Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Mysterious writings in the Book of Enoch




1. Introduction:
This paper is about astronomy, Heavenly and cosmological writings (Mysterious) which are mentioned in the book of Enoch[1]. The writer would like to limit this paper with in the above mentioned topics and not considering other topics like Animal Apocalypse, Son of man and Enochic Judaism in Book of Enoch.

1.1.            Introduction to Enoch:
Enoch is the name of four biblical persons. The first is the oldest son of Cain (Genesis 4:17), the second, the son of Jared (Genesis 5:18), the third the son of Midian (Genesis 24:4) and the fourth is the oldest son of Reuben (Genesis 26:9, Exodus 6:14). Of these the second alone is of importance and interest for us not only on account of the mysterious prominence given him in Genesis five, but also from the fact that an inspired writer of the New Testament, Jude in his letter (V.14), mentions him as a prophet, and produces a quotation from a book attributed to the patriarch. [2]
The main theme of the Book of Enoch is the final judgment of the fallen angels, the Watchers, and their progeny, the evil spirits.[3] The number of archangels in this period is usually four. (Michael, Gabriel, Sariel, and Raphael; 1QM 9:14-16.) However, a list of seven is found in the Greek text of 1 Enoch 20, so the seven chief angels of the Songs are not without parallel.[4]
Enoch is not just one work, but is a major collection of apocalyptic writings. Five separate compositions have long been distinguished: The Book of the Watchers (chaps. 1-36), The Similitudes (chaps. 37-71), The Astronomical Book (chaps. 72-82), The Book of Dreams (chaps. 83-90), and The Epistle of Enoch (chaps. 91-108) Within the Epistle, the Apocalypse of Weeks (93:1-10; 91:11-17) stands out as a distinct unit.[5]

2. Place in Canon:
 The Books of Enoch, Jubilees and Jasher are not included in the official 66 book Canon. However, there are references in the Bible to these books, which have led ancient Jewish scholars to include Enoch and Jubilees in the Septuagint under the heading “for profitable reading”. These books were always earmarked as “Deuterocanonical”, or part of a “secondary canon”, and never as a part of the Word of God.
These three books were alluded to in the Bible; scholars always listed them as interesting books to read. This lead to the teachings contained in these books to influence people’s doctrines, especially so regarding the calendars. What follows is a brief discussion of each of these books in question, focusing on the content and provenance (original context and origin/nature of the oldest manuscripts) of each.

2.1. Jude’ acceptance of 1 Enoch as Scripture:
Does Jude's use of such Pseudepigrapha suggest that he viewed these books as inspired and/or authoritative? Does he accept 1 Enoch as scripture? Michael Green opines that even though the early church highly esteemed 1 Enoch, "we have no means of knowing whether Jude regarded these books as canonical." Paul does not mind using a heathen poet in this way” (Acts 17:28; 1 Cor.l5:32-33; Titus 1:12).
1 Enoch is quoted once and alluded to on numerous occasions in the book of Jude and other New Testament writings. Two additional points need mentioning in support of Jude's possible belief that 1 Enoch is inspired and authoritative.
First, the evidence suggests that Jude does not distinguish between his use of the Old Testament and his use of 1 Enoch. Second, Enochic literature was accepted by some Jews and Christians during the Intertestamental period and in the early church. The Church Fathers, who saw these as typological figures, identified the two witnesses as Elijah and Enoch, who went up to heaven.[6]
 Since Jude was a contemporary of some who accepted 1 Enoch as authoritative and inspired, it is not without reason to suggest that Jude, as well as the heretics he confronted in his epistle and the recipients of his letter, all held the same belief. Rather than viewing Jude's use of 1 Enoch as illustrative material, J. Daryl Charles opines that Jude is "exploiting, if not the readers' devotion to Enochic literature, then that of his opponents." Is Jude merely giving attention to 1 Enoch because the recipients or his opponents were devoted to Enochic literature even though he is not? Is he simply using 1 Enoch as a literary strategy? Robert C. Newman says, "One might be inclined to dismiss Jude's reference as an ad hominem argument against his opponents who accepted the OT Pseudepigrapha since he apparently quotes 1 Enoch 1:9 in vl4 and cites a no longer extant portion of the Assumption of Moses in v9.
Jude's reason for using the book might be his devotion to what he considered an inspired text and the eschatological and Christological message he found contained in the book of 1 Enoch. Jude's acceptance of 1 Enoch as scripture is significant because of the effect it had upon his reading of this pseudepigraphal book. Attaching the quality of inspiration to a text affects the way in which that text is read. If Jude views 1 Enoch as scripture, then perhaps his reading of 1 Enoch is more similar to the way in which other New Testament authors read the inspired text of the Old Testament and then quoted and eluded to it.[7]

