Knowledge Transmission in the Context of the Watchers’ Sexual Sin with the Women in 1 Enoch 6-11

dc.contributor.authorDrawnel, Henryk
dc.date.accessioned2024-10-10T13:37:08Z
dc.date.available2024-10-10T13:37:08Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.descriptionArtykuł w języku angielskim.
dc.description.abstractThe first part of this research scrutinizes previous scholarly opinions concerning the belonging of the motif of instruction to the original narrative. While the conclusions of especially Nickelsburg and Hanson are negative, the mainly thematic criterion used by them in the separation of the literary strata indicates that they could not see any thematic connection between the Watchers and the motif of knowledge transmission. The second part of the research shows the interrelationship between the mythological origins of scribal and medical knowledge transmission in cuneiform sources and the response of Jewish priests in Babylonia. The latter group rejected Babylonian cuneiform arts and opted for Aramaic type of knowledge with the creation of a different ideal scribe from before the flood (Enoch), different transcendent channel of knowledge transmission (angels faithful to God), and different channel of knowledge transmission from father to son in patriarchal and Levitical genealogies. The third part of the research explores the metaphorical meaning of especially the “great sin” of “fornication” committed by the Watchers. The sin of fornication with women and successive defilement of the Watchers have to be interpreted in relation to the metaphorical, not literal, meaning of these terms found in the biblical account where they often figuratively express apostasy from the God of Israel and idolatrous relationship with other gods.
dc.identifier.citationThe Biblical Annals, 2012, T. 2, nr 1, s. 123-151.
dc.identifier.issn2083-2222
dc.identifier.issn2451-2168
dc.identifier.urihttps://theo-logos.pl/handle/123456789/21582
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherKatolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II
dc.rightsCC-BY - Uznanie autorstwa
dc.subject1 Enoch
dc.subjectBook of Watchers
dc.subjectfallen angels
dc.subjectsexual sin
dc.subjectknowledge transmission
dc.subjectMesopotamian background
dc.subjectancient Mesopotamian cultural context
dc.subjectancient Mesopotamian culture
dc.subjectMesopotamia
dc.subjectantiquity
dc.subjectculture
dc.subjectangels
dc.subjectsin
dc.subject1 Henoch
dc.subjectintertestamental literature
dc.subjectKsięga Czuwających
dc.subjectupadli aniołowie
dc.subjectgrzech seksualny
dc.subjectprzekaz wiedzy
dc.subjecttło mezopotamskie
dc.subjectkontekst kultury starożytnej Mezopotamii
dc.subjectkultura starożytnej Mezopotamii
dc.subjectMezopotamia
dc.subjectstarożytność
dc.subjectkultura
dc.subjectanioły
dc.subjectgrzech
dc.subjectliteratura międzytestamentalna
dc.subject1 Enoch 6-11
dc.subject1 Henoch 6-11
dc.subjectKsięga Henocha
dc.subjectapokryf
dc.subjectBook of Henoch
dc.subjectapocrypha
dc.titleKnowledge Transmission in the Context of the Watchers’ Sexual Sin with the Women in 1 Enoch 6-11
dc.typeArticle

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