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The book of Enoch, scripture or not?

The Biblicist

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
The Case of the Book of Enoch, LXX translation, and the Dead Sea scrolls reveal that at the time of the Apostles what was considered scripture (canon in regards to the old testament) was a bit more fluid than people generally believe. Enoch falls into a particular catagory of liturature called Apocalyptic which was a particularily favorable form at the time. The Book of Revelation also follows this literary type in its presentation. The fact that the early Christians read and familiarized themselves with it and Copts still hold it as canon and certain dispensationalist (particularily the gap theorist sources with regard to who the nephalim were) have formulated certain ideas originating from this document is significant. Its actually a facinating study into the thinking of the early church.

I think you are presenting your case through rose colored glasses. What you say is true only to a certain point and then infers that which is not true.

Those entrusted with the scriptures - the Jewish people - did not recognize the apocrapha as scripture but only as devotional materials in their Jewish heritage or similar to commentators in our day. That is precisely how early Christians viewed the apocrypha in contrast to scriptures.

Second, since John wrote it during his own life time to seven churches in Asia minor (Turkey) it was fully received as inspired by the churches that received it. It was fully received by others. Only in the circles of a more liberal and apostate leaning type of Chrisitanity was it questioned and rejected.
 

Thinkingstuff

Active Member
I think you are presenting your case through rose colored glasses. What you say is true only to a certain point and then infers that which is not true.
What I've said is true. And I haven't infered anything apart that canon was not closed (meaning not that they weren't finished being written rather which collection of books were considered to be "inspired".) at the time of the apostles and what was considered canon was more fluid than what people generally believe today.

Those entrusted with the scriptures - the Jewish people - did not recognize the apocrapha as scripture but only as devotional materials in their Jewish heritage or similar to commentators in our day.
having read the late Dr. David Flusser's (professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Orthodox Jew) works on the second temple period scripture this expresses that this statement of yours isn't entirely accurate. He holds a more open Jewish canon at the time of the apostles. Though at a later date the Jews did "close their canon" after the already spreading Christianity an established faith at that time and as a response to Christianity's influence on Judaism. You cannot seriously contend that the Jews establishing a canon after the inseption and spread of Christianity was "entrusted to them" by God when their motivation was to limit the spread of Christianity now do you?

Second, since John wrote it during his own life time to seven churches in Asia minor (Turkey) it was fully received as inspired by the churches that received it. It was fully received by others. Only in the circles of a more liberal and apostate leaning type of Chrisitanity was it questioned and rejected.
Actually, I didn't even speak to this topic. This is a topic you introduced which means you are attempting to set up a straw man. My only Comment with regard to the book of Revelation is that it was an apocalyptic literary type similar to the book of Enoch which type of literature was popular at the time.
 
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The Biblicist

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
What I've said is true. And I haven't infered anything apart that canon was not closed (meaning not that they weren't finished being written rather which collection of books were considered to be "inspired".) at the time of the apostles and what was considered canon was more fluid than what people generally believe today.

The Canon was closed and we have been around this bush before. Tertullian refers to a closed canon which by definition cannot be added or subtracted from and that is the very language he did use. Second, the fact that he did not list every book of the New Testament means nothing, as the other books are listed by those prevous to Tertullian who lived AFTER the time tertullian speaks but before him.


having read the late Dr. David Flusser's (professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Orthodox Jew) works on the second temple period scripture this expresses that this statement of yours isn't entirely accurate. He holds a more open Jewish canon at the time of the apostles. Though at a later date the Jews did "close their canon" after the already spreading Christianity an established faith at that time and as a response to Christianity's influence on Judaism.

You really think that quoting one uninspired man changes history? We know the apocrapha was not recieved as scripture and that has been a settled fact for hundreds of years.
 

The Biblicist

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Site Supporter
The Canon was closed and we have been around this bush before. Tertullian refers to a closed canon which by definition cannot be added or subtracted from and that is the very language he did use. Second, the fact that he did not list every book of the New Testament means nothing, as the other books are listed by those prevous to Tertullian who lived AFTER the time tertullian speaks but before him.




You really think that quoting one uninspired man changes history? We know the apocrapha was not recieved as scripture and that has been a settled fact for hundreds of years.

When Jesus refers to the prophets he starts with Abel and stops with Zechariah. That excludes 1st and 2nd Macabees from his prophetic list along with all the other apocrypha written between Zechariah and Matthew. Scriptures are the product of prophets.
 

The Biblicist

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When Jesus refers to the prophets he starts with Abel and stops with Zechariah. That excludes 1st and 2nd Macabees from his prophetic list along with all the other apocrypha written between Zechariah and Matthew. Scriptures are the product of prophets.

