The Visions of Enoch the Prophet: On the Function of the Book of Parables

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Research notes

AC/17/03/2026/not checked

Reference type
Author(s)
Cielontko, David
Year
2026
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
Deuterocanonical and Cognate Literature Studies
Volume
62
Publisher
De Gruyter Brill
Place of Publication
Berlin/Boston
Work type
Language
Label
27/04/2026
Orion Center Library has physical copy
Abstract

This book examines the function of the Book of Parables (1 Enoch 37-71) in its ancient context. The fi rst part of the volume addresses essential introductory issues, including the textual and redactional history of the Book of Parables, its historical setting, literary features, and the communicative strategies employed by its author. The second part argues that the Book of Parables constructs a symbolic universe that functions as a complex form of legitimation for an audience whose shared social reality is destabilized by experiences of oppression. At the center of this crisis lies a theological problem of justice, as the persecution of the righteous contradicts deeply held expectations of divine protection and blessing. The study interprets the Book of Parables as a body of revealed knowledge that seeks to re-establish the credibility of this threatened social reality. Through a sequence of visionary revelations, the text presents an eschatological reversal of fates as part of God’s eternal plan, while cosmological, messianological, and mythic traditions are integrated as essential strategies of legitimation. Together, these elements lend authority to the message and its messenger, enabling the audience to reconcile their lived experience with the conviction that God remains just and decisively on the side of the righteous.

Primary Texts: Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha
1 Enoch, 37-71