Enoch and the Mosaic Torah- The Evidence of Jubilees

(Nora) #1
Eschatological Impulses in Jubilees

Punishment (2322-25)

Punishment will come as the people are delivered up to the violence of "sin­

ful nations who will have no mercy or kindness for them and who will show

partiality to no one" (v. 23). There are visions of bloodshed and chaos and

young children whose "heads will turn white with gray hair" (v. 25). Their

condition will be dire. Even their outcries to God and prayers for rescue will

go unheeded (v. 24).

Turning Point/Repentance (2326)

As usual in this pattern, there comes a turning point; here it is signaled only

by the notice that "the children will begin to study the laws, to seek out the

commands, and to return to the right way." Perhaps all three verbs function

synonymously: studying laws, searching out God's commands, and return­

ing to God's ways. The verb "return" (myt/meta, probably translating 2W)

also appeared in the similar passage in Jub 1:15, in which God says, "After this

they will return to me." One connotation of this verb is "to be converted

(relig. sense),^34 and it fits well this context.

Salvation by God (232,7-31)

Salvation by God has a dual appearance in this text: an earthly, newly ac­

quired longevity, and passing through death of the just.^35 God's saving acts

are not explicitly political, even though the punishments in w. 22-25 have of­

ten been interpreted in this way.^36 Eschatological signs of salvation include

longer lifetimes, lived in peace and joy, without satans or evil destroyers; in

short, people in the eschaton will enjoy lives of "blessing and healing" (v. 29).

Especially significant is the notion that the life span of the just may again

34. T. Lambdin, Introduction to Classical Ethiopic (Ge'ez), HSS 24 (Missoula: Scholars

Press, 1978), 417-

35. Cf. G. Aranda Perez, "Los Mil Aflos en el Libro de los Jubileos y Ap 20,1-10," EstBib

57 (1999): 39-6o, esp. 44-47.


36. For example, R. Charles saw in w. 22-23 a description of "the sufferings of the na­

tion during the civil wars and internal trouble that took place down to Simon's high priest­

hood (142-135 B.C.)": Charles, The Book of Jubilees or the Little Genesis (London: Adam and

Charles Black, 1902), 148.
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