Introduction to the analysis of Essex and the Dead Sea "The grass withers, the flowers fall, but our God's word is always there", 1957, 401) I will be what he brought Isaiah 40.2 in 1947 I do not know. The shepherd boy climbed the cracks of the rock wall of Wadi Kumran north of the Dead Sea and around Gully. He threw a stone at the opening, thinking he could evacuate to that hole.
Essen was a religious scholar of the Jewish monastery appeared near Kumran in about 200 B.C. A series of works by Essex, a scroll of the Dead Sea discovered in 1947, reveals the complete scroll of Isaiah. This discovery helps to make sure that Isaiah 's prophecy is true and written before it is realized. Isaiah is the most quoted prophet in the New Testament, and the number of Hebrew Bible quotations found in the New Testament follows the Psalms. For example, Matthew 1:23 refers to Isaiah 7:14, and horses can refer to the gospel of Isaiah 40: 3. Paul quoted Isaiah three times in the Romans 9th section - Isaiah 10: 22-23, Romans 9: 27, Isaiah 1: 9, Romans 9: 29, Isaiah 28: 16, Rome 9: 33 2 Peter 1: 24 refers to Isaiah 40: 6 - 8. "All flesh is like grass, grass withers, flowers disappear, but the word of the Lord always exists."
Ancient Hebrew scrolls discovered by Bedouin boys in 1947 evoked the enthusiasm and academic interest of people in the past half century. The source of this excitement is that these dead sea documents reveal the history of the second temple era (520 BC - 70 AD), especially the destruction of the second temple from the 2nd century BC to the 1970s. Discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls caused intense debate in academia on their date and the community identity they represent. After the Dead Sea Scrolls period was approved, we saw the Essene hypothesis. The Essen hypothesis, the scroll of the Dead Sea is also known as the text of Kumran, as Essen lived in Kumulan pointed out that it is the ruins of the Essen Library. James C. VanderKam and Frank M. Cross agree with the Essene hypothesis. They use classical materials and are using them as proof of dead sea scrolls. With t!
Many scholars believe that there is a connection between the early church in the apostolic period and the so-called "Kumran - Essen community". Scrolls of the Dead Sea were discovered in Kumulan, and most historians and archaeologists consider this to be the village of Essen. John the Baptist is considered a "contact" with Essen, or the Khirbet Qumran community. According to the apostolic speech, Paul encountered "disciples of John" at Ephesus. Some people believe that the "disciples" mentioned in Acts 19: 1-7 are disciples of John the Baptist, due to the terms of Qumranic and the influence of Paul's letter on Ephesians' ideas. This view thinks that John is Essen and is being discussed by scholars. When John the Baptist was baptized, Essex used ceremonial wash, also known as bathing as a form of spiritual purification.