Chapter 7: The Dead Sea
Scrolls and the Gospel of Barn p2
"It (Pesher Habakkuk) describes the
struggle between the Teacher of Righteousness and his opponents
- the Man of Lies (also termed the Spouter or Preacher of Lies)
and the Wicked Priest. The Spouter is
pictured as heading a community. The dispute between the teacher
and the Spouter is seems to have been based on matters of
religious interpretation and law. The wicked priest is said to
have begun his rule in truth but then to have abandoned the way
of truth. He then persecutes the Teacher, confronting him on the
holiest day of the year, the Day of Atonement."
Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls, Lawrence H.
Schiffman, p. 228
This prophesy continues in Pesher
Psalms:
"This text also mentions the familiar
dramatis personae: the Teacher of Righteousness, termed 'the
priest'; the wicked priest; and the Man of Lies. The Wicked
Priest persecuted the Teacher and sought to
kill him. The man of lies lead people astray".
Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls, Lawrence H.
Schiffman, p. 229
In Pesher Psalms A 1 III
15-16 we read
"Its interpretation (Psalms 37:23) refers
to the priest, the Teacher of Righteousness whom God promised
would arise, for He (God) prepared (i.e., predestined) him (the
teacher) to build for Him a congregation".
Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls, Lawrence H.
Schiffman, p. 120
What we begin to see in all of this is the
story of the coming of Jesus (pbuh), his selection of Judas as
one of the apostles, the deviance of Judas from the truth, how a
sect of the Jews persecuted Jesus (pbuh), how this sect tried to
deceive the masses and differed with Jesus (pbuh) regarding the
truth of God's message, and finally, how they schemed with Judas
to kill Jesus (pbuh). The Teacher of Righteousness
is thus a reference to Jesus (pbuh); the "priestly" messiah. The
Wicked Priest is a reference to Judas, and
the Spouter of Lies is most likely the
leader of the "chief priests and Pharisees" who persecuted Jesus
(pbuh) and are mentioned so often in the Bible, or it may be a
reference to Paul himself.
Many Christian scholars have snatched up these
prophesies in order to prove the validity of their claim that
Jesus (pbuh) was indeed sent by God and that the Jews are
required to follow him. However, they have been thwarted in
their attempts by one other quite amazing piece of evidence that
the Jews continually manage to refute their claims with,
specifically, that the Dead Sea Scrolls claim that the first
messiah will be persecuted and that the Wicked Priest
will try to kill him, but that the Wicked Priest will not be
successful and that it is he who will receive the fate he wished
for the messiah.
"The Wicked Priest went so far as to lie in
ambush for the Teacher of Righteousness.
In interpreting Psalms 37:32, "The Wicked watches for the
righteous, seeking to put him to death," the text states: 'Its
interpretation concerns the Wicked Priest who watched out for
the Teacher of Righteousness and sought to put him to death'
Pesher Psalms A 1-10 IV 8-9"
Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls, Lawrence H.
Schiffman, p. 233
So Judas will try to kill Jesus (pbuh).
In Pesher Habakkuk 11:4-8
we read
"Its interpretation (Habakkuk 2:15)
concerns the Wicked Priest, who pursued the Teacher of
Righteousness to swallow him up
with his wrathful anger to the place of his exile. And at the
time of the day of rest of the Day of Atonement, he (the Wicked
Priest) appeared before them to swallow them up and to make them
stumble on the day of the fast of their abstention from work."
Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls, Lawrence H.
Schiffman, p. 120
"The Wicked Priest began his career with
the support of the sectarians, but he quickly lost his way and
began to transgress in order to increase his wealth".
Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls, Lawrence H.
Schiffman, p. 233
Remember Matthew 26:15
"And said unto them, What will ye give me,
and I will deliver him unto you? And they covenanted with him
for thirty pieces of silver".
