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Originally Posted by brinny
Interesting post, but the Bible does not refer to the "book of Enoch"
It quotes it:
1:14 And Enoch also, the seventh from Adam, prophesied of these, saying, Behold, the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his saints, 1:15 To execute judgment upon all, and to convince all that are ungodly among them of all their ungodly deeds which they have ungodly committed, and of all their hard speeches which ungodly sinners have spoken against him.
(King James Bible, Jude)
The verse refers to the prophet Enoch, not to a "book of Enoch".
Originally Posted by brinny
The verse refers to the prophet Enoch, not to a "book of Enoch".
Since the Book of Enoch, in the form we have it today, is positively proven to have existed in the time that Jude was written, and not only existed, but was accepted canon until the council of Laodicea, it stretches the imagination to think that Jude would use a line straight out of that book, attribute it to Enoch, and have it *not* be a quote - but whatever.
The veracity or canonicity of the Book of Enoch is not the point of the thread. The point is that this is the culture in which the veiling of women arose.
and the fourth, who is set over the repentance unto hope of those who inherit eternal life, is named Phanuel.’
Since the Book of Enoch, in the form we have it today, is positively proven to have existed in the time that Jude was written, and not only existed, but was accepted canon until the council of Laodicea, it stretches the imagination to think that Jude would use a line straight out of that book, attribute it to Enoch, and have it *not* be a quote
Stating that the "book of Enoch" is quoted in the Bible is an issue. The "book of Enoch" is not quoted in the Bible. The verse you spoke of mentioned the prophet Enoch, not a "book of Enoch". The prophet Enoch was righteous, and walked with God. He would never have authored or authorized such a book. No such book was God-breathed, neither did God authorize or inspire anyone else to write it. it is similar to the Qur'an, However, the "book of Enoch" goes further into heresy, saying for example of an angel named "Phanuel", in chapter 40, verse 9:
It's blatantly heretical.
Originally Posted by brinny
Stating that the "book of Enoch" is quoted in the Bible is an issue. The "book of Enoch" is not quoted in the Bible. The verse you spoke of mentioned the prophet Enoch, not a "book of Enoch". The prophet Enoch was righteous, and walked with God. He would never have authored or authorized such a book. No such book was God-breathed, neither did God authorize or inspire anyone else to write it. it is similar to the Qur'an, However, the "book of Enoch" goes further into heresy, saying for example of an angel named "Phanuel", in chapter 40, verse 9:
It's blatantly heretical.
and yet it was part of the Christian Canon until 364 AD
and it still is part of the Ethiopian canon.
Many early church fathers referred to it.
It was almost certainly removed by the amalgamation of the Church with politics because it proclaims repeatedly that the evil kings and rulers have a future in hell
still not the point of this thread, although it seems to be the only point anyone wants to discuss![]()
There's nothing new under the sun. There have always been fallacies and heresy, and wolves in sheep's clothing in the Church.
"And no wonder, for even Satan disguises himself as an angel of light." ~II Corinthians 11:14
To discuss the heretical nature (or not) of TBoE maybe it deserves its own thread.
Still Off Topic.
If you would like to discuss whether the belief that fallen angels were after the women likely contributed to the origination of the practises of seclusion and veiling, please be my guest. To discuss the heretical nature (or not) of TBoE maybe it deserves its own thread.
I never thought it might go as far as to say women should be ashamed for being beautiful. So beautiful that they had to cover themselves from the angels...to be ashamed.
But it kinda makes sense that it is a shame covering.
Maybe the long hair is God telling us he has us covered and we are not to be ashamed for being women? Never thought of it that way before...