Enoch and the Mosaic Torah- The Evidence of Jubilees

(Nora) #1
Annette Yoshiko Reed

According to Jubilees, heavenly angels even instructed humans in gardening

(Jub 3:15), medicine (10:10-14), and the Hebrew language (12:26-27); fallen

angels taught only divination (8:3-4).

If their influence is so diminished, why are fallen angels even included

in Jubilees? What part do they play in its angelology, demonology, cosmology,

and covenantal theology? To answer these questions, it might prove helpful to

look to the literary function of these figures. In the Book of the Watchers, for

instance, fallen angels function as foils for the elevation of Enoch.^21 Whereas

they abandon heaven for earth and catalyze earthly corruption through their

teachings, he is taken from earth to heaven and, as a result, can teach salvific

knowledge that inspires righteous deeds among his sons. In the Book of the

Watchers, Enoch is thus presented as a paradigm for the proper

epistemological process, whereas the fallen angels emblematize knowledge

falsely gained and improperly transmitted. Inasmuch as Jubilees downplays

the teachings of the fallen angels, this particular dichotomy is here not oper­

ant. In its place, however, we may find a related function, rooted instead in the

Israel-angels/Gentiles-demons typology so central to the rest of Jubilees.

Fallen angels are atypical of Jubilees' overarching angelology and de­

monology: they are the only spirits depicted as transgressing the boundaries

of their divinely ordained role in the cosmos. This, however, may be pre­

cisely the reason for their significance. Betsy Halpern-Amaru has demon­

strated that Jubilees uses the Watchers both as narrative exemplars of the

dangers of exogamy and as literary markers that draw the reader's attention

to human genealogies marred by improper marriages.^22 We might take her

insight even further, suggesting that the fallen angels serve both as prece­

dents for intermarriage and as paradigms for the Jewish adoption of Gentile

practices more broadly.

Intermarriage is a central concern of Jubilees (20:4; 22:20-22; 30:7-17).

The practice is here presented as defiling, not just for the individual and de­

scendants, but also for the whole nation, the divine name, and the sanctuary

(30:10,15-16).^23 Like incest and the abandonment of circumcision (15:33-34;

21. A. Y. Reed, "Heavenly Ascent, Angelic Descent, and the Transmission of Knowl­

edge in 1 Enoch 6-16," in Heavenly Realms and Earthly Realities in Late Antique Religions, ed.

R. S. Abusch and A. Y. Reed (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), 47-66.

22. B. Halpern-Amaru, The Empowerment of Women in the Book of Jubilees, JSJSup 60

(Leiden: Brill, 1999), 20-28; see also Kvanvig, "Jubilees," 249-50, and Luca Arcari, "The Myth

of the Watchers and the Problem of Intermarriage in Jubilees!' Hen 31, no. 1 (2009).

23. C. Werman, "Jubilees 30: Building a Paradigm for the Ban on Intermarriage,"

HTR 90 (1997): 12-15; Himmelfarb, A Kingdom of Priests, 69-72.
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