Also – re. my previous post on the Dead Sea Scrolls as a quite obvious source from which Paul & the members of the Church of God at Jerusalem (see Paul's letter for all that) could easily have been forming a religious belief around the idea of a spiritual messiah of the distant past (up to 250 years before Paul), ie an Apocalyptic Messiah belief which afaik everyone agrees that Paul was preaching - below are some links and quotes on the Dead Sea Scrolls where the Scrolls certainly do talk about their belief in an apocalyptic messiah.
But just to recap what I said in that previous post - Afaik, everyone agrees that Paul was preaching an apocalyptic message of messiah belief. Afaik, there are no dissenting voices on that. However, what the quotes below show, is that the Dead Sea Scrolls were also preaching an apocalyptic messiah. But note that the Scrolls were written as much as 250 years or more before Paul was even born ... although experts all agree that those Scrolls continued to be written all through the lifetime of Paul and up until about 100AD (see the dating links & quotes below) ... and the writers of those scrolls were preaching and writing in the exact same few square-miles as Paul ... and not only that but, the Letters of Paul make very clear that Paul himself says that before his vision Paul was preaching the traditional OT version of Judaism and he was vehemently persecuting on the streets others who were preaching some different version of Jewish messiah belief (such as the Essenes were doing with their Dead Sea Scrolls) ... but then Paul had his vision and the sudden conversion where he say's that he suddenly realised that he had been wrong in his traditional messiah beliefs, and that God had now revealed to him the true messaih meaning "hidden so long" in scripture, after which Paul instantly began to preach the same belief as those he'd been persecuting, and where that new preaching from Paul was now of an apocalyptic messiah (just as they had in the Scrolls) ...
OK, some of the quotes below are quite long (just for context), but I've highlighted the relevant bits to show (a) the dates, and (b) the apocalyptic nature of the Scroll beliefs -
Apocalyptic Nature of the Messiah Belief in the Dead Sea Scrolls
https://www.deadseascrolls.org.il/featured-scrolls?locale=en_US
4Q Apocryphon of Daniel*
Date:*50–1 bce, Herodian Period*
Language: Aramaic
The Dead Sea Scrolls contain extensive apocalyptic literature relating to the final messianic battle at the End of Days. The Aramaic Apocryphon of Daniel describes either a messianic figure or a boastful ruler that will arise as “Son of God” or “Son of the Most High”, like the apocalyptic redeemer in the biblical book of Daniel. The text calls to mind the New Testament proclamation of the angel Gabriel concerning the new-born Jesus: “He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High… ” (Luke 1:32)
https://biblicalstudies.org.uk/pdf/emwl/dss_rowley.pdf
In chapters vi-xxxvi we have the expectation of a world judgement, followed by the establishment of the kingdom of God, with Jerusalem and the Temple at its centre.38 There is no thought of the Messiah as the head of the kingdom. This is closely similar to what we find in the book of Daniel. It does not mean that either the author of Daniel or the author of these chapters thought of the kingdom as without a leader, but that the person of the leader was not in the focus of their thought. The Apocalypse of Weeks thought of history as divided into periods, the seventh being marked by apostasy, the eighth being marked by righteousness, the ninth by the destruction of the wicked, and the tenth by the bringing in of a period of eternal bliss[/B]. The remainder of chapters xci-civ show us the wicked apostatizing and following idolatry,39 and promised torment hereafter, while the righteous are promised bliss.40 There is 28 Cf. The Book of Enoch, 2nd ed., 1912, pp. lii f., 1 f., and Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, ii, 1913, pp. 170 f. On p. 171, however, he says the date of the latter section is wholly doubtful. 29 Cf. The Relevance of Apocalyptic, 2nd ed., 1947, pp. 78 ff. F. Martin, Le livre d’Hénoch,’ 1906, dates the Apocalypse of Weeks before 170 B.C., and chapters vi-xxxvi circa 166 B.C. M.-J. Lagrange, Le Messianisme chez les Juifs, 1909, p. 62, took a similar view, but in Le Judaisme avant Jésus-Christ, 1931, pp. 113 f., he assigns chapters vi-xxxvi to a date anterior to 125 B.C., and the Apocalypse of Weeks to circa 152 B.C. J. B. Frey, in Pirot’s Supplément an Dictionnaire de la Bible, i, 1928, cols. 358, 366, dated the former section in the reign of Antiochus Epiphanes, and the latter during the early Maccabaean period. A. Weiser, Einleitung in das Alte Testament, 2nd ed., 1949, p. 311, assigns the origin of both of these sections to the Maccabaean period. O. Eissfeldt, Einleitung in das A1te Testament, 2nd ed., 1956, p. 765, assigns the Apocalypse of Weeks to circa 170 B.C.
