THE BOOK OF ENOCH EXPLICITLY LINKS ABORTION KNOWLEDGE TO A FALLEN ANGEL, AND THAT IS WHY PEOPLE WANT IT IGNORED
There is a line in 1 Enoch that modern readers do not want to touch, because it is not subtle.
In 1 Enoch 69:12, the text names a fallen angel and connects him to teaching humanity how to harm life in the womb. In many translations from the Ethiopic tradition, the verse describes instruction related to striking the embryo in the womb so that it passes away.
That is not framed as medicine. It is framed as wicked knowledge.
Enoch places this teaching in the same category as spiritual violence, occult instruction, and manipulation of creation. In that worldview, the issue is not merely personal crisis. It is rebellion against divine boundaries, the same pattern seen in the Watchers story earlier in Enoch.
And here is what people miss.
There is a line in 1 Enoch that modern readers do not want to touch, because it is not subtle.
In 1 Enoch 69:12, the text names a fallen angel and connects him to teaching humanity how to harm life in the womb. In many translations from the Ethiopic tradition, the verse describes instruction related to striking the embryo in the womb so that it passes away.
That is not framed as medicine. It is framed as wicked knowledge.
Enoch places this teaching in the same category as spiritual violence, occult instruction, and manipulation of creation. In that worldview, the issue is not merely personal crisis. It is rebellion against divine boundaries, the same pattern seen in the Watchers story earlier in Enoch.
And here is what people miss.
08:42 AM - Feb 15, 2026
Only people mentioned by myralynnr in this post can reply
Carole Davis-Z
@Tallyho
15 February, 11:50
In response Myra Raney to her Publication
Yet another ancient text that villifies and defames women.
The Watchers TOOK women as wives... do we really think the Watchers gave the women a CHOICE?
There is a passage that inders the Watchers, were 'led astray' by women... so, here we see blame being set on the creation, not the creator.
They taught them herbalism... is that bad - or bad because WOMEN were given the knowledge, not men?
These Watchers were 'watching' what? An experiment? A social 'test'... 'Watching' infers no physical contact but the Watchers decided to break that rule... then blame the women
Seems to me the one who created the Watcheds did not create them correctly, because they developed a need for wives, but not a need for accepting responsibility..
The Watchers TOOK women as wives... do we really think the Watchers gave the women a CHOICE?
There is a passage that inders the Watchers, were 'led astray' by women... so, here we see blame being set on the creation, not the creator.
They taught them herbalism... is that bad - or bad because WOMEN were given the knowledge, not men?
These Watchers were 'watching' what? An experiment? A social 'test'... 'Watching' infers no physical contact but the Watchers decided to break that rule... then blame the women
Seems to me the one who created the Watcheds did not create them correctly, because they developed a need for wives, but not a need for accepting responsibility..
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Myra Raney
@myralynnr
15 February, 08:42
In response Myra Raney to her Publication
Enoch does not primarily aim blame at women. It does not make mothers the villain. It traces responsibility upward, to spiritual rebellion, to powers teaching humans to grasp control over life and death.
You do not have to treat Enoch as canonical Scripture to understand why this matters. Jude references Enoch, and early Jewish and Christian communities preserved it because they believed it exposed the spiritual roots behind recurring human patterns.
So the controversy is not just about whether Enoch belongs in a Bible.
The controversy is what the text implies. If abortion related knowledge is described as a destructive, fallen teaching, then the argument is no longer only political or medical. It becomes theological. Are humans stewards of life, or owners of it.
That is why this verse provokes such resistance.
It forces the question modern culture keeps trying to avoid.
You do not have to treat Enoch as canonical Scripture to understand why this matters. Jude references Enoch, and early Jewish and Christian communities preserved it because they believed it exposed the spiritual roots behind recurring human patterns.
So the controversy is not just about whether Enoch belongs in a Bible.
The controversy is what the text implies. If abortion related knowledge is described as a destructive, fallen teaching, then the argument is no longer only political or medical. It becomes theological. Are humans stewards of life, or owners of it.
That is why this verse provokes such resistance.
It forces the question modern culture keeps trying to avoid.
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