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3.
The Teacher and the Halakhic Tradition
In
this section I will respond to the comments of Philip Davies.
Philip:
No:
marrying, having numerous settlements, limited temple participation all fits
Josephus and the Admonition of CD. I cna't see any reason, either, to assign the
Admonition and Laws to different groups.
Both CD Admonitions and Laws sections are composite subdocuments.
For Laws, Hempel's book The
Laws of the Damascus Document is definitive in showing the relative sequence
between older halachic (H) materials and later Serekh (S) rules. The
halachic portions of the Laws do not particularly correlate with the
Essenes. Further, the (H) laws in CD, like the related laws in 11QT, have
full temple participation. In CD, one only sees reservations about the
temple in later portions of the Admonitions that contain the later Serekh
terminology and thus postdate the (H) legal materials.
Hempel's
chronological stratification of Laws also helps unravel the subdocuments in
Admonitions, the early portions which contain affinities to (H) and the
later portions of which contain Serekh language, as I discuss extensively in an
article under preparation, The Damascus Document: A Literary-Historical
Analysis.
Russ: From source critical arguments from CD, the
Sadducean halachah appears to relate to the Teacher of
Righteousness.
Philip: What arguments? Whose? There is no halakhah associated with
the TR in CD (or anywhere else): we have the 'voice of the Teacher' - but that
is quite a different matter.
That the Teacher's name was attached to a body of laws is well known from
the pesharim. The Teacher's name is also attached to a body of laws in CD
in an early sub-document contemporary with the Teacher that contains the
text of a covenant enrollment speech. the original oral context of this
speech is evident from recurrent formulae that gave rise to the familiar title
Admonitions: "Listen, all those who know justice" (CD 1:1); "Listen to me,
all entering the covenant" (CD 2:2); "Now, my sons, listen to me" (CD
2:14). CD 20:27-34 contains part of this speech enjoining those entering
the covenant to "remain steadfast in these regulations, and going in accordance
with the law, and listen to the Teacher's voice" (CD 20:28), and "lend their
ears to the voice of the Teacher of Righteousness and do not reject the holy
regulations when they hear them" (CD 20:32-33). Clearly these
regulations and laws were those being promulgated under the Teacher of
Righteousness's name and authority.
The enrollment speech contains no Serekh terminology, and as noted in
earlier postings Serekh texts contain no reference to the Teacher, while the
pesherim that do mention the Teacher (or his opponents the Man of Lies and
Wicked Priest) contain no Serekh language. There is in the scrolls no textual
evidence linking the Teacher to the Serekh laws found in 1QS, 1QM, or later
parts of CD. The idea that the Teacher authored Serekh texts is traceable
to the early days of scrolls scholarship when CD was thought to be a unitary
document, and the Serekh elements within CD consequently linked with the
Teacher in the minds of scrolls scholars. This simplistic approach it
no longer supportable in light of the demonstrable composite character of
CD's laws and Admonitions. So one cannot assume that the Teacher's
laws are in any way linked to the Serekh materials in CD or elsewhere in the
Qumran corpus.
And indeed one can demonstrate that the Teacher's laws were in fact of the
halachic, Sadducee type. For not only does CD 20:27-34 enjoin those
entering the covenant to listen to the Teacher's voice and obey these (i.e. his)
regulations and laws, but 4QD(e) 2 ii contains a summary list of these
laws. That this latter list of laws was part of the covenant enrollment
speech is guaranteed by the formula that concludes this passage, "listen to me
all you who know justice and fulfill the law." The list of laws summarized
in 4QD(e) 2 ii are expanded in detail elsewhere in the halachic portions of CD /
4QD. It inescapably follows that the halachic laws of CD / 4QD were
precisely those promulgated in the name of the Teacher.
In short, the Teacher of Righteousness is associated with the Sadducee
halachic legal traditions that the field is accustomed to labeling as
"pre-sectarian." The so-called "sectarian" Serekh texts postdate the era
of the Teacher on evidence of CD. These source critical observations also
completely sever the Teacher from the Essene tradition.
Best regards,
Russell Gmirkin
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- [Megillot] SV: osey hattora Søren Holst
- Re: [Megillot] SV: osey hattora RUSSELLGMIRKIN
- Re: [Megillot] SV: osey hattora goranson
- Re: [Megillot] SV: osey hattora RUSSELLGMIRKIN
- Re: [Megillot] SV: osey hattora RUSSELLGMIRKIN
- Fwd: [Megillot] SV: osey hattora RUSSELLGMIRKIN
- RE: [Megillot] SV: osey hattora Ken Penner
