DSS Updates, including Abegg lecture online and some pictures.

I have uploaded an MP3 of Dr. Martin Abegg’s public lecture he gave at Taylor University College last week (April 4, 2005): "Jesus in the Dead Sea Scrolls? Messianic Expectations at Qumran." Dr. Martin Abegg is Co-Director of the Dead Sea Scrolls Institute, Graduate Program Director, and Professor of Religious Studies, Trinity Western University, British Columbia. The MP3 is available on my Taylor Public Lectures page.

I have created a Dead Sea Scrolls pictures page, where I have uploaded some scans of original photographs of the scrolls I received from the widow of R.K. Harrison. I believe they are the originals of the plates used in his out-of-print, The Dead Sea Scrolls: An Introduction (New York: Harper and Row, 1961).

Finally, I have also updated some of my Dead Sea Scrolls pages, including creating a Critical Editions of the Dead Sea Scrolls page were I list all of the DJD and Princeton volumes with full bibliographic information (thanks to Eibert Tigchelaar for some corrections and Ken Ristau for the Amazon links).

Thoughts on Technology & the Reconstruction of Dead Sea Scrolls

I am amazed at the benefits of computer technology for studying the Scriptures. This was recently impressed upon me again while visiting with Marty Abegg, who was in town giving some special lectures on the Dead Sea Scrolls at Taylor University College (N.B. I will upload an MP3 of his public lecture, “Jesus in the Dead Sea Scrolls? Messianic Expectations at Qumran,” to my Public Lectures Page soon). Marty has done an amazing amount of work preparing a searchable database of the non-biblical texts from Qumran from which he assembled the now available Dead Sea Scrolls Concordance, Volume 1: The Non-Biblical Texts from Qumran (see my Annotated Guide to the DSS).

My own (very modest) foray into using technology in helping us study the scrolls — besides using Marty’s database with Accordance as well as other software packages — is in connection with 1Q12 (= 1QPs-c), a small scroll containing part of Psalm 44. When working with the official publication of the fragmentary scroll (DJD 1; Oxford, 1955), I decided to try to visually reconstruct some of the manuscripts using computer technology. In particular, using Accordance Bible Software, Adobe Photoshop, and Quark XPress, as well as some other imaging software, I was able to identify another fragment of this scroll. Unfortunately, while my identification is likely (IMHO), it will never be able to be confirmed visually with the orginal fragment, as it as been misplaced!

You can take a look at a brief write-up of my proposed reconstruction from my Software for Biblical Studies page. Any and all comments are most welcome! (And if you know where the original fragments are, please return them to the Shrine of the Book!)

Welcome to my blogspot!

Welcome to my blogspot! I hope that my blog will be worthy of your attention. I hope to post my musings on Biblical Studies, Biblical Hebrew, Dead Sea Scrolls, Septuagint, Popular Culture, and pretty much anything else that interests me! I will also let you know about site updates and special academic events in the Edmonton area, among other things.