The Bible Lands Museum in Yerushalayim reports that five of the famous Dead Sea scrolls are fake and as such, they will be removed from display.
The scrolls, presumably 2,000 years old, were discovered in caves in the Judean Desert in the 1940s and 1950s. The Bible Lands Museum has conducted independent tests on the 16 Dead Sea Scrolls in its collection and learned that the 5 were not legitimate.
When Washington DC’s $500 million Museum of the Bible held its grand opening in November 2017, attended by Vice President Mike Pence, there were questions even then about the authenticity of its centerpiece collection of Dead Sea Scrolls.
Now the museum has been forced to admit a painful truth: Technical analysis by a team of German scholars has revealed that at least five of the museum’s 16 scroll fragments are apparent forgeries.
The museum’s chief curator, Jeffrey Kloha released a statement on Tuesday: “Though we had hoped the testing would render different results, this is an opportunity to educate the public on the importance of verifying the authenticity of rare biblical artifacts, the elaborate testing process undertaken and our commitment to transparency.”
The announcement has serious implications not only for the Bible Museum but for other evangelical Christian individuals and institutions who paid top dollar for what now seems to be a massive case of archaeological fraud.
The scrolls are a collection of ancient Jewish religious texts first discovered in the mid-1940s in caves on the western shore of the Dead Sea. With more than 9,000 documents and 50,000 fragments, the entire collection took decades to fully excavate.
Most of the scrolls and fragments are tightly controlled by the Israeli Antiquities Authority. But around 2002, a wave of new fragments began mysteriously appearing on the market, despite skepticism from Biblical scholars.
These fragments, they warned, were specifically designed to target American evangelical Christians, who prize the scrolls. That appears to be exactly what happened; a Baptist seminary in Texas and an evangelical college in California reportedly paid millions to purchase alleged pieces of the scrolls.
Also eagerly buying up fragments was the Green family — evangelical Oklahoma billionaires who run the Hobby Lobby chain of craft stores and who famously sued the Obama administration on religious grounds, saying they didn’t want to pay to provide their employees access to the morning-after pill or intrauterine devices.
The Greens are the primary backers of the Museum of the Bible and went on an archaeological acquisition spree in the years leading up to the museum’s opening. In addition to the alleged Dead Sea Scrolls fragments, the Greens ran afoul of the Justice Department, which said they had acquired thousands of smuggled artifacts looted from Iraq and elsewhere. The family agreed last year to return those artifacts and pay a $3 million fine.
(YWN Israel Desk – Jerusalem / AP)
5 Responses
i never understood the interest in some ancient parchment even if it was real ; what diff. or value is there if the aleph is bent this way or that way
If I am not mistaken, the “Bible Lands Museum” is run by evangelical Christians, and part of the mission of the BML is to recruit more people into evangelical Christianity. I do not know whether this mistake is an honest mistake, or sloppy scholarship, or something treacherous, but the source must be viewed skeptically. After all, evangelical Christians are major supporters of the lyingest (not to mention least Christian) president in the history of the United States. In fairness to the BLM, I do not know whether their particular supporters are also supporters of the unchristian president.
This article is misleading. The Bible Lands Museum has nothing to do with these fake Dead Sea Scroll fragments. The fragments are owned by the Bible Museum in Washington, DC.
👆 trump derangement syndrome at its peak
Can’t go one news article without posting something, ANYTHING about trump
@Huju,
LOL
LOL
Folks, you see how crazy this gets?
So now Pres. Trump is tied to Dead Sea Scrolls also.
It’s not so much that TDS is craziness, as much as clinical insanity.