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Thursday, April 12, 2012

More on the SWBTS DSS fragments

A LEVITICUS FRAGMENT from the collection belonging to Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminar gets some coverage by a local news station:
Dead Sea Scrolls At Fort Worth Baptist Seminary

April 11, 2012 7:01 PM

Reporting Carol Cavazos

FORT WORTH (CBSDFW.COM) – The Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered over 60 years ago and are keys to biblical times. Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth is planning an exhibition in July featured 16 scroll fragments. Wednesday, they gave us a sneak peak of a fragment not shown yet to the public.

The fragment is 14.5 centimeters long and 8 centimeters high. It was put on display for CBS 11 in the MacGorman Chapel. Seminary President, Dr. Paige Patterson, is thankful to have it.

“We are mostly grateful to God for His kindness to us,” he said.

The scrap is called Paleo Leviticus. Paleo means old and Leviticus is the name of the third book in the old testament.

[...]
"Paleo" refers to the Paleo-Hebrew script, the Second-Temple-era pastiche of the script used in the First Temple period. The article includes a photo of the fragment and mentions that it comes from Cave 11, it was discovered in 1956 and they still have the cigar box it came in (presumably from Bedouin discoverers?), and the text includes Leviticus 22:21.

Background here and links.