I think 1 Enoch does deserve some credit, since it was quoted by St. Jude and is in the Ethiopian Orthodox canon, and parts of it correspond with established doctrine, for example, the four principle archangels Saints Michael, Gabriel, Rafael and Uriel. I think it is meant to be read like the Song of Solomon or to a lesser extent Job or Jonah, or the Revelation of St. John, as a highly metaphorical, spiritual, prophetic, typological apocalypse, using primarily Alexandrian exegesis rather than using the Antiochene Literal-Historical exegesis that is appropriate for, say, Luke-Acts, or the books of Samuel, and the Chronicles and Joshua or Judges (and even these books have aspects which have value if read using Alexandrian exegesis, for example, in 2 Samuel the description of the reign of King David, who was 30 when he became King and ruled all of Israel for 33 years - the ministry of Christ our Lord was between the ages of 30 and 33.
And when we use Alexandrian exegesis, Christological prophecy starts to become apparent in 1 Enoch. For example, let us consider this Pericope, of the Fragrant Tree, from 1 Enoch 24:3-25:1-7
3 The seventh mountain (was) in the middle of these, and it rose above them in height, like the seat of a throne. And fragrant[66] trees encircled it. 4 Among them was a tree such as I had never smelled, and among them was no other like it. It had a fragrance sweeter smelling than all spices, and its leaves and its blossom and the tree never wither. Its fruit is beautiful, like dates of the palm trees.
5 Then I said, “How beautiful is this tree and fragrant, and its leaves are lovely, and its blossoms are lovely to look at.”
6 Then Michael answered me, one of the holy angels who was with me and was their leader,
Ch. 25
1 and he said to me, “Enoch, why do you inquire and why do you marvel about the fragrance of this tree, and why do you wish to learn the truth?”
2 Then I answered him—I, Enoch—and said, “Concerning all things I wish to know, but especially concerning this tree.”
3 And he answered me and said, “This high mountain that you saw, whose peak is like the throne of God, is the seat where the Great Holy One, the Lord of glory, the King of eternity, will sit, when he descends to visit the earth in goodness.
4 And (as for) this fragrant tree, no flesh ahas the right to touch it until the great judgment, in which there will be vengeance on all and a consummation forever. Then it will be given to the righteous and the pious,
5 and its fruit will be food for the chosen. And it will be transplanted to the holy place, by the house of God, the King of eternity.
6 Then they will rejoice greatly and be glad, and they will enter into the sanctuary. Its fragrances <will be> in their bones, and they will live a long life on the earth, such as your fathers lived also in their days,
and torments and plagues and suffering will not touch them.”
7 Then I blessed the God of glory, the King of eternity, who has prepared such things for people (who are) righteous, and has created them and promised to give (them) to them.
Clearly, this pericope, from the translation 1 Enoch: The Hermeneia Translation, is a typological prophecy of the Cross, commonly represented as the Tree of Life, and Christ offering Himself to us in the Eucharist.
In this respect it is similiar to the Songs of the Suffering Servant in Isaiah, and the related content in Wisdom chapter 2, which are undoubtably prophecies of the Passion of our Lord on the Cross.
So if we read 1 Enoch literally, we get wacky results, much more than just a geocentric model, we would find ourselves with a flat Earth and a land of fire in the West responsible for the Sunset. If we read it as typological Christological prophecy, remembering that all of the Old Testament is about Christ, as He revealed to His disciples at the end of Luke, before being known to them in the breaking of bread (the Eucharist), so for example, Jonah, while I believe it literally happened, is also a prophecy of the three days Christ was confined in a tomb, and a comparison of the humanity of Jonah enfeebled by sim and the humanity of Christ strengthened by His sinlessness, and of the importance of repentence, if we read 1 Enoch using the Alexandrian technique, there is value to it.
The danger is these days, most Christians have forgotten about Alexandrian exegesis, and assume a literal interpretation is intended for everything, when this view is actually disproven by a literal reading of the Gospel According to Luke, and furthermore, when some books like the Song of Solomon only make sense when interpreted as typological prophecy. 1 Enoch is such a book, and it should be stressed, that since the Ethiopian Church was until the 20th century an autonomous church under the omophorion of the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria, whose Patriarch, or Abune, was appointed by the Coptic Patriarchate, we should expect the Ethiopians read it using Alexandrian technique, since Ethiopia was historically one of the most advanced civilizations of antiquity, and possesses, among other scientific and technical accomplishments (like rock-hewn churches and coffee), the oldest system of musical notation still in continuous use, and would not assume the world was flat or that the Sun set in a firery land, responsible for the sunset (particularly since it was a mathematician in neighboring Egypt who in antiquity determined the approximate curvature of the Earth).