Difference between revisions of "Category:Parables of Enoch (text)"
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==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
Also known as the Similitudes of Enoch, this work comprises chapters 37-71 of the Ethiopic Book of Enoch. It is a Jewish apocalypse that is likely to be dated from the early to mid first century CE, or perhaps in the latter part of the first century BCE. It was initially composed either in Aramaic or Hebrew but at present is preserved only in Ge’ez (ancient Ethiopic) as a part of the Ethiopic version of 1 Enoch. | |||
The Parables of Enoch is divided into three sections, each designated as a “parable,” in which the sage Enoch is lifted into heaven and shown visions of a messianic figure being named and seated in judgment in conjunction with the celestial praise of the angels and the revelation of cosmological secrets. The meaning of “parable” (Hebrew mashal or Aramaic metal) in this context seems to indicate some sort of comparison between celestial and cosmological order on one hand and the disorder of human society on the other, to be set right by an act of judgment by the messianic figure revealed in each of the parables. The comparison between nature and humanity has its origin in the Wisdom tradition of ancient Israel, from whence it passes over into the ideology and formal expression of apocalyptic literature. The designation of mashal does not reflect a genre per se (there are a number of genres or literary types associated with the mashal) but rather the use of a variety of topics that are typical of meshalim. The Parables of Enoch addresses the fate of the righteous and the wicked through a patterned set of likenesses linking cosmology and eschatology. | |||
The work is noted for the distinctive character of its "[[Son of Man]]"/”Elect one” angelomorphic messianism based on Daniel 7 and the Servant Songs of Deutero-Isaiah, for its revelatory scenes set in the temple of heaven in which the praise of the angels presages the celestial worship in the later Jewish Hekhaloth literature, for its continued interest in the cosmological lore characteristic of the Enochic tradition in Early Judaism, and for its advancement of the pseudonymous career of the sage Enoch, the recipient of the revelations of “that Son of Man” seated upon “his glorious throne” to judge “the kings and mighty of the earth.” In an addendum at the conclusion of the Parables, Enoch is informed that he is “that Son of Man.” While this final revelation seems incongruous with the Parables as a whole, where Enoch is the recipient rather than the subject of the revelation, it may well anticipate Enoch’s metamorphosis into an angelic or celestial being in later examples of the Enochic literature. | |||
Other features of note include an interest in the fall of the Watchers derived from the [[Book of the Watchers]] (1 Enoch 1-36), which the Parables links to the fate of the kings and the mighty, and several passages associated in one way or another with the figure of Noah rather than Enoch. In general, scholars tend to consider the Parables of Enoch to be not a critique of the oppression of the Romans and their clients. It is quite possible, for example, that the crisis that precipitates the work is the oppressive policy of Herod the Great or the effort of Gaius Caligula to install his statue in the Holy of Holies of the Temple. | |||
The Parables became prominent in the 1970’s when J.T. Milik announced that it was not included in the Aramaic fragments of Enoch discovered among the Dead Sea Scrolls, opening a heated controversy among scholars concerning its dating and its implications for messianism in early Judaism and the associated Jesus movement. Milik’s effort to treat the Parables as a third century Christian document composed in Greek on the basis of the gospels has been soundly rejected by other scholars, who tend to date the work as a Jewish document composed somewhere between the coming of Rome to the region and the fall of Jerusalem to the Romans in 70 C.E. Such a dating represents a fairly narrow window in time for the composition of the work; however, where one dates the document during this period can make a dramatic difference in how one reconstructs the religious history of the time. | |||
==Manuscript tradition== | ==Manuscript tradition== |
Revision as of 08:12, 10 January 2011
- This page is edited by David W. Suter, St Martin’s University (Lacey, WA), United States of America
The Parables of Enoch is a Jewish writing, a section of 1 Enoch, generally included in collections of Old Testament Pseudepigrapha.
Overview
Also known as the Similitudes of Enoch, this work comprises chapters 37-71 of the Ethiopic Book of Enoch. It is a Jewish apocalypse that is likely to be dated from the early to mid first century CE, or perhaps in the latter part of the first century BCE. It was initially composed either in Aramaic or Hebrew but at present is preserved only in Ge’ez (ancient Ethiopic) as a part of the Ethiopic version of 1 Enoch.
The Parables of Enoch is divided into three sections, each designated as a “parable,” in which the sage Enoch is lifted into heaven and shown visions of a messianic figure being named and seated in judgment in conjunction with the celestial praise of the angels and the revelation of cosmological secrets. The meaning of “parable” (Hebrew mashal or Aramaic metal) in this context seems to indicate some sort of comparison between celestial and cosmological order on one hand and the disorder of human society on the other, to be set right by an act of judgment by the messianic figure revealed in each of the parables. The comparison between nature and humanity has its origin in the Wisdom tradition of ancient Israel, from whence it passes over into the ideology and formal expression of apocalyptic literature. The designation of mashal does not reflect a genre per se (there are a number of genres or literary types associated with the mashal) but rather the use of a variety of topics that are typical of meshalim. The Parables of Enoch addresses the fate of the righteous and the wicked through a patterned set of likenesses linking cosmology and eschatology.
The work is noted for the distinctive character of its "Son of Man"/”Elect one” angelomorphic messianism based on Daniel 7 and the Servant Songs of Deutero-Isaiah, for its revelatory scenes set in the temple of heaven in which the praise of the angels presages the celestial worship in the later Jewish Hekhaloth literature, for its continued interest in the cosmological lore characteristic of the Enochic tradition in Early Judaism, and for its advancement of the pseudonymous career of the sage Enoch, the recipient of the revelations of “that Son of Man” seated upon “his glorious throne” to judge “the kings and mighty of the earth.” In an addendum at the conclusion of the Parables, Enoch is informed that he is “that Son of Man.” While this final revelation seems incongruous with the Parables as a whole, where Enoch is the recipient rather than the subject of the revelation, it may well anticipate Enoch’s metamorphosis into an angelic or celestial being in later examples of the Enochic literature.
