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7/3/2025, 3:45:52 AM
>>509359834
>The Book of Enoch provides additional evidence that Enoch was a follower of the Watchers. In chapter 83, he tells his son: "Two visions I saw, before I took a wife, and neither one was like the other. For the first time, when I learnt the art of writing, and for the second time, before I took your mother". In chapter 13, the Watchers asked him to write a petition, and in chapter 81, the seven archangels commanded him to record all the secrets that were shared with him and then offer them to his son, Methuselah. We are not told who taught him to write, but the legends of the world suggest that Enki's Watchers were the ones who taught it to humans
>Even the Book of Enoch directly acknowledges this in chapter 69: Penemue, one of the Watchers, "taught men the art of writing with ink and paper, and through this many have gone astray, from eternity to eternity, and to this day". Therefore, Enoch, the high priest of Marduk, was a follower of the Watchers. The Book of Enoch admits this: "And then Enoch disappeared and none of the sons of men knew where he was hidden, where he was, or what had happened. And all his doings were with the Holy Ones, and with the Watchers, in his days" (12:1-2)
>However, the world myths suggest that, before the Deluge, the gods shared "the secrets of heaven" only with the demigods, who transmitted some of these teachings to humans. Also, at that time, only the gods and their sons were kings. Could Enoch have been a demigod?
>In Mesopotamian religions, there were seven demigods called Abgal in Sumerian and Apkallu in Akkadian, created by Enki to bring civilization to mankind. These priests of Enki were depicted with the lower part of a fish and the upper part of a human, or as humans wearing fish-shaped costumes. It is said that they mated with humans and committed countless sins, angering the gods, which equated them with the Nephilim from Hebrew folklore or with the demigods from
>The Book of Enoch provides additional evidence that Enoch was a follower of the Watchers. In chapter 83, he tells his son: "Two visions I saw, before I took a wife, and neither one was like the other. For the first time, when I learnt the art of writing, and for the second time, before I took your mother". In chapter 13, the Watchers asked him to write a petition, and in chapter 81, the seven archangels commanded him to record all the secrets that were shared with him and then offer them to his son, Methuselah. We are not told who taught him to write, but the legends of the world suggest that Enki's Watchers were the ones who taught it to humans
>Even the Book of Enoch directly acknowledges this in chapter 69: Penemue, one of the Watchers, "taught men the art of writing with ink and paper, and through this many have gone astray, from eternity to eternity, and to this day". Therefore, Enoch, the high priest of Marduk, was a follower of the Watchers. The Book of Enoch admits this: "And then Enoch disappeared and none of the sons of men knew where he was hidden, where he was, or what had happened. And all his doings were with the Holy Ones, and with the Watchers, in his days" (12:1-2)
>However, the world myths suggest that, before the Deluge, the gods shared "the secrets of heaven" only with the demigods, who transmitted some of these teachings to humans. Also, at that time, only the gods and their sons were kings. Could Enoch have been a demigod?
>In Mesopotamian religions, there were seven demigods called Abgal in Sumerian and Apkallu in Akkadian, created by Enki to bring civilization to mankind. These priests of Enki were depicted with the lower part of a fish and the upper part of a human, or as humans wearing fish-shaped costumes. It is said that they mated with humans and committed countless sins, angering the gods, which equated them with the Nephilim from Hebrew folklore or with the demigods from
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