Qumran Interpretation of the Genesis Flood
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Jeremy D. Lyon
Jeremy D. Lyon (PhD, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary) is Associate Professor of Old Testament and Hebrew at Truett-McConnell College and a research associate with Logos Research Associates.
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Qumran Interpretation of the Genesis Flood - Jeremy D. Lyon
QUMRAN INTERPRETATION
of the GENESIS FLOOD
JEREMY D. LYON
Pickwicklogo.jpgQUMRAN INTERPRETATION OF THE GENESIS FLOOD
Copyright © 2015 Jeremy D. Lyon. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions. Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.
Pickwick Publications
An Imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3
Eugene, OR 97401
www.wipfandstock.com
ISBN 13: 978-1-4982-2009-5
EISBN 13: 978-1-4982-2010-1
Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
Lyon, Jeremy D.
Qumran interpretation of the Genesis flood / Jeremy D. Lyon.
xii + 212 p. ; 23 cm. Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN 13: 978-1-4982-2009-5
1. Genesis Apocryphon. 2. Dead Sea scrolls. 4Q. 3. Bible. Genesis—Criticism, interpretation, etc., Jewish. I. Title.
BS1235.5 L95 2015
Manufactured in the U.S.A.
Table of Contents
Qumran Interpretation of Genesis Flood
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Chapter One: Introduction
Chapter Two: Genesis Apocryphon
Chapter Three: Commentary on Genesis
Chapter Four: An Admonition Based on the Flood
Chapter Five: Paraphrase of Genesis and Exodus
Chapter Six: Conclusion
Appendix A: Text and Translation of Columns 0–XII of Genesis Apocryphon
Appendix B: Text and Translation of Columns I–II:5 of Commentary on Genesis
Appendix C: Text and Translation of An Admonition Based on the Flood
Appendix D: Text and Translation of Paraphrase of Genesis and Exodus
Bibliography
This book is dedicated to the Lord, who sat
enthroned over the Flood (Psalm 29:10).
יהוה למבול ישב וישב יהוה מלך לעולם
The Lord sat enthroned at the Flood, and the Lord sits as King forever.
Acknowledgments
A number of people have been instrumental in helping me bring this research to fruition. I would like to thank Dr. Robert Cole and Dr. Mark Rooker, who mentored me in Hebrew Bible/Old Testament studies and provided helpful feedback during the process of this writing. Also, I am grateful to Dr. Stephen Stout, who read through this, offering helpful suggestions and encouragement. I want to thank my colleagues at Southern California Seminary, who encouraged and supported me in various ways during the writing of this work. I would also like to thank Dr. Stephen Pfann and Claire Pfann at the University of the Holy Land for their generosity and hospitality toward my family in the months we spent in Jerusalem studying the Dead Sea Scrolls. Concerning various scroll images provided for this publication, I would like to thank James E. Trever, the Israel Antiquities Authority, and Dr. Marilyn Lundberg and Dr. Bruce Zuckerman at West Semitic Research.
My family has always been such a wonderful support for me over the years. I would like to thank my beautiful wife Ashley, who endured many days and nights, never wavering in her support, while I was researching and writing. I would also like to thank my precious children, Isaiah and Hadassah, for allowing daddy to get work done and for always bringing such joy into my life. I am truly blessed and thank the Lord for my wife and kids. I would like to thank my mom, Kim Young, who taught me God’s Word through word and deed. No person has taught me more. I thank my dad, Charlie Lyon, for modeling such a strong work ethic. Also, with great fondness, I am grateful to my grandpa, Bill Lyon, who is now with the Lord. His prayers and letters of encouragement have made a profound impact.
Most of all, I thank the Lord Jesus Christ, who called me to this work and enabled me to complete it. May He get the glory.
Abbreviations
1 En - 1 Enoch
1Q19 - Book of Noah
1QapGen - Genesis Apocryphon
1QHa - Hodayot
1QpHab - Habakkuk Pesher
1QS - Community Rule
3 Macc - 3 Maccabees
4Q176 - Tanhumim
4Q244 - Pseudo–Daniel
4Q252 - Commentary on Genesis A
4Q253 - Commentary on Genesis B
4Q254 - Commentary on Genesis C
4Q254a - Commentary on Genesis D
4Q370 - An Admonition Based on the Flood
4Q422 - Paraphrase of Genesis and Exodus
4Q464 - A Narrative Based on Genesis and Exodus
4Q504 - The Words of the Heavenly Lights
4Q508 - Prayers for Festivals
4Q534–36 - Book of Noah
4Q577 - eight fragments containing allusions to the Flood story
5Q13 - small fragment quoting 1QS
CD - Damascus Document
DJD - Discoveries in the Judaean Desert
Jub - Jubilees
LXX - Septuagint
MT - Masoretic Text
NT - New Testament
OT - Old Testament
PAM - Palestine Archaeological Museum
Sib Or - Sibylline Oracles
Sir - Wisdom of Ben Sirach
SP - Samaritan Pentateuch
Wis - Wisdom of Solomon
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
In 1947, a Bedouin stumbled upon some ancient scrolls when he tossed a rock into a cave opening and heard pottery shatter. This discovery would turn out to be one of the greatest archaeological finds in history, leading to the search for more scrolls. Between 1947 and 1956 some nine hundred manuscripts, dated 250 B.C.–A.D. 68, were discovered in eleven caves around Qumran, along the northwestern shore of the Dead Sea. Among these manuscripts were Jewish sectarian writings, pseudepigraphal and apocryphal writings, and biblical books. These largely fragmentary manuscripts, collectively known as the Dead Sea Scrolls, have transformed our understanding of Second Temple Judaism and have shed ancient light on the formation, preservation, translation, and interpretation of the Hebrew Bible.