"Various theories have sought to identify
the Teacher with Jesus, claiming that he was executed by the
Wicked Priest. Had that been the case, the text would not have
gone on to explain how God took vengeance against the priest by
turning him over to the 'ruthless ones of the nations'. And
according to this text, the teacher certainly survived the
ambush. Indeed the entire passage is an interpretation of Psalms
where the text continues, "The Lord will not abandon him (the
Righteous), into his hand (the Wicked); He will not let him (the
Righteous) be condemned in judgment (by the wicked)."
Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls, Lawrence H.
Schiffman, pp. 233-234
The author goes on to quote Pesher
Habakkuk with regard to the Wicked Priest's
intentions and his punishment. He says:
"Ultimately, however, the Wicked Priest was
punished: '.. because of his transgression against the Teacher
of Righteousness and the men of his council, God gave him over
to the hands of his enemies to afflict him with disease so as to
destroy him with mortal suffering because he had acted wickedly
against His chosen one'. The Wicked Priest's enemies tortured
him which represents divine punishment for his attacks on the
Teacher of Righteousness. The sufferings of the Wicked Priest
are even more graphically described in another passage: 'and all
his enemies arose and abused him in order for his suffering to
be fit punishment for his evil. And they inflicted upon him
horrible diseases, and acts of vengeance in the flesh of his
body'. The one who suffered was the Wicked Priest, not the
Teacher of Righteousness. The enemies of the Wicked Priest, the
nation against whom he had made war, are said to have tortured
him, so that his life ended in mortal disease and affliction."
Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls, Lawrence H.
Schiffman, p. 234
Pesher Habakkuk 9:9-10
reads:
"Its interpretation (Habakkuk 2:8) concerns
the Wicked Priest, who, because of (his) transgression against
the Teacher of Righteousness and
the men of his council, God handed over into the hands of his
enemies to afflict him..."
Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls, Lawrence H.
Schiffman, p. 119
If we were to read the Gospel of Barnabas,
we would find that when Judas came with the Roman troops in
order to betray Jesus (pbuh), God raised Jesus (pbuh) unto Him
and saved him. He then made Judas look and even speak like Jesus
(pbuh) so that the Romans dragged Judas away with them kicking
and screaming that he was not Jesus (pbuh) but Judas. Even the
apostles were totally bewildered.
After the Romans had their fill afflicting
Judas with all manner of abuse and torture, he was finally taken
to trial. He was asked many times whether he was Jesus (pbuh)
and each time he replied that he was not Jesus but Judas and
that Jesus had utilized his black magic in order to alter his
form and make him resemble Jesus. Of course, no one believed
him. The most his pleas succeeded in doing was to convince some
that Jesus was a lunatic. This turn of events appears to be
supported by the New Testament where we find that whenever Jesus
was asked, "art thou Jesus?" He would reply "Thou
sayest"(Matthew 27:11, Mark 15:2). This would be a completely
logical response if he was not Jesus but Judas and he had been
abused, ridiculed and mocked to the point that he had given up
all hope of being believed. In other words, what Judas meant by
"thou sayest" was, "you will not believe me if I say otherwise,
so why fight it any more."
Judas' enemies (the Romans) then took him and
resumed their abuse. They mocked him, kicked him, cut him, spat
on him, humiliated him, and tortured him. Finally, they put him
up on the cross. It appears, however, that shortly
after they took him down, he disappeared from his tomb (perhaps
to live in disease and torment and die later on if he was not
already dead). The Gospel of Barnabas
then goes on to describe how Jesus (pbuh) returned to the
apostles to tell them of how God had saved him from the hands of
the Jews and the Romans, raised him up into heaven, and how the
traitor (Judas) was taken instead.
Once again this chain of events appears to be
supported by the New Testament where we find that uncertainty
regarding the fate of Judas has resulted in contradicting
narrations in it's different books. For example, in Matthew 27:5 Judas is depicted as having felt severe remorse, handed over his
blood money to the custodians of the great Temple, and then gone
out and hung himself out of shame and remorse. However, in Acts 1:19 far from displaying remorse, Judas is depicted as having
purchased a field with his ill gotten gains and then one day
while he was out walking he tripped, fell down, and his internal
organs burst out. In this manner, divine justice took vengeance
against the traitor.
