I recall the exhibit at the Smithsonian years ago on the bible...along with all the old bibles.and history they had a bin replicating the dead sea.scroll find...all scraps of paper...what a puzzle to put together
Just curious:So it seems the Essenes at Qumran might have been a brotherhood of older male ascetics?
The sources, Pliny, Josephus and Philo all claim they were a celibate brotherhood. The Qumran finds, however, contain documents that deal with family matters, with wives and children.
So an uneducated guess for me is that 'Essene' might well be a collective term that covered a broad range of belief, from strict ascetic male-only communities of older men (Qumran?) to more commonplace family structures, nevertheless observing certain rules that set them apart from the Pharisee and the Sadducee. Jewish mystical speculation is a lot more sophisticated and a lot more diverse than we for so long assumed.
Re the quote from Eusebius ... it would be useful if the site had given the source document ...
According to scholars, the last three centuries BC and the first century ADOver how long a time-period those these documents stretch?
Possibly.Could the community have changed over time?
Too precise for my knowledge. Interesting idea, though.Alternately, could it be that the families mentioned was of the then celibate brothers? If they had families from before they might still feel the obligation to provide or care for them?
Well, it depends when they were copied/written. Two hundred+ years is a long enough time. The documents may have come from other Essene communities too, to be buried there?If only a few hundred they must all have been scribes...
I think I read somewhere the documents were presumed transported there and hidden? There's talk in the docs about the rules for families — wives and children — and there are bodies of women and children, although some have suggested these were Bedu and not Essene; don't think anyone's dated the bones? But if it was used as a hiding place then docs might have come from various places.Well, it depends when they were copied/written. Two hundred+ years is a long enough time. The documents may have come from other Essene communities too, to be buried there?
@Thomas : There are theories about the women and childrens' graves. Such graves (at Qumran) are not many. It's a small percentage. There are several theories. They may have been graves of strangers lost in the desert, etc. But the graves are a small percentage. I am open to correction in anything I say, of course.I think I read somewhere the documents were presumed transported there and hidden? There's talk in the docs about the rules for families — wives and children — and there are bodies of women and children, although some have suggested these were Bedu and not Essene; don't think anyone's dated the bones? But if it was used as a hiding place then docs might have come from various places.
I that's how i understand it.There are theories about the women and childrens' graves ... They may have been graves of strangers lost in the desert, etc. But the graves are a small percentage. I am open to correction in anything I say, of course.
Quite. The Jews who plotted to kill Paul were zealots, Paul himself was a zealot, and historians now take Luke's gospel quite seriously when it gives hints to the political situation in Jerusalem. Acts 23:23-25 details the armed contingent that smuggled Paul out of Jerusalem in the dead of night: "Then having called two centurions, he said to them: Make ready two hundred soldiers to go as far as Caesarea, and seventy horsemen, and two hundred spearmen for the third hour of the night"If anyone has not read 'The Jewish Wars' by Josephus, I really do believe they are missing out on a very important understanding of what really happened in the Jewish revolution, with stark stuff about what the Zealots were really like.
This, too, is interesting ...
"And he said to them: Behold, as you go into the city, there shall meet you a man carrying a pitcher of water: follow him into the house where he entereth in... " (Luke 22:10, Mark 14:13)
A man carrying a pitcher of water would be an unusual sight in the city — this was regarded as women's work. Why then a man?
Well if the man was an Essene, then that would not be so strange. Essenes performed tasks that were commonly regarded as women's work. The Essenes had a community in Jerusalem, and there was a city gate called the Essene Gate.
Google 'man carrying a pitcher of water' and 'essene' ... there's the usual stuff.
It's an interesting thesis ...
Excellent link. Thank you.This episode is also connected with the Last Supper.
You seem to speak with a bit of knowledge on the subject, and it is an interesting subject. Could you write more about it?Why Essenes are not even mentioned in the Bible. It's because theologically they are irrelevant.
Why the Jews never had a Bible (Canon) with only 5 books. it's because theologically the Sadducees are irrelevant.
Pharisees are accountable for almost all theological views mentioned in the Bible. By and large, Essenes made not much difference from the Pharisees, except for some minor issues. They basically agree on most major issues. The main difference could be a matter of living style. Essenes prefer more to living in caves to do their studies and researches. While the Pharisees are living in major cities influencing the Hebrew speaking Jews (and some Hellenistic). The Pharisaic thoughts are the dominant views adapted by most of the Jews back then (i.e., in Jesus' days).
1) Why the Jews never had a Bible (Canon) with only 5 books. it's because theologically the Sadducees are irrelevant.
2) Pharisees are accountable for almost all theological views mentioned in the Bible.
3) By and large, Essenes made not much difference from the Pharisees, except for some minor issues. They basically agree on most major issues.
4) [T]he Pharisees are living in major cities influencing the Hebrew speaking Jews (and some Hellenistic).
5) The Pharisaic thoughts are the dominant views adapted by most of the Jews back then (i.e., in Jesus' days).
1) The Sadducees did not limit their acceptance of sacred text to only the Torah.
2)...
Why Essenes are not even mentioned in the Bible. It's because theologically they are irrelevant.
Pharisees are accountable for almost all theological views mentioned in the Bible. By and large, Essenes made not much difference from the Pharisees, except for some minor issues. They basically agree on most major issues. The main difference could be a matter of living style. Essenes prefer more to living in caves to do their studies and researches. While the Pharisees are living in major cities influencing the Hebrew speaking Jews (and some Hellenistic). The Pharisaic thoughts are the dominant views adapted by most of the Jews back then (i.e., in Jesus' days).