This book focuses on the particular impact of the Dead Sea Scrolls for understanding biblical interpretation during the Second Temple period.¹ In particular, these Qumran scrolls contain the most ancient surviving interpretations of the Genesis Flood, dating to the first-century B.C.² Several non-biblical texts from Qumran refer to Noah and the Flood, revealing how certain ancient Jews understood and employed the Flood material. Some of these references are very brief and somewhat obscure, while other manuscripts preserve more detailed references for serious examination of Qumran Flood interpretation. These texts contain, among other things, commentary, paraphrase, and admonition, which provide additional value in seeking to understand how they viewed the biblical text.
Four scrolls, in particular, have drawn significant attention from scholars concerning Qumran interpretations of the Genesis Flood. The Genesis Apocryphon (1QapGen) is a large, but badly damaged manuscript, preserving twenty-three columns of Aramaic text. Several fragmentary columns preserve a retelling and expansion upon the Genesis Noah/Flood narrative which includes a first-person account from Noah. The Commentary on Genesis (4Q252) is a fragmentary text which gives significant attention to the chronology of the events during the Flood. The Admonition Based on the Flood (4Q370) is a fragment, containing two columns of text. The first column contains a retelling of the Flood, which leads into an exhortation found in the second column. The Paraphrase of Genesis and Exodus (4Q422) is also fragmentary, preserving portions of three columns of text, of which the second provides a paraphrase of the Flood. But what do these texts mean as a collective whole and what are the implications?
Since the discovery and publication of 1QapGen, 4Q252, 4Q370, and 4Q422, there has been renewed interest in scholarly investigation concerning ancient interpretations of the Genesis Flood narrative. Numerous studies have been published on these individual Qumran Flood texts since their discoveries.
Notable Research on Noah and the Flood in the Dead Sea Scrolls
From the time of the discoveries between 1947 and 1956, considerable time had lapsed before the official publications of many of the scrolls. Hence, the scholarly examination of the individual Flood texts was delayed. 1QapGen was an exception among these Flood texts as it was published (in part) in an official edition in 1956, opening up study of this manuscript. However, even scholarship of 1QapGen has been a developing process as this manuscript presents its own issues. Once all of the manuscripts were made available for scholarship, these Flood texts began to be scrutinized. However, it was not until the 1990s when the study of these Flood texts began to flourish.
Since the 1990s the individual Qumran Flood texts have received attention from scholars in official editions of the text, articles, segments of chapters, whole chapters, and monographs. While considerable work has been done on the individual texts since the 1990s, what about studies on the Qumran Flood texts as a whole? To date, there have been several notable contributions to investigating the Flood texts as a whole, and thus, working towards a fuller understanding of the various aspects of Qumran interpretation of the Genesis Flood.
Jack P. Lewis (1968)
In 1968, Brill published Jack P. Lewis’s 1962 dissertation, A Study of the Interpretation of Noah and the Flood in Jewish and Christian Literature, which was written prior to the publication of a number of relevant Flood texts from Qumran. Lewis provided a comprehensive compilation of the interpretation of Noah and the Flood in Jewish and Christian literature, which included apocryphal and pseudepigraphal works, Hellenistic-Jewish writings, the Greek and Aramaic versions, and early Christian and rabbinic interpretations. While Lewis made a foundational contribution to research on the interpretation of Noah and the Flood in ancient Jewish and Christian literature, this 1968 work preceded the rise of studies on Qumran Flood interpretation. The only noteworthy discussion in his work dealing with the Qumran corpus was on the Genesis Apocryphon.³
If this topic were published today, one would expect at least a full chapter devoted to Flood interpretation in the Dead Sea Scrolls. However, at that time Lewis could not devote more space to Qumran interpretation since many of the Dead Sea Scrolls had not yet been published. Lewis could only note his awareness of the existence of other fragmentary texts relating to Noah and the Flood stating that, Starcky has reported that Cave IV has two fairly large fragments relating to Noah literature . . . .
