Have you heard of the Dead Sea Scrolls? Discovered in the 1940s and 1950s, they were among the most important archeological finds of the twentieth century. The scrolls were written by ancient Jewish communities between about the third century BCE and first century CE, though some a bit later and some a bit earlier. Moreover, they were remarkably well-preserved, giving scientists and other researchers a glimpse into life in ancient Palestine.<\/span><\/p>\n
A scandal erupted at The Museum Of The Bible in Washington, DC, which claimed to have several fragments of the Dead Sea Scrolls. However, these fragments proved to be fake. In turn, many came to question the integrity of the museum and the scrolls. But is such a reaction justified, and what does science have to say? Read on to learn more about the authenticity of the Dead Sea scrolls.<\/span><\/p>\n
The story behind the Dead Sea Scrolls is as legendary as the documents themselves. A Bedouin boy and his friends were throwing rocks into a cave in Palestine, near the Dead Sea, and heard smashing sounds. When the boy went inside to see what he had broken, he found clay pots that he had accidentally shattered.<\/span><\/p>\n
Inside the clay pots were ancient fragments of scrolls<\/a> written between the fourth century BCE and the second century CE. These scrolls are what came to be known as the Dead Sea Scrolls.<\/span><\/p>\n
The best-preserved ancient relics in the world come from dry climates, where the aridity prevents artifacts from decomposing. Ancient Sumer had a civilization that might have been at least as developed as Ancient Egypt’s. However, we have more Egyptian artifacts (and therefore a better understanding of Egyptian history) because the desert preserved more.<\/span><\/p>\n
The air around the Dead Sea is sweltering and dry, due to the high salt content of the Dead Sea<\/a> and the fact that the Dead Sea basin is the lowest land place in the world. The Dead Sea scrolls were not perfectly preserved, but many of the fragments are readable.<\/span><\/p>\n
When the Bedouin children went back home to show what they had found, a horde of archeologists, antiquities dealers, and black-market peddlers descended on the caves to see for themselves. They found thousands of fragments – to date, at least 15,000 – spread across 11 caves.<\/span><\/p>\n
Those 15,000 fragments are part of approximately 800 to 900 manuscripts<\/a>. Many of the scripts are books of the Hebrew Bible (for Christians, the Old Testament) or variations of those books, as the texts of the Dead Sea Scrolls do not always correspond with the version of the Bible. The Dead Sea Scrolls also include other religious writings of ancient Jewish communities. <\/span><\/p>\n
Qumran<\/a> was a village near the Dead Sea and close to the caves that house the Dead Sea Scrolls. The site was abandoned around 68 BCE, and many of the scrolls have been dated to about the time that the Qumran community was occupied.<\/span><\/p>\n
The Essenes<\/a> were a Jewish sect in ancient Palestine that lived ascetic lives in the desert. They did not engage in public life, such as in the proceedings of the Sanhedrin (the Jewish ruling body) or the Temple (the seat of Jewish worship). They also had rigorous observance of Jewish law.<\/span><\/p>\n
The scrolls of Cave 4, out of the 11 Dead Sea caves that have been found to contain ancient scrolls, seem to be an Essenic library.<\/a> They have an almost complete Hebrew Bible, minus the book of Esther, and many sectarian writings that are consistent with what we know about the Essenes.<\/span><\/p>\n
The original Dead Sea Scrolls were first discovered in 1947. Once their authenticity had been verified, archeologists began working hard to search for other possible ancient finds in the surrounding areas. <\/span><\/p>\n
They continued finding scrolls<\/a> in the caves around the Dead Sea through the 1960s. Archeologists had to verify the authenticity of the scrolls they were finding because unethical treasure hunters could have put fake scrolls in the caves to give the impression that they were worth a lot of money. The black market in antiquities is no joke.<\/span><\/p>\n
The Bar Kokhba Revolt<\/a> was a Jewish revolt against Rome that occurred in about 132-135 CE. The Roman Empire occupied Palestine and had already destroyed the Jewish Temple in about 70 CE. The Bar Kokhba Revolt was an unsuccessful attempt to force the Romans out of Palestine, and it led to the expulsion of nearly the entire Jewish community from the land.<\/span><\/p>\n
