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Enoch and the Nephilim

Mysteries of Nature

By Fredrick Sibwoga KomboPublished 12 months ago 3 min read
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Enoch and the Nephilim
Photo by Max Harlynking on Unsplash

Who was the first civilization to set foot on our planet? Our history is written through centuries of records of winners, their power and influence. But over time, mankind transformed from a primitive hunter to an intelligent civilization that created monuments, calendars, and ancient documents. All of this has evolved to this day, and we are the descendants of relatively intelligent beings. But what if that's not so easy? What if that story was told by an ancient civilization? Tales of gods and angels, tales of giants and catastrophes were more literal than when they first appeared. What if we were given ancient knowledge beyond human comprehension? Turning to a few details, suddenly a completely different human history emerges. Something that completely overturns conventional wisdom and history. Most of the time, this version is deliberately censored, forgotten, or worse, ignored.

In early 1946, in what is now known as the West Bank, a group of teenagers were passing time by herding sheep and goats and throwing stones near the ancient settlement of Qumran. On rugged desert terrain, one of these rocks entered the dark side of the cave, and the teens were shocked to hear a loud popping sound echoing inside. A little scared but following their curiosity, they discover a large lump of clay pot. Unknowingly at this point, these teenagers make a very important historical discovery. Many ancient scrolls are hidden in the earthen pot.

Since then, various archaeologists, historians, and treasure hunters have discovered more scroll fragments in ten other caves in the area, bringing the total number of discovered manuscripts to nearly 900. These manuscripts became popularly known as the "Dead Sea Scrolls". Oddly enough, these manuscripts contain a large amount of mysterious and non-canonical religious texts long forgotten by human civilization, or thought to be so in modern times. One of these documents is known as the "Book of Enoch." The Book of Enoch consists of his five books:

The Book of Observers, the Book of Parables, the Book of Astronomy, the Book of Dreams and Visions, and the Letter of Enoch. These chapters tell the story of Genesis' seventh patriarch Enoch, father of Methuselah and Barakir, and grandfather of Noah. The same Noah we know in the Bible, but this is not the Noah's Ark story in the Bible. The Book of Enoch offers an entirely different perspective on the events leading up to the Deluge in Noah's time, from the perspective of an observer who reveals the existence of fallen angels. A team of angels or sentinels sent by God in undetermined time immemorial to watch over people. According to one of the earliest legends about Enoch, the originator of astronomical knowledge and responsible for compiling the solar calendar, he explains that the sons of God descended to earth on Mount Hermon. This mountain became a sacred place for both Canons and Jews, who later invaded the country to build sanctuaries for gods such as Bull, Zeus, Helios, Pan and the Goddess. An observer is someone who never sleeps and guides and observes others. Over time, however, the Observers abandoned their role as Observers and began having sexual relations with human females and procreating children.

Their children will be hybrids, or hybrids, as seen in the Book of Enoch's account of the Nephilim, the children of this interbreeding between Guardians and humans. The Nephilim are giants and barbarians who have terrorized and plundered humanity. In other words, they became supernatural man-eating giants who angered the gods. God punished the Guardians in a dungeon deep in the earth, where Enoch became the mediator between the gods and the captive Guardians. Yahweh's wrath condemned the mingling of fallen angels and mortals, producing half-angel, half-human offspring with insatiable appetites.

humanityextraterrestrialbody modificationsastronomy
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