Enoch and the Mosaic Torah- The Evidence of Jubilees

(Nora) #1
Jubilees and Enochic Judaism

1 En 9:6-10 and perhaps 86:1-2, and the juxtaposition of human and Watcher culpability in

chaps. 7 and 8; and Bergsma's paper in this volume, "The Relationship between Jubilees and

the Early Enochic Books (Astronomical Book and Book of the Watchers)," section III.

16. Reed, Fallen Angels, 77-78.

17. See discussion in Jackson, Enochic Judaism, 35-36.

18. See D. R. Jackson, "Demonising Gilgamesh," in Gilgamesh and the World of As­

syria, ed. J. Azize and N. Weeks, Ancient Near East Studies Supplement 21 (Louvain: Peeters,

"minimizing" of the connection between the prediluvian giants and the

postdiluvian demons, as Reed has suggested.^16 It was in marrying women

that the Watchers crossed the boundary of spirit and flesh and so abandoned

their right to return to heaven, not their initial descent (cf. 1 En 6:6; 12:4; 14:5;

15:3,7,10; 16:2; 84:4; 86:1). So it was also for the author's target audience. Liv­

ing in a land ruled by Gentiles would not constitute "going astray." Inter­

marrying with them would. Jubilees did not set aside a concept of an origin

of evil that occurred without a free choice. In the BW the women are not

raped but marry — "they are co-perpetrators, not victims."^17

Jubilees took the opportunity to identify within the Torah narrative

other minor exemplars that conform to the pattern, in particular the experi­

ence of Lot in Sodom (Jub 20:2-7). Joseph demonstrates how an Israelite can

survive under Gentile rule. Because of his rigorous moral purity, Joseph was

not only protected and blessed by God, but no demon or satan could bring

destruction to any who came under his leadership (40:9; 46:2). It is interest­

ing then that in Joseph's case Jubilees seems to have made an exception.

Whereas the writer avoids noticing Moses' marriage to a Midianite or

Amram's marriage to his aunt, no such attempt is made to avoid Joseph's

marriage to an Egyptian (30:17). His culpability is bypassed perhaps as a

union imposed by Pharaoh but perhaps also because the author may have

seen in the future history of Ephraim and Manasseh reason not to omit their

Gentile roots. The concern for purity focuses on the female line.

The 'Aza'el Exemplar


The 'Aza'el exemplar viewed the same event from the perspective of cultural

purity. 'Aza'el (1 En 10:8) was deemed responsible for revealing to humans

heavenly secrets that were forbidden to them and, in so doing, empowering

them to develop deviant and rebellious cultural practices. The 'Aza'el exem­

plar demonized the scholarship, philosophies, education, and therefore the

culture of the Gentiles.^18 It also presented the elect righteous with a body of
Free download pdf