4QInstruction, ( he, מוסר למבין, Musar leMevin, Instruction to a student), also known as Sapiential Work A or Secret of the Way Things Are, is a Hebrew text among the
Dead Sea Scrolls classified as
wisdom literature. It is authored by a spiritual expert, directed towards a beginner. The author addresses how to deal with business and money issues in a godly manner, public affairs, leadership, marriage, children, and family, and how to live life righteously among secular society. There is some consensus that it dates to the third century BCE.
Manuscripts
4QInstruction is preserved in at least seven fragmentary manuscripts from the
Dead Sea Scrolls found in
Qumran caves one and four, namely: 4Q415, 4Q416, 4Q417, 4Q418, 4Q418a, 4Q423, and 1Q26. These scrolls date approximately from the first century BCE and early first century CE.
History of scholarship
Cave 1 materials were first published by
Józef Milik in
Discoveries in the Judaean Desert 1 in 1955. Cave 4 materials were published in the ''
Discoveries in the Judean Desert'' series in 1999 by
John Strugnell and Daniel Harrington.
[4QInstruction (Musar Le Mevin): 4Q415 ff. with a re-edition of 1Q26, ed. John Strugnell and Daniel J. Harrington, 505-533. DJD 34. Oxford: Clarendon, 1999.] The document is written in Hebrew and is likely to be categorized as "non-sectarian" or perhaps "pre-sectarian".
Among the major studies published on the document are those by Armin Lange (1995),
Daniel J. Harrington (1996), Torleif Elgvin (1998),
John J. Collins
John J. Collins (born 1946) is the Holmes Professor of Old Testament Criticism and Interpretation at Yale Divinity School. He is noted for his research in the Hebrew Bible, as well as the apocryphal works of the Second Temple period including the ...
(1999; 2003),
Eibert Tigchelaar Eibert Johannes Calvinus Tigchelaar (born 1959, Sint Anthoniepolder) is a leading authority and author on the subject of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Formerly he held the position of research associate at the Qumran Instituut (Qumran Institute), Rijksuni ...
(2001), Matthew Goff (2003), Cana Werman (2004),
Benjamin Wold (2018), and Jean-Sebastian Rey (2009).
Authorship and reception history
Parts of six copies were discovered, indicating popularity and importance, especially to the supposed sect at Qumran. All of the Sapiential manuscripts are in
Hebrew, which is deemed the original language of the text. The actual ancient title is unknown, but the frequent use of ''raz nihyeh'', translating to "the mystery of existence," "approaching mystery," or "the way things are" gave reason to title the work "The Secret of the Way Things are". A well-accepted theory is that the Sapiential Work was a pre-Qumranic text. In other words, it was not written for an isolated sect, but it ''was'' directed toward a specific audience. Many scholars assume the text to either have existed before the formation of the sect, or to have been a precursor to sect involvement.
Parallels
Although there is no literal dependence between Daniel and the Sapiential Works, it is likely that they emerged from the same, or similar, scribal circles. Many phrases and ideas from Daniel pertaining to wisdom, revelation, and the elect recur in "The Secret of the Way Things Are." Similarly, both books reflect scribal activity with "a quest for divine communication," and "neither are concerned with the sacrificial cult of the Temple". The Work is also analogous to New Testament scripture, with recurring similarities found in Proverbs and the
Gospel of Matthew. Although the terminology is not consistently parallel, the ideas and themes are comparable.
Contents
This document continues to receive so much attention because it is viewed, on the one hand, as a wisdom document and yet, on the other, has multiple apocalyptic motifs that arise alongside ones. Many major studies have asked questions about the relationship of wisdom to
apocalypticism which has been part of a larger question about categorizing genres, schools and worldviews in Judaism in the
Second Temple period
The Second Temple period in Jewish history lasted approximately 600 years (516 BCE - 70 CE), during which the Second Temple existed. It started with the return to Zion and the construction of the Second Temple, while it ended with the First Jewis ...
.