For some scholars who prefer later dates cf. The Relevance of Apocalyptic, pp. 79 f. To these may be added, R. H. Pfeiffer, History of New Testament Times, 1949, where chapters vi-xxxvi are assigned to circa 100 B.C., and the Apocalypse of Weeks to circa 163 B.C. 30 Cf. The Book of Enoch, 2nd ed., pp. liii f., and Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, ii, p. 171. 31 Loc. cit., col. 367. 32 Cf. The Relevance of the Apocalyptic, 2nd ed., p. 56. 33 Cf. The Book of Enoch, 2nd ed., p. liv, and Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, ii, p. 171. 34 Cf. The Book of Enoch, p. liii, and Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, loc. cit. 35 Loc. cit., cols. 361 f. 36 Ibid., col. 364 37 Ibid., col. 368. 38 I Enoch x. 6, xvi. 1, xix. 1, xxv. 4 f. 39 I Enoch xci. 7, 9, xcvii. 7 ff. 40 I Enoch xcix. 11, ciii. 3 f, 7 f., civ. 2 ff. H.H. Rowley, Jewish Apocalyptic and the Dead Sea Scrolls. The Ethel M. Wood Lecture delivered before the University of London on 12 March 1957. London: The Athlone Press, 1957. pp.36. no suggestion of the establishment of the kingdom of God on earth, or of any resurrection on earth. In chapters lxxxiii-xc the history of Israel is depicted symbolically under the figure of sheep. The history culminates in a Gentile attack, until one of the sheep develops a powerful horn, against which the enemy had no power.41 This is doubtless to be identified with the Maccabees,42 whose victory was expected to inaugurate the kingdom of God, when the enemy should be destroyed, and the righteous dead should arise. One described as a white bull should lead them,43 and he fulfils the functions of the Messiah, though the term is not used of him, and there is no mention of Davidic descent. The Similitudes of Enoch raise problems of Christian [p.10] interpolation and of the interpretation of their figure of the Son of Man. In the book of Daniel the Son of Man is a figure symbolizing the saints as invested with power in the coming kingdom,44 and [B]there are some who think the Son of Man is here also a collective symbol.45 Others hold that he is a transcendental figure, a pre-existent individual.46 For our purpose this is not material, since nothing of this character can be found in the Scrolls. The term Anointed One, or Messiah, is found in the Similitudes,47 but there is nothing to indicate that he is a human deliverer, and again the view has been expressed that this is a collective figure.48
Dating The Dead Sea Scrolls
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_Sea_Scrolls
Scholarly consensus dates the Qumran Caves Scrolls from the last three centuries*BCE*and the first century*CE.[2]*Bronze coins found at the same sites form a series beginning with*John Hyrcanus*(in office 135–104*BCE) and continuing until the period of the*First Jewish–Roman War*(66–73 CE), supporting the radiocarbon and*paleographic*dating of the*scrolls.[5]
Radiocarbon dating
Main article:*Carbon dating the Dead Sea Scrolls
Parchment from a number of the Dead Sea Scrolls has been carbon dated. The initial test performed in 1950 was on a piece of linen from one of the caves. This test gave an indicative dating of 33CE plus or minus 200 years, eliminating early hypotheses relating the scrolls to the medieval period.[433] Since then two large series of tests have been performed on the scrolls themselves. The results were summarized by VanderKam and Flint, who said the tests give "strong reason for thinking that most of the Qumran manuscripts belong to the last two centuries BCE and the first century CE."[17]:32
Paleographic dating[edit]
Analysis of letter forms, or*palaeography, was applied to the texts of the Dead Sea Scrolls by a variety of scholars in the field. Major linguistic analysis by*Cross*and*Avigad*dates fragments from 225*BCE to 50*CE.[434]*These dates were determined by examining the size, variability, and style of the text.[435]The same fragments were later analyzed using radiocarbon dating and were dated to an estimated range of 385*BCE to 82*CE with a 68% accuracy rate.[434] “
