Enoch and the Mosaic Torah- The Evidence of Jubilees
nora
(Nora)
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Eschatological Impulses in Jubilees
response has a public character as well, since God promises that all spirits
and angels will know them and the special relationship between Israel and
God. All "of them will be called children of the living God," who is here
called "their father" (v. 25). Moses' prayer leads God to promise that sin will
be followed by joyful "return."
God Orders the Writing Down of the Message (1:26-29)
The message constitutes a vision of the blessings of a new age and a new Je
rusalem, both eschatological motifs. There appear to be two commands to
write down all these words; the first, in v. 26, contains an imperative form,
seemingly directed to Moses, to write down all the words God "will tell you
on this mountain." In a second line, God tells the angel of presence, "Dictate
to Moses" all this history, from the very beginning until its ending time,
when God will descend and actually live with his people (v. 27). This change,
a command to Moses in the first and an order to the angel to dictate in the
second, has long proved a crux interpretum; Davenport interpreted it as evi
dence of redactional activity, arguing that the notion of a dictating angel
corresponds to a later redactional level.^24 VanderKam suspects that the dif
ferent verbs in Ethiopic could reflect imprecisions of the Greek translator,
who might have failed to recognize the difference between qal and hiphil
forms of the verb.^25
Then the Lord will appear so that all can see and recognize him as "the
God of Israel, the father of all Jacob's children, and the king on Mt. Zion"
(v. 28). The covenant promise, originally associated with Moses as the cen
tral figure, greatly expands here as it now extends to all Jacob's family of
twelve descendants, but finally to the claim that Jerusalem and Zion are holy
— even more surprising in the earlier worldview. This chapter concludes
(v. 29) when the angel of presence takes the tablets with all this information
inscribed on them and displays them. In a foretaste of things to come in this
book, the audience learns that these tablets will contain a complete picture
of all the "times" important for their history, including a look ahead to the
renewal of all creatures, when the Lord's temple will be created in Jerusalem.
Even the luminaries will be renewed, so that they can effect "healing, health,
- Davenport, Eschatology, 15C This point was a key element for his reconstruction of
the redactional history of this text.
- VanderKam, Jubilees, 6, note to v. 27.