This fragmentary manuscript is similar to portions of the book
of Jubilees, an important writing of Second Temple Judaism that
survived only among Christian readers and that has long been known
to us from versions in Greek and Ethiopic. Among Ethiopian Christians
Jubilees was so treasured that it actually became a part of the
Old Testament. Fifteen fragmentary exemplars of Jubilees have turned
up among the scrolls, establishing the work as one of the most common
among those caches and clearly testifying to its importance for
those who hid the texts. Like the Ethiopian Christians, they may
have considered the book a part of the canon of Holy Writ/
In that light, the present work seems to be a retelling of Jubilees,
and it may be that we should consider it an example of "rewritten
Bible," the interpretive phenomenon we encounter so often in
the scrolls. Surviving fragments of 4Q227 relate to Jubilees 4:17-24,
but give the material in a different order. Jubilees 4:18 reports
that the angels taught Enoch the calendar, which seems to be the
subiect of our fray. 2, 1. 1. Jubilees 4:22 says that Enoch testified
against the Watchers, or fallen angels, who had taken human wives
and whose progeny were the Giants (Gen. 6:1-2; cf. text 33, The
Book of Giants). Our author also relates this story, in 1. 4, and
apparently goes on to connect it, under the influence ofJubilees
4:23., to the judgment of the entire world.
Frag. 2 i[ . . . E]noch, after we taught him 2[ . . . he
was with the angels of God] six full jubilees 3[ . . . the la]nd,
into the midst of the sons of man and he test)fied against them
alI 4[ . . . ] and also against the watchers. And he wrote all [
. . . ] heaven and the ways of their hosts and [ho]ly ones 6[ .
. . SO th]at the ri[ghteous ones] shall not commit error [ . . .
]