Ancient Ten Commandments scroll on display in Israel (2024)

Monday, May 25, 2015 1:48 PMUpdated Monday, May. 25, 2015 3:11 PM

Part of display that also features Einstein writings

Ancient Ten Commandments scroll on display in Israel (1)

This is Albert Einstein’s handwritten 1912 manuscript for the Special Theory of Relativity, which is next to a 2,000-year-old copy of the Ten Commandments at the Israel Museum.

Courtesy of the Israel Museum

Ancient Ten Commandments scroll on display in Israel (2)

This is Albert Einstein’s handwritten 1912 manuscript for the Special Theory of Relativity, which is next to a 2,000-year-old copy of the Ten Commandments at the Israel Museum.

Courtesy of the Israel Museum

JERUSALEM – One of the earliest known copies of the Ten Commandments was written in soot on a strip of goatskin found among the trove of biblical material known as the Dead Sea Scrolls, widely considered to be one of the great archaeological finds of the 20th century.

Penned on parchment by an unknown scribe more than 2,000 years ago, the scroll fragment is one of humanity’s most precious documents – and so fragile that its custodians rarely permit it to be moved from the secure vault where it rests in complete darkness.

But for 14 days over the next seven months, the Ten Commandments scroll, known to scholars as 4Q41, will make a rare public appearance at the Israel Museum as part of a new exhibit called “A Brief History of Humankind,” a show based on the international best-selling book by Israeli polymath Yuval Noah Harari.

The exhibit chronicles humanity’s narrative arc by pairing cutting-edge modern art from the museum’s extensive collection alongside the display of 14 artifacts: the earliest-dated stone tools; the earliest evidence of human-made fire; the earliest-known evidence of a family burial; the world’s oldest complete sickle – plus the Ten Commandments. It ends with Albert Einstein’s handwritten 1912 manuscript for the Special Theory of Relativity, including the formula E=mc².

Even if you consider a couple of the commandments – maybe the ones about coveting? – as more suggestions than rules, seeing the scroll provides a major wow, taking us as far back as we can get to Moses the lawgiver, who faith and tradition say brought God’s orders down from Mount Sinai to his people.

As for who wrote the copy of the commandments now on display at the Israel Museum, deep mysteries still remain. Were they inked by scribes belonging to a collective of celibate Jews from the sect known as the Essenes, who might have hidden the scrolls in the nearby caves? Or were the caves just a temporary place to cache documents as the Romans and Jews went to war?

For the opening of the exhibit earlier this month, staged to celebrate the Israel Museum’s 50th anniversary, more than 12,000 guests showed up – breaking a one-day record at the hilltop art and archaeology institution.

“No matter how many times I have heard the story of the Dead Sea Scrolls it still amazes me that these fragments survived,” said Tania Coen-Uzzielli, head of Curatorial Affairs at the Israel Museum.

A kid with enough Hebrew to make his bar mitzvah can still read the text: “Honor your father and mother so you will have a long and healthy life.”

The scrolls were discovered in a series of caves in the late 1940s and early 1950s by Bedouin shepherds. The Ten Commandments fragment was found in the famous Cave 4 not far from the Qumran ruins in the Judean Desert of the West Bank, where the scrolls had rested, undisturbed and preserved for two millennia, in darkness and dry desert air.

After the discovery, all sorts of crazy things happened to the scrolls. With enough twists and turns for an Indiana Jones sequel, they were lost and recovered, hoarded by secretive scholars, the subject of academic feuds, lawsuits and conspiracy theories and, very sadly, woefully mishandled. The delicate bits were flattened under glass panes in rooms without climate or humidity control.

As hard as it is to believe today, some of the fragments were taped together soon after their discovery, as researchers tried to piece the puzzle of the fragments back together. The conservators are still working to ever-so gently remove bits of yellowed, sticky cellophane.

The curators at the Israel Antiquities Authority, which maintains labs at the Israel Museum, allowed a Washington Post correspondent a glimpse at how the scrolls are stored, protected and handled today. The ground rules were simple: Look, but do not even think of touching. If you could stop sweating and breathing (which creates subtle changes in temperature and humidity), probably better. And no photographs, and never tell a soul where the scrolls are stored, except to say, “deep in the bowels of the Israel Museum.”

The Ten Commandments fragment measures about 14-by-4 inches, and when it is not being readied for display it is sleeping between pieces of delicate tissue paper and acid-free cardboard in a simple archival box on a shelf in a secure vault that maintains “very strict” conditions – a rock-steady temperature of 68 degrees and 48 percent humidity in complete darkness.

“Literally resting,” as Pnina Shor, curator and head of the Dead Sea Scrolls Projects explained, “because the parchments are organic material -–they need air to breathe.”

Israeli curators have decided it can be exposed to the light of a museum display case no more two weeks every five years.

