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The Final Jubilee – Enoch Theological Hoodie (Unisex)

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The Final Jubilee – Enoch Theological Hoodie (Unisex)

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The Final Jubilee – Enoch Theological Hoodie (Unisex)

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The Book Of Enoch 

The Lost Prophecy Restored

The Book of Enoch is one of the most mysterious writings of antiquity — quoted in the New Testament, preserved in the Ethiopian Bible, rediscovered among the Dead Sea Scrolls. It tells of the Watchers who fell from heaven, the giants born of their union with the daughters of men, and the coming judgment of the Son of Man.

This Rashomon Effect Edition is the first to reunite 1 Enoch (in a revised form of R. H. Charles’s 1912 translation) with a fresh modern rendering of the Book of the Giants. More than a reprint, it is a study edition, enriched with an original introduction, commentary, footnotes, and appendix by Weston Simonis.

Drawing on parallel voices across history — the Bible, the Apocrypha (Jubilees, Jasher, Dead Sea Scrolls, Revelation of Abraham), the Zohar and Kabbalah, Gnostic texts, the writings of the early Church Fathers, the scriptures of the Latter-day Saints (Book of Mormon, Doctrine & Covenants, Pearl of Great Price), and the mythologies of Egypt, Greece, and Mesopotamia — this volume restores Enoch’s testimony within the full chorus of world tradition.

“From them I understood that the vision I saw was not for my generation, but for a far distant one.” — 1 Enoch 1:2

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The Book Of Genesis

The Book of Genesis: Bereshit – The Rashomon Effect Edition
By Weston Simonis The Final Jubilees

From the first words of Bereshit — “In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth” — the Scriptures open a cosmic drama that sets the stage for all of redemptive history. Yet the story of Genesis was never preserved in one voice alone. Its echoes resound across Israel’s Torah, the Book of Enoch, the Book of Jubilees, the Book of Jasher, the Dead Sea Scrolls, rabbinic midrash, the writings of Josephus and the early Church fathers, the visions of the Revelation of Abraham, and even in the sacred texts and myths of Egypt, Mesopotamia, Greece, China, and Islam. Each of these traditions carries a fragment of memory — a piece of the diamond that, when seen together, reflects a greater light. This is the Rashomon Effect: one divine story, witnessed from many angles.

In this volume you will read the book of Genesis in a carefully modernized form of the public-domain King James Version (1611; 1769 Oxford Standard Text), accompanied by footnotes and commentary drawn from a wide range of ancient sources. Jubilees retells the stories of the patriarchs with precision, framing them within a heavenly calendar of jubilees and weeks. The Book of Jasher preserves dialogues, motives, and customs that deepen our understanding of the lives of the fathers. The Dead Sea Scrolls provide fragments that echo Genesis and confirm its ancient transmission among Israel’s faithful. Rabbinic writings, such as Genesis Rabbah and the Talmud, wrestle with the moral complexity of figures like Abraham, Jacob, and Joseph. Early Christian witnesses, including Justin Martyr, saw in these beginnings the shadows of Christ Himself. Latter-day Saint scripture, such as the Book of Mormon and the Joseph Smith Translation, expands the story of Joseph and the promises to his seed in the last days. Even the myths of Egypt, with their visions of creation from chaos and the struggle of Osiris and Set; of Mesopotamia, with the battle of Marduk and Tiamat; of Greece, with the Titans striving against heaven; and of China, with Pangu dividing sky and earth, all bear the faint memory of Genesis, preserved and transformed in the traditions of the nations. The Qur’an remembers Adam, Nūḥ, Ibrāhīm, Yūsuf, and Idrīs (Enoch), testifying in its own tongue to the same divine pattern of creation, fall, judgment, exile, and redemption.

At the center of these many voices stands Enoch, the “scribe of righteousness,” who was taken up into heaven and shown the Ten Weeks of world history, including the conflict of Simeon and Levi in the Fifth Week and the promise of a Redeemer from Judah’s line. Genesis thus becomes not merely a book of beginnings, but the first scroll of Enoch’s Bible of Revelation — a witness that God has heard His people, that His covenant endures through scattering and exile, and that His purposes are revealed through prophets, sages, and even the myths of nations. Ultimately, Genesis points forward to the Messiah, the Son of Man whom Enoch foresaw, the One who would crush the serpent, overcome the powers of darkness, and restore creation to the light of God.

