Reason Four – Enoch & Christ’s Words Match Up

Enoch and Christ Speak the Same Words

Jesus did not introduce new moral or prophetic concepts. His teachings echo the language, structure, and authority already found in Enoch. The overlap is not thematic alone. It is verbal, judicial, and doctrinal.

Parallel #1 — Judgment Given to the Son

1 Enoch 69:27

(R. H. Charles Translation, 1917)

“And the sum of judgment was given unto the Son of Man, and he sat on the throne of his glory.”

Now compare Christ’s own words:

Gospel of John 5:22 (KJV)

“For the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment unto the Son.”

Both texts teach the same doctrine:

• Judgment belongs to the Son

• Authority is delegated by God

• The Son sits in glory and power

This is not coincidence, it shows how deeply the New Testament teachings align with 1 Enoch.

Parallel #2 — The Inheritance of the Meek

1 Enoch 5:7

(R. H. Charles Translation, 1917)

“But for the elect there shall be light and joy and peace, and they shall inherit the earth.”

Now compare:

Gospel of Matthew 5:5 (KJV)

“Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth.”

Jesus does not redefine inheritance, He reaffirms it, using language already preserved in Enoch’s writings. 

Parallel #3 — Woe to the Rich and Comfortable

1 Enoch 94:8

(R. H. Charles Translation, 1917)

“Woe to you, ye rich, for ye have trusted in your riches… and your riches shall not abide.”

Now compare:

Gospel of Luke 6:24 (KJV)

“But woe unto you that are rich! for ye have received your consolation.”

The structure is identical:

• Direct address

• Pronouncement of woe

• Warning against misplaced trust

Christ speaks in Enochian cadence.

Other Teachings Shared by Enoch and the New Testament

Briefly, both teach:

• A final judgment by the Son

• Resurrection of the righteous

• Punishment of the wicked

• Angels executing divine judgment

• A coming kingdom ruled by the chosen one

Showing a Deep connection to the teaching of Christ and Writings of Enoch.

Other Teachings Shared by Enoch and the Old Testament

Enoch also aligns with:

• Heavenly court imagery

• Thrones of judgment

• Divine books of record

• A coming day of reckoning

• God ruling through an appointed Son

These concepts form a single, continuous theological worldview.

Enoch and Daniel — The Son of Man

Enoch’s Son of Man language appears again in Daniel.

Book of Daniel 7:13–14 (KJV)

“Behold, one like the Son of man came with the clouds of heaven…

And there was given him dominion, and glory, and a kingdom…”

Daniel does not explain the title — he assumes it is already known.

That vocabulary is preserved clearly in Enoch.

Why Jesus Called Himself the Son of Man

Jesus repeatedly called Himself the Son of Man, and it enraged the religious authorities of the Jewish faith. 

Why?

Because:

• The title implied divine authority

• Quoting a text they rejected 

• pointing towards a ancient faith that pre dates Judaism. 

Jesus was openly identifying Himself with a text they rejected by the Pharisees but recognized.

Summary

    •  Enoch assigns judgment to the Son

• Jesus claims that authority

• Enoch blesses the meek

• Jesus repeats the promise

• Enoch warns the rich

• Jesus echoes the woe

• Enoch defines the Son of Man

• Jesus claims the title

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