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Fortson's Four Hour Bible Series: Enoch

Learn the Complete Book of Enoch in 4 Hours or Less

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Fortson's Four Hour Bible Series: Enoch

By: Dante Fortson
Narrated by: Steve Stewart's voice replica
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About this listen

To understand the spiritual landscape of the ancient world and the foundations of apocalyptic thought, one must look to the Book of Enoch; a manuscript that stands as a colossal bridge between the Genesis patriarchs and the New Testament apostles. Though it resides outside the modern Western Biblical canon, its influence is woven into the very fabric of Judeo-Christian theology. Attributed to the seventh man from Adam, the book is not a single narrative but a compilation of five distinct works: The Book of the Watchers, The Similitudes (or Parables), The Astronomical Book, The Dream Visions, and The Epistle of Enoch. Together, these sections provide a "Cosmic History" that explains the origin of evil, the mechanics of the heavens, and the certainty of a final judgment. Enoch is presented not merely as a man who "walked with God," but as the "Scribe of Righteousness" who was granted access to the heavenly tablets to record the destiny of the world for the "last generation" of the elect.

The journey begins in the Book of the Watchers, which expands upon the cryptic mentions in Genesis regarding the "sons of God" and the "daughters of men." Here, the text identifies a group of two hundred angels, led by Semjaza and Azazel, who abandoned their celestial stations to descend upon Mount Hermon. Their rebellion was twofold: they committed the "great sin" of biological defilement by taking human wives, and they committed the "theological sin" of premature revelation. They taught humanity the "forbidden arts" of warfare, sorcery, metallurgy, and vanity; secrets that accelerated the moral decay of the human race. The offspring of these unions, the Nephilim giants, became the predators of the earth, leading to an ecological and spiritual crisis that necessitated the Great Flood. This section establishes the "Enochic Problem of Evil"; the suffering of the world is not just a human failing, but the result of a celestial mutiny that remains the root of all lawlessness.

©2026 Dante Fortson (P)2026 Dante Fortson
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