Deep in the arid wilderness near the shores of the Dead Sea, a radical community known as the Essenes forged a legacy that would echo through millennia. Among their most significant writings is the Damascus Document—a manifesto of divine predestination and spiritual rebellion. These Essenes, often called the Enochians for their reverence of the patriarch Enoch, believed they were the true heirs of Israel, chosen to carry forth God’s covenant in purity and truth. The Damascus Document reveals how this community saw themselves as the ‘Elect of God,’ separated from mainstream Judaism corrupted by what they viewed as illegitimate priesthoods. Led by a visionary known as the Teacher of Righteousness, they adhered to a strict interpretation of prophecy and law, convinced that all souls—both good and evil—were set upon a path preordained by divine decree. Drawing inspiration from ancient Enochic literature, the Damascus Document describes a New Covenant made not in Jerusalem, but in a place symbolically named Damascus. Here, the faithful were called to uphold the commandments in defiance of the ‘Scoffer,’ a shadowy adversary blamed for leading Israel astray. To the Essenes, their secluded communities were sanctuaries of holiness amidst a world teetering on judgment. This New Covenant, enshrined in their scrolls, was more than ritual; it was rebellion. A declaration that true Israel was not found in towering temples, but among those chosen by God to keep His laws unbroken, awaiting the final redemption.