The Dead Sea Scrolls Bible by Martin G. Abegg, Jr., Peter Flint & Eugene Ulrich

The Dead Sea Scrolls Bible

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  • Genre Bibles
  • Released

Description

For two thousand years, the world has read a Bible translated from manuscripts copied a thousand years after the time of Jesus.

Now, with this landmark volume, the doors are thrown open to an earlier world.

The Dead Sea Scrolls Bible presents the first-ever English translation of the biblical texts found at Qumran. These ancient manuscripts are a priceless link to the scriptures as they existed during the Second Temple period, offering a startlingly fresh perspective on the Old Testament that Jesus and the early rabbis would have known.

This groundbreaking work reveals a biblical text that is often different from the one we read today. The editors meticulously compare the scroll fragments to the traditional Masoretic Text, the Greek Septuagint, and the Samaritan Pentateuch, highlighting hundreds of fascinating variants—from single words that change a sentence’s meaning to entire passages previously lost to history. For anyone interested in serious Bible study or the textual history of the Hebrew Bible, this is an essential and invaluable resource.

This translation unlocks a version of the Old Testament unlike any other, revealing:
Previously Unknown Passages: Read entire paragraphs, missing from modern Bibles for two millennia, that have been restored from the scrolls—including the full story of Nahash the Ammonite’s atrocities in 1 Samuel.Old Testament Textual Criticism in Action: See on-the-page comparisons between the Dead Sea Scrolls and the three most important ancient Bibles: the Masoretic Text, the Greek Septuagint, and the Samaritan Pentateuch.A Pre-Christian Bible: Explore the biblical canon as it existed before it was finalized, including books like Tobit, Ben Sira, and Jubilees that were found among the Qumran scrolls.Surprising Manuscript Variations: Discover hundreds of significant variants where the scrolls differ from the traditional text, offering new perspectives on familiar verses—from single words to altered readings of passages like Genesis 22:14.

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