3. Pseudepigrapha:
The term Pseudepigrapha (Greek, "falsely attributed") was given to Jewish writings of the same period, which were attributed to authors who did not actually write them. This was widespread in Greco-Roman antiquity in Jewish, Christian, and pagan circles alike. Books were attributed to pagan authors, and names drawn from the repertoire of biblical personalities, such as Adam, Noah, Enoch, Abraham, Moses, Elijah, Ezekiel, Baruch, and Jeremiah. The Pseudepigrapha resemble the Apocrypha in general character, yet were not included in the Bible, Apocrypha, or rabbinic literature. All the Apocrypha and most of the Pseudepigrapha are Jewish works (some contain Christianizing additions). They provide essential evidence of Jewish literature and thought during the period between the end of biblical writing (400 B.C.E) and the beginning of substantial rabbinic literature in the latter part of the first century CE. They have aroused much scholarly interest, since they provide information about Judaism at the turn of the era between the Bible and the Mishna (Biblical Law and Oral Law), and help explain how Rabbinic Judaism and Christianity came into being.[8]
The pseudepigraphal books of Enoch were originally composed in either Hebrew or Aramaic probably no later than the 1st century BC. They survived in three versions. Ethiopic (1 Enoch). Slavonic (2 Enoch, also known as The Book (s) of the Secrets of Enoch the just or The Slavonic Apocalypse of Enoch), and Hebrew (3 Enoch)[9]

4. Book of Enoch 1
Enoch 1, also known as the Hebrew Enoch, is a collection of books of the visions and dreams supposedly granted the Antediluvian (pre flood) Enoch, father of Methuselah.[10] This is, however, a completely fictious myth, using Enoch’s name as a pseudonym under which to write apocryphal prophesies, theological revelations or sectarian doctrines.[11] 
The first mention of this book came from Ethiopia, where it is extant in a nearly complete Ge’ez version and is used as a scholarly and theological source. In 1821, this Ge’ez version, the only known manuscript of the Enoch Collection, was translated and published in English by Richard Lawrence. This started frenzy in the study of apocryphal books and finding originals. Enoch’s original Aramaic and Hebrew version, though in fragments, was found in Cave Four (Q 4) at Qumran in 1948, showed the accuracy of the Ethiopian version on analyses, as well as grounding the work in its Pre-Maccabean context, through textual analysis and carbon dating.  The complete book, or more correctly, “Enochic Collection”, is made up of six different “books”, originally different manuscripts. These books all use the name of Enoch as a pseudonym and are dated to different periods in history, and were written with different purposes.
4.1. The “Book of the Watchers” (Enoch 1-36):
This is the first “book” in Enoch, and describes the events which took place when the “Sons of God” of Genesis 6:2 married the “daughters of men”. It also describes Enoch’s travel to heaven, giving detailed descriptions of everything, using language which is quite mystic and filled with Numerological symbolism. Dated to the 4th or 3rd Centuries BC by linguistic experts, it is one of the source documents for Jewish mysticism. 
The Book of the Watchers may serve as an introduction to the Enoch literature, since it is one of the oldest, pre-Maccabean Enochic works and gives the most explicit elaboration of the story of Enoch. It has received extensive attention in recent years. Much of the discussion has focused on smaller units within 1 Enoch 1-36: chaps. 6-11, 6-16, or 6-19. The book may be divided into three main sections: chaps. 1-5, 6-16, and 17-36. Chapters 1-5 constitute an introduction. The book is characterized as "the words of the blessing of Enoch according to which he blessed the chosen and righteous who must be present on the day of distress (which is appointed) for the removal of all the wicked and impious" (1:1). The "chosen" and "righteous" are stereotyped designations in the Enoch literature. It is ultimately concerned with the final judgment of righteous and wicked. The second verse adds a second characterization which is more obviously appropriate: "a holy vision in the heavens which the angels showed to me."
Among the different sections of the First or Ethiopic Book of Enoch, the Book of the Watchers (1 Enoch 1–36) is probably the catchiest one. It tells the story of angels (Enoch 29:4-5) who decided to transgress the boundaries of the cosmic order established by God. The consequences of their transgression are described as disastrous. The heavenly angels intrude into the worldly and human sphere causing chaos and suffering. The BW, however, is not just a story about these angels, their “fall,” and the world thrown out of order. On a narrative level, the story is told by Enoch, one of the human forefathers mentioned in (Genesis 5:18-24). The entire BW is presented as his “words of blessing” addressing a distant generation (1 Enoch 1:1-2). Furthermore, Enoch tells us of his own role within the resolution of the story. He is being told to act as a messenger between God and the angels, and to announce and underline God’s condemnation of the angels and their sin. Having in mind the BW’s Pseudepigraphic character and the fact that Enoch plays an important role within the plot, it seems appropriate to adopt the common labeling of the writing and to call the BW an “Enochic writing.” From such a perspective, the qualifier “Enochic” basically highlights the narrative weight given to the fictive figure of Enoch by a set of writings.[12] However, some scholars go even further and they call the BW “Enochic” claiming that the writing offers clues to trace back to a social group within Judaism which they call “the Enochians.” Against this background, the meaning of “Enochic” obviously turns into an ideological issue. “Enochic” becomes a label opposed to labels such as “Mosaic” or “Zadokite.”[13]