Because of their faithfulness, we have today a form of the Hebrew text which in all essentials duplicates the recension which was considered authoritative in the days of Christ and the apostles, if not a century earlier. And this in turn, judging from Qumran evidence, goes back to an authoritative revision of the Old Testament text which was drawn up on the basis of the most reliable manuscripts available for collation from previous centuries. These bring us very close in all essentials to the original autographs themselves, and furnish us with an authentic record of God's revelation. As W. F. Albright has said, "We may rest assured that the consonantal text of the Hebrew Bible, though not infallible has been preserved with an accuracy perhaps unparalleled in any other Near Eastern literature."[504]
Christian origin theory[edit]
Spanish*Jesuit*José O'Callaghan Martínez*argued in the 1960s that one fragment (7Q5) preserves a portion of text from the*New Testament*Gospel of Mark*6:52–53.[424]*This theory was*falsifiedin the year 2000 by paleographic analysis of the particular fragment.[425]
Robert Eisenman*has advanced the theory that some scrolls describe the*early Christian*community. Eisenman also argued that the careers of*James the Just*and*Paul the Apostle*correspond to events recorded in some of these documents.[426]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4Q246
4Q246, also known as the*Son of God*Text or the*Aramaic Apocalypse, is one of the*Dead Sea Scrolls*found at*Qumran*which is notable for an early*messianic*mention of a*son of God.[1][2]*The text is an*Aramaic language*fragment first acquired in 1958 from cave 4 at Qumran, and the major debate on this fragment has been on the identity of this "son of God" figure.[3]
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2018/01/dead-sea-scroll-
translated-religion-tekufah-spd/
The Mystery of the Scrolls
As religious documents, a wave of controversy surrounds the Dead Sea Scrolls. They were written between the second century BC and the second century AD, but their exact authors are highly contested. Scholars agree, however, that the documents—which consist of explanatory, wisdom, apocalyptic, and calendrical texts, in addition to hymns and prayers—were written by Judean desert dwellers.
https://www.biblicalarchaeology.org...s/the-dead-sea-scrolls-and-the-new-testament/
Nevertheless, there are some similarities between the two groups and their writings, which make for interesting comparisons. For example, a list of miracles appears in both Luke 7:21–22 of the New Testament and the Dead Sea Scroll known as the Messianic Apocalypse (4Q521).
In Luke 7, Jesus gives these miracles to the disciples of John the Baptist as proof that he is the messiah. In the Messianic Apocalypse, which was written approximately 150 years before Luke’s Gospel, the Lord is the one who will perform these miracles. The source for both of these lists is Isaiah chapters 35 and 61. While not all of the same miracles appear in Luke 7 and the Messianic Apocalypse, the miracles that do appear in both are listed in the same order (see char
The curious thing is that not all of these miracles, such as “raising the dead,” appear in the passages from Isaiah, which were the source material for the lists—the prophecies being fulfilled. Yet the miracle of “raising the dead” appears in both Luke 7 and the Messianic Apocalypse*right before*bringing “good news to the poor.” Rather than suggesting that the writer of Luke 7 copied from—or was even aware of—the Messianic Apocalypse, this similarity suggests that both groups shared certain “interpretive and theological traditions on which writers in both communities drew.