⁴ Though these texts had been discovered, they had not been published yet for scholars to examine.
Further, Lewis dealt with the Genesis Apocryphon at an earlier stage of its history in scholarly publication and research, which affected his coverage of this material. He noted, Since the scroll is as yet unpublished in its entirety, one is completely dependent upon the preliminary report . . . .
⁵ Thus, Lewis’s treatment of 1QapGen was limited.
While in many ways Lewis’s study has contributed much to the general study of the interpretation of Noah and the Flood in ancient Jewish and Christian literature, in other ways his work was before its time, especially in regard to Qumran interpretation. With the publication of other Flood texts (4Q252, 4Q370, and 4Q422), which were not available to Lewis at the time, a comprehensive study is now possible.
Florentino García Martínez (1998)
In a 1998 work, titled Interpretations of the Flood, Florentino García Martínez produced a chapter titled, Interpretations of the Flood in the Dead Sea Scrolls.
The stated purpose of this 23-page chapter was . . . to provide a rather summary overview of all the allusions to the Flood narrative found in the Dead Sea Scrolls, and to present in greater detail the two best preserved fragments dealing with this narrative, 4Q252 and 4Q370.
⁶
In his first major section of the chapter García Martínez summarizes the brief references or allusions made to Noah and the Flood in the non-biblical Qumran texts. The manuscripts in this initial summary include: the Damascus Document (CD), the Genesis Apocryphon (1QapGen), 1Q19, 4Q176, 4Q244, 4Q253, 4Q254, 4Q422, 4Q504, 4Q508, 4Q534-36, and 5Q13. In general, most of these texts contain very little Flood content or are obscure references which do not contribute much to the understanding of Qumran interpretation of the Flood. Thus, in the next two major sections he only expounds on 4Q252 and 4Q370.
García Martínez provides certain reasons why he did not expound on the Genesis Apocryphon (1QapGen) and the Paraphrase of Genesis and Exodus (4Q422) for this chapter. Concerning 1QapGen, brief mention is made of some of the extant scroll’s content such as the birth of Noah and the book of the words of Noah.
He does not mention other significant elements of the text dealing with Noah and the Flood though. His reason for not including 1QapGen in fuller treatment is that ". . . the manuscript is so badly preserved that in most of its columns very few lines, or even sentences or words, can be read with any certainty; in addition, its precise relationship to Jubilees is so unclear and disputed that it would require a study of its own. Therefore the study of its interpretation of the Flood . . . must be left for another occasion."⁷ Since there are recognizable difficulties with this manuscript, it is understandable that 1QapGen was not included for further examination in his summary-style chapter. This omission of detailed study of 1QapGen leaves the opportunity for this current investigation to provide the occasion for detailed examination of 1QapGen as part of a comprehensive study on Qumran Flood interpretation.
García Martínez says very little concerning 4Q422, only stating the basic subject matter of the three fragmentary columns. He does not provide warrant for further examination, noting that . . . very little can be concluded about the content of the fragments, about their relationship to the biblical text, or about the interpretation of the Flood narrative offered by its author.
⁸ However, Torleif Elgvin⁹ and Ariel Feldman¹⁰ have demonstrated the value of examining 4Q422 for understanding Qumran Flood interpretation. Though 4Q422 is fragmentary, the extant text certainly appears to warrant detailed investigation for this current study.
García Martínez has made a noteworthy contribution towards investigating the Qumran Flood texts as a whole. However, due to the brevity of being a single chapter, it was limited to summarizing without being able to go in-depth. Further, the only two manuscripts that received any significant attention were 4Q252 and 4Q370, omitting other noteworthy manuscripts for this discussion. The more detailed presentation of 4Q252 and 4Q370 in the chapter was also limited in scope due to space. Nonetheless, his chapter serves as a good brief survey to the Qumran Flood texts available for further study. García Martínez has laid part of the foundation for more detailed research on Qumran Flood interpretation.
Moshe Bernstein (1999)
Moshe Bernstein contributed a chapter titled, Noah and the Flood at Qumran,
in the 1999 Brill publication, The Provo International Conference on the Dead Sea Scrolls: Technological Innovations, New Texts, and Reformulated Issues.¹¹ Bernstein’s purpose was . . . to focus more closely on two aspects of a single unit from Genesis: the man Noah, and the event the Flood, in an attempt to evaluate comparatively the ways in which this unit is employed in Qumran literature.
¹² In other words, Bernstein is not so much providing what the Qumran community believed concerning the Flood, but how they employed the Flood texts in the Qumran literature. This is an important interrelated aspect in the discussion of Qumran Flood interpretation.