Conservative scholars have tried to harmonize
these two conflicting narrations for centuries now, trying to
make sense of how in one place it is Judas who purchased the
field himself, and in the other it is the chief priests who
purchased it. Similarly, in one place Judas died by hanging
himself, and in the other he triped and his bowels gush out. In
one he was remorseful and in the other he displayed no signs of
remorse. As a partial solution to this dilemma, some
conservative scholars have suggested that Judas hung himself,
the rope broke, he fell down and then his bowels gushed out. In
other words, they have taken two contradictory accounts, added
in additional details found in neither one, and then come up
with a completely new account supported by neither.
As mentioned previously, it is quite possible
that the elusive Q document which Christian scholars believe to
be the source document for the first three Gospels, (Matthew,
Mark and Luke) is indeed the Gospel of Barnabas.
This Gospel, once again, appears to have had a strong influence
on our current day New Testament, however, the denial of Judas
has now taken on various new forms, for example:
In one (Matthew 26:64), Jesus is taken before
the high priest who commands him to answer "whether thou be
the Christ, the Son of God." Jesus replies: "Thou has
said."
In the next Gospel (Mark 14:61), Jesus is
asked the question by the High Priest but this time he is
depicted as having answered it directly and courageously. In
this version, Jesus affirms "I am�"
However, In Luke 22:67, Jesus now returns to
the original "thou sayest" position, albeit with different
words. In this version he says: "If I tell you, ye will not
believe" Once again, confirming the narration of the Gospel
of Barnabas.
Further evidence in support of my assertion
that Q may in fact be the Gospel of Barnabas
is the fact that the final (Non-Synoptic) Gospel, that of John,
contains no mention of the High Priest's question or Jesus'
claimed reply. In the Johnine version (John 18:19-23), the
questions and answers are quite different than the first three
Gospels. The author of the Gospel of Mark appears to have
modified the original response in order to depict Jesus as
fearlessly answering their questions directly, and heroically
standing his ground welcoming their persecution with open arms.
On the other hand the other two (Matthew and Luke) still retain
the original text reflecting Judas' frustration in the face of
the persecution he had intended for his master.
For 1400 years now the Qur'an has been telling
us that Jesus (pbuh) was not forsaken by God to be killed by the
conspiracy of the Jews and Judas but that "it was made to
appear so unto them." Although we as Muslims may never know
for certain the details of how this transpired since the Qur'an
does not give us these details, still, we read:
"But when Jesus became conscious of their
disbelief, he cried: Who will be my helpers in the cause of
Allah? The disciples said: We will be Allah's helpers. We
believe in Allah, and bear you witness that we have surrendered
(unto Him). Our Lord! We believe in that which You have revealed
and we follow him whom You have sent. Enroll us among those who
witness (to the truth). And they (the disbelievers) schemed, and
Allah schemed (against them): and Allah is the best of schemers"
The noble Qur'an, A'l-Umran(3):52-54.
"And because of their saying: We slew the
Messiah Jesus son of Mary, Allah's messenger, and they slew him
not nor crucified, but a similitude of that was shown unto them;
and lo! those who disagree concerning it are in doubt thereof;
they have no knowledge thereof save the pursuit of conjecture;
for of a surety they slew him not"
The noble Qur'an, Al-Nissa(4):157
Those among the Children of Israel who
disbelieved were cursed by the tongue of David and Jesus, son of
Mary. That was because they disobeyed and were ever
transgressing. They used not to forbid one another from the evil
which they committed. Vile indeed was what they used to do. You
see many of them taking the disbelievers as their protectors and
helpers. Evil indeed is that which their ownselves have sent
forward before them, for that (reason) Allah's Wrath fell upon
them and in torment they will abide. And had they believed in
Allah, and in the Prophet (Muhammad, pbuh) and in what has been
revealed to him, never would they have taken them (the
disbelievers) as protectors and helpers, but many of them are
the rebellious, the disobedient to Allah. Verily, you will find
the strongest among men in enmity to the believers (Muslims) the
Jews and the polythiests, and you will find the nearest in love
to the believers (Muslims) those who say: "We are Christians."
