Dibrê Moshe

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Words of Moses
דברי הימים
10 Commandments
MaterialParchment
WritingHebrew
Period/cultureHellenistic period
Identification1QDM; 1Q22
Scans of plate fragments

The Dibrê Moshe, also known as the Dires de Moïse or Words of Moses (identified as 1QDM = 1Q22),[1] is a Hellenistic-Roman era manuscript fragment found among the Dead Sea Scrolls in Qumran Cave 1.[2]

Contents

Name

The Dibrê Moshe is not a name found within the book or a name from a contemporary source. The name was, at earliest, assigned during the 1950s following excavation, translation, and identification efforts.[3]

Summary

Within the fragment, similar to a farewell discourse, God commands Moses to interpret the law for the Israelite community, and predicts that the people will fall away from his worship. Moses then tells his son Eliezer to speak the words of the law. Moses orders the people to choose for themselves who can interpret God's law for them, and then goes on to speak the law. He gives a warning to the people, stating that they should be careful in obeying God's law and keeping their given precepts.[4]

The manuscript is influenced by the structure of Deuteronomy, which itself is a speech by Moses to the people of Israel.[5] The text is seemingly a reworking of Moses's instructions to the Israelites prior to their entrance to Canaan. The total length of the writing is 4 columns.[6]

References

  1. JSTOR 24663194
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  4. ^ Lundberg, Marilyn J. "Commentary on the scrolls: The Words of Moses (1Q22 [1QDM])". Dead Sea Scrolls Foundation. Retrieved 2023-06-23.
  5. ^ Ricks, Stephen D. "1Q22 Words of Moses" (PDF). Brigham Young University. Retrieved 23 Jun 2023.
  6. ^ García Martínez, Florentino; Tigchelaar, Eibert J.C. (1999). The Dead Sea Scrolls Study Edition (PDF). Leiden: Brill Publishers. pp. 59–60.