New Volume of Studies in the Bible and Antiquity
Posted: Tue Dec 21, 2010 7:24 am
I'm pleased to report that the latest number, the second, of the newest Maxwell Institute periodical has now come from the press:
Studies in the Bible and Antiquity 2 (2010).
Here is the table of contents:
vii. Editors' Introduction.
1. The Dead Sea Scrolls Bible (Donald W. Parry).
29. The Dead Sea Scrolls and Latter-day Saints: Where Do We Go from Here? (Dana M. Pike)
49. The Dead Sea Scrolls and the World of Jesus (Andrew C. Skinner).
83. From the Dead Sea Scrolls (1QS) (Hugh Nibley, with an introduction by Stephen D. Ricks).
105. The Dead Sea Scrolls: Select Publications by Latter-day Saint Scholars (Daniel B. McKinlay and Steven W. Booras).
As you might have noticed, this issue of Studies in the Bible and Antiquity focuses on the Dead Sea Scrolls. Three of the four BYU professors who are members of the International Dead Sea Scrolls Editorial Team -- Drs. Parry, Pike, and Skinner -- are represented in this volume. (The fourth, Professor David Rolph Seely, would have been, except that he has been busy throughout all of 2010 leading the BYU Semester Abroad programs in London.)*
* Incidentally, Drs. Parry and Seely are former members of the FARMS board of directors (which, since our reorganization several years ago, no longer exists), and Dr. Ricks is a former chairman of that board. Dr. Skinner served a three-year term as director of FARMS and the Maxwell Institute, from, if I'm not mistaken, 2005 to 2008. Dr. Pike is a former associate editor of the Journal of Book of Mormon Studies, published by FARMS and then by FARMS as a unit within the Maxwell Institute.
It is important to understand that this issue is hot off the press. I have a copy, but they're not yet available for distribution. Under the best of circumstances, it takes at least a week before the new periodicals begin going out to subscribers, appearing on the Website, showing up in bookstores, and etc. But these are not the best of circumstances, in that regard: It's Christmastime, people have scattered to the four quarters of the earth, and all University functions will be working at less than normal speed. So please be patient.
Studies in the Bible and Antiquity 2 (2010).
Here is the table of contents:
vii. Editors' Introduction.
1. The Dead Sea Scrolls Bible (Donald W. Parry).
29. The Dead Sea Scrolls and Latter-day Saints: Where Do We Go from Here? (Dana M. Pike)
49. The Dead Sea Scrolls and the World of Jesus (Andrew C. Skinner).
83. From the Dead Sea Scrolls (1QS) (Hugh Nibley, with an introduction by Stephen D. Ricks).
105. The Dead Sea Scrolls: Select Publications by Latter-day Saint Scholars (Daniel B. McKinlay and Steven W. Booras).
As you might have noticed, this issue of Studies in the Bible and Antiquity focuses on the Dead Sea Scrolls. Three of the four BYU professors who are members of the International Dead Sea Scrolls Editorial Team -- Drs. Parry, Pike, and Skinner -- are represented in this volume. (The fourth, Professor David Rolph Seely, would have been, except that he has been busy throughout all of 2010 leading the BYU Semester Abroad programs in London.)*
* Incidentally, Drs. Parry and Seely are former members of the FARMS board of directors (which, since our reorganization several years ago, no longer exists), and Dr. Ricks is a former chairman of that board. Dr. Skinner served a three-year term as director of FARMS and the Maxwell Institute, from, if I'm not mistaken, 2005 to 2008. Dr. Pike is a former associate editor of the Journal of Book of Mormon Studies, published by FARMS and then by FARMS as a unit within the Maxwell Institute.
It is important to understand that this issue is hot off the press. I have a copy, but they're not yet available for distribution. Under the best of circumstances, it takes at least a week before the new periodicals begin going out to subscribers, appearing on the Website, showing up in bookstores, and etc. But these are not the best of circumstances, in that regard: It's Christmastime, people have scattered to the four quarters of the earth, and all University functions will be working at less than normal speed. So please be patient.