That is because amongst them are priests and monks, and they are
not proud. And when they listen to what has been sent down to
the Messenger (Muhammad, pbuh), you see their eyes overflowing
with tears because of the truth they have recognised. They say:
"Our Lord! We believe; so write us down among the witnesses.
"And why should we not believe in Allah and in that which has
come to us of the truth? And we wish that our Lord will admit us
(in Paradise) along with the righteous people. So because of
what they said, Allah rewarded them Gardens under which rivers
flow (in Paradise), they will abide therein forever. Such is the
reward of good�doers. But those who disbelieved and belied Our
signs they shall be the dwellers of the (Hell) Fire.
The noble Qur'an, Al-Maidah(5): 78-86
The scrolls then go on to describe how "Kittim"
(the Roman empire) and the kings of Greece would both try to
take Jerusalem (the symbol of the faithful), but that it would
be Kittim (the Romans) who would finally be successful. Remember
how in chapter one we described the stages of how the Roman
empire eventually took control of the whole Christian religion
and "protected" it and "spread" it after it was "clarified" and
it's doctrines established and preserved through Greek
philosophy and writing?
"Some texts also speak about an
eschatological prophet who will announce the coming of the
messiah, a figure similar to Elijah in the rabinnic tradition"
Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls, Lawrence H.
Schiffman, p. 323
Once again, please read section 6.1 where it
is made abundantly clear that not only were the Jews expecting a
prophet to "clear the way" for Jesus (pbuh) and "announce" him
(this was John the Baptist), but they
also expected a second messiah to come after Jesus (pbuh).
Referring to the manuscript titled The Rule of
the Community, verse 9:11-12, Mr. Schiffman says:
"this text unquestionably refers to two
messiahs, Dual Messiah prophesy who
will be announced by an eschatological prophet. Based on a the
cave 4 manuscripts of Rule of the Community, the original
publication team argued that this passage was added to the text
later in the history of the sect. However, the evidence in these
manuscripts does not sufficiently support such an assertion. As
far as we can tell, the two-messiah concept was part of Rule of
the Community from the time it was composed".
Reclaiming the Dead Sea Scrolls, Lawrence H.
Schiffman, p. 324
"Until the coming of the Prophet and both
the priestly and the lay Messiahs, these men are not to depart
from the clear intent of the law to walk in any way in the
stubbornness of their own hearts. They shall judge by the
original laws in which the community was schooled from the
beginning"
Manual of Discipline 9:8-11 (The Dead Sea
Scrolls and Gospel of Barnabas)
"And these, in specific form, are the
regulations which they are to follow throughout the Era of
Wickedness, until the priestly and lay Messiahs enter upon their
office expiate and expiates their inequities"
Zadokite Document 14:18 (The Dead Sea Scrolls
and Gospel of Barnabas)
Mr M. A. Yusseff relates in his book:
"In the late second century, as the Memoirs
of Hegesippus says, a man was found collecting traditions about
the life and ministry of Jesus from the Nazarenes and Christians
in order to write a general ecclesiastical history. Whatever was
the nature of such an ecclesiastical history, one thing can be
said for sure that the traditions carried prophesies about the
Messiah who was to come after Jesus. So pervasive was their
presence in the ecclesiastical literature that even the
Nicolaitans Church of Rome retained them, though in a distorted
from"
The Dead Sea Scrolls, the Gospel of Barnabas,
and the New Testament, M. A. Yusseff, p. 109
To see how the Jews recognized these
prophesies and indeed acted upon them in anticipation of the
arrival of their final Messiah in Arabia, please read chapter
10.