4.1.1. Rituals and purity in the book of watchers:
Further, there are repeated accusations that the Watchers have defiled themselves through their contact with women and with blood (1 En. 7:1; 9:8; 10:11; 12:4; 15:4). This concern led Suter to argue that the myth needed to be examined in the light of the rules concerning family purity in the Second Temple period, particularly priestly purity, and that what was at issue was marriages by priests that were regarded as illegitimate, while the emphasis on blood might imply contamination through contact with menstrual blood. On the other hand, the Watchers are presented as subverting one of the traditional roles of priests in that they teach forbidden knowledge (Mal 2:6-9).[14]
Olson noted, there are at least five passages in the Book of the Watchers (i.e., chapters 6-19 of 1 Enoch) that specifically discuss the issue of sexual relations between the Watchers and the “daughters of men.” In each of these passages the Watchers are described as becoming defiled through the act of having sexual intercourse with mortal women: “And they went in to the daughters of men together, and lay with those women, and became unclean” (1 Enoch 9:8;7:1; 10:11; 12:4). It is not until 1 Enoch 15:3-7, however, that we are told why the act of having sexual relations with the daughters of men defiled the Watchers.[15]

4.1.2. Temple in the book of watchers: Sinai has a place in Enoch's revelation, but it is not the ultimate source. The Watchers, whose story is told in 1 Enoch 6-16, are said to shake at the revelation of God. The story of the Watchers, then, is clearly oriented toward this eschatological horizon. Finally, we note that "he comes with ten thousand holy ones." A similar, even greater, angelic entourage will surround the Ancient of Days in Daniel. This angelic world forms the backdrop for the human action in both books. The remainder of the introduction chaps. 2-5, sets the scene for the judgment in a different manner.[16]
At first sight the Book of Watchers (1 En. 1-36), has concern with the Temple. The tree is the tree of life of Gen 2:9, which is kept from human beings at present (Gen 3:24), but is to be transplanted in the new age to near the Temple in Jerusalem. In that age the tree near the Temple, rather than the Temple itself, will be the source of life, a life understood as being very long, as in Isa 65:19-20, but not eternal.[17]
Apart from this reference to the Temple in the new age, it is widely recognized that in the account of Enoch’s ascent to heaven (1 En. 14:8-25), heaven itself is conceived of as a Temple. The narrative describes how Enoch proceeded from a court (verse 9) to a “large house” (verses 10-14a), and then to a “larger house”, a holy of holies, in which the great glory sat on a high throne (verses 14b-25). The narrative has been influenced not only by Ezekiel 1, Daniel 7, and Isaiah 6, but also, as Michael Stone originally suggested, 13 by Ezekiel 40-44. It may be noted that the term ‘sanctuary’ (Greek-hagiasma, hagion) is used of heaven in two passages (1 En. 12:4; 15:3) in which the Watchers are condemned for having left heaven. Further, Enoch himself seemingly plays the role of priest of the heavenly Temple, when at the request of the Watchers he intercedes on their behalf (1 En. 13:4-5).[18]

