Repentance at Qumran: The Penitential Framework of Religious Experience in the Dead Sea Scrolls (Emerging Scholars)
English


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About The Book

Mark A. Jason offers a detailed investigation of the place of repentance in the Dead Sea Scrolls addressing a significant lacuna in Qumran scholarship. Normally when the belief system of the community is examined repentance is usually taken for granted or relegated to a peripheral position. By careful attention to key texts Jason establishes the importance of repentance as a fundamental way of structuring and describing religious experience within the Qumran community. Repentance was important not only for entry into the community and covenant but also for daily governance and cultic activities and even for authenticating understanding of the end times. Jason shows then that repentance was a central and decisive element in shaping that communitys identity and undergirded its religious experience from the start. Further comparison with relevant texts from the Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha shows that the Qumran community represented a distinctive penitential movement in Second Temple Judaism.
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