4qmmt And Paul: Justification, 'works,' And - N... May 2026

For Paul, the "works of the law" were not necessarily "bad," but they were "old." They belonged to an era of separation. In the new age of the Messiah, the definition of the "righteous" shifted from those who perform the ma’ase ha-torah to those who belong to the family of Abraham through faith. Conclusion

4QMMT is a foundation document of the Qumran community (likely the Essenes). Written as a letter from the community’s leader to a political or religious authority, it outlines approximately twenty-two points of ritual law where the group disagreed with the establishment in Jerusalem. The document concludes with a crucial exhortation: if the recipient follows these specific "works of the law" ( ma’ase ha-torah ), it will be "reckoned to you as righteousness." 4QMMT and Paul: Justification, 'Works,' and - N...

This is the only known instance outside of Paul’s epistles where the exact phrase "works of the law" appears in a theological context. In 4QMMT, these "works" are not a checklist for universal moral perfection; they are specific ritual observances—such as calendar disputes, purity laws, and marriage restrictions—that defined the "righteous" community against "outsiders." Paul’s "Works of the Law" For Paul, the "works of the law" were