5. The “Astronomical Book” (Enoch 72-82): The Earliest Traditions: In terms of the redactional history of 1 Enoch, chapters 33-36 are a summary of astronomical and meteorological lore used to conclude the Book of Watchers.[19] The Astronomical Book, 1 Enoch 72-82, is attested in fragments of four manuscripts from Qumran.[20] The earliest of these dates from the end of the third or the beginning of the second century and so is the earliest of the Enoch manuscripts. The Aramaic work represented in these fragments was much longer than the text that survived in Ethiopic.
There is no account of the actual process of revelation, such as we usually find in an apocalypse, through the description of a vision or of a heavenly journey. We are given the content of a revelation rather than a report of the revelation itself.  Yet a heavenly tour is clearly implied. Uriel is the accompanying angel or tour guide. Enoch ranges all over the heavens to the ends of the earth (76:1). In 81:5 he is brought back to earth by "three holy ones," who set him before the door of his house.[21] This passage appears to be a secondary addition to the Astronomical Book, but the presumption of a heavenly journey is consistent with the preceding chapters. The content of the revelation is primarily cosmological and concerned with the movements of the sun, moon, and stars. The astronomical observations are primitive in relation to Babylonian and Hellenistic knowledge, although the conception of the world definitely shows Babylonian influence. The descriptions are highly mythological. The heavens are peopled with angels: "the leaders of the heads of thousands who are in charge of the whole creation and in charge of all the stars" (75:1). Uriel is the leader of the lights of heaven. The lengthy descriptions of the heavenly bodies are in part a celebration of the order of the universe.[22]
This part of Enoch is highly controversial and, as its name suggests, concerns astronomical observations and the movements of the stars, hence its other name; “Book of the Heavenly Luminaries”. It also contains the controversial “Enoch Calendar”, which is a completely unrealistic calendar according to some scholars.
Generally, the Astronomical Book stands far apart from the Torah; save the fact that Gen 1:14-16 is dealing also, though in a different manner, with the “lights of heaven” (1 En 72:1). Much more fruitful is a comparison of 1 En 6-36 and the Torah, especially Gen 1-11. Both texts focus on primeval history and are heavily interested in connecting the “sin of the created beings” to “divine punishment.” Like Genesis, the Book of the Watchers knows about.
The Astronomical Book, however, does not make an issue of the festivals and does not polemicize against the 354-day calendar. Instead it attacks a 360-day calendar that fails to include the four additional days (75:1 -2; 82:4-6), although we do not know that such a calendar was ever used in Judaism. We will return below to the possible implications of the 364-day calendar for the social setting of the Enoch literature. Although most of the Astronomical Book is devoted to cosmological speculation, the eschatological horizon is also present. At the outset the heavenly regulations are said to hold "until the new creation" (72:1).[23] Eschatological concerns emerge more clearly in chap. 80. We are reminded of the contrast between orderly nature and sinful humanity in 1 Enoch 1-5. Here the transgressions originate with the heads of the stars. Earthly sinfulness has a supernatural cause, just as it has in the story of the Watchers. The correlation of stars and angelic beings was old in Israel (see Judges 5:19-20; Job 38:7) and was ultimately derived from the belief in astral divinities that is condemned here. Here Enoch derives his explanation from "the tablets of heaven" and the book where the deeds of men are recorded. Enoch's response, "Blessed is the man who dies righteous and good . . . ,” implies some form of afterlife. Milik points out that the reference to "three holy ones" who bring Enoch back to earth in 81:5 presupposes the reference to three angels in 87:3 in the Animal Apocalypse; 81:9 ("and those who practice righteousness will die because of the deeds of men") suggests a time of persecution.[24]
 Chapter 81 then was probably an addition to the Astronomical Book. It serves a twofold purpose in its present context. It explains how Enoch is given one year after his heavenly Journeys to impart his wisdom to Methuselah before he is finally taken up, and it gives Enoch's revelation an ethical orientation.
Chapter 82 is in the form of a parting address to Methuselah. Accordingly it illustrates the overlap between apocalypse and testament, although the dominant form in this case is clearly the revelation. The exhortation in chap. 82 is more specific than that in 81 and is integrally related to the revelations about the sun and moon: "Blessed are all those who walk in the way of righteousness and do not sin like the sinners in the numbering of all their days." The chapter goes on to elaborate the law of the stars and the names of the angels who lead them. The address to Methuselah underlines the primary purpose of the Astronomical Book: to prevent sin by calendrical error. The alleged experience of Enoch evokes a sense of awe at the workings of the heavenly bodies, under their angelic leaders, and instills conviction in the understanding he imparts. The revelation provides assurance "in the days of the sinners" and this assurance is confirmed, in the present form of the book, by the eschatological revelation in chap.[25]

