A Companion to the Hellenistic and Roman Near East. Группа авторов

A Companion to the Hellenistic and Roman Near East - Группа авторов


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as a God-fearing man who regularly offers sacrifice and is the object of God’s special protection (Fitzmyer 2004; Machiela 2009). Evidently, these and other related matters were of commanding importance for this text; they appear in similar guise in Jubilees, prompting questions about the literary relationship of the two writings. Other examples of “Re-written Bible” found at Qumran are less well-preserved: they include a text often called “Reworked Pentateuch” (4Q158, 364–367), along with fragments of Testaments ascribed to Levi, Naphtali, Judah and Joseph, Qahat, and Amram, all of which tell the reader more about biblical characters, some of whom are fairly minor. These Testaments serve as vehicles to promote laws, religious and ethical values, and social attitudes which the writers hold dear. Several of them are also keen to offer predictions of the future, including speculations on the end of days and attendant circumstances (Kolenkow 1975). To them we may add a host of writings, now extant only in fragments, which are often labelled individually as kinds of “Apocryphon,” similarly elaborating biblical characters and their lives for didactic, social, and religious purposes. Attesting to vigorous literary activity in both Aramaic and Hebrew, these writings are almost entirely given over to inner Jewish concerns. These and other related texts often involve annotation of, and commentary upon, biblical texts which are thereby made to speak to the historical situation of the composer. It is not always possible, however, for the modern reader to discern whether, in fact, historical evidence is recoverable from such texts: scholarly opinions on the matter differ considerably (Falk 2007).

      Qumran Writings Produced by the “Community”

      The End of the Hasmoneans, the Rise of the Herodians, and the Two Jewish Revolts

      The independence of the Hasmonean state was maintained until 63 BCE; and the evidence of the Qumran manuscripts indicates that literary activity continued apace in this period, attesting as it does to a wide variety of genres. Much of this activity is represented by works now in fragmentary form which treated the religious life of Israel in general or the ordering of the Yahad in particular: it seems that some of the pesharim may date from the later years of Hasmonean rule. In 63 BCE, however, the Romans took control of Jerusalem and Judaea, while confirming in office the reigning Hasmonean high priest John Hyrcanus II. The events leading to these political changes involved Jewish factionalism on a grand scale and effective civil war, one group of Jews aligning themselves with John Hyrcanus and his Pharisee supporters, another with his energetic brother Aristobulos II and the Sadducees. The Psalms of Solomon, composed originally in Hebrew and surviving in Greek translation, consist in their final form of 18 poems which reflect on this civil strife, the Roman intervention under Pompey which brought it to an end, and on its uncomfortable aftermath. Jewish attitudes are judged; the nature of Pompey’s invasion is critiqued and analysed; and the ultimate future of the Jews is entrusted to God and the activities of a Davidic Messiah (Atkinson 2004).

      The end of the Hasmonean state, and the advent of the Romans as rulers of Judaea, led to the eventual rise of Herod I as king of the Jews, a position he maintained from 37 to 4 BCE as a steadfast ally of Rome. A Life of Herod was composed in Greek by the prolific philosopher, scholar, and historian Nicolaus of Damascus (born around 64 BCE): now lost, it is widely believed that this Life was the major source for the account of Herod’s reign set out by the Jewish priest-historian Josephus in his Antiquities books 15–17 (Wacholder 1962). It is also clear that Josephus mined the very extensive writings of Nicolaus to find information on the Jews in Hasmonean and earlier periods as


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