One scroll that archeologists found contains the texts of the 12 minor prophets<\/a>, each with a book in the Hebrew Bible. The scroll was remarkably well-preserved, and the writings of the minor prophets were almost identical to the text that has been preserved in the canonical Bible.<\/span><\/p>\n
While some of the scrolls were preserved in remarkably good condition, some of them were not. The Essenic library of cave 4 is one such example; many of the fragments have been pieced together by experts and deciphered, but doing so took an immense amount of time, money, and skill.<\/span><\/p>\n
Some other scrolls found include the Temple Scroll, which provided detailed instructions for building the ideal Jewish Temple, and the War Scroll, which has many Gnostic ideas in its text that may have led to the mystical system of Kabbalah. There are also commentaries on books of the Hebrew Bible, such as the Psalms.<\/span><\/p>\n
Piecing together the brittle fragments of hundreds of 2000-year-old scrolls was a monumental undertaking. It required cooperation among many research universities and the antiquities authorities of both Jordan (which oversaw the West Bank, where the scrolls were discovered, until 1967) and of Israel.<\/span><\/p>\n
The immense effort has paid off. All of the scrolls<\/a> have been pieced together and deciphered, and the resulting texts have been published. If you are interested in reading the Dead Sea Scrolls, you can look at one of many online databases. But be forewarned – there are nearly 1000 scrolls.<\/span><\/p>\n
The Jordan and Israel departments of antiquities have faced criticism for not allowing researchers access to the Dead Sea Scrolls. Complaints suggested that the authorities only allowed local researchers, not international teams, access to the scrolls.<\/span><\/p>\n
Without independent teams from outside also studying the scrolls, there was no way to verify what the Jordanian and Israeli teams were saying. When the texts of the Dead Sea Scrolls were published in 1991<\/a>, Israel lifted the veil of secrecy over the scrolls and provided researchers with more access. Today, anyone who has internet access can read the texts.<\/span><\/p>\n
The Shrine of the Book<\/a> is a museum in Israel that houses artifacts related to the ancient Hebrew Bible. Most of the Dead Sea Scrolls are located there, and some are on display. Many of the scrolls are housed at a similar institution, the Israel Museum.<\/span><\/p>\n
Many researchers from different fields at numerous universities have conducted tests and studied the Dead Sea Scrolls. They have been at various institutions, especially universities and museums, where researchers can review them.<\/span><\/p>\n
Some of the scrolls are on display at The Jordan Museum<\/a> in Amman, the capital of Jordan, because Jordan has custodianship of some of the scrolls. Others have had temporary homes at places like Yale University and the British Museum. There have also been reproductions of the Dead Sea Scrolls made for display at institutions around the world.<\/span><\/p>\n
Some people have been able to see the Dead Sea Scrolls because of traveling exhibits that have featured the scrolls. Often these exhibits feature reproductions of the scrolls, but the prints are made with exquisite detail to make them as close to the original as possible.<\/span><\/p>\n
But if you want to see the Dead Sea Scrolls for yourself, your best option is to go to Jerusalem and see them at The Shrine of the Book<\/a>, or else go to the other side of the Jordan River and visit The Jordan Museum in Amman.<\/span><\/p>\n
The Dead Sea Scrolls have gone a long way in showing the authenticity of the Hebrew Bible. They prove that the text is much older than the third century BCE, as some critics of the Bible have suggested. The Dead Sea Scrolls are the earliest known copies of the Hebrew Bible. <\/span><\/p>\n
Because of their central role in supporting the authenticity of the Bible, The Museum Of The Bible<\/a> fragments of the Dead Sea Scrolls are featured in the entryway to the museum, but they are no longer there.<\/span><\/p>\n
The Museum Of The Bible<\/a>, located in Washington, DC, has been open since 2017. Hobby Lobby, the national craft franchise that is well-known for its conservative Christian views, was a vital funder in the museum’s opening and the National Christian Foundation.<\/span><\/p>\n
The Dead Sea Scrolls are real. The Bible is real. How the actual Dead Sea Scrolls demonstrate, the authenticity of the Bible is real. However, the fragments that were on display at The Museum Of The Bible were not genuine. They were forgeries.<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n