6. The “Dream Visions” (Enoch 83-90):
The fifth book in Enoch has an angel showing Enoch the complete history of Israel, divided into ten “weeks” right up to the Maccabean Revolt (165/163BC). After this survey of history, also filled with numerological symbolism, the angel prophesies that those who harm the “Righteous” (Israel), will be judged by God, and finally destroyed. Because the “history” part ends with the Maccabean Revolt, it places the composition within the Maccabean period, or just before the revolt actually took place. During this time the Hellenistic “successor kingdoms” oppressed most of the Middle East, and many such apocalyptic prophesies characterize this period's literature in all affected cultures. This book should therefore be seen in this apocalyptic, hope bringing light.[26]

6.1. Exagoge:
Book of Enoch (Enochic tradition) deals not only with celestial and cosmology but also with mysteries of the underworld. The Exagoge scholars mentions about Exagoge passage mentions that Moses had a vision of things not only above the heaven but also “beneath the earth.” his reference to the secrets of the underworld is intriguing, and it is possible that the sentence following it that deals with the “stars” is somehow connected with mysteries of the underworld. As may be remembered, the text (In chapter 9 of the Apocalypse of Abraham) tells that Moses saw a multitude of stars falling before his knees and parading before him like a battalion of men. It has previously been noted that the Exagoge passage might have been influenced by the Enochic traditions and attempts to rewrite the Enochic motifs from the Mosaic perspective. In view of the Enochic connections, the imagery of the stars falling before Moses evokes the memory of the peculiar symbolism found in some Enochic writings where stars signify the fallen Watchers. Moreover, in some Enochic texts, the Watchers imprisoned in the underworld or lower heavens are depicted as “falling down” before the seventh antediluvian hero during his visit to the regions of their punishment. One of the specimens of this tradition is found in 2 Enoch, where the fallen Watchers are depicted as bowing down before the patriarch Enoch. Hagigah does not seem farfetched, and it is possible that the early versions of the formula originated within Enochic lore, which portrays the seventh antediluvian hero traveling through the upper and lower regions and receiving knowledge about protological and eschatological events.[27]

7. Mysteries of Leviathan:
It is even more intriguing that the formula found in the Similitudes (1 En. 60:11) is situated in the narrative dealing with the revelation of two esoteric subjects are the Account of the Chariot (1 En. 60:1-6) and the account of Leviathan and Behemoth (1 En. 60:7-10). 1 Enoch. 60:1-6 the seer, like Moses in the Exagoge, describes his vision of the deity seated on the throne of his glory and his own transformation during this vision. His visionary merkavah account is situated in the text right before the tradition about two primordial monsters. A female monster, Leviathan, will dwell in the depths of the sea above the springs of the waters and a male monster, Behemoth, will occupy an immense desert named Dendayn. It is intriguing that the authors of the Book of the Similitudes, like the authors of the Apocalypse of Abraham and Song of Songs Rabbah, attempt to conflate two esoteric subjects, the merkavah vision and the vision of Leviathan and Behemoth. This constellation is then followed in the Enochic pseudepigraphon by the expression about the secret described as “first and last in heaven, in the heights, and under the dry ground.” It should be also noted that in 1 En.[28] 