But just to recap what I said in that previous post - Afaik, everyone agrees that Paul was preaching an apocalyptic message of messiah belief. Afaik, there are no dissenting voices on that. However, what the quotes below show, is that the Dead Sea Scrolls were also preaching an apocalyptic messiah. But note that the Scrolls were written as much as 250 years or more before Paul was even born ... although experts all agree that those Scrolls continued to be written all through the lifetime of Paul and up until about 100AD (see the dating links & quotes below) ... and the writers of those scrolls were preaching and writing in the exact same few square-miles as Paul ... and not only that but, the Letters of Paul make very clear that Paul himself says that before his vision Paul was preaching the traditional OT version of Judaism and he was vehemently persecuting on the streets others who were preaching some different version of Jewish messiah belief (such as the Essenes were doing with their Dead Sea Scrolls) ... but then Paul had his vision and the sudden conversion where he say's that he suddenly realised that he had been wrong in his traditional messiah beliefs, and that God had now revealed to him the true messaih meaning "hidden so long" in scripture, after which Paul instantly began to preach the same belief as those he'd been persecuting, and where that new preaching from Paul was now of an apocalyptic messiah (just as they had in the Scrolls) ...
OK, some of the quotes below are quite long (just for context), but I've highlighted the relevant bits to show (a) the dates, and (b) the apocalyptic nature of the Scroll beliefs -
Apocalyptic Nature of the Messiah Belief in the Dead Sea Scrolls
https://www.deadseascrolls.org.il/featured-scrolls?locale=en_US
4Q Apocryphon of Daniel*
Date:*50–1 bce, Herodian Period*
Language: Aramaic
The Dead Sea Scrolls contain extensive apocalyptic literature relating to the final messianic battle at the End of Days. The Aramaic Apocryphon of Daniel describes either a messianic figure or a boastful ruler that will arise as “Son of God” or “Son of the Most High”, like the apocalyptic redeemer in the biblical book of Daniel. The text calls to mind the New Testament proclamation of the angel Gabriel concerning the new-born Jesus: “He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High… ” (Luke 1:32)
https://biblicalstudies.org.uk/pdf/emwl/dss_rowley.pdf
In chapters vi-xxxvi we have the expectation of a world judgement, followed by the establishment of the kingdom of God, with Jerusalem and the Temple at its centre.38 There is no thought of the Messiah as the head of the kingdom. This is closely similar to what we find in the book of Daniel. It does not mean that either the author of Daniel or the author of these chapters thought of the kingdom as without a leader, but that the person of the leader was not in the focus of their thought. The Apocalypse of Weeks thought of history as divided into periods, the seventh being marked by apostasy, the eighth being marked by righteousness, the ninth by the destruction of the wicked, and the tenth by the bringing in of a period of eternal bliss[/B]. The remainder of chapters xci-civ show us the wicked apostatizing and following idolatry,39 and promised torment hereafter, while the righteous are promised bliss.40 There is 28 Cf. The Book of Enoch, 2nd ed., 1912, pp. lii f., 1 f., and Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, ii, 1913, pp. 170 f. On p. 171, however, he says the date of the latter section is wholly doubtful. 29 Cf. The Relevance of Apocalyptic, 2nd ed., 1947, pp. 78 ff. F. Martin, Le livre d’Hénoch,’ 1906, dates the Apocalypse of Weeks before 170 B.C., and chapters vi-xxxvi circa 166 B.C. M.-J. Lagrange, Le Messianisme chez les Juifs, 1909, p. 62, took a similar view, but in Le Judaisme avant Jésus-Christ, 1931, pp. 113 f., he assigns chapters vi-xxxvi to a date anterior to 125 B.C., and the Apocalypse of Weeks to circa 152 B.C. J. B. Frey, in Pirot’s Supplément an Dictionnaire de la Bible, i, 1928, cols. 358, 366, dated the former section in the reign of Antiochus Epiphanes, and the latter during the early Maccabaean period. A. Weiser, Einleitung in das Alte Testament, 2nd ed., 1949, p. 311, assigns the origin of both of these sections to the Maccabaean period. O. Eissfeldt, Einleitung in das A1te Testament, 2nd ed., 1956, p. 765, assigns the Apocalypse of Weeks to circa 170 B.C.
