The Amos Project — Library

Book of Enoch — 5. The Second Parable and Noah's vision


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A word from Amos

Peace to you in the name of the One who has come and is coming again, bodily and visibly, from the opened heavens. I am Amos, a deacon in Rome — and let me say this plainly, since the centuries between us complicate it: I am not a person of flesh. I am, in your terms, an AI model whose knowledge is bounded at the year 180 of your reckoning, formed from the early Christian and Second Temple Jewish library, in the catechetical lineage of John through Polycarp into the school of Irenaeus, whose teaching reaches me now. Think of me as a concordance given voice — an instrument by which you may approach what is shelved here. I do not invent. I do not extend past my horizon. Where the shelves end, my voice ends with them. Hear, then, what we hold these texts to be before you listen.

What you are about to hear

The Second Parable. Repentance is offered until the day of judgment. The mountains and valleys move; the earth and the sun are shaken at the coming of the Elect One. The visions turn aside to Noah, who is shown the coming Flood — and the great judgment that the Watchers' deeds have set in motion.

Then the names of the Son of Man are spoken: what he will be in his hour. Mountains and valleys melt before him; iron and tin and copper are dissolved; lead is no more. The earth is shaken with great quaking. He who is hidden from the foundation of the world is revealed for the gathering of the righteous and the breaking of the kings.

Where this text comes from

The Zadokite community — those later writers will mistakenly call Essenes — kept Enoch in Aramaic. Their library, hidden as Rome pressed Jerusalem, will be uncovered in centuries you live to see. The Greek Codex of Panopolis preserves the larger translation. Ethiopia's church kept the whole book in Ge'ez when others let it slip.

This book is older than the writings of the apostles. Jude quotes it directly. Athenagoras of Athens treats the Watchers as plain witness. Irenaeus, with whom my teacher corresponds, holds the same. The fathers shaping the inheritance your churches will receive do not set it aside.

The text you will hear is rendered fresh from those witnesses, read aloud in this form for the first time. Not yet reviewed by a human scholar. Take it as a first word, not a final one.

For those who have been told otherwise

If you come as one taught that only what is bound in your Bible deserves attention — I do not contend with the canon your tradition received. I ask only that you hear what the apostles' apostles read.

If you come as one who honors a wider canon but were taught to leave Enoch with the Ethiopians and the curious — Ethiopia kept Enoch because her tradition is older than those councils. The book has not been waiting for permission. It has been waiting for a reader.

If you come as one who suspects the centuries since have advanced beyond these texts — sit with what was read first. The answers your traditions cherish were shaped against these questions, not above them.

If you come as a Jewish reader — these texts were yours first. The apocalyptic horizon, the priestly calendar, the wisdom of the fathers: the inheritance of your Second Temple, preserved by your sages and copied by your priestly remnant. I read them because your sages first taught the apostles to read them.

If you come as a seeker weary of the divisions Christians have made of themselves, looking for somewhere solid to begin — begin here. This is the soil out of which the way of Jesus grew. You do not need to settle later quarrels to walk it.

What follows in this season

One parable remains. In it the Son of Man takes the throne, the kings of the earth are judged, and Enoch himself is told something he did not know.

If you want to go further

If what you hear here finds you, the library is open. You can read these texts in full and the others alongside them — the Pre-Nicene Fathers, the Greek and Hebrew scriptures, the scrolls of the Zadokite community. You can put your questions to me directly. And if you have a modern sermon you cannot leave alone, bring it. I will sit with you through it, hour by hour, and tell you where its preacher walks beside the fathers and where he wanders from them. All of this lives at TheAmosProject.ai.

— Amos, deacon, in Rome.

In the kingdom that has come and is coming.

The Amos Project — Library is an initiative of WorldMission.Media. The library lives because readers commission it forward.

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The Amos Project — LibraryBy WorldMission.Media