
He writes: "Amongst the articles I consigned to the library at Paris
was a very beautiful and magnificent copy of the prophecies of Enoch,
in large Quarto; another is amongst the books of scripture that I
brought home, standing immediately before the book of Job, which is
it's proper place in the Abyssinian Cannon: and a third copy I
presented to the Bodleian Library at Oxford, by the hands of Dr.
Douglass, the Bishop of Carlisle."
It rested there, forgotten, until 1821 when Laurence issued his
first translation of which there were many additions, culminating
in the revised edition of 1883, compiled from notes in his estate.
As a former professor of Hebrew at Oxford, Laurence's familiarity
with Kabbalah and the Zohar (as shown in the introductions of
earlier editions) gave him unique qualifications that were especially
useful in translating a work of this type.
At present there are three versions of Enoch (not to be confused with
the tabloid clones "Keys of Enoch" or "Secrets of Enoch" which are
presently circulating amongst New Age groups). The first being the
Ethiopian found by James Bruce in Abyssinia in 1773, and culminating
in the present translation of this volume. The second is called the
Book of the Secrets of Enoch, or Slavonian Enoch. It was discovered
in the Belgrade public library by Prof. Sokolov in 1886, and trans-
lated by Morfill and Charles in 1896. The third is (of necessity)
called Enoch III, or the Hebrew Enoch, translated by Hugo Odeberg in
1922. Each has some variations that will help understanding, and
one can hardly escape the conclusion that this book may be far older
than anyone suspects.
Further correlations can be found in: "Hypostasis of the Archons"
translated by Roger Bullard, 1970, from one of the Nag Hammadi
gnostic codexes. In it are striking parallels with Enoch. The
creation of giants or failures is again met with in the Mandaean
Codex Nazaraeus, or Ginza rabba, which can be found in "Gnosis:
It's Character and Testimony" by Roger Haardt, translated by
J.F. Hendry, 1971. And of course, Blavatsky's "The Secret Doctrine"
has been in print continuously since 1888.
Although the Book of Enoch was apparently at one time recognized
as a valid piece of Hebrew (i.e. Judeo-Christian) belief systems
and although it was directly quoted from in the new testament
epistle of Jude, the Council of Nicene voted to exclude it from
"canonized" scripture in 325 AD.
Lyman Abbott notes: "Reverting to the second century of Christianity,
we find Irenaeus and Clement of Alexandria citing the Book of Enoch
without questioning it's sacred character. Thus, Irenaeus, assigning
to the Book of Enoch an authenticity analogous to that of Mosaic
literature, affirms that Enoch, although a man, filled the office of
God's messenger to the angels. Tertullian, who flourished at the
close of the first and at the beginning of the second century, whilst
admitting that the 'Scripture of Enoch' is not received by some
because it is not included in the Hebrew Canon, speaks of the author
as 'the most ancient prophet, Enoch,' and of the book as the divinely
inspired autograph of that immortal patriarch..."
After reading Enoch, I was left with the impression that it was
either an extremely precise historical document (one vision of
many cows succinctly traces the developement of Israel and Judah
through a few centuries) with fascinating astronomical data added
to the mix which had to have been written after the fact, or, if
written when it was said to have been, it was without a doubt the
most profoundly accurate prophetic work extant. In either case,
Enoch should not be taken lightly.
Some may find Thomas' work to be too flavored with fundamentalism
for their particular taste but I personally found it to be some
exceptionally well-researched stuff. I make no apologies for it
and challenge you, the reader, to lay aside any predispositions
and consider the work on it's own merits.
About the Book of Enoch
In the year 1773, after a period of almost total obscurity lasting
1500 years, the Scottish explorer, James Bruce, discovered in what
is now Ethiopia, The Book of Enoch.
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