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The Book of Enoch 28

1 min 3 verses Translated by R.H. Charles, 1917 (public domain).
Book I The Book of the Watchers Chapters 1–36 · 3rd century BCE

The oldest core of 1 Enoch: the descent of the two hundred Watchers, the birth of the giants, Enoch's intercession, and his guided journeys through the cosmos and the places of judgment.

Dating & manuscripts. Among the oldest apocalyptic writings in existence. Aramaic copies were found at Qumran (4QEnoch a-c), confirming its pre-Maccabean date - older than the Book of Daniel.

Chapters 6-11 preserve an older Semjaza/Shemihazah myth cycle later woven together with the Azazel/Asael tradition; scholars read them as composite, with a Noah fragment embedded. Angel names vary by manuscript (Semjaza/Shemihazah, Azazel/Asael).

In later tradition. This section's imagery echoes through later scripture and tradition: the Epistle of Jude (verses 14-15) quotes 1 Enoch 1:9 by name, and the Watchers legend shaped 2 Peter, the Book of Revelation, and the theology of the Qumran community and early Christianity.

The Book of Giants. A sixth Enochic work that expands the Watchers story from the giants' point of view - their violence, their prophetic dreams, and their doom. Known from Aramaic fragments at Qumran and, centuries later, adopted into Manichaean scripture. It is not part of the Ethiopic 1 Enoch preserved here.

1 Enoch is an anthology of five distinct works, composed over roughly three centuries.

The Eastern Desert

Towards the east in the midst of the mountain range of the desert lay a solitary wilderness full of trees and plants.

A1🔗nd thence I went towards the east, into the midst of the mountain range of the desert, and I saw a wilderness and it was solitary, full of trees and plants.

2🔗 And water gushed forth from above.

3🔗 Rushing like a copious watercourse which flowed towards the north-west it caused clouds and dew to ascend on every side.

Commentary

In brief

Enoch goes towards the east into the midst of the mountain range of the desert and sees a solitary wilderness full of trees and plants. Water gushes forth from above, rushing like a copious watercourse which flows towards the north-west and causes clouds and dew to ascend on every side.

Did You Know?

1

Towards the east in the midst of the mountain range of the desert lay a solitary wilderness full of trees and plants.

2

Water gushed forth from above in the solitary wilderness of the desert mountain range.

3

The water rushed like a copious watercourse which flowed towards the north-west.

4

The watercourse flowing towards the north-west caused clouds and dew to ascend on every side.

5

A solitary desert wilderness full of trees and plants featured water that gushed forth from above.

Continue Reading The Book of Enoch 29 The Fragrant Trees

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Chapter Context