One of the most discussed passages (4Q417 1 i lines 15–18) from this document is a fragmentary and cryptic description of what many view as angelic involvement in the creation of humanity, which is apparently described in reference to
Genesis 1:26. Some translations find that humanity is divided into those who are among the "Spirit of Flesh" and the "Spiritual People". In addition to the fragmentary nature of these lines and the broader context, the identification of the "Vision of Hagu" and the "sons of Seth/perdition" have led to competing views about implications for the type, or even presence, of
dualism
Dualism most commonly refers to:
* Mind–body dualism, a philosophical view which holds that mental phenomena are, at least in certain respects, not physical phenomena, or that the mind and the body are distinct and separable from one another
** ...
that one should find in 4QInstruction.
Motifs
Although the text itself is not considered
apocalyptic, and does not reflect the developed philosophical dualism of the
War Scrolls or the
Community Rule (1Qs), the text does reflect
motif
Motif may refer to:
General concepts
* Motif (chess composition), an element of a move in the consideration of its purpose
* Motif (folkloristics), a recurring element that creates recognizable patterns in folklore and folk-art traditions
* Moti ...
s of the
end times, judgment, and a predestined division of good and evil. The overall ideas and form of the text are comparable to
Proverbs, Jesus' instructions and parables in the
New Testament gospels, the
book of James
The Epistle of James). is a general epistle and one of the 21 epistles ( didactic letters) in the New Testament.
James 1:1 identifies the author as "James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ" who is writing to "the twelve tribes ...
, and especially the
book of Daniel.
Women
An unusual aspect of this particular text is that it addresses women, which is very uncommon for an ancient Jewish text. 4Q413 appears to give advice to a woman, presumably the wife of the beginner being instructed. This particular section uses feminine verbal forms, rather than the singular forms used throughout the rest of the instruction.
Editions
* Wise, Abegg, and Cook, ''The Dead Sea Scrolls: A New Translation,'' San Francisco: Harper, 2005.
Citations
References
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Further reading
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* Adams, Samuel L. (2010). Rethinking the relationship between "4QInstruction" and "Ben Sira". Revue de Qumran, 555–583.
* Aitken, J. K. (1999). Apocalyptic, revelation and early Jewish wisdom literature. In New Heaven and New Earth. Prophecy and the Millennium (pp. 181–193). Brill.
* An, C. S. (2020). Re-Considering the Meaning and Function of the "Mystery" through the רן נהיה (Raz Nihyeh) in 4QInstruction. Canon & Culture, 14(1), 137–166.
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* Berg, S. A. (2008). Religious epistemologies in the Dead Sea Scrolls: The heritage and transformation of the wisdom tradition. Yale University.
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* Burns, J. E. (2004). Practical Wisdom in 4QInstruction. Dead Sea Discoveries, 12–42.
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* Chazon, E. C. (1999). A Case of Mistaken Identity: Testament of Naphtali (4Q215) and Time of Righteousness (4Q215a). In The Provo International Conference on the Dead Sea Scrolls (pp. 110–123). Brill.
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* Collins, John J. (1997). Wisdom reconsidered, in light of the Scrolls. Dead Sea Discoveries, 265–281.
* Collins, John J. (2003). The mysteries of God: creation and eschatology in 4QInstruction and the Wisdom of Solomon. Wisdom and apocalypticism in the Dead Sea Scrolls and in the biblical tradition, 287–305.
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* Corley, J. (1999). Wisdom of Solomon. The Catholic Biblical Quarterly, 61(1), 120.
* Crenshaw, J. L. (2000). Jewish Wisdom in the Hellenistic Age. The Journal of the American Oriental Society, 120(1), 106-106.
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* Elgvin, Torleif. (1997). An analysis of 4QInstruction. Jerusalem: Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
* Elgvin, Torleif. (2000). Wisdom and apocalypticism in the early second century BCE: the evidence of 4QInstruction. The Dead Sea scrolls fifty years after their discovery, 226–247.
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* Elgvin, Torleif. (2009). From secular to religious language in 4QInstruction". Revue de Qumran, 24(1), 155–163.
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* Goff, Matthew J. (2003). The Mystery of Creation in 4QInstruction. Dead Sea Discoveries, 163–186.
* Goff, Matthew J. (2004). Reading Wisdom at Qumran: 4QInstruction and the Hodayot. Dead Sea Discoveries, 263–288.
