I never knew Cain had a son named Enoch totally separate from the “walked with God” Enoch
If Cain named a city after Enoch, his influence had to be massive in early civilization
“Banned book” or curated canon—either way I want to see the sources
Two Enochs, two legacies: one builds cities, one walks with God
This makes Genesis 4 feel like the birth of culture, not just a footnote
If a text about Cain’s Enoch existed, what scared editors about it
A city called Enoch hints at memory stronger than myth
This episode finally sorted the confusion between Jared’s Enoch and Cain’s Enoch
The idea that a book was suppressed raises questions about power and doctrine
Early metallurgy and music in Cain’s line make Enoch look like a culture founder
If the church sidelined this text, was it heresy or just hazardous for unity
I appreciate the difference between legend, liturgy, and literature here
Enoch of Cain symbolizes innovation without illumination—power minus holiness
A hidden book about early urban life would explain Genesis’ sudden tech boom
Whether banned or not, the city named Enoch is a historical breadcrumb
Separating apocrypha from canon doesn’t mean we can’t study it
This video treats the claim like scholarship, not just scandal—thank you
If fragments survive, show the manuscripts and the provenance trail
A city-builder Enoch reframes our idea of “progress” after Eden
The contrast with the other Enoch makes Genesis read like a mirror and a warning
I love how this makes Cain’s genealogy feel like a real family, not a list
If Enoch wrote anything, it would read like ground-level history of the first city
The story turns the world’s first skyscraper dreams into a spiritual caution sign
Banned pages create curiosity; responsible commentary creates clarity
Early urban planning meets early moral failure—timeless tension
The city’s name lasting longer than the man says a lot about legacy
If the book existed, it might reveal how art and weapons grew up together
This angle makes the altar vs. anvil conflict start way earlier than Babel
Even rumors of a lost Enoch text push us to read Genesis more carefully
A complicated Enoch makes God’s patience in Genesis look even more amazing