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The Book Of Jubiless

The Book of Jubilees is a foundational Jewish text from the Second Temple period, preserved in full within the Ethiopian tradition and widely recognized for its detailed presentation of sacred time, covenant history, and heavenly order. Presented as a revelation given to Moses on Mount Sinai, Jubilees retells the events of Genesis and early Exodus according to a fixed calendar of jubilees, sabbatical cycles, and appointed seasons, revealing history as structured, measured, and governed by divine order rather than chance.

This Rashomon Effect Edition is a revised and arranged presentation of the Book of Jubilees, based on the Ethiopic (Geʿez) text as translated by Rev. George H. Schodde, Ph.D. Rather than offering a new translation, this edition clarifies structure, sequencing, and historical context so the internal logic of Jubilees—its heavenly tablets, sacred calendar, angelic mediation, and covenantal framework—can be read with coherence and consistency.

Jubilees presents creation as ordered instruction, the patriarchs as early keepers of divine law, and festivals as heavenly institutions practiced on earth long before Sinai. Time itself is treated as sacred, governed by heaven, and essential to covenant faithfulness. Events unfold according to appointment, judgment is rendered according to recorded decree, and obedience is understood as alignment with an order already written.

The included appendices provide historical and theological orientation without speculation, addressing sacred calendars, jubilees, the unseen conflict behind human history, the custody of covenant through figures such as Enoch and Abraham, and the public restoration of divine order at Sinai. These materials are designed to restore context rather than replace canon, allowing readers to engage Jubilees as ancient Jewish communities once did.

Intended for readers of biblical studies, Second Temple literature, apocrypha, pseudepigrapha, and ancient Jewish texts, this revised edition presents the Book of Jubilees as an enduring witness to a world governed by order, accountability, and revelation—meant to be read alongside Scripture, not in place of it.

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The Final Jubilee – Enoch Theological Tee (Unisex)

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The Final Jubilee – Enoch Theological Tee (Unisex)

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The Final Jubilee – Enoch Theological Tee (Unisex)

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Enoch The Theological Story

Before theology condemned humanity, it explained rebellion. Before Christ was preached, He was already seen.

Enoch: The Theological Story is a Christ-centered theological work that restores the ancient framework behind Genesis, the Book of Enoch, the Watchers, Azazel, and the Son of Man—Yeshua (Jesus). This book argues that what later Christianity rejected or forgot was not lost by accident, but through a theological shift that redirected blame away from cosmic rebellion and onto humanity itself.

At the center of this work stands Yeshua, not as a late doctrinal invention, but as the eternal Son of Man revealed before Bethlehem, before Rome, and before the cross. The Book of Enoch describes the Son of Man as the Righteous One and Judge of kings and Watchers. This book shows how the Gospels reveal this identity and present Christ as the resolution of a cosmic conflict, not merely a moral teacher.

This volume traces a unified narrative from Eden, where humanity stood unashamed, through the rebellion of the Watchers, to Azazel bound and judged according to ancient ritual and prophecy, and ultimately to Christ, whose authority restores divine order. Rather than teaching inherited guilt or sexual shame, the book returns to an older Hebraic worldview in which humanity is deceived rather than damned.

A central focus of this edition is Azazel Theologically Unmasked, presenting Azazel as a distinct rebellious figure whose judgment is defined in Scripture, the Book of Enoch, and the scapegoat ritual. The book also examines why the Book of Enoch was rejected and traces the theological shift from Adam’s fall to Augustine’s shame, showing how inherited guilt replaced earlier covenant theology.

Using the Rashomon Effect, this work shows how the same ancient events were remembered differently across biblical and mythological traditions. Myth is treated not as fiction, but as fragmented testimony pointing toward a shared ancient reality fulfilled in Christ.

Enoch: The Theological Story is written for readers of biblical theology, apocrypha, and Christians seeking a deeper, older, Christ-centered Gospel. This is Season 1 of a multi-volume theological project.

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