Fallen Angels and the History of Judaism and Christianity: The Reception of Enochic Literature
Annette Yoshiko Reed
Cambridge University Press, 2005-11-28 - 318 pages
This
book considers the early history of Jewish-Christian relations
focussing on traditions about the fallen angels. In the Book of the
Watchers, an Enochic apocalypse from the third century BCE, the 'sons of
God' of Gen 6:1-4 are accused of corrupting humankind through their
teachings of metalworking, cosmetology, magic, and divination. By
tracing the transformations of this motif in Second Temple, Rabbinic,
and early medieval Judaism and early, late antique, and Byzantine
Christianity, this book sheds light on the history of interpretation of
Genesis, the changing status of Enochic literature, and the place of
parabiblical texts and traditions in the interchange between Jews and
Christians in Late Antiquity and the early Middle Ages. In the process,
it explores issues such as the role of text-selection in the delineation
of community boundaries and the development of early Jewish and
Christian ideas about the origins of evil on the earth.
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