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The Book of Jubilees

c. 160–150 BCE 50 chapters
Illustration for The Book of Jubilees

The Book of Jubilees retells the narrative of creation and the early patriarchs through a celestial lens, organizing all of sacred history into a precise calendar of jubilee periods — each spanning forty-nine years. Presented as a revelation given to Moses by the Angel of the Presence on Mount Sinai, the text provides expanded accounts of the lives of Adam, Noah, Abraham, Jacob, and Moses, filling in details absent from other traditions. It emphasizes the eternal nature of divine law, the role of angels and demons in human affairs, and the importance of the solar calendar. Written in the second century BCE, it was treasured by the community at Qumran and remains canonical in the Ethiopian tradition.

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📘 About This Book

Purpose

To defend the eternal validity of the Law and the solar calendar against Hellenistic influences.

Audience

Second-century BCE Jewish community

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