Has author Vanderkam ever been quoted by the WTS?

by City Fan 4 Replies latest watchtower bible

  • City Fan
    City Fan

    I don't have access to a Watchtower CD but just wanted to know if author James Vanderkam has ever been quoted by the Watchtower Society? I've just lent one of his books to a Witness friend and it may lend more weight to his more critical biblical arguments if he has been quoted by them.

    Thanks,

    CF.

  • Corvin
    Corvin

    City Fan, this is the only place I could find any quote(s) from Mr. Vanerkam;

    ***

    w01 2/15 pp. 4-5 What Is the Truth About the Dead Sea Scrolls? ***

    Were

    the Qumran Residents Essenes?

    If these scrolls were Qumran?s library, who were its residents? Professor Eleazar Sukenik, who obtained three scrolls for the Hebrew University in Jerusalem in 1947, was the first to propose that these scrolls had belonged to a community of Essenes.

    The Essenes were a Jewish sect mentioned by first-century writers Josephus, Philo of Alexandria, and Pliny the Elder. The exact origin of the Essenes is a matter of speculation, but they seem to have arisen during the period of turmoil following the Maccabean revolt in the second century B.C.E. Josephus reported on their existence during that period as he detailed how their religious views differed from those of the Pharisees and the Sadducees. Pliny mentioned the location of a community of Essenes by the Dead Sea between Jericho and En-gedi.

    Professor James VanderKam, a Dead Sea Scroll scholar, proposes that "the Essenes who lived at Qumran were just a small part of the larger Essene movement," which Josephus numbered at about four thousand. Although not perfectly fitting all descriptions, the picture that emerges from the Qumran texts seems to match the Essenes better than any other known Jewish group of that period.

    Some have claimed that Christianity had its beginnings at Qumran. Nevertheless, many striking differences can be noted between the religious views of the Qumran sect and the early Christians. The Qumran writings reveal ultrastrict Sabbath regulations and an almost obsessive preoccupation with ceremonial purity. (Matthew 15:1-20; Luke 6:1-11) Much the same could be said regarding the Essenes? seclusion from society, their belief in fate and the immortality of the soul, and their emphasis on celibacy and mystical ideas about participating with the angels in their worship. This shows them to be at variance with Jesus? teachings and those of early Christians.?Matthew 5:14-16; John 11:23, 24; Colossians 2:18; 1 Timothy 4:1-3.

    No

    Cover-up, No Hidden Scrolls

    In the years following the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, various publications were produced that made the initial finds readily available to scholars around the world. But the thousands of fragments from one of the caves, known as Cave 4, were far more problematic. These were in the hands of a small international team of scholars set up in East Jerusalem (then part of Jordan) at the Palestine Archaeological Museum. No Jewish or Israeli scholars were included in this team.

    The team developed a policy of not allowing access to the scrolls until they published the official results of their research. The number of scholars on the team was kept to a set limit. When a team member died, only one new scholar would be added to replace him. The amount of work demanded a much larger team, and in some cases, greater expertise in ancient Hebrew and Aramaic. James VanderKam put it this way: "Tens of thousands of fragments were more than eight experts, however skilled, could handle."

    With the Six-Day War in 1967, East Jerusalem and its scrolls came under Israeli jurisdiction, but no policy change for the scroll research team was instituted. As the delay in publishing the scrolls from Cave 4 extended from years to decades, an outcry was heard from a number of scholars. In 1977, Professor Geza Vermes of Oxford University called it the academic scandal par excellence of the 20th century. Rumors started to spread that the Catholic Church was deliberately hiding information from the scrolls that would be devastating to Christianity.

    In the 1980?s, the team was finally expanded to 20 scholars. Then, in 1990, under the direction of its newly appointed editor in chief, Emanuel Tov, of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, the team was further expanded to over 50 scholars. A strict schedule was set up for publishing all the scholarly editions of the remaining scrolls.

    A real breakthrough came unexpectedly in 1991. First, A Preliminary Edition of the Unpublished Dead Sea Scrolls was published. This was put together with computer assistance based on a copy of the team?s concordance. Next, the Huntington Library in San Marino, California, announced that they would make available for any scholar their complete set of photographs of the scrolls. Before long, with the publication of A Facsimile Edition of the Dead Sea Scrolls, photographs of the previously unpublished scrolls became easily accessible.

    So for the last decade, all the Dead Sea Scrolls have been available for examination. The research reveals that there was no cover-up; there were no hidden scrolls. As the final official editions of the scrolls are being published, only now can full analysis begin. A new generation of scroll scholarship has been born. But what significance does this research have for Bible students?

    As you can see here, Vanderkam's word's only support the existence of the Essenes, and the formiddable task of translating the Dead Sea Scrolls, and does not give any weight to any JW dogma. The WT does have a history of misapplying the words of others to lend some weight to their views.

    Corvin

  • Corvin
    Corvin

    Whoops, posted the same thing twice.

  • City Fan
    City Fan

    That's great - many thanks Corvin!

    CF.

  • Corvin
    Corvin

    you betcha.

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