Catholics attempt to divide the Old Testament into the Law, the Prophets and THE WRITINGS but the New Testament writers never use that division but speak of it as "the Law, the Prophets and THE PSALMS."
 

The Biblicist

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Site Supporter
Catholics attempt to divide the Old Testament into the Law, the Prophets and THE WRITINGS but the New Testament writers never use that division but speak of it as "the Law, the Prophets and THE PSALMS."

Josephus the contemporary Jewish historian with New Testament Christianity NEVER once included the apocrypha with the Old Testament Scriptures.

Jerome the translator of the Latin Vulgate excluded the Old Testament apocrypha as scripture because he did not believe the Jews accepted it as scriptures.
 

Scarlett O.

Moderator
Moderator
It seems that the bible gives a rough outline of what happened. Enoch gives specific details.

But if the Book of Enoch were merely fleshing out the details of the Bible, then wouldn't those details have to actually match the "rough outline"? I used to teach English. Your detailed paper has to match your outline.

The Bible says that Jesus is the only mediator between God and man. 1 Timothy 2:5 - "For there is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus..."

The book of Enoch says that the angel Phanuel is our mediator. That's not a fleshing out of details. It's a direct contradiction.

Also, the Bible states that through one MAN, (Adam), sin entered the world. This happened when Adam and Eve ate of the fruit, their eyes were "opened" as to good and evil, and IMMEDIATELY the rest of humanity was born with a sin nature - beginning with Cain.

The book of Enoch state that the angel Penemue (sp?) and his "ink and paper" writings were what "enlightened" mankind with wisdom. Not of good and evil. Just "wisdom". And this wisdom brought mankind to sin and to an understanding of what sin was and "taught" them to sin and to understand what death was.

Again, that's a direct contradiction of what the Bible says.

If we go with what Enoch says that "men were created LIKE angels" (which is not true in itself) and that it was the wisdom of angels through the reading of documents written in ink and on paper that brought sin and death into the world - then, brother, that is no fleshed out detail. Again, it's a direct contradiction.
 
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Thinkingstuff

Active Member
The Canon was closed and we have been around this bush before.
Yes we have. And as before you will attempt to misuse one early christian taking them out of their cultural and life context to promote your stance. However, historically it is factual that ambiguity surounded which books should be canon at the time of Christ and was not set until much later.

Tertullian refers to a closed canon which by definition cannot be added or subtracted from and that is the very language he did use.
Ah... As I've said. Looking at the early writings we find in Athenagoras and Justin Martyr that Christians had a different set of writings than the Jews because as any Christian can tell you the bible is not one book but a library of books or a collection of books. And the Christian collection was different than the Jews very early on. We can see Melito of Sardis (170) had a different collection than mentioned by Tertullian. J.N.D. Kelly States that
"It should be observed that the Old Testament thus admitted as authoritative in the Church was somewhat bulkier and more comprehensive than the . . . It always included, though with varying degrees of recognition, the so-called Apocrypha or deuterocanonical books. The reason for this is that the Old Testament which passed in the first instance into the hands of Christians was . . . the Greek translation known as the Septuagint. . . . most of the Scriptural quotations found in the New Testament are based upon it rather than the Hebrew.. . . In the first two centuries . . . the Church seems to have accept all, or most of, these additional books as inspired and to have treated them without question as Scripture.Quotations from Wisdom, for example, occur in 1 Clement and Barnabas. . . Polycarp cites Tobit, and the Didache [cites] Ecclesiasticus. Irenaeus refers to Wisdom, the History of Susannah, Bel and the Dragon [i.e., the deuterocanonical portions of Daniel], and Baruch. The use made of the Apocrypha by Tertullian, Hippolytus, Cyprian and Clement of Alexandria is too frequent for detailed references to be necessary" (Early Christian Doctrines, 53-54).

Second, the fact that he did not list every book of the New Testament means nothing, as the other books are listed by those prevous to Tertullian who lived AFTER the time tertullian speaks but before him.
Only in your mind would this be true. It is significant that in listing what is accepted he ignores certain books especially since the man fell into the ancient heresy resembeling current Legalistic Pentecostalism known as Montanism. Which btw held on to many Litrugical beliefs to include the Sacraments to which he says:
The flesh is washed, in order that the soul may be cleansed; the flesh is anointed, that the soul may be consecrated; the flesh is signed [with the cross], that the soul, too, may be fortified; the flesh is shadowed with the imposition of hands, that the soul also may be illuminated by the Spirit; the flesh feeds on the body and blood of Christ, that the soul likewise may have its fill of God — "Deres. Carnis.", viii
which btw isn't a baptist belief.

