4Q252
Encyclopedia
4Q252, or the "Pesher on Genesis," is one of the Dead Sea Scrolls
. It is the technical designation for a collection of scroll fragments found in Qumran's cave 4. Together these fragments are currently named 4Q Commentary on Genesis A or 4QComm Gen A. It is dated approximately to the 1st century BCE. 4Q252 has variously been described as pesher
, commentary, and retelling. Elements of each are present in the text.
For decades only column V of 4Q252 was known to scholars, and this fragment was known as 4QPatriarchal Blessings. Gerbern S. Oegema and other scholars later recognized that other fragments should be included with this work to comprise 4QCommentary on Genesis A.
There are 6 columns extant of 4Q252, some more fragmentary than others.
Column I and II lines 1-7 mostly retell and expand slightly the story of Noah and the flood from Genesis 6-9. In this portion, the author was mostly concerned with including more dating details than appear in Genesis.
Column II lines 8-14 and all of column III focus on the story of Abraham, including the judgement on Sodom and Gomorrah and the binding of Isaac. Column III is especially fragmentary, with several blanks.
Columns IV-VI are based on Genesis 49, Joseph's blessing of his twelve sons.
Column IV covers Joseph's blessing of Reuben. The author's comment on Joseph's blessing is an exclusively negative portrayal of Reuben.
Column V, formerly known as Patriarchal Blessing, covers Joseph's blessing of Judah. It contains a quotation from Jeremiah 33:17. The author links this blessing to Messianic expectation and the "covenant of royalty" given to David. The commentary serves dually as anti Hasmonaean polemic and affirmation of the Qumran community's self understanding as spiritual descendants of David.
Column VI is a couple of lines and only a few words, but apparently contains Joseph's blessing of Naphtali.
Dead Sea scrolls
The Dead Sea Scrolls are a collection of 972 texts from the Hebrew Bible and extra-biblical documents found between 1947 and 1956 on the northwest shore of the Dead Sea, from which they derive their name...
. It is the technical designation for a collection of scroll fragments found in Qumran's cave 4. Together these fragments are currently named 4Q Commentary on Genesis A or 4QComm Gen A. It is dated approximately to the 1st century BCE. 4Q252 has variously been described as pesher
Pesher
Pesher is a Hebrew word meaning "interpretation" in the sense of "solution". It became known from one group of texts, numbering some hundreds, among the Dead Sea Scrolls....
, commentary, and retelling. Elements of each are present in the text.
For decades only column V of 4Q252 was known to scholars, and this fragment was known as 4QPatriarchal Blessings. Gerbern S. Oegema and other scholars later recognized that other fragments should be included with this work to comprise 4QCommentary on Genesis A.
There are 6 columns extant of 4Q252, some more fragmentary than others.
Column I and II lines 1-7 mostly retell and expand slightly the story of Noah and the flood from Genesis 6-9. In this portion, the author was mostly concerned with including more dating details than appear in Genesis.
Column II lines 8-14 and all of column III focus on the story of Abraham, including the judgement on Sodom and Gomorrah and the binding of Isaac. Column III is especially fragmentary, with several blanks.
Columns IV-VI are based on Genesis 49, Joseph's blessing of his twelve sons.
Column IV covers Joseph's blessing of Reuben. The author's comment on Joseph's blessing is an exclusively negative portrayal of Reuben.
Column V, formerly known as Patriarchal Blessing, covers Joseph's blessing of Judah. It contains a quotation from Jeremiah 33:17. The author links this blessing to Messianic expectation and the "covenant of royalty" given to David. The commentary serves dually as anti Hasmonaean polemic and affirmation of the Qumran community's self understanding as spiritual descendants of David.
Column VI is a couple of lines and only a few words, but apparently contains Joseph's blessing of Naphtali.
Sources
- Martinez, Florentino GarciaFlorentino Garcia MartinezFlorentino García Martínez is a professor of religion and theology at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands...
, ed. Dead Sea Scrolls Study Edition, vol. 1. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1997. - Oegema, Gerbern S. "Tradition-Historical Studies on 4Q252." Pages 165-85 in Qumran-Messianism. Studies on the Messianic Expectations in the Dead Sea Scrolls. Edited by J. H. Charlesworth, H. Lichtenberger, and G. S. Oegema. Tübingen: J.C.B. Mohr (Paul Siebeck), 1998.