The Book of Enoch
Book of Secrets of Enoch
The Book of Enoch
Introduction
Genesis 5:18-24 [18] Jared lived one hundred and sixty-two years, and
begot Enoch. [19] After he begot Enoch, Jared lived eight hundred years,
and had sons and daughters. [20] So all the days of Jared were nine
hundred and sixty-two years; and he died. [21] Enoch lived sixty-five
years, and begot Methuselah. [22] After he begot Methuselah, Enoch
walked with God three hundred years, and had sons and daughters. [23] So
all the days of Enoch were three hundred and sixty-five years. [24] And
Enoch walked with God; and he was not, for God took him.
Hebrews 11:5 By faith Enoch was taken away so that he did not see
death, "and was not found, because God had taken him"; for
before he was taken he had this testimony, that he pleased God.
Jude 1:14-15 [14] Now Enoch, the seventh from Adam, prophesied about
these men also, saying, "Behold, the Lord comes with ten thousands
of His saints, [15] to execute judgment on all, to convict all who are
ungodly among them of all their ungodly deeds which they have committed
in an ungodly way, and of all the harsh things which ungodly sinners
have spoken against Him."
We first learn of Enoch in Genesis 5 but it leaves us with questions.
Hebrews 11 has the answers and Jude quotes Enoch! How did Jude come to
know the words of Enoch? They are not in the Bible. The answer of
course, is The Book of Enoch. A book which is actually quoted by Jude in
the New Testament. What is the Book of Enoch and where did it come from?
Enoch was the grandfather of Noah. The Book of Enoch chapter 68:1
"And after that my grandfather Enoch gave me all the secrets in the
book and in the parables which had been given to him, and he put them
together for me in the words of the book of the parables."
The Book of Enoch was extant centuries before the birth of Christ and
yet is considered by many to be more Christian in its theology than
Jewish. It was considered scripture by many early Christians. The
earliest literature of the so-called "Church Fathers" is
filled with references to this mysterious book. The early second century
"Epistle of Barnabus" makes much use of the Book of Enoch.
Second and Third Century "Church Fathers" like Justin Martyr,
Irenaeus, Origin and Clement of Alexandria all make use of the Book of
Enoch. Tertullian (160-230 C.E) even called the Book of Enoch "Holy
Scripture". The Ethiopic Church even added the Book of Enoch to its
official canon. It was widely known and read the first three centuries
after Christ. This and many other books became discredited after the
Council of Laodicea. And being under ban of the authorities, afterwards
it gradually passed out of circulation.
At about the time of the Protestant Reformation, there came to be a
renewed interest in the Book of Enoch which had long since been lost to
the modern world. By the late 1400's rumors began to spread that
somewhere a copy of the long lost Book of Enoch might still exist.
During this time many books arose claiming to be the long lost book and
were later found to be forgeries.
The return of the long lost Book of Enoch to the modern western world
is credited to the famous explorer James Bruce, who in 1773 returned
from six years in Abyssinia with three Ethiopic copies of the lost book.
In 1821 Richard Laurence published the first English translation. The
famous R.H. Charles edition was published in 1912. In the following
years several portions of the Greek text surfaced. Then with the
discovery of cave 4 of the Dead Sea Scrolls, seven fragmentary copies of
the Aramaic text were discovered.
There are scholars who believe the Book of Enoch was published before
the Christian era by some great unknown of Semetic race, who believing
himself to be inspired in a post-prophetic age, borrowed the name of an
antediluvian patriarch to authenticate his own enthusiastic forcast of
the coming Messiah. The Book of Enoch is divided into five basic parts,
but it is the The Book of Parables (37-71) which gives scholars the most
trouble for it is primarily concerned with a figure called "the
messiah"; "the righteous one"; "the chosen one"
and "the son of man."
The Book of Enoch Chapter 46:1-2 [1] There I beheld the Ancient of
days whose head was like white wool, and with him another, whose
countenance resembled that of a man. His countenance was full of grace,
like that of one of the holy angels. Then I inquired of one of the
angels, who went with me, and who showed me every secret thing,
concerning this Son of man; who he was; whence he was; and why he
accompanied the Ancient of days. [2] He answered and said to me, This is
the Son of man, to whom righteousness belongs; with whom righteousness
has dwealt; and who will reveal all the treasures of that which is
concealed: for the Lord of spirits has chosen him; and his portion has
surpassed all before the Lord of spirits in everlasting
uprightness."
