Enoch and the Mosaic Torah- The Evidence of Jubilees
nora
(Nora)
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Jonathan Ben-Dov
The fact that in the foremost opportunity for programmatic state
ments on the calendar the author of Jubilees chose to ignore the numbering
of months and stressed the count of weeks instead reveals his extraordinary
indebtedness to the septenary scheme. One may note how this idea appears
again in Synchellus and Cedrenus, who were greatly influenced by Jubilees'
time reckoning. In their description of the order of times as revealed by Uriel
to Enoch, they revert to septenary terminology: ". .. Uriel ... revealed to
Enoch... that a year has 52 weeks."^13 Surprisingly, this report reflects Jub
6:30 rather than the Enochic AB!
The importance of the septenary principle in Jubilees is further under
scored by two passages on Sabbath halakah, standing at the framework of
the book, in chaps. 2 and 50.^14
Despite all of the above, some reservations arise from a close analysis
of the narratives in Jubilees. First, throughout the dozens of dating formulas
in Jubilees there is not one case where the days of the week are mentioned.^15
This stands in striking contrast to the practice in Qumran literature, where
the days of the week are meticulously recorded in date formulas. The con
trast is most evident when comparing the flood narrative of Jubilees to that
of the Commentary on Genesis 4Q252. While the two versions considerably
touch on chronology and date formulas, only in 4Q252 are the days of the
week added to the date formulas, and very thoroughly so. The same is true
with regard to dates and date formulas in 4Q317,4Q503, and all the Qumran
calendars (4Q319-4Q330,4Q394), as well as in Jewish deeds from the second
century c.e. onward.^16 It is also illuminating that Synchellus's account of the
flood, despite being indebted to Jubilees, adds the record of the days of the
week, an element absent from the account in Jubilees.
The absence of the days of the week from the accounts in Jubilees con
spicuously distinguishes this book from other second temple literature. In
13. M. Black, Apocalypsis Henochi Graece, SVTP 3 (Leiden: Brill, 1970), 12; W. Adler
and P. Tuffin, The Chronography of George Synkellos (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002),
45-
14. L. Doering, "The Concept of the Sabbath in the Book of Jubilees," in Studies in the
Book of Jubilees, ed. M. Albani et al., TSAJ 65 (Tubingen: Mohr Siebeck, 1997), 179-205.
15. Ravid, "The Book of Jubilees," 377; see already J. M. Baumgarten, Studies in
Qumran Law (Leiden: Brill, 1977), 106.
16. R. Katzoff and B. M. Schreiber, "Week and Sabbath in Judean Desert Documents,"
Scripta Classica Israelica 17 (1998): 102-14. A few centuries later this practice was attested in
the Zo'ar inscriptions of the late talmudic period (S. Stern, Calendar and Community: A His
tory of the Jewish Calendar, 2nd Century BCE-ioth Century CE [Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2001], 87-97).