"And when there came unto them (the Jews) a
Scripture from Allah, confirming that in their possession though
before that they were invoking Allah (for the coming of
Muhammad, the last Messiah) in order to gain victory over those
who disbelieved, then when there came unto them that which they
had recognized, they disbelieved in it. So let the curse of
Allah be on the disbelievers"
The noble Qur'an, Al-Baqarah(2):89
The Dead Sea Scrolls make mention of many more
quite amazing and illuminating prophesies and parallels with the
teachings of the Qur'an and Islam. There are also many parallels
with the historical series of events presented in this book,
such as the reference to the "seekers of smooth things"
(simplifying the law of the religion) which sound amazingly
similar to the description of Paul and his followers who
"simplified" the religion of Jesus after his departure and
removed all obligation from it all the while claiming that his
authority came directly from "visions" of Jesus (pbuh). He is
even quoted, while preaching this removal of obligation and the
law, as saying
"But I fear, lest by any means, as the
serpent beguiled eve through his subtlety, so your minds should
be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ"
2 Corinthians 11:3 (also see 2 Corinthians 1:12, Romans 3:28, etc.)
"When the prayer was ended, the priest said
with a loud voice: 'Stay Jesus, for we need to know who you are,
for the quieting of our nation.' Jesus answered 'I am Jesus son
of Mary, of the seed of David, a man who is mortal and fears
God, and I seek that God be given honor and glory.' The priest
answered, 'In the book of moses it is written that our God must
send us the Messiah, who shall come to announce to us that which
God willed, and shall bring to the world His mercy. Therefore, I
pray, tell us the truth, are you the Messiah of God whom we
expect?' Jesus answered 'It is true that God has so promised,
but indeed I am not he, for he was made before me, and shall
come after me.' The priest answered, 'By your words and signs at
any rate we believe you to be a prophet and a holy one of God. I
pray in the name of all Judea and Israel that you, for love of
God, should tell us how the Messiah will come.' Jesus answered,
'As God lives, in whose presence my soul stands, I am not the
Messiah whom all of the tribes of the earth expect, even as God
promised to our father Abraham saying: "In your
seed will I bless all of the tribes of the earth" But when God
shall take me away from the world, Satan will raise again this
accursed sedition, by making the impious believe that I am God
the Son of God. At such time, my words and my doctrine shall be
contaminated so much that scarcely shall there remain thirty
faithful ones. At that time, God will have mercy upon the world
and will send his messenger for whom He has made all things. He
shall come from the South with power and shall destroy the idols
and the idolaters. He shall take away the dominion which Satan
has over men. He shall bring with him the mercy of God for
salvation of those who shall believe in his words'"
The Gospel of Barnabas,
96
"Then the disciples wept after this
discourse, and Jesus was also weeping, and when they saw many
who came to find him, for the chief of priests took council
among themselves to catch him in his talk. They sent the Levites
and some of the scribes to question him, saying, 'Who are you?'
Jesus confessed and said the truth, 'I am not the Messiah.' They
said, 'Are you Elijah or Jeremiah, or any of the other ancient
prophets?' Jesus answered 'No' Then they said, 'Who are you?
Say, in order that we may give testimony to those who sent us.'
Then said Jesus, 'I am a voice that cries through all Judea, and
cries, "Prepare you the way for the messenger of the Lord," even
as it is written in Esaias.' They said, 'If you are not the
Messiah or Elijah, or any prophet, why do you preach new
doctrine, and make yourself more important than the Messiah?'
Jesus answered, 'The miracles which God works by my hands show
that I speak that which God wills; nor do I make myself to be
accounted as him of whom you speak. For I am not worthy to
loosen the shoe straps of the messenger of God whom you call
"Messiah," who was made before me, and shall come after me. And
shall bring the words of truth, so that his faith shall have no
end.' The Levites and the scribes departed in confusion, and
recounted to the chiefs of the priests, who said, 'He has the
devil on his back who recounted all to him'"
The Gospel of Barnabas,
42
Mr. Yusseff says:
"In sir Godfrey Higgins' notable work
Anacalypsis, we are told that in the book of Haggi, the name of
the Messiah who was to come after Jesus appears in chapter two,
verse seven: 'And the desire of all nations shall come' Here the
Hebrew word HMD* [translated as
'desire'], from the Hebrew text appears in Sir Higgins' work
with the following explanation of the root word HMD. 'From this
root,' (says Parkhurst,) 'The pretended prophet Mohammed, or
Mahomet, had his name.' Sir Higgins says, 'Here Mohammed' is
expressly foretold by Haggi, and by name; there is no
interpolation here. There is no evading this clear text and it's
meaning, as it appeared to the mind of the most unwilling of
witnesses, Parkhurst, and a competent judge too when he happened
to not be warped by prejudice. He does not suppress his opinion
here, as he did in the Wisdom of the Jerusalem Targum, because
he had no object to serve; he did not see to what this truth
would lead."