(1) 1 Enoch
Discovery of the "Lost Text"
"The Greek word pseudepigrapha is a Greek word meaning 'falsely
superscribed,' or what we moderns might call writing under a pen name.
The classification, 'OT Pseudepigrapha,' is a label that scholars have
given to these writings."
- Craig A. Evans, Noncanonical
Writings and New Testament Interpretation, (1992) p. 22
"The Book of Enoch is a pseudepigraphical work (a work
that claims to be by a biblical character). The Book of Enoch
was not included in either the Hebrew or most Christian biblical canons,
but could have been considered a sacred text by the sectarians."
- Milik, Jazef. T., ed. The Books of
Enoch: Aramaic Fragments of Qumran Cave 4
The Book of Enoch is "an ancient composition known from
two sets of versions, an Ethiopic one that scholars identify as '1
Enoch', and a Slavonic version that is identified as '2 Enoch', and
which is also known as The Book of the Secrets of Enoch. Both
versions, of which copied manuscripts have been found mostly in Greek
and Latin translations, are based on early sources that enlarged on the
short biblical mention that Enoch, the seventh Patriarch after Adam, did
not die because, at age 365, 'he walked with God' - taken heavenward to
join the deity."
- Zecharia Sitchin, When Time Began
"I Enoch, also known as the Ethiopic Apocalypse of Enoch, is the
oldest of the three pseudepigraphal books attributed to Enoch, the man
who apparently did not die, but was taken up to heaven (Gen 5:24). The
book was originally written in either Hebrew or Aramaic, perhaps both,
but it survives in complete form only in Ethiopic (Ge'ez), and in
fragmentary form in Aramaic, Greek (1:1-32:6; 6:1-10:14; 15:8-16:1;
89:42-49; 97:6-104), and Latin (106:1-18)."
"The materials in I Enoch range in date from 200 B.C.E. to 50 C.E.
I Enoch contributes much to intertestamental views of angels, heaven,
judgment, resurrection, and the Messiah. This book has left its stamp
upon many of the NT writers, especially the author of Revelation."
- Craig A. Evans, Noncanonical
Writings and New Testament Interpretation, (1992) p. 23
"Prior to the eighteenth century, scholars had believed the Book
of Enoch to be irretrievably lost: composed long before the birth
of Christ, and considered to be one of the most important pieces of
Jewish mystical literature, it was only known from fragments and from
references to it in other texts. James Bruce changed all this by
procuring several copies of the missing work during his stay in
Ethiopia. These were the first complete editions of the Book of
Enoch ever to be seen in Europe."
- Graham Hancock, The Sign and the
Seal
"The Book of Enoch remained in darkness until 1821,
when the long years of dedicated work by a professor of Hebrew at the
University of Oxford were finally rewarded with the publication of the
first ever English translation of the Book of Enoch. The
Reverend Richard Laurence, Archbishop of Cashel, had labored for many
hundreds of hours over the faded manuscript in the hands of the Bodleian
Library, carefully substituting English words and expressions for the
original Geez, while comparing the results with known extracts, such as
the few brief chapters preserved in Greek by Syncellus during the ninth
century."
- Andrew Collins, From the Ashes of
Angels - The Forbidden Legacy of a Fallen Race (1996) p. 21
"The original Aramaic version was lost until the Dead Sea
fragments were discovered."
"The original language of most of this work was, in all likelihood,
Aramaic (an early Semitic language). Although the original version was
lost in antiquity, portions of a Greek translation were discovered in
Egypt and quotations were known from the Church Fathers. The discovery
of the texts from Qumran Cave 4 has finally provided parts of the
Aramaic original. ...Humankind is called on to observe how unchanging
nature follows God's will."
- Milik, Jazef. T., ed. The Books of
Enoch: Aramaic Fragments of Qumran Cave 4
Composition
"1 Enoch, preserved in a full, 108-chapter form in Ethiopic,
consists of five parts and one appended chapter. It originated in
Aramaic (perhaps Hebrew for chaps. 37-71), was translated into Greek,
and from Greek into Ethiopic."
- James C. Vanderkam (Professor of Hebrew
Scriptures at the University of Notre Dame)
"The Aramaic Book of Enoch...very considerably
influenced the idiom of the New Testament and patristic literature, more
so in fact than any other writing of the Apocrypha and
Pseudepigrapha."