Bernstein provided a more detailed summary of the Qumran Flood material than García Martínez and he also elaborated on the approaches used in the Qumran literature. Bernstein mentions several minor references to Noah and the Flood from the Qumran corpus and discusses in most detail 1QapGen, 4Q252, 4Q370, and 4Q422. Bernstein’s discussion on these four texts was summarizing and selective in nature, focusing on how these texts treated the Noah/Flood narrative. He concluded, We did not expect to find a single conception or treatment of either Noah or the flood pericope in the texts which survive from Qumran, and our expectations were vindicated.
¹³
Bernstein’s chapter has contributed significantly to the research of Qumran Flood interpretation, examining the literature as a whole and adding an important element to the discussion–how the Qumran literature employed the Noah/Flood material. His work, however, does not elaborate on many details of the individual texts and is necessarily selective due to limited space. He does, however, deal with some of these Flood texts in more detail in other separate works.¹⁴ While Bernstein’s chapter provides an invaluable study on the how,
it does not discuss in detail the what
of Qumran Flood interpretation. This current research seeks to provide full-length chapters for each of the individual Flood texts (1QapGen, 4Q252, 4Q370, and 4Q422). This study also seeks to provide a comprehensive understanding of not only how the Qumran literature employs the Flood material, but what the Qumran community believed concerning the Flood.
Ariel Feldman (2007)
Ariel Feldman made a significant contribution to the study of Qumran Flood interpretation with his 2007 dissertation, פרשת המבול המקראית במגילות קומראן (1Q19, 4Q370, 4Q422, 4Q464 and 4Q577).
¹⁵ Feldman’s purpose was to examine the biblical exegesis in the texts, along with the interpretation methods and strategies employed while reworking the biblical text. He provided new editions of the five texts he examined (1Q19, 4Q370, 4Q422, 4Q464, and 4Q577), and provided detailed commentary and discussion of these texts. Feldman’s dissertation research has been translated into English and published in a work, edited by Devorah Dimant, titled, Scripture and Interpretation: Qumran Texts that Rework the Bible.¹⁶ While Feldman’s work will likely become a standard in studies on Qumran Flood interpretation, his research differs from this current study in several ways.
While Feldman’s study addresses some of the same Flood texts as this current study (4Q370 and 4Q422), he also selected three other texts (1Q19, 4Q464 and 4Q577) for his study which are not included in this study. Further, Feldman does not include 1QapGen and 4Q252, which are included in this current study. Overall, Feldman’s research emphasizes the exegetical and interpretive methods employed in these texts. Thus, Feldman’s research differs from this study in its focus and scope. This current research will also address exegetical methods and how the Flood narrative was employed, but will focus more on developing the various aspects of Flood interpretation (what was believed concerning different aspects of the Flood) within the various literary contexts of 1QapGen, 4Q252, 4Q370, and 4Q422.
Dorothy Peters (2008)
In 2008, Dorothy M. Peters published an intriguing study of Noah in the Qumran texts in a work titled Noah Traditions in the Dead Sea Scrolls: Conversations and Controversies of Antiquity. Peters explored all the Qumran manuscripts which included the figure Noah in a text-by-text fashion providing a full-length analysis of the interpretation of Noah in the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Peters’s work has made an invaluable contribution to understanding the Noah traditions in the Dead Sea Scrolls and, in general, the Second Temple period. However, Peters’s work focuses on Noah traditions specifically, not Flood interpretation at Qumran. For example, Peters notes several background questions guiding her research: First, How and to what extent is Noah portrayed as an archetype for a particular interpretation of what it meant to be Jewish? Second, What does God reveal to Noah and how does he do it? Finally, To what extent is Noah claimed as a ‘distinctly Jewish’ ancestor, or alternatively, claimed as a common ancestor shared with Gentiles?
¹⁷
The study of both, Noah and the Flood, is generally understood as being interrelated, but they are not the same study. Peters’s focus on Noah in 1QapGen, 4Q252, 4Q370, and 4Q422 is different than studying these texts to understand specifically Qumran Flood interpretation.¹⁸ Further, these texts necessarily receive less treatment in Peters’s work as they constitute only a part of her text-by-text analysis of a larger corpus of literature, whereas 1QapGen, 4Q252, 4Q370, and 4Q422 constitute the full scope of this treatment on Qumran Flood interpretation.
This current study is specifically concerned with how the Qumran community understood the Flood narrative itself. Since Noah is the central figure in the Flood narrative, this study will examine Noah only as specifically related to the Flood, recognizing the necessity of studying Noah as a part of the larger scope of Qumran Flood interpretation. Thus, there will be some significant points of contact between Peters’s work and this current study where her work addresses the relevant Flood texts. While Peters’s work differs in its focus, it nonetheless provides a foundational