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The '''Book of Enoch''' or '''1 Enoch'''<ref>There are two other works attributed to Enoch; 2 Enoch, a 1st century text written in Old Slavonic and 3 Enoch, a surviving Hebrew manuscript from c. 5th-6th century</ref> is an apocryphal book attributed to [[Enoch]], the great-grandfather of [[Noah]], dated to Maccabean times (ca. 160s BC). It is generally considered pseudepigraphal by most [[Christians]] but, it is accepted by the [[Oriental Orthodoxy|Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church]] as inspired [[Bible|Scripture]] and is part of their official canon.<ref>[http://www.islamic-awareness.org/Bible/Text/Canon/ethiopican.html The Biblical Canon of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church Today]</ref> Fragments of this book were also found among the [[Dead Sea Scrolls]].
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The '''Book of Enoch''' or '''1 Enoch'''<ref>There are two other works attributed to Enoch; 2 Enoch, a 1st century text written in Old Slavonic and 3 Enoch, a surviving Hebrew manuscript from c. 5th-6th century</ref> also known as '''1 Ethiopic Apocalypse of Enoch'''<ref name=James>{{cite book|editor=Charlesworth, James H|author=Isaac, E|title=The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha: Apocalyptic Literature and Testaments|chapter=1 (Ethiopic Apocalypse of) Enoch|volumes=2|volume=1|publisher=Hendrickson Publishers|location=Peabody. Massachusetts|year=1983|page=5-12|isbn=0-385-09630-5}}</ref> is an apocryphal book attributed to [[Enoch]], the great-grandfather of [[Noah]], dated to Maccabean times (ca. 160s BC). It is generally considered pseudepigraphal by most [[Christians]] but, it is accepted by the [[Oriental Orthodoxy|Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church]] as inspired [[Bible|Scripture]] and is part of their official canon.<ref>[http://www.islamic-awareness.org/Bible/Text/Canon/ethiopican.html The Biblical Canon of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church Today]</ref> It is the oldest of the three pseudepigrapha attributed to Enoch.<ref name=James /> 1 Enoch is found complete only in Ethiopic with more than 40 manuscripts, but fragments exist in Greek and Latin and Aramaic fragments of the book were also found among the [[Dead Sea Scrolls]].<ref name=James />
  
 
==Véase también==
 
==Véase también==

Revisión del 19:29 14 oct 2012

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The Book of Enoch or 1 Enoch[1] also known as 1 Ethiopic Apocalypse of Enoch[2] is an apocryphal book attributed to Enoch, the great-grandfather of Noah, dated to Maccabean times (ca. 160s BC). It is generally considered pseudepigraphal by most Christians but, it is accepted by the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church as inspired Scripture and is part of their official canon.[3] It is the oldest of the three pseudepigrapha attributed to Enoch.[2] 1 Enoch is found complete only in Ethiopic with more than 40 manuscripts, but fragments exist in Greek and Latin and Aramaic fragments of the book were also found among the Dead Sea Scrolls.[2]

Véase también

Referencias

  1. There are two other works attributed to Enoch; 2 Enoch, a 1st century text written in Old Slavonic and 3 Enoch, a surviving Hebrew manuscript from c. 5th-6th century
  2. 2,0 2,1 2,2 Plantilla:Cite book
  3. The Biblical Canon of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church Today

Enlaces externos