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Thanksgiving Scroll [Kõva köide]

(Professor of Religious Studies (Emerita), McMaster University), (Charles Howard Candler Professor Emerita of Old Testament/Hebrew Bible, Emory University)
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1QHa was one of the first Dead Sea Scrolls discovered by the Bedouin in 1947 and is recognized as one of the most important. Also known as Hodayot, it contains a collection of psalms, addressed to God, in which the author(s) give thanks to God for deliverance, salvation, knowledge, and divine mercy. The Thanksgiving Scroll by Carol A. Newsom and Eileen M. Schuller is the first commentary based on 1QHa as reconstructed by Hartmut Stegemann and Émile Puech, with the revision of 1QHa 1-8 by Michael Johnson. The Hebrew text and the division of the scroll into twenty-four compositions largely follows that established by Stegemann. The Introduction also includes accounts of the history of publication, reconstruction, and interpretation of the Hodayot, as well as information on the material aspects of 1QHa, its paleography, and scribal practices, much of which was not included in the previous edition in Discoveries in the Judaean Desert 40.

In this commentary, attention is given primarily to exegetical, literary, and rhetorical issues. In contrast to the earlier distinction between Teacher Psalms and Community Psalms, Newsom and Schuller attribute all the non-Teacher Psalms to the work of various Maskilim, the instructors and liturgical leaders of the Yahad. Internal evidence from 1QHa and comparison with the Hodayot manuscripts from Cave 4 (4QHa-f) provide grounds for identifying three successive editions in the growth of the Hodayot collections that appear to have served different functions. The careful editorial framework provided by Maskil Psalms (cols. 9, 18-19, plus 15:29-16:4) contains numerous intertextual allusions to the Teacher Psalms (cols. 10-17)--which form the core of the collection--and supplies grounds for understanding the Teacher Psalms as compositions by the Teacher of Righteousness.
Carol A. Newsom is Charles Howard Candler Professor Emerita of Old Testament/Hebrew Bible at Emory University, where she taught in the School of Theology from 1980 to 2019. As a member of the international team of editors of the Dead Sea Scrolls, she edited the Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice, the Apocryphon of Joshua, and other texts. Her work includes commentaries and monographs on the Dead Sea Scrolls, the book of Job, the book of Daniel, and Second Temple selfhood. In 2011, Newsom served as the president of the Society of Biblical Literature and was elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2016. She received the Burkitt Medal from the British Academy in 2025.



Eileen M. Schuller is Professor Emerita of Religious Studies at McMaster University, where she also held the Senator Wiliam McMaster Chair in the Study of Religion. Her scholarly work focuses on prayer and psalmic texts from the Dead Sea Scrolls, especially the Cave 1 and Cave 4 manuscripts of the Hodayot. Schuller previously served as president of the Catholic Biblical Association and the Canadian Society of Biblical Studies.