What is 'First Enoch' and how is it composed?
First Enoch is a composite text made up of several earlier pieces—most notably the Book of the Watchers, the Book of the Giants, the Book of Parables, and an Astronomical Enoch fragment now on display—grouped together under the name Enoch.
How does the Book of Enoch interpret the Nephilim mentioned in Genesis 6?
Enoch elaborates that the 'sons of God' were angelic beings who mated with human women, producing the Nephilim—supernatural-human hybrids whose disembodied spirits later became associated with demonic activity.
Does the Old Testament say much about demons?
The Old Testament has limited material on demons; later Jewish writings and texts found among the Dead Sea Scrolls expand the discussion and often identify demons with the wandering spirits of the Nephilim.
Why do scholars call Enoch pseudepigraphical?
Because it is attributed to the antediluvian figure Enoch but likely written much later; internal features (Hellenistic timekeeping, allusions to Daniel and other post-Mosaic literature) and ancient testimonies suggest a later composition.
How did early Christians treat noncanonical Jewish writings like Enoch when forming the New Testament canon?
Early Christian communities focused on apostolic memoirs and letters—especially the four gospels—as authoritative. Jewish writings and other texts were influential for context and interpretation but generally did not attain the same canonical status.