The Dead Sea Scrolls, the Gospel of Barnabas,
and the New Testament, M. A. Yusseff, pp. 110-111
Other Ancient Religions and Scriptures:
There is much more that could be said about
the Dead Sea Scrolls and their confirmation of the Qur'an and
the mission of Muhammad (pbuh), however, that will have to be
left to a future book where, God willing, many more examples of
this sort shall be analyzed in detail. However, before closing
this topic, I would like to pose the following question: Are the
Gospel of Barnabas and the Dead Sea
Scrolls the only two ancient scriptures that prophesy the coming
of a final messenger of God from Arabia? This was a question
that I wrestled with for some time. Muslims are told that Allah
Almighty had been sending messengers since the beginning of time
to all of the nations of earth. They are also told that each one
of these messengers had prophesied to their followers a number
of matters, among them the coming of the "last messenger" and
also the coming of the "false Christ" (whom Muhammad too warned
his people of). A brief study of other ancient scriptures
available today has lead me to the conclusion that it is indeed
the case that many of these religions, no matter their current
state, appear to have at one point in time began their life with
a true messenger of God and that this messenger of God
prophesied the coming of Muhammad (pbuh). Although I have not
yet had sufficient opportunity to research this matter
appropriately, still, the initial indications appear to support
this assertion. Two very brief examples follow:
Example one: The
Farsi (Parsi) religion is one of the oldest known religions of
mankind. It was practiced in Persia for many centuries and
consisted mainly of two scriptures: the Dasatir and the Zand
Avasta. In Dasatir 14 (Sasan11) we can find a very clear
prophesy of Muhammad (pbuh):
"When the Persians should sink so low in
morality, a man will be born in Arabia whose followers will
upset their throne, religion and everything. The mighty
stiff-necked ones of Persia will be overpowered. The house which
was built (The Kaaba in Makkah built by prophet Abraham)
and in which many idols have been placed will be purged of
idols, and people will say their prayers facing towards it. His
followers will capture the towns of Parsis and Taus and Balkh
and other big places round about. People will embroil with one
another. The wise men of Persia and others will join his
followers."
This prophesy requires no interpretation. It
is an exact description of matters that we now recognize as
historical fact (see end of chapter 10).
Example two: In
the Hindu scriptures too there is what appears to be a clear
prophesy of Muhammad (pbuh). In Bhavishya Purana he is actually
mentioned by name:
"Just an illiterate man with the epithet
Teacher, Muhammad by name, came along with his companions. Raja
(Bhoja in a vision) to that Great Diva, that denizen of Arabia,
purifying with the Ganges water and with the five things of cow
offered sandal wood and pay worship to him. O denizen of Arabia
and Lord of the holies, to thee is my adoration. O thou who hast
found many ways and means to destroy the devils of the world. O
pure one from among the illiterates, O sinless one, the spirit
of the truth and absolute master, to thee is my adoration.
Accept me at thy feet"
Bhavishya Purna Parv 3, Khand 3, Adhya 3,
Shalok 5-8
For those who wish to see more, you are
encouraged to obtain a copy of the book "The Bible's Last
Prophet," by Faisal Siddiqui, Al-Saadawi Publications.
Lawrence Schiffman says regarding Pesher
Habakkuk:
Table of Contents |
Next Page
|