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Research Team to Present Research on Dead Sea Scroll Fragments

by Kim Mizar

An Ļć½¶Šć University alumni-faculty group is presenting their work on a fragment of Psalm 11 from the Museum of the Bible Collection from noon to 1 p.m. Nov. 3. in Ļć½¶Šć’s Bishop W. Angie Smith Chapel.

ā€œDead Sea Scrolls Fragments in the Museum Collectionā€ was recently published and contains the team’s conclusions about the artifact, along with a chapter by Lisa Wolfe, professor and Endowed Chair of Hebrew Bible, on the process of research as a means of teaching. In the summer of 2013, Wolfe and four of her students joined the Museum Scholars Initiative and received access to the fragment for their fall semester-long Hebrew class.

ā€œMost doctoral students don’t have the opportunity to work with biblical fragments, so for undergrads to have the opportunity is astounding,ā€ said Wolfe.

Editors of the book include Emanuel Tov, a renowned expert in the field of the Qumran Scrolls; Kipp Davis of Trinity Western University; and Robert Duke of Azusa University, all leaders in the field of Dead Sea Scrolls research. Contributions to the project made by the Ļć½¶Šć team are the chapters ā€œProcedure Followed by the Museum of the Bible Scholars Teams: Manuscript Research as Pedagogyā€ by Wolfe, and ā€œPsalm 11:1- 4 (Inv. MOTB.SCR.000121)ā€ by Wolfe, Allison Bevers, Kathryn Hirsch, Leigh Smith and Daniel Ethan Watt.

Parking is available behind the Ļć½¶Šć Ann Lacy Visitor Center at NW 24th Street andBlackwelder Avenue or on Noble Drive, adjacent to N.W. 23rd. The weekly Ļć½¶Šć chapel service, open to the public, will follow this presentation at 1 p.m.

The presentation is open to the public. Lunch is $7. Contact Annette Harper at [email protected] by Oct. 26 to register.


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