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Prophecy & History

The Book of Enoch

The Apocalypse of Weeks & The Divine Architecture of Time

An Ancient Voice
for the Last Days

The Book of Enoch is an ancient Hebraic apocalyptic text attributed to Enoch, the great-grandfather of Noah. Though absent from most biblical canons, it was highly regarded in early Ancient Hebraic faith and Christianity, quoted directly in the New Testament (Jude 14–15), and preserved complete in the Ethiopian Orthodox tradition.

It was written for a future generation facing the Day of Judgment—a generation instructed to transmit its message to "all the generations of the world." Its Messianic prophecies are so detailed that skeptics once argued it was written after YASHUA's ministry; that claim collapsed when pre-Christian copies were found among the Dead Sea Scrolls.

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Historical Value

Provides unmatched insight into Second Temple Judaism and the formation of early Christian thought.

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Prophetic Vision

Contains unique prophecies about the whole arc of world history and the end times, verified by the Dead Sea Scrolls.

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Scriptural Context

Quoted in Jude, alluded to in Revelation, and woven through the New Covenant language YASHUA and the apostles used.

Messianic Portrait

Presents THE SON OF MAN as chosen before creation—light to the nations and Judge of kings—in unmistakable pre-temporal terms.


What You'll Learn in Enoch

Four sweeping themes that illuminate Scripture, clarify hard questions, and strengthen hope.

1

The Flood & the Roots of Human Corruption

  • Why "all flesh" had corrupted its way (Genesis 6)—including the rebellion of angels, the rise of violence, weapon-making, occult knowledge, and the origin of the nephilim
  • How this "explosion of knowledge" parallels what historians call the "birth of civilization"
  • Insights on writing's divine design and why Enoch says the fallen taught what man was striving to learn—while still affirming that man authored sin by his own will
  • Geological details that help frame creation-science conversations about the antediluvian world and the Flood
2

The History of Mankind — Two Sweeping Panoramas

  • The Parable of the Animals: nations pictured as beasts, Israel as sheep, and GOD as the LORD OF THE SHEEP—deepening biblical motifs like "lost sheep," the "tower of the flock" (Micah 4:8), and the Shepherd-King
  • The Ten Weeks: a prophetic arc rooted in the righteous line that culminates in the Messiah's work and the final judgment
3

Messiah — THE SON OF MAN and the SON OF GOD

  • Enoch's portrait of THE SON OF MAN is explicit, exalted, and pre-temporal: chosen before creation, light to the nations, and Judge of kings
  • Enoch plainly speaks of GOD's SON and of our union with the Father and the SON in paths of uprightness—harmonizing with YEHOSHUA's prayer (John 17:20–21)
4

Encouragement for the Last Days

  • Vivid promises of restoration: earth at peace, righteousness established, the righteous clothed with glory
  • Practical exhortations for endurance, purity, and hope as judgment approaches
  • Fulfills Enoch's own prediction: that in the last days his words would be given to the righteous as a source of "joy, and truth, and much wisdom"

Answers to Common Objections

"Enoch blames angels for human sin."

Enoch explicitly says man authored sin by himself; he also explains why GOD ascribed the violence-teaching of Azazel as a sign—illumining the Yom Kippur "Azazel" (scapegoat) ritual.

"YASHUA said angels don't marry; Enoch says they did."

YASHUA referred to angels in heaven. Enoch and Jude describe rebellious angels who left their proper estate—those lawless ones transgressed.

"Enoch says angels buil