* Goff, Matthew J. (2005). Discerning trajectories: 4QInstruction and the sapiential background of the sayings source Q. Journal of Biblical Literature, 124(4), 657–673.
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* Goff, Matthew J. (2009). Recent trends in the study of early Jewish wisdom literature: The contribution of 4QInstruction and other Qumran texts. Currents in Biblical Research, 7(3), 376–416.
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* Goff, Matthew J. (2013). 4QInstruction: A Commentary.
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* Goff, Matthew J. (2017). Gardens of Knowledge: Teachers in Ben Sira, 4QInstruction, and the Hodayot. Pedagogy in Ancient Judaism and Early Christianity, 171–193.
* Goff, Matthew J., Rothschild, C. K., & Thompson, T. W. (2011). Being fleshly or spiritual: Anthropological reflection and exegesis of Genesis 1–3 in 4QInstruction and First Corinthians. Christian body, Christian self, 41–59.
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* Harding, J. E. (2012). Divine knowledge in the Book of Job and 4QInstruction. Far from minimal: Celebrating the work and influence of Philip R. Davies, 173–192.
* Harding, J. E., & Davies, P. (2002). Qumran Cave 4. XXIV: Sapiential Texts, Part 2. 4QInstruction (Mûsār lěMēvîn): 4Q415ff. With a Re-Edition of 1Q26.
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* Harrington, Daniel J. (1997). Ten reasons why the Qumran wisdom texts are important. Dead Sea Discoveries, 245–254.
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* Harrington, Daniel J. (2003). Wisdom and Apocalyptic in 4QInstruction and 4 Ezra. Wisdom and apocalypticism in the Dead Sea Scrolls and in the biblical tradition, 343–355.
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* Hogeterp, A. L. (2013). Immaterial wealth in Luke between wisdom and apocalypticism: Luke's Jesus tradition in light of 4QInstruction. Early Christianity, 4(1), 41–63.
* Jefferies, Daryl F. (2008). Scripture, Wisdom, and Authority in 4QInstruction: Understanding the use of Numbers 30: 8–9 in 4Q416. Hebrew Studies, 87–98.
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* Kim, D. (2019). Qoheleth's Impact on the Qumranic Presentation of the Eschatological Worldview (4QMysteries and 4QInstruction). 성경원문연구, (45), 201–234.
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* Lim, Timothy H. (2010). 4QInstruction: Sagesse et eschatologie. The Catholic Biblical Quarterly, 72(2), 357.
* Lockett, D. R. (2005). The spectrum of wisdom and eschatology in the epistle of James and 4QInstruction. Tyndale Bulletin, 56(2), 131. https://legacy.tyndalehouse.com/tynbul/Library/TynBull_2005_56_2_08_Lockett_James_4QInstruction.pdf
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* Stuckenbruck, L. T. (2002). 4QInstruction and the possible influence of early Enochic traditions: an evaluation. The wisdom texts from Qumran and the development of sapiential thought, 245–261.
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* Tigchelaar, Eibert J. C. (2002). Towards a reconstruction of the beginning of 4QInstruction:(4Q416 fragment 1 and parallels). The wisdom texts from Qumran and the development of sapiential thought, 99–126.
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* Tysk, S. (2021). The Human and the Creation in Relation to the Narrative of the Divine An Ecological Reading of the Letter to the Romans in Comparison with 4QInstruction.
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* Wold, Benjamin G. (2003). To Increase Learning for the Understanding Ones: Reading and Reconstructing the Fragmentary Early Jewish Sapiential Text 4QInstruction.
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* Wold, Benjamin G. (2007). Metaphorical poverty in Musar leMevin. Journal of Jewish studies., 58(1), 140–153.
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* Wold, Benjamin G. (2013). The universality of creation in "4QInstruction". Revue de Qumran, 211–226.
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* Wold, Benjamin G., Stuckenbruck, L. T., & Boccaccini, G. (2016). Jesus among Wisdom's representatives: 4QInstruction. Enoch and the Synoptic Gospels: Reminiscences, Allusions, Intertextuality, 44, 317.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:4QInstruction
2nd-century BC texts
3rd-century BC texts
Ancient Hebrew texts
Dead Sea Scrolls
Essene texts
Wisdom literature