8. Cosmological writings:
There, among the various sites described, natural and cosmological phenomena figure prominently in the tour. 1 Enoch 17–19 relates that Enoch encounters the storehouses of the winds (1 Enoch 18:1), places of storm, lightning and thunder (1 Enoch 17:2–3), the cornerstone of the earth (1 Enoch 18:2), pillars of heaven (1 Enoch 18:3), the waters of life (1 Enoch 17:4), the river of fire (1 Enoch 17:5), and the firmament of the heaven (1 Enoch 18:5). We learn that these cosmological wonders are accessible to Enoch alone through the patriarch’s statement that no other has seen as Enoch has.[29]
In addition to the cosmological phenomena, Enoch is taken to sites with extraordinary topographical features. In the course of the journey Enoch sees two mountains whose summits reach heaven. From the vicinity of one, Enoch sees the storehouses of the luminaries and meteorological phenomena (1 Enoch 17:2-3). The other mountain stands in the middle of six mountains (1 Enoch 18:6, 1 Enoch 24:2-3) all seven consist of precious stones. The highest mountain which stands in between the six is compared to the throne of God (1 Enoch 18:8, 1 Enoch 24:3) and in a duplicate tradition also found in the Book of the Watchers, 1 Enoch 25:3, we learn that the mountain is the site at which God will descend. Enoch also visits sites connected with infernal places of punishment and the Day of Judgment. Most prominent among the places to which Enoch travels in 1 Enoch 17-19, in fact, are ‘holding places’ for angels and stars. In 1 Enoch 18:11, Enoch visits a deserted place located beyond the foundations of the earth and sees a chasm full of pillars of blazing fire. Enoch learns from the angel Uriel that this is the spot where the promiscuous watchers will stand until the great day of judgment (1 Enoch 19:1-2). Further, in 1 Enoch 18:14-16 (and the duplicate tradition 21:4–6) Enoch views the prison for the disobedient stars and host of heaven where they will be bound until the consummation of their sin. I would say Cosmology in some sense becomes a medium for 1 Enoch’s eschatology.[30]
Cosmic order is an important theme in a number of apocalypses. In the book of watchers (I Enoch (1-36) and the book of the Heavenly Luminaries marked interest in the topography of various regions of the cosmos. The cosmology or geographical interests of 1 Enoch 17-19, though the Hebrew Apocalypse of Elijah certainly comes close within the Enochic corpus itself, the cosmos as well as sacred sites are often transformed as one finds in 1 Enoch 108’s depiction of an eastern place of punishment beyond the edges of the earth or reflect other paradigms, such as the multiple heaven schema in portions of the Similitudes. Every text, though generally reflecting a cosmology derived from either the ancient Near Eastern (and biblical) model or the Greco-Roman model of the cosmos, partakes of its own idiosyncrasies. The cosmology and manner in which space is construed are also tailored to suit the literary and theological goals of the author. The author of 1 Enoch 17-19 acquires geographical sensibilities, sacred sites, and cosmology from Near Eastern, biblical and Greek traditions. Many of these same traditions would be available to the authors of other apocalypses as well. The depiction of the cosmos as tripartite or the view that the earth is a flat disk encircled by a great river were familiar images in the Near East and classical Greece. It is possible that 1 Enoch 17-19 and the Book of the Watchers contributed to the imagery that would be recycled in later apocalypses. Also probable is that the authors of other apocalypses, like the person responsible for 1 Enoch 17-19, drank deeply from the well of traditional motifs and images while still absorbing and appropriating from their environment and context new information about geography, sacred sites, and cosmology.[31]

Bibliography:
Argall, Randal A. 1 Enoch and Sirach, A Comparative Literary and Conceptual Analysis of the Themes of Revelation, Creation and Judgment, SBL Early Judaism and its Literature. Atlanta: Scholar Press, 1995.

Boccaccini, Gabriele ed., Enoch and Qumran Origins, New Light on a Forgotten Connection. Grandrapids: William Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2005.

Collins, John J The Apocalyptic Imagination An Introduction To Jewish Apocalyptic Literature, Second Edition. Cambridge: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company grand Rapids,1998.