- Norman Golb, Who Wrote the Dead Sea
Scrolls?, (1995) p. 366
"As it now stands, I Enoch appears to consist of the following
five major divisions:
(1) The Book of the Watchers (chaps. 1-36);
(2) The Book of the Similitudes (chaps. 37-7l)-,
(3) The Book of Astronomical Writings (chaps.
72-82);
(4) The Book of Dream Visions (chaps. 83-90);
and
(5) The Book of the Epistle of Enoch (chaps.
91-107)."
- Craig A. Evans, Noncanonical
Writings and New Testament Interpretation, (1992) p. 23
"Chaps. 1-36 The Book of the Watchers may date
from the third century BCE. Parts of its text have been identified on
several copies from Qumran cave 4; the earliest fragmentary manuscript
(4QEnocha) dates, according to the editor J.T. Milk, to between 200 and
150 BCE. All Qumran copies are in the Aramaic language."
- James C. Vanderkam
"James Vanderkam divides the first part of 1 Enoch into five
sections:
1-5 a theophany followed by an eschatological
admonition
6-11 the angel story (stories)
12-16 Enoch and the failed petition of the
angels who descended,
17-19 Enoch's first journey,
20-36 Enoch's second journey (chap. 20 is a list
of angels who are connected with the journeys)."
- Tom Simms (CrossTalk)
"Chaps. 37-71 The Book of Parables (or the
Similitudes of Enoch) may have been composed in the late first century
BCE; a number of scholars prefer to place it in the first or even the
second century CE. Milik assigns it to the late third century CE. No
fragments of these chapters have been found at Qumran, and some think
their original language was Hebrew, not Aramaic."
- James C. Vanderkam
"Chaps. 72-82 The Astronomical Book, like the
Book of Watchers, may date from the third century BCE; the oldest copy
of it seems to have been made not long after 200 BCE. Sizable portions
of the text are preserved on four copies, written in Aramaic, from
Qumran cave 4. The Aramaic original appears to have been much different
and much longer than the Ethiopic text, adding far more astronomical
details."
- James C. Vanderkam
Authorship
"A world view so encyclopaediac that it embraced the geography
of heaven and earth, astronomy, meteorology, medicine was no part of
Jewish tradition - but was familiar to educated Greeks, but attempting
to emulate and surpass Greek wisdom, by having an integrating divine
plan for destiny, elaborated through an angelic host with which Enoch is
in communication through his mystical travels."
- Chris King, "The Apocalyptic
Tradition"
Although the Book of Enoch is considered as apocryphal, it
was clearly known to early Christian writers as the following quote from
1 Enoch 1:9 indicates:
"In the seventh (generation) from Adam Enoch also prophesied
these things, saying: 'Behold, the Lord came with his holy myriads, to
execute judgment on all, and to convict all the ungodly of all their
ungodly deeds which they have committed in such an ungodly way, and of
all the harsh things which ungodly sinners spoke against him'."
- Jude 14-15
2 Enoch
"2 Enoch, or the Slavonic Apocalypse of Enoch, was written late
first century C.E. in Egypt by a Jew. It survives only in late Old
Slavonic manuscripts. It may have been composed originally in Aramaic or
Hebrew, later being translated into Greek, and later still being
translated into Old Slavonic. It is an amplification of Gen 5:21-32
(from Enoch to the Flood). Major theological themes include:
(1) God created the world out of nothing
(24:2);
(2) seven heavens (30:2-3) and angelic
hosts;
(3) God created the souls of men before
the foundation of the earth (23:5);
(4) abodes of heaven and hell are already
prepared for righteous and sinners; and
(5) ethical teachings, which at times
parallel those of the NT and Proverbs."
- Craig A. Evans, Noncanonical
Writings and New Testament Interpretation, (1992) p. 23
Date: 07/22/2000 Author: David Chariot
About the Book of Enoch
(also known as "Ethiopian Enoch" or "1 Enoch")
The Book of Enoch (also known as 1 Enoch) was once cherished by Jews and
Christians alike, this book later fell into disfavor with powerful
theologians - precisely because of its controversial statements on the
nature and deeds of the fallen angels.