Other features of note include an interest in the fall of the Watchers derived from the Book of the Watchers (1 Enoch 1-36), which the Parables links to the fate of the kings and the mighty, and several passages associated in one way or another with the figure of Noah rather than Enoch. In general, scholars tend to consider the Parables of Enoch to be not a critique of the oppression of the Romans and their clients. It is quite possible, for example, that the crisis that precipitates the work is the oppressive policy of Herod the Great or the effort of Gaius Caligula to install his statue in the Holy of Holies of the Temple.
The Parables became prominent in the 1970’s when J.T. Milik announced that it was not included in the Aramaic fragments of Enoch discovered among the Dead Sea Scrolls, opening a heated controversy among scholars concerning its dating and its implications for messianism in early Judaism and the associated Jesus movement. Milik’s effort to treat the Parables as a third century Christian document composed in Greek on the basis of the gospels has been soundly rejected by other scholars, who tend to date the work as a Jewish document composed somewhere between the coming of Rome to the region and the fall of Jerusalem to the Romans in 70 C.E. Such a dating represents a fairly narrow window in time for the composition of the work; however, where one dates the document during this period can make a dramatic difference in how one reconstructs the religious history of the time.
Manuscript tradition
Synopsis
The Parables of Enoch in Scholarship (History of research)
The Parables of Enoch in Fiction
Related categories
External links
- [ Wikipedia]
- The Online Critical Pseudepigrapha
References
Bibliographies
Editions
Modern translations
Studies
- Enoch, Similiudes of (1 Enoch 37-71) / Michael A. Knibb / In: The Eerdmans Dictionary of Early Judaism (2010 Collins / Harlow), edited volume, 585-587
Pages in category "Parables of Enoch (text)"
The following 29 pages are in this category, out of 29 total.
1
- Les paraboles d'Hénoch et leur messianisme (The Parables of Enoch and Their Messianism / 1910 Gry), book
- Der Menschensohn in den Bilderreden des Henoch (1922 Messel), book
- The Apocalypse of Noah and the Parables of Enoch (1926 Schmidt), essay
- Zum Komposition und Literarkritik der Bilderreden des Äthiopischen Henoch (1935 Stier), essay
- Mystique gnostique (juive et chrétienne) en finale des Paraboles d’Hénoch (1939 Gry), essay
- Der Menschensohn im äthiopischen Henochbuch (The Son of Man in the Ethiopic Book of Enoch / 1946 Sjöberg), book
- The Eschatology of the Similitudes of Enoch (1952 Black), essay
- Notes sur le texte éthiopien des ‘paraboles’ d’Hénoch (1963 Caquot, Geoltrain), essay
- Towards a Date for the Similitudes of Enoch: An Historical Approach (1968 Hindley), essay
- The Son of Man in Enoch (1973 Agourides), essay
- Léviathan et Béhémoth dans la troisième "parabole" d’Hénoch (1975 Caquot), essay
- Der auserwählte Richter: Untersuchungen zum traditionsgeschichtlichen Ort der Menschensohngestalt der Bilderreden des Äthiopischen Henoch (1975 Theisohn), book
- The 'Parables' of Enoch (1 En 37-71) and the 'Son of Man' (1976 Black), essay
- The Use of Term "Son of Man" in the Similitudes of Enoch (1976 Casey), essay
- Remarques sur les chapitres 70 et 71 du livre éthiopien d'Hénoch (1977 Caquot), essay
- The Enochic Pentateuch and the Date of the Similitudes (1977 Greenfield, Stone), essay
- The Parables of Enoch: Origin and Date (1978 Mearns), essay
- Masal in the Similitudes of Enoch (1981 Suter), essay
- The Measure of Redemption: The Similitudes of Enoch, Nonviolence, and National Integrity (1983 Suter), essay
- The Similitudes of Enoch: Historical Allusions (1984 Bampfylde), essay
- The Messianism of the Parables of Enoch: Their Date and Contribution to Christological Origins (1992 Black), essay
- The Date of the Parables of Enoch (1998 Charlesworth), essay
- Enoch and the Son of Man in the Epilogue of the Parables (1998 Olson), essay
2
- The Throne of His Glory: The Divine Throne and Heavenly Mediators in Revelation and the Similitudes of Enoch (2003 Hannah), essay
- Daniel 7 in the Similitudes of Enoch (2006 VanderKam), essay
- A Symbolic Transfiguration of a Historical Event: The Parthian Invasion in Josephus and the Parables of Enoch (2007 Arcari), essay
- Enoch in Sheol: Updating the Dating of the Book of Parables (2007 Suter), essay
- The Son of Man in the Parables of Enoch and in Matthew (2011 Walck), book
Media in category "Parables of Enoch (text)"
The following 8 files are in this category, out of 8 total.
- 1979 * Suter.jpg 260 × 402; 7 KB
- 1997 * Chiala.jpg 320 × 500; 28 KB
- 2007-E * Boccaccini.jpg 333 × 499; 40 KB
- 2011 * Waddell.jpg 333 × 499; 12 KB
- 2011 Walck.jpg 314 × 499; 16 KB
- 2012 * Nickelsburg VanderKam.jpg 421 × 500; 21 KB
- 2012 Arcari.jpg 333 × 499; 16 KB
- 2014-E Bock Charlesworth.jpg 314 × 499; 15 KB