You really think that quoting one uninspired man changes history?
No, I think citing an expert in the field of Hebrew Scriptures who is neither Catholic or Protestant but an orthodox Jew, is able to cite history more and the canonization of hebrew scriptures more accurately than you.
 

Thinkingstuff

Active Member
When Jesus refers to the prophets he starts with Abel and stops with Zechariah. That excludes 1st and 2nd Macabees from his prophetic list along with all the other apocrypha written between Zechariah and Matthew. Scriptures are the product of prophets.

This is an easy mistake to make which you fall into quite splendidly. First of all it shows a lack of consideration of how the Hebrew Scriptures are catagorized which isn't in chronilogical order or how the LXX orders them (as does your bible) does it but by Torah, Nevi'im, and Ketuvim. It also shows a lack of consideration that Josephus wrote to Apion around 96 long after Christianity was well established and countered to Jewish faith. Clearly following in the Jewish rabbinical footsteps by limiting writings to the exclusion of books holding christian beliefs.
 

The Biblicist

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Yes we have. And as before you will attempt to misuse one early christian taking them out of their cultural and life context to promote your stance. However, historically it is factual that ambiguity surounded which books should be canon at the time of Christ and was not set until much later.

You are welcome to you opinion. You are citing uninspired sources which I believe represent a trail of apostasy that grows worse and worse from minor to major errors. You are quoting other sources that I view as complete heretics.


No, I think citing an expert in the field of Hebrew Scriptures who is neither Catholic or Protestant but an orthodox Jew, is able to cite history more and the canonization of hebrew scriptures more accurately than you.

I never quoted myself as a source. But there are many BELIEVING scholars who disagree with your one UNBELIEVING scholar. I also listed other reasons that demonstrates your position lacks crediblity.

The fact is the canon of scripture was closed before the last apostle died as Scripture predicted it would be closed by his apostles (Isa. 8:16-18).
 

billwald

New Member
The Christian Reformed Church concludes that the Apocypha is not official scripture but is authorized for teaching and illustration.

1 Maccabees is the ONLY history we have of that time period.
 

billwald

New Member
>Those entrusted with the scriptures - the Jewish people - did not recognize the apocrapha as scripture but only as devotional materials in their Jewish heritage or similar to commentators in our day. That is precisely how early Christians viewed the apocrypha in contrast to scriptures.

Those entrusted with the scripures - the Jewish people - did not HAVE a canon until after 70 AD. The Jewish canon was established because Christians "stole" the Tanakh and revised it for Christian theological purposes. The Tanakh, Jewish OT, is NOT identical to the Christian OT.
 

Thinkingstuff

Active Member
You are welcome to you opinion. You are citing uninspired sources which I believe represent a trail of apostasy that grows worse and worse from minor to major errors. You are quoting other sources that I view as complete heretics.
See, this is a false delema. First of all the discussion isn't about "dividing the word of truth". Or the meaning of a text from scriptures. Thus the requirement of having used sources not inspired by God becomes moot. We are asking a question of history which like all academic studies of history we attempt to assertain by eyewitnesses to that history. And much can be discovered by this method. Whether the men themselves are heretics is irrelevant to the discussion of history. However, I do find it telling that for proof of your position you will cite a person you consider a "heretic". Thus you find yourself in a position to treat the person simultaniously as an authority and a heretic about the same subject. Either the person has a value or you should disregard him altogether. But you can't have your cake an eat it too as the saying goes.


I never quoted myself as a source. But there are many BELIEVING scholars who disagree with your one UNBELIEVING scholar.
Two points about this statement. By using the Term "believing" you already catagorize these "scholars" as being biased and skewed to your particular view. Thus none of them are objectively viewing the subject. They are subjective. Which is why I usually cite non-Catholic authors as they aren't automatically percieved to be biased for Catholicism. Secondly, it seems more credible that an Orthodox Jewish historian has better knowledge and insite into his own sacred text than an outside "biased" academic that has a totally foreign cultural backgrown to anything from the land of Israel.

The fact is the canon of scripture was closed before the last apostle died as Scripture predicted it would be closed by his apostles (Isa. 8:16-18).
The last book of canon was actually writen during the last of the apostles life. That doesn't mean what was considered OT canon was settled at that point by early Christians. Because the gospel and the christian faith was primarily and firstly spead and propegated by oral teaching. OT Scripture were used to support what was spoken by the apostles. Christians therefore already had established beliefs as spoken to them by the apostles to which they sought support and further enlightenment to what they already believed from scripture text. But the final collection of what was acceptable happened long after the Apostles as history attest to.
 