In all, the Dead Sea Scrolls contain some 900 manuscripts composed of a few complete scrolls and tens of thousands of fragments. The works include books of the Old Testament or Hebrew Bible, as well as texts not included in the Bible (like the Book of Tobit and the Wisdom of Sirach), as well as commentaries, hymns, prayers and mystical formulas.

Ancient Ten Commandments scroll on display in Israel (2024)

FAQs

What is the scroll of the Ten Commandments? ›

This fragment from the Dead Sea scrolls, 4Q41, has been named the “Ten Commandments scroll” because it preserves the entire Decalogue, the Ten Commandments, in the form that has been handed down to us to this day.

How did the Israelites view the Ten Commandments? ›

These laws were very important. The Israelites needed them to become a strong nation amid all the people around them who worshipped idols. We are pledging in these commandments our allegiance to be loyal, obedient and respect God.

How do Jews view the 10 Commandments? ›

The Ten Commandments still hold great significance for Jews today for many reasons:
  • They are a guide for Jewish living today.
  • Following the Ten Commandments is part of the covenant made at Mount Sinai, which applies to all Jews.
  • God will judge Jews on how well they have observed these commandments.

Where are the real 10 Commandments located? ›

The Ten Commandments fragment was found in the famous Cave 4 not far from the Qumran ruins in the Judean Desert of the West Bank, where the scrolls had rested, undisturbed and preserved for two millennia, in darkness and dry desert air.

What is the difference between the 10 Commandments in Exodus and Deuteronomy? ›

Some of these differences have practical ramifications. For example, the commandment to “remember” the Shabbat (Exodus) tells us to verbally sanctify the Shabbat through reciting kiddush, etc., while the commandment to “keep” the Shabbat (Deuteronomy) is about refraining from doing forbidden work.

What is the oldest evidence of the Ten Commandments? ›

Part of the All Souls Deuteronomy, containing the oldest extant copy of the Decalogue. It is dated to the early Herodian period, between 30 and 1 BC.

Where is the original copy of the Ten Commandments? ›

Discovered in 1952 in a cave at Qumran, near the Dead Sea, it preserves the oldest existing copy of the Ten Commandments.

Where is the original Ark of the covenant? ›

The Book of Revelation in the New Testament claims that the Ark is in the heavenly Temple. The most famous tale of the Ark's location today is that it currently is housed in the Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion in Ethiopia.

What did Jesus say about the Ten Commandments? ›

When speaking to the rich ruler, Jesus said that obedience to the Commandments was necessary and then listed five of the 10 Commandments (Luke 18:18-20).

Do Christians have to follow the Ten Commandments? ›

THE MORAL LAW OF TEN COMMANDMENTS REMAINS THE STANDARD OF RIGHTEOUSNESS FOR THE CHRISTIAN. There is no contradiction between the Old Testament and the New on the question of obedience to the law resulting from salvation by faith.

Do Jews believe in Jesus? ›

For Jews, the significance of Jesus must be in his life rather than his death, a life of faith in God. For Jews, not Jesus but God alone is Lord. Yet an increasing number of Jews are proud that Jesus was born, lived and died a Jew.

What does 613 mean in the Bible? ›

The 613 refers to the 613 Jewish commandments (mitzvot in Hebrew) extracted from the Old Testament.

What is the difference between the 10 commandments and the 613 commandments? ›

The most well-known of these laws are the Ten Commandments. Also known as the Decalogue., but the Torah contains a total of 613 commandments or mitzvah. covering many aspects of daily life, including family, personal hygiene and diet.

Do Jews believe in heaven? ›

Most Orthodox Jews believe that people who follow the laws given by God will be sent to Heaven after their body dies. However, there is no exact description of Heaven in Jewish scripture close scripture(s)A piece of writing that has religious significance..

What is the scroll Bible? ›

The scroll is the execution of God's plan to rid the world of sin. In a way, it's God's war plans against the evil one. Notice how the Elders and living creatures revere the opening of the scroll which releases the seven seals? The seven seals are the seven actions God uses to defeat evil and sin.

What did Jesus read on the scroll? ›

He goes into a synagogue in Nazareth, is handed a scroll of the book of Isaiah, finds the place he is looking for, and reads Isaiah 61:1: “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor.

What is the real order of the Ten Commandments? ›

  • “Thou shalt have no other gods before me.” ...
  • “Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image.” ...
  • “Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain.” ...
  • “Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy.” ...
  • “Honour thy father and thy mother.” ...
  • “Thou shalt not kill.” ...
  • “Thou shalt not commit adultery.” ...
  • “Thou shalt not steal.”

Do the Dead Sea scrolls contain the Ten Commandments? ›

Photos: Dead Sea Scrolls exhibitThe Ten Commandments scroll is one of only two ancient manuscripts to feature the commandments, the foundation of Jewish and Christian religions. The other one, known as the Nash Papyrus, is at Cambridge University in England.

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