Celestial Choir-Master: The Liturgical Role of Enoch-Metatron in 2 Enoch and the Merkabah Tradition

Full title
Celestial Choir-Master: The Liturgical Role of Enoch-Metatron in 2 Enoch and the Merkabah Tradition
Research notes

Reader Checked|OA 03/12/2012

Reference type
Author(s)
Orlov, Andrei A.
Year
2004
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Journal for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha
Volume
14
Issue / Series Volume
1
Pages
3-29
Alternative title
JSP
Reprint edition
Andrei A. Orlov, ed. From Apocalypticism to Merkabah Mysticism: Studies in the Slavonic Pseudepigrapha . Leiden: Brill, 2007, 197-221.
Label
17/01/2005
Abstract

This article investigates the roots of Enoch-Metatron’s liturgical office of celestial choirmaster which plays a prominent role in the Merkabah tradition. Although references to this office of the exalted patriarch are absent in 1 Enoch, Jubilees, Genesis Apocryphon, and the Book of Giants, this article argues that the roots of Enoch-Metatron’s liturgical imagery can be traced to the Second Temple Enochic lore, namely to 2 Enoch, the Jewish apocalypse, apparently written in the first century CE. This article investigates a tradition found in 2 Enoch 18 where the translated patriarch encourages the celestial Watchers to start liturgy ‘before the Face of the Lord’, that is, in front of the divine Kabod, the exact location where Metatron will later conduct heavenly worship of angelic hosts in the Shi‘ur Qomah and Hekhalot accounts.