Emotional Regimes, Ritual Practice, and the Shaping of Sectarian Identity
: The experience of ablutions in the Dead Sea Scrolls

In this article, I explore the role that the purification rites attested in some of the sectarian Dead Sea Scrolls played in identity construction. Ritual ablutions communicated “canonical” messages to initiates about some of the group’s foundational beliefs, including the worthlessness of humanity,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biblical interpretation
Main Author: Mermelstein, Ari 1971- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Brill 2016
In: Biblical interpretation
RelBib Classification:AE Psychology of religion
AG Religious life; material religion
HD Early Judaism
Further subjects:B emotion
 ritual
 purity
 Dead Sea Scrolls
 Qumran
 Community Rule
 Hodayot

Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
Parallel Edition:Non-electronic
Description
Summary:In this article, I explore the role that the purification rites attested in some of the sectarian Dead Sea Scrolls played in identity construction. Ritual ablutions communicated “canonical” messages to initiates about some of the group’s foundational beliefs, including the worthlessness of humanity, the gift of divine election, and the sharp boundary between insiders and outsiders. These messages were channeled through the emotions that the sect associated with ritual ablutions: shame, disgust, and grief with the ritual actor’s former state of impurity, joy and honor upon receiving the undeserved divine gift of purity, love for other pure insiders, and hate for all impure outsiders. By evoking emotions – “embodied thoughts” – that reflect core sectarian values, the embodied ritual became a vehicle through which the sectarian “emotional regime” transformed the ritual actor into the embodiment of the sectarian worldview.

ISSN:1568-5152
Contains:In: Biblical interpretation
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1163/15685152-02445p04