J.H. Charlesworth is the George L. Collord Professor of New Testament Language and Literature and Editor and Director of the Princeton Theological Seminary Dead Sea Scrolls Project.

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Introduction: The Dead Sea Scrolls: Their Discovery and Challenge to Biblical Studies, James H. Charlesworth Chapter 1: The Impact of the Judean Desert Scrolls on Issues of Text and Canon of the Hebrew Bible, James A. Sanders Chapter 2: Qumran and the Enoch Groups: Revisiting the Enochic-Essene Hypothesis, Gabriele Boccaccini Chapter 3: The Biblical Scrolls from Qumran and the Canonical Text, Frank Moore Cross Chapter 4: The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Hebrew Scriptural Texts, Eugene C. Ulrich Chapter 5: The Formation and Re-Formation of Daniel in the Dead Sea Scrolls, Loren T. Stuckenbruck Chapter 6: The Rewritten Bible at Qumran, Sidnie White Crawford Chapter 7: Qumran and a New Edition of the Hebrew Bible, Ronald S. Hendel Chapter 8: 4QSama (= 4Q51), the Canon, and the Community of Lay Readers, Donald W. Parry Chapter 9: Three Sobriquets, Their Meaning and Function: The Wicked Priest, Synagogue of Satan, and the Woman Jezebel, H?Nkan Bengtsson Chapter 10: The Biblical and Qumranic Concept of War, Philip R. Davies Chapter 11: Psalms and Psalters in the Dead Sea Scrolls, Peter W. Flint Chapter 12: The Importance of Isaiah at Qumran, J. J. M. Roberts Chapter 13: Biblical Interpretation at Qumran, George J. Brooke
"The three-volume edition, -- MARTIN HENGEL, University of Tobingen