For some scholars who prefer later dates cf. The Relevance of Apocalyptic, pp. 79 f. To these may be added, R. H. Pfeiffer, History of New Testament Times, 1949, where chapters vi-xxxvi are assigned to circa 100 B.C., and the Apocalypse of Weeks to circa 163 B.C. 30 Cf. The Book of Enoch, 2nd ed., pp. liii f., and Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, ii, p. 171. 31 Loc. cit., col. 367. 32 Cf. The Relevance of the Apocalyptic, 2nd ed., p. 56. 33 Cf. The Book of Enoch, 2nd ed., p. liv, and Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, ii, p. 171. 34 Cf. The Book of Enoch, p. liii, and Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha, loc. cit. 35 Loc. cit., cols. 361 f. 36 Ibid., col. 364 37 Ibid., col. 368. 38 I Enoch x. 6, xvi. 1, xix. 1, xxv. 4 f. 39 I Enoch xci. 7, 9, xcvii. 7 ff. 40 I Enoch xcix. 11, ciii. 3 f, 7 f., civ. 2 ff. H.H. Rowley, Jewish Apocalyptic and the Dead Sea Scrolls. The Ethel M. Wood Lecture delivered before the University of London on 12 March 1957. London: The Athlone Press, 1957. pp.36. no suggestion of the establishment of the kingdom of God on earth, or of any resurrection on earth. In chapters lxxxiii-xc the history of Israel is depicted symbolically under the figure of sheep. The history culminates in a Gentile attack, until one of the sheep develops a powerful horn, against which the enemy had no power.41 This is doubtless to be identified with the Maccabees,42 whose victory was expected to inaugurate the kingdom of God, when the enemy should be destroyed, and the righteous dead should arise. One described as a white bull should lead them,43 and he fulfils the functions of the Messiah, though the term is not used of him, and there is no mention of Davidic descent. The Similitudes of Enoch raise problems of Christian [p.10] interpolation and of the interpretation of their figure of the Son of Man. In the book of Daniel the Son of Man is a figure symbolizing the saints as invested with power in the coming kingdom,44 and [B]there are some who think the Son of Man is here also a collective symbol.45 Others hold that he is a transcendental figure, a pre-existent individual.46 For our purpose this is not material, since nothing of this character can be found in the Scrolls. The term Anointed One, or Messiah, is found in the Similitudes,47 but there is nothing to indicate that he is a human deliverer, and again the view has been expressed that this is a collective figure.48
Dating The Dead Sea Scrolls
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_Sea_Scrolls
Scholarly consensus dates the Qumran Caves Scrolls from the last three centuries*BCE*and the first century*CE.[2]*Bronze coins found at the same sites form a series beginning with*John Hyrcanus*(in office 135–104*BCE) and continuing until the period of the*First Jewish–Roman War*(66–73 CE), supporting the radiocarbon and*paleographic*dating of the*scrolls.[5]
Radiocarbon dating
Main article:*Carbon dating the Dead Sea Scrolls
Parchment from a number of the Dead Sea Scrolls has been carbon dated. The initial test performed in 1950 was on a piece of linen from one of the caves. This test gave an indicative dating of 33CE plus or minus 200 years, eliminating early hypotheses relating the scrolls to the medieval period.[433] Since then two large series of tests have been performed on the scrolls themselves. The results were summarized by VanderKam and Flint, who said the tests give "strong reason for thinking that most of the Qumran manuscripts belong to the last two centuries BCE and the first century CE."[17]:32
Paleographic dating[edit]
Analysis of letter forms, or*palaeography, was applied to the texts of the Dead Sea Scrolls by a variety of scholars in the field. Major linguistic analysis by*Cross*and*Avigad*dates fragments from 225*BCE to 50*CE.[434]*These dates were determined by examining the size, variability, and style of the text.[435]The same fragments were later analyzed using radiocarbon dating and were dated to an estimated range of 385*BCE to 82*CE with a 68% accuracy rate.[434] “