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Bob Hope

Member
The Case of the Book of Enoch, LXX translation, and the Dead Sea scrolls reveal that at the time of the Apostles what was considered scripture (canon in regards to the old testament) was a bit more fluid than people generally believe. Enoch falls into a particular catagory of liturature called Apocalyptic which was a particularily favorable form at the time. The Book of Revelation also follows this literary type in its presentation. The fact that the early Christians read and familiarized themselves with it and Copts still hold it as canon and certain dispensationalist (particularily the gap theorist sources with regard to who the nephalim were) have formulated certain ideas originating from this document is significant. Its actually a facinating study into the thinking of the early church.


Awesome. Have you read Jasher?
 

billwald

New Member
The trouble with Christian in general, Baptists in particular, is that most read the Bible backwards, from Revelation to Genesis. The end is not the most cannonical and Genesis is not commentary on Revelation. It works the other way around. The covenants are cumulative, not replacements.
 

Thinkingstuff

Active Member
Awesome. Have you read Jasher?

Yes, and its a fun read however the origins of that book is a 13 century rabbi. The attempt to answer certain questions from the Torah from Jewish Midrash is interesting but it cannot be connected to the book referrenced in 2 Samuel. However, it is easy to see how some of the consepts have come to shape the views of certain pastors I knew regarding the same subjects in Genesis. I enjoyed the read however. Just a note; Mormons like this book and often try to claim it as authoritative.
 

Bob Hope

Member
But if the Book of Enoch were merely fleshing out the details of the Bible, then wouldn't those details have to actually match the "rough outline"? I used to teach English. Your detailed paper has to match your outline.

The Bible says that Jesus is the only mediator between God and man. 1 Timothy 2:5 - "For there is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus..."

The book of Enoch says that the angel Phanuel is our mediator. That's not a fleshing out of details. It's a direct contradiction.

Also, the Bible states that through one MAN, (Adam), sin entered the world. This happened when Adam and Eve ate of the fruit, their eyes were "opened" as to good and evil, and IMMEDIATELY the rest of humanity was born with a sin nature - beginning with Cain.

The book of Enoch state that the angel Penemue (sp?) and his "ink and paper" writings were what "enlightened" mankind with wisdom. Not of good and evil. Just "wisdom". And this wisdom brought mankind to sin and to an understanding of what sin was and "taught" them to sin and to understand what death was.

Again, that's a direct contradiction of what the Bible says.

If we go with what Enoch says that "men were created LIKE angels" (which is not true in itself) and that it was the wisdom of angels through the reading of documents written in ink and on paper that brought sin and death into the world - then, brother, that is no fleshed out detail. Again, it's a direct contradiction.



I can't say every detail is accurate, but maybe at the time of Enoch Phanuel was the mediator. It’s been a few years since I read the book but the other things you mentioned do not sound familiar. I would suggest you read it for yourself. You will see the truth of God, not in the details but in a story of righteousness vs. evil, of a loving God putting forth a great salvation to redeem His elect from sin.
 

Bob Hope

Member
The trouble with Christian in general, Baptists in particular, is that most read the Bible backwards, from Revelation to Genesis. The end is not the most cannonical and Genesis is not commentary on Revelation. It works the other way around. The covenants are cumulative, not replacements.


I agree as long as you mean that those who followed the first covenant are brought to God through the last covenant. So that now all men must come to God through Christ.
 

Bob Hope

Member
Yes, and its a fun read however the origins of that book is a 13 century rabbi. The attempt to answer certain questions from the Torah from Jewish Midrash is interesting but it cannot be connected to the book referrenced in 2 Samuel. However, it is easy to see how some of the consepts have come to shape the views of certain pastors I knew regarding the same subjects in Genesis. I enjoyed the read however. Just a note; Mormons like this book and often try to claim it as authoritative.


I found myself greatly encouraged by it if nothing else. It spanned many years and it was fun to see some possible ways God has guided His people. I agree that it may not be authoritative but may contain elements of truth. Maybe it was just a compilation of legends and lore.
 

Thinkingstuff

Active Member
I found myself greatly encouraged by it if nothing else. It spanned many years and it was fun to see some possible ways God has guided His people. I agree that it may not be authoritative but may contain elements of truth. Maybe it was just a compilation of legends and lore.

Did you notice the two treatments or beliefs from those documents (Enoch and Jasher) have shaped the two primary camps people find themselves in with regard to Genesis "the heros of old", "Giants in the land", and "nephalim"? Also Jasher shows a view held by some regarding the tower of Babylon Story I find very interesting because though many Pastors when answering questions regarding these things in genesis seem to repeat the views fromt hose texts who believe they assertained that perspective from scripture alone. Many of whom never even read those books! Go ahead and test it out. Ask your pastor about who the "sons of God" were and see their reply they may either take the Jasher view or the Enoch view. See how they answer your questions and compare to those books and take scripture and try to assertain how they came to that speculative view with little information in the genesis text itself.
 
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