In the Biblical age "son of" meant "reflection of."
Many people were deemed sons of God (reflections of) and being called
"son of Man" probably means to be a reflection of mankinds progression of achievements.
In the scrolls the sons of light vs sons of darkness requires knowing in that age what light and darkness meant.
Light=knowledge & truth
darkness= lies ignorance & folly
Means: "Sons of"(reflections of) knowledge and truth vs those who reflect lies ignorance and folly.
One can say this is taking place now in the political and religious arena in the age of information where as
Daniel 12 1-4 says we go to and fro gaining knowledge.
The War Scroll describes the Rules of War of the Children of Light (knowledge & truth)
against the Children of Darkness (Lies, Ignorance, & Folly).
Fact: Top Messenger Michael was always known as the Messenger of truth (spiritual Light)-Dan 10:21
Remember it's Michael who is known to be THE ONE Overturning the messenger of darkness (lies and ignorance).
And The clearest undeniable description of the Messiah Michael's Kingdom is in the same War Scroll (4Q471)
Where in verse XVII, it says, God will send eternal bliss by the might of
the Princely Angel of the Kingdom of Michael. He will enlighten with joy the children of Israel.
1QM v, 1-2) States:He (Michael)will not have much room to act as Royal Messiah while battling the Sons of Darkness.
“God himself is a supreme agent of salvation and after him in importance is Michael.”
So it doesn't sound like Jesus does it?
Jesus (the imposter) was the lie, it cost us thousands of wars and over 50 million slain over said lie.
Two time periods have been put forward and defended as the most probable time of composition: the Seleucid period and the Roman period.[3] The Seleucid period proposals include the very beginning of the Maccabean Revolt (165 or 164 BCE), the height of Jonathan's military power (143 BCE), and the reign of John Hyrcanus (135–104 BCE).[4] Scholars who believe the scroll was composed during the Roman period propose a date from the middle of the 1st century BCE to the first decade of the 1st century CE.[4] The War Scroll's description of the weaponry and tactics led Yigael Yadin to assign the composition of the scroll to a date between the capture of Jerusalem by Pompey (65 BCE) and the death of Herod (4 BCE).[1] More recently, author Russell Gmirkin disagrees with Yadin's analysis and assigns the weaponry described in the War Scroll to the 2nd century BCE.[5] Lt. Col. Peter Fromm (US Army Ret.) sides with Gmirkin also assigning the army and weaponry described in the War Scroll to the 2nd century BCE.[6]
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