Collins, John J. Supplements To The Journal For The Study Of Judaism, A Study Of The Geography of 1 Enoch 17-19 “No One Has Seen What I Have Seen”. Boston: Brill, 2003.

Cory D. Anderson, Jude's Use of The Pseudepigraphal Book Of 1 Enoch. London: University Of California Press, 2000.

David R. Jackson, Enochic Judaism, Three Defining Paradigm Exemplars (London: T&T Clark International, 2004.

Elizabeth Clare, Fallen Angels and the Origins Of Evil, Why Church Fathers Suppressed The Book Of Enoch And Its Startling Revelations. Montana: Summit University Press, 2000.

Florentina Badalanova, Heavenly Writings: Celestial Cosmography In The Book Of Secrets Of Enoch. Berlin Press: London, 1999.
Gabriel Boccaccini & John J. Collins, Eds., The Early Enoch Literature: Supplements To The Journal For The Study Of Judaism. Boston: Brill, 2007.

George H. Schodde, The Book Of Enoch With Introduction And Notes. Washington: Office Of The Librarian Of Congress. 1982.

Israel Knohl, The Messiah Before Jesus The Suffering Servant Of The Dead Sea Scrolls. London: University Of California Press, 2000.

Martinez, Florentino Garcia Studies On The Texts Of The Desert Of Judah, VOLUME LXXII. Boston: Brill, 2007.

Maxwell J. Davidson, Angels at Qumran, A Comparative Study of 1 Enoch 1-36, 72-108 and Sectarian Writings from Qumran. England: Sheffield Academic Press, 1992.

Michael A. Knibb, Essays On The Book Of Enoch And Other Early Jewish Texts And Traditions. Boston: Brill Publications, 2009.

Nickelsburg George W.E. and James C. VanderKam, I Enoch, A New Translation. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2004.

Robert Collins And Roberta Kugler,  eds., Religion In The Dead Sea Scrolls. Grand Rapids: William Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2000.

Schafer Peter & Annette Yoshiko Reed, Et Al., Texts And Studies In Ancient Judaism (Leiden: Brill, 2009.

The Books Of Enoch And Jubilees Are Jewish Apocalyptic Books That Are Not Included In The Hebrew Canon Or The Apocrypha But In The Pseudepigrapha. Fragments Of Both Books Were Found Among The Dead Sea Scrolls. Schurer, The History Of The Jewish People In The Age Of Jesus Christ, Vol. III.1.

Tiller, Patrick A. A Commentary on the Apocalypse of I Enoch, SBL Early Judaism and its Literature. Atlanta: Scholar Press, 1993.

Vanderkam James C. and William Adler, The Jewish Apocalyptic Heritage In Early Christianity. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996.

Veronica Bachmann, The Book Of The Watchers (1 Enoch 1–36): An Anti-Mosaic, Non-Mosaic, Or Even Pro-Mosaic Writing? (10/Aug/2014), Http://Www.Jhsonline.Org/ Volume 11, Article 4.Htm (10 August 2014).


[1] The Books Of Enoch And Jubilees Are Jewish Apocalyptic Books That Are Not Included In The Hebrew Canon or The Apocrypha But In The Pseudepigrapha. Fragments Of Both Books Were Found Among The Dead Sea Scrolls. (Schurer, The History Of The Jewish People In The Age Of Jesus Christ, Vol. III.1, 250-68, 308-18).
[2] George H. Schodde, The Book Of Enoch With Introduction And Notes (Washington: Office Of The Librarian Of Congress), 1982), 4.
[3] Elizabeth Clare, Fallen Angels And The Origins Of Evil, Why Church Fathers Suppressed The Book Of Enoch And Its Startling Revelations (Montana: Summit University Press, 2000),16.
[4] Robert Collins And Roberta Kugler,  eds., Religion In The Dead Sea Scrolls (Grand Rapids: William Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2000), 13

[5] Gabriel Boccaccini & John J. Collins, Eds., The Early Enoch Literature: Supplements To The Journal For The Study Of Judaism (Boston: Brill, 2007), 58.
[6] Isreal Knohl, The Messiah Before Jesus The Suffering Servant Of The Dead Sea Scrolls (London: University Of California Press, 2000), 383.
[7] Cory D. Anderson, Jude's Use Of The Pseudepigraphal Book Of 1 Enoch (London: University Of California Press, 2000), 301-3.3