The Enochian writings, in addition to many other writings that were
excluded (or lost) from the Bible (i.e., the Book of Tobit, Esdras,
etc.) were widely recognized by many of the early church fathers as
"apocryphal" writings. The term "apocrypha" is
derived from the Greek word meaning "hidden" or
"secret". Originally, the import of the term may have
been complimentary in that the term was applied to sacred books whose
contents were too exalted to be made available to the general public.
In Dan. 12:9-10 we hear of words that are shut up until the end of time
and, words that the wise shall understand and the wicked shall not. In
addition, 4 Ezra 14:44ff. mentions 94 books, of which 24 (the OT) were
to be published and 70 were to be delivered only to the wise among the
people (= apocrypha). Gradually, the term "apocrypha" took on
a pejorative connotation, for the orthodoxy of these hidden books was
often questionable. Origen (Comm. in Matt. 10.18; p. 13.881)
distinguished between books that were to be read in public worship and
apocryphal books. Because these secret books were often preserved for
use within the esoteric circles of the divinely - knit believers, many
of the critically - spirited or "unenlightened" Church Fathers
found themselves outside the realm of understanding, and therefore came
to apply the term "apocryphal" to, what they claimed to be,
heretical works which were forbidden to be read.
In Protestant parlance, "the Apocrypha" designate 15 works,
all but one of which are Jewish in origin and found in the Septuagint
(parts of 2 Esdras are Christian and Latin in origin). Although
some of them were composed in Palestine in Aramaic or Hebrew, they were
not accepted into the Jewish canon formed late in the 2nd cent. AD
(Canonicity, 67:31-35). The Reformers, influenced by the Jewish canon of
the OT, did not consider these books on a par with the rest of the
Scriptures; thus the custom arose of making the Apocrypha a separate
section in the
Protestant Bible, or sometimes even of omitting them entirely
(Canonicity, 67:44-46). The Catholic view, expressed as a doctrine of
faith at the Council of Trent, is that 12 of these 15 works (in a
different enumeration, however) are canonical Scripture; they are called
the Deuterocanonical Books (Canonicity, 67:21, 42-43).
The three books of the Protestant Apocrypha that are not accepted by
Catholics are 1-2 Esdras and the Prayer of Manasseh. The theme of the
Book of Enoch dealing with the nature and deeds of the fallen angels so
infuriated the later Church fathers that one, Filastrius, actually
condemned it openly as heresy (Filastrius, Liber de Haeresibus, no.
108). Nor did the rabbis deign to give credence to the book's teaching
about angels. Rabbi Simeon ben Jochai in the second century A.D.
pronounced a curse upon those who believed it (Delitzsch, p. 223). So
the book was denounced, banned, cursed, no doubt burned and
shredded - and last but not least, lost (and conveniently forgotten) for
a thousand years. But with an uncanny persistence, the Book of Enoch
found its way back into circulation two centuries ago.
In 1773, rumors of a surviving copy of the book drew Scottish explorer
James Bruce to distant Ethiopia. True to hearsay, the Book of Enoch had
been preserved by the Ethiopic church, which put it right alongside the
other books of the Bible. Bruce secured not one, but three Ethiopic
copies of the book and brought them back to Europe and Britain. When in
1821 Dr. Richard Laurence, a Hebrew professor at Oxford, produced the
first English translation of the work, the modern world gained its first
glimpse of the forbidden mysteries of Enoch.
Most scholars say that the present form of the story in the Book of
Enoch was penned sometime during the second century B.C. and was popular
for at least five hundred years. The earliest Ethiopic text was
apparently made from a Greek manuscript of the Book of Enoch, which
itself was a copy of an earlier text. The original was apparently
written in Semitic language, now thought to be Aramaic.
Though it was once believed to be post-Christian (the similarities to
Christian terminology and teaching are striking), recent discoveries of
copies of the book among the Dead Sea Scrolls found at Qumran prove that
the book was in existence before the time of Jesus Christ. But the date
of the original writing upon which the second century B.C. Qumran copies
were based is shrouded in obscurity. It is, in a word, old. It has
been largely the opinion of historians that the book does not really
contain the authentic words of the ancient biblical patriarch Enoch,
since he would have lived (based on the chronologies in the Book of
Genesis) several thousand years earlier than the first known appearance
of the book attributed to him.
