The Book of Habakkuk is accepted as
canonical by adherents of the Jewish and Christian faiths.
Judaism The Book of Habakkuk is the eighth book of the Twelve Prophets of the
Hebrew Bible, and this collection appears in all copies of texts of the
Septuagint, the
Ancient Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible completed by 132 BC. Likewise, the book of
Sirach (or Ecclesiasticus), also written in the 2nd century BC, mentions "
The Twelve Prophets". A partial copy of Habakkuk itself is included in the
Habakkuk Commentary, a
pesher found among the original seven
Dead Sea Scrolls discovered in 1947. The Commentary contains a copy of the first two chapters of Habakkuk, but not of the third chapter. The writer of the
pesher draws a comparison between the Babylonian invasion of the original text and the Roman threat of the writer's own period. What is even more significant than the commentary in the
pesher is the quoted text of Habakkuk itself. The divergences between the Hebrew text of the scroll and the standard
Masoretic Text are startlingly minimal. The biggest differences are word order, small grammatical variations, addition or omission of conjunctions, and spelling variations, but these are small enough not to damage the meaning of the text. Some scholars suggest that Chapter 3 may be a later independent addition to the book, in part because it is not included among the Dead Sea Scrolls. However, this chapter does appear in all copies of the Septuagint, as well as in texts from as early as the 3rd century BC. This final chapter is a poetic praise of God, and has some similarities with
Exodus 19, and with texts found in the
Book of Daniel. However, the fact that the third chapter is written in a different style, as a liturgical piece, does not necessarily mean that Habakkuk was not also its author.
Qumran community A commentary on the first two chapters of the book was found among the Dead Sea Scrolls at Qumran. The omission of chapter 3 from the version within the Dead Sea Scrolls has been attributed to incompatibilities with the theology of the
Qumran sect. ==Habakkuk 2:4==