About This Book
An essay examines the origins, beliefs, rituals, and communal institutions of the Essenes, synthesizing Greco‑Roman testimonies and rabbinic material to reconstruct their character. It outlines their strict observance of Mosaic law and purity regulations, avoidance of oaths, frequent abstention from marriage, communal ownership and shared labor, nonviolence, and rejection of slavery. The account describes internal governance, disciplinary procedures, and the aspirational aim of spiritual perfection expressed through prophecy and healing. The author collates ancient accounts, critiques their biases, and offers an impartial overview of the sect’s doctrines, practices, numbers, and relationship to contemporary Jewish and early Christian movements.