Despite its unknown origins, Christians once accepted the words of this
Book of Enoch as authentic scripture, especially the part about the
fallen angels and their prophesied judgment. In fact, many of the key
concepts used by Jesus Christ himself seem directly connected to terms
and ideas in the Book of Enoch. Thus, it is hard to avoid the
conclusion that Jesus had not only studied the book, but also respected
it highly enough to adopt and elaborate on its specific descriptions of
the coming kingdom and its theme of inevitable judgment descending upon
"the wicked" - the term most often used in the Old Testament
to describe the Watchers.
There is abundant proof that Christ approved of the Book of Enoch. Over
a hundred phrases in the New Testament find precedents in the Book of
Enoch. Another remarkable bit of evidence for the early
Christians' acceptance of the Book of Enoch was for many years buried
under the King James Bible's mistranslation of Luke 9:35, describing the
transfiguration of Christ: "And there came a voice out of the
cloud, saying, 'This is my beloved Son: hear him." Apparently the
translator here wished to make this verse agree with a similar verse in
Matthew and Mark. But Luke's verse in the original Greek reads:
"This is my Son, the Elect One (from the Greek ho eklelegmenos,
lit., "the elect one"): hear him." The "Elect
One" is a most significant term (found fourteen times) in the Book
of Enoch. If the book was indeed known to the apostles of Christ,
with its abundant descriptions of the Elect One who should "sit
upon the throne of glory" and the Elect One who should "dwell
in the midst of them," then the great scriptural authenticity is
accorded to the Book of Enoch when the "voice out of the
cloud" tells the apostles, "This is my Son, the Elect
One" - the one promised in the Book of Enoch.
The Book of Jude tells us in vs. 14 that "Enoch, the seventh from
Adam, prophesied..." Jude also, in vs. 15, makes a direct reference
to the Book of Enoch (2:1), where he writes, "to execute judgment
on all, to convict all who are ungodly..." The time difference
between Enoch and Jude is approximately 3400 years. Therefore, Jude's
reference to the Enochian prophesies strongly leans toward the
conclusion that these written prophesies were available to him at that
time.
Fragments of ten Enoch manuscripts were found among the Dead Sea
Scrolls. The famous scrolls actually comprise only one part of the
total findings at Qumran. Much of the rest was Enochian literature,
copies of the Book of Enoch, and other apocryphal works in the Enochian
tradition, like the Book of Jubilees. With so many copies around, the
Essenes could well have used the Enochian writings as a community prayer
book or teacher's manual and study text.
The Book of Enoch was also used by writers of the noncanonical (i.e.
apocryphal or "hidden") texts. The author of the apocryphal
Epistle of Barnabas quotes the Book of Enoch three times, twice calling
it "the Scripture," a term specifically denoting the inspired
Word of God (Epis. of Barnabas 4:3, 16:5,6). Other apocryphal works
reflect knowledge of the Enoch story of the Watchers, notably the
Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs and the Book of Jubilees.
Many of the early church fathers also supported the Enochian writings.
Justin Martyr ascribed all evil to demons whom he alleged to be the
offspring of the angels who fell through lust for women (from the
Ibid.)-directly referencing the Enochian writings. Athenagoras,
writing in his work called Legatio in about 170 A.D., regards Enoch as a
true prophet. He describes the angels which "violated both their
own nature and their office." In his writings, he goes into
detail about the nature of fallen angels and the cause of their fall,
which comes directly from the Enochian writings.
Many other church fathers: Tatian (110-172); Irenaeus, Bishop of Lyons
(115-185); Clement of Alexandria (150-220); Tertullian (160-230); Origen
(186-255); Lactantius (260-330); in addition to: Methodius of Philippi,
Minucius Felix, Commodianus, and Ambrose of Milanalso-also approved of
and supported the Enochian writings.
The twentieth-century discovery of several Aramaic Enochian texts among
the Dead Sea Scrolls prompted Catholic scholar J.T. Milik to compile a
complete history of the Enochian writings, including translations of the
Aramaic manuscripts. Milik's 400-page book, published in 1976 by
Oxford (J. T. Milik, ed. and trans., The Books of Enoch: Aramaic
Fragments of Qumran Cave 4, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1976) is a
milestone in Enochian scholarship, and Milik himself is no doubt one of
the finest experts on the subject. His opinions, based as they are on
years of in-depth research, are highly respected.
One by one the arguments against the Book of Enoch fade away. The day
may soon arrive when the final complaints about the Book of Enoch's lack
of historicity and "late date" are also silenced by new
evidence of the book's real antiquity.