P. Kyle McCarter, Jr.
Author of The Dead Sea Scrolls After Forty Years: Symposium at the Smithsonian Institution, October 27, 1990
About the Author
Works by P. Kyle McCarter, Jr.
The Dead Sea Scrolls After Forty Years: Symposium at the Smithsonian Institution, October 27, 1990 (1991) 700 copies, 5 reviews
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- McCarter, P. Kyle, Jr.
- Legal name
- McCarter, Peter Kyle, Jr.
- Birthdate
- 1945
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- scholar of the Dead Sea Scrolls
university professor - Organizations
- Johns Hopkins University
- Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
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Reviews
The book of Samuel is a lot like an improvised explosive device: If you don't know just what you're doing, it will blow up and cause a tremendous amount of damage.
There are a lot of reasons for this. Part of it has to do with the fact that it seems to have many different sources -- an Ark of the Covenant source, a Samuel the Prophet source, a pro-Saul source, and anti-Saul source. These sources not only give slightly different accounts of events, they also have somewhat different theologies show more (as in their various attitudes toward kingship, e.g.). Great care must be taken not to get tangled up in this.
But the biggest reason why 1 Samuel is explosive is simply the Hebrew text. Most books of the Hebrew Bible seem to have been copied with great care. The Hebrew as we have it makes good sense. Not the Book of Samuel. It is clear that the canonical text had suffered badly at the hands of copyists. Much was lost or garbled, resulting in a text that is very hard to understand and needs substantial repair.
Some translations just take wild guesses and let it go at that. Not this translation. P. Kyle McCarter takes all the available sources -- the standard Hebrew text, the early Greek translation known as the Septuagint, and the Dead Sea Scrolls of Samuel -- and combines them with skill to produce one of the best Hebrew base texts available. He then translates and interprets with equal skill.
The result, it should be noted, is not much like the King James Bible. It's rather different even from the translations of the early twentieth century. It's closer to translations like the New Revised Standard Version. Those who want everything cut-and-dried-and-the-way-great-grandma-knew-it will hate this translation, from the Hebrew text to the historical speculations. But if you want to see a true reconstruction of a text, this volume is close to a tour de force. show less
There are a lot of reasons for this. Part of it has to do with the fact that it seems to have many different sources -- an Ark of the Covenant source, a Samuel the Prophet source, a pro-Saul source, and anti-Saul source. These sources not only give slightly different accounts of events, they also have somewhat different theologies show more (as in their various attitudes toward kingship, e.g.). Great care must be taken not to get tangled up in this.
But the biggest reason why 1 Samuel is explosive is simply the Hebrew text. Most books of the Hebrew Bible seem to have been copied with great care. The Hebrew as we have it makes good sense. Not the Book of Samuel. It is clear that the canonical text had suffered badly at the hands of copyists. Much was lost or garbled, resulting in a text that is very hard to understand and needs substantial repair.
Some translations just take wild guesses and let it go at that. Not this translation. P. Kyle McCarter takes all the available sources -- the standard Hebrew text, the early Greek translation known as the Septuagint, and the Dead Sea Scrolls of Samuel -- and combines them with skill to produce one of the best Hebrew base texts available. He then translates and interprets with equal skill.
The result, it should be noted, is not much like the King James Bible. It's rather different even from the translations of the early twentieth century. It's closer to translations like the New Revised Standard Version. Those who want everything cut-and-dried-and-the-way-great-grandma-knew-it will hate this translation, from the Hebrew text to the historical speculations. But if you want to see a true reconstruction of a text, this volume is close to a tour de force. show less
P. Kyle McCarter has done a great service by writing this introduction to Old Testament textual criticism. The first chapter defends the need for textual criticism. The second provides an extensive list of scribal errors. The last gives a three step how-to guide. One must not overlook this short title, especially Housman's dog. If you are not familiar with this, buy this book!
Transcript of a symposium, with photos (apparently from the slides shown). Answered my random wondering what ever happened to the scrolls that were found--they are still being pieced together.
The Dead Sea Scrolls After Forty Years (Symposium at the Smithsonian Institution, Oct. 27, 1990) by P. Kyle McCarter, Jr.
NO OF PAGES: 85 SUB CAT I: Dead Sea Scrolls SUB CAT II: SUB CAT III: DESCRIPTION: Exciting new discoveries regarding the Dead Sea scrolls, as scholars begin to examine the evidence.NOTES: SUBTITLE:
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- Rating
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