[8] David R. Jackson, Enochic Judaism, Three Defining Paradigm Exemplars (London: T&T Clark International, 2004), 21.
[9] Florentina Badalanova, Heavenly Writings: Celestial Cosmography In The Book Of Secrets Of Enoch (Berlin Press: London, 1999), 1.
[10] Randal A. Argall, 1 Enoch and Sirach, A Comparative Literary and Conceptual Analysis of the Themes of Revelation, Creation and Judgment, SBL Early Judaism and its Literature (Atlanta: Scholar Press, 1995), 51.
[12] Maxwell J. Davidson, Angels at Qumran, A Comparative Study of 1 Enoch 1-36, 72-108 and Sectarian Writings from Qumran (England: Sheffield Academic Press, 1992), 59
[13] Veronica Bachmann, The Book Of The Watchers (1 Enoch 1–36): An Anti-Mosaic, Non-Mosaic, Or Even Pro-Mosaic Writing? (10/Aug/2014), Http://Www.Jhsonline.Org/ Volume 11, Article 4.Htm (10 August 2014).
[14] Michael A. Knibb, Essays On The Book Of Enoch And Other Early Jewish Texts And Traditions (Boston: Brill Publications, 2009), 372-375.
[15] Florentino Garcia Martinez, Studies On The Texts Of The Desert Of Judah, VOLUME LXXII (Boston: Brill, 2007), 67.
[16] John J Collins, The Apocalyptic Imagination An Introduction To Jewish Apocalyptic Literature, Second Edition., 58.
[17] George W.E. Nickelsburg and James C. VanderKam, I Enoch, A New Translation (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2004), 12.
[18] James C. Vanderkam and William Adler, The Jewish Apocalyptic Heritage In Early Christianity (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996)15.
[19] Randal A. Argall, 1 Enoch and Sirach, A Comparative Literary and Conceptual Analysis of the Themes of Revelation, Creation and Judgment, SBL Early Judaism and its Literature.,50.
[20] Gabriele Boccaccini, ed., Enoch and Qumran Origins, New Light on a Forgotten Connection (Grandrapids: William Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2005), 14.
[21] Randal A. Argall, 1 Enoch and Sirach, A Comparative Literary and Conceptual Analysis of the Themes of Revelation, Creation and Judgment, SBL Early Judaism and its Literature.,51.
[22] Randal A. Argall, 1 Enoch and Sirach, A Comparative Literary and Conceptual Analysis of the Themes of Revelation, Creation and Judgment, SBL Early Judaism and its Literature.,56-58.
[23] Randal A. Argall, 1 Enoch and Sirach, A Comparative Literary and Conceptual Analysis of the Themes of Revelation, Creation and Judgment, SBL Early Judaism and its Literature., 99.
[24] Patrick A. Tiller, A Commentary on the Apocalypse of I Enoch, SBL Early Judaism and its Literature (Atlanta: Scholar Press, 1993), 24.
[25] John J Collins, The Apocalyptic Imagination An Introduction To Jewish Apocalyptic Literature, Second Edition., 58-61.
[26] John J Collins, The Apocalyptic Imagination An Introduction To Jewish Apocalyptic Literature, Second Edition (Cambridge: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company grand Rapids, Michigan /, U.K, 1998),6.
[27] Peter Schafer & Annette Yoshiko Reed, Et Al., Texts And Studies In Ancient Judaism (Leiden: Brill, 2009),320.
[28] Peter Schafer & Annette Yoshiko Reed, Et Al., Texts And Studies In Ancient Judaism., 322.
[29] John J. Collins, Supplements To The Journal For The Study Of Judaism, A Study Of The Geography of 1 Enoch 17-19 “No One Has Seen What I Have Seen” (Boston: Brill, 2003),2-3.
[30] John J. Collins, Supplements To The Journal For The Study Of Judaism, A Study Of The Geographyof 1 Enoch 17-19 “No One Has Seen What I Have Seen”., 3-4.
[31] John J. Collins, Supplements To The Journal For The Study Of Judaism, A Study Of The Geographyof 1 Enoch 17-19 “No One Has Seen What I Have Seen”., 272.

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