Because of their faithfulness, we have today a form of the Hebrew text which in all essentials duplicates the recension which was considered authoritative in the days of Christ and the apostles, if not a century earlier. And this in turn, judging from Qumran evidence, goes back to an authoritative revision of the Old Testament text which was drawn up on the basis of the most reliable manuscripts available for collation from previous centuries. These bring us very close in all essentials to the original autographs themselves, and furnish us with an authentic record of God's revelation. As W. F. Albright has said, "We may rest assured that the consonantal text of the Hebrew Bible, though not infallible has been preserved with an accuracy perhaps unparalleled in any other Near Eastern literature."[504]
Christian origin theory[edit]
Spanish*Jesuit*José O'Callaghan Martínez*argued in the 1960s that one fragment (7Q5) preserves a portion of text from the*New Testament*Gospel of Mark*6:52–53.[424]*This theory was*falsifiedin the year 2000 by paleographic analysis of the particular fragment.[425]
Robert Eisenman*has advanced the theory that some scrolls describe the*early Christian*community. Eisenman also argued that the careers of*James the Just*and*Paul the Apostle*correspond to events recorded in some of these documents.[426]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4Q246
4Q246, also known as the*Son of God*Text or the*Aramaic Apocalypse, is one of the*Dead Sea Scrolls*found at*Qumran*which is notable for an early*messianic*mention of a*son of God.[1][2]*The text is an*Aramaic language*fragment first acquired in 1958 from cave 4 at Qumran, and the major debate on this fragment has been on the identity of this "son of God" figure.[3]
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2018/01/dead-sea-scroll-
translated-religion-tekufah-spd/
The Mystery of the Scrolls
As religious documents, a wave of controversy surrounds the Dead Sea Scrolls. They were written between the second century BC and the second century AD, but their exact authors are highly contested. Scholars agree, however, that the documents—which consist of explanatory, wisdom, apocalyptic, and calendrical texts, in addition to hymns and prayers—were written by Judean desert dwellers.
https://www.biblicalarchaeology.org...s/the-dead-sea-scrolls-and-the-new-testament/
Nevertheless, there are some similarities between the two groups and their writings, which make for interesting comparisons. For example, a list of miracles appears in both Luke 7:21–22 of the New Testament and the Dead Sea Scroll known as the Messianic Apocalypse (4Q521).
In Luke 7, Jesus gives these miracles to the disciples of John the Baptist as proof that he is the messiah. In the Messianic Apocalypse, which was written approximately 150 years before Luke’s Gospel, the Lord is the one who will perform these miracles. The source for both of these lists is Isaiah chapters 35 and 61. While not all of the same miracles appear in Luke 7 and the Messianic Apocalypse, the miracles that do appear in both are listed in the same order (see char
The curious thing is that not all of these miracles, such as “raising the dead,” appear in the passages from Isaiah, which were the source material for the lists—the prophecies being fulfilled. Yet the miracle of “raising the dead” appears in both Luke 7 and the Messianic Apocalypse*right before*bringing “good news to the poor.” Rather than suggesting that the writer of Luke 7 copied from—or was even aware of—the Messianic Apocalypse, this similarity suggests that both groups shared certain “interpretive and theological traditions on which writers in both communities drew.