When a significant archeological discovery happens, looters sometimes beat archeologists to the scene. That is what happened when the Bedouin boy first smashed the pot in a cave and unwittingly discovered the first of the Dead Sea Scrolls.<\/span><\/p>\n
Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, many of the scrolls’ fragments were sold by a dealer known as Kando<\/a>. He sold them to institutions worldwide, as universities and museums could not get enough of the most important find of the twentieth century. <\/span><\/p>\n
Nevertheless, the selling of the Dead Sea Scrolls came to an end around 1970, when the United Nations implemented new cultural property guidelines, particularly regarding antiquities. Israel<\/a> also instated strong laws protecting its antiquities, so getting artifacts out of the country became much more difficult.<\/span><\/p>\n
Around 75<\/a> alleged fragments of the Dead Sea Scrolls mysteriously entered the market around 2002. Many were the size of small coins, and they were on material that strongly resembled the scrolls that researchers had been studying.<\/span><\/p>\n
When determining the authenticity of artifacts that an institution possesses, scientists look at the chain of custody. The chain of custody says who has owned the artifact from the time it was discovered. The 2002 fragments did not have a reliable chain of custody.<\/span><\/p>\n
Some of the fragments were found to be forgeries, so researchers and analysts concluded that they are probably all forgeries, made from the same person or group of people. Ultimately, all of the fragments<\/a> that appeared in the early 2000s are forgeries. They are not from the fragments that Kando sold to dealers during the 1950s and 1960s.<\/span><\/p>\n
Steve Green<\/a>, president of Hobby Lobby and founder of The Museum Of The Bible, was one of the many collectors who managed to get his hands on the alleged fragments of the Dead Sea Scrolls. He, like many others, believed that the pieces he acquired were legitimate. Those fragments became the central feature of The Museum Of The Bible. <\/span><\/p>\n
How does one tell if an artifact is real or fake? Beyond verifying a chain of custody, modern science has a lot to contribute. Dating materials, determining the kind of material on which the text was written, and examining the ink<\/a> used to write it all helped Colette Loll in her investigation.<\/span><\/p>\n
Loll was able to determine that the material on which the fragments owned by The Museum Of The Bible was as old as the real Dead Sea Scrolls. However, it was not parchment<\/a>, as was used on the other scrolls. It was leather, leather that had been preserved for two millennia.<\/span><\/p>\n
One thing that tipped off the people investigating the fragments was the text itself. One clue was that the text was written in a corner<\/a> in a way that the earliest Jewish writers did not write. Another clue was that the ink used was not the same kind of ink used in the real Dead Sea Scrolls.<\/span><\/p>\n
Representatives<\/a> from The Museum Of The Bible quickly removed the forgeries and made sure to preserve the museum’s integrity. They acknowledged that the fragments were not authentic and that the tests done on their pieces would help other researchers working on the real Dead Sea Scrolls.<\/span><\/p>\n
Stories like the ones from The Museum Of The Bible, in which artifacts that demonstrate the Bible’s authenticity are proven to be forgeries, tend to dampen people’s trust in the Bible itself. Nevertheless, the fact is that the real Dead Sea Scrolls<\/a> are not forgeries.<\/span><\/p>\n
There are some things that science cannot prove, such as whether or not the beliefs of the Essenes and other ancient Jewish communities are objectively and universally true. There are some things that science can prove, such as whether fragments of the <\/span>Dead Sea Scrolls are real or fake.<\/span><\/p>\n
Whether artifacts are in the realm of religion, geology, biology, or any other field, science can help determine how old they are and uncover valuable information. Something that science cannot do is apologize for getting something wrong – people have to do that. And the leadership at The Museum Of The Bible did.<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n
Being able to tell the real Dead Sea Scrolls from fake forgeries is a hallmark of modern science and how science and religion can work together. Moreover, science can help us better understand the real Dead Sea Scrolls because they have a lot to teach us about the Bible and ancient Jewish life<\/a>.<\/span><\/p>\n