Scribes in Early Jewish Literature

2nd Century BCE–3rd Century CE
Wooden supports in the shape of a long, narrow table and bench with slabs of broken plaster on top, in a room with arched ceilings and stone walls.
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Scribes (Heb., soferim) were important transmitters of Torah in the Second Temple period, involved both with textual study of the biblical text and with the production and writing of scrolls. Although it is difficult to pin down what the term scribe denotes and the extent to which scribes constituted a specific class, it seems that they were often scholars and teachers of Torah as well as, sometimes, professional writers.

Much of the literature of this period identifies scribes with the descendants of Levi and of Aaron in particular—likely a reflection of the reality that the elite professional guild of scribes and teachers of the law also served as Temple administrators. Indeed, the sources indicate that in the Hellenistic period some scribes worked at the Temple, where they were exempt from taxes, carrying out various functions.

The mysterious figure of Enoch, known for walking with God (Genesis 5:24), is cast as a scribe and as mediator of salvific and heavenly knowledge to his descendants—a progenitor of the later scribes, also mediators of divine knowledge, that is, Torah. Other texts are critical of those who held these roles. Josephus refers to scribes as government functionaries, while other texts ascribe to them legal expertise.

Related Primary Sources

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Scribe of Righteousness

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And I, Enoch, began to bless the Lord of the mighty ones and the King of the universe. At that moment the Watchers were calling me. And…

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Scribes as Descendants of Levi

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And they said to me, “Levi, your posterity shall be divided into three offices as a sign of the glory of the Lord who is coming. The first lot shall be great; no other shall be greater than it.

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Ezra as Priestly Scribe

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This Ezra came up from Babylon as a scribe skilled in the law of Moses, which was given by the God of Israel; and the king showed him honor, for he found favor before the king in all his requests.

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Table and Bench, Qumran (Reconstruction)

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This reconstruction of a table and bench from Qumran is housed at the Rockefeller Archaeological Museum in Jerusalem. The furniture, which was made of mud brick and covered with plaster, was found in…

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Inkwells from Qumran

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These two inkwells, one made of clay and the other of bronze, were found in the vicinity of a large table, suggesting that the room was a scriptorium designated for the copying of manuscripts.

Primary Source

An Ideal Scribe

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He seeks out the wisdom of all the ancients,    and is concerned with prophecies; he preserves the sayings of the famous…