Enoch and the Mosaic Torah- The Evidence of Jubilees
nora
(Nora)
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John C. Endres, S.J.
reach a thousand years (v. 27), seemingly the perfect age for humans (which
Adam did not attain because he had eaten of the fruit in the garden [Jub
4:30]). Then the message reaches its peak and terms that might be taken as
eschatological impulses appear in italics:
3oThen the Lord will heal his servants. They will rise and see great peace.
He will expel their enemies. The righteous will see (this), offer praise, and
be very happy forever and ever. They will see all the punishments and
curses on their enemies. 3iTheir bones will rest in the earth and their
spirits will be very happy. They will know that the Lord is one who exe
cutes judgmentbxit shows kindnessto hundreds and thousands and to all
who love him.
These eschatological blessings include several of the categories identified
earlier as eschatological: triumph of God's people (v. 30), descriptions of the
blessings of the new age (w. 29-30, with great peace and blessing), the notion
of a final judgment with reward for the righteous (v. 30), and the triumph of
the righteous.
Another sign of the eschaton comes in Jub 23:31, which considers the
crisis of individuals who have proven faithful to the covenant. Jubilees ad
dresses the issue of life after death for the righteous, but in very muted
terms: their bones will rest in peace in the ground, but their "spirits will be
very happy" (v. 31). VanderKam assesses the teaching of this passage thus:
"the writer does not anticipate a physical resurrection of the righteous dead
(the wicked do not come into consideration because they are destroyed) but
a continued existence for their spirits. In that form they will participate in
the new age."^37 The precise meaning of the phrase continues to elicit inter
pretive work.
A covenant formulary seems to stand in the background of this apoca
lypse, while its final stage, the blessings, is transformed into an eschatologi
cal vision of a hopeful future, with an added note that the spirits of the faith
ful ones of Israel will continue. The eschatological horizon, however,
strongly suggests a perspective for viewing their life and relationship with
God. God's friend Abraham represents the hopes of all of Jacob's descen
dants: when they study the laws (Torah), seek out God's commands, and re
turn/repent, they will experience a type of life characterized by all the signs
of the eschaton. The eschatological vision of this apocalypse should instill
- VanderKam, The Book of Jubilees, 59.