Mind blown—the Ge’ez Enoch readings made familiar passages feel brand new
Hearing priests chant from Ethiopic manuscripts gave the “divine secrets” real gravity
Please share shelf marks and folio numbers so we can verify every citation
The Watchers narrative in 1 Enoch felt less like myth and more like moral surgery
I didn’t know Ethiopia kept the only complete Enoch—global church owes you thanks
Your side-by-side of Ge’ez, Aramaic fragments, and Greek parallels was a masterclass
Jude quoting Enoch hits different when you hear it in a living liturgical tradition
Angels, justice, and mercy—Enoch’s vision reads like a courtroom the cosmos can hear
The astronomy calendar sections suddenly felt ordered, not odd, through Ethiopian lenses
You balanced wonder with warnings against building doctrine on one book—wise
If “hidden” means “ignored by the West,” Ethiopia just turned on the lights
I loved the clarity that Enoch is Scripture in Tewahedo churches and a witness elsewhere
Please release transliterations and literal translations of the key Ge’ez passages
The righteous remnant theme makes me want integrity, not just information
Hearing about Uriel and Michael in Ge’ez gave texture to angelic ministry without hype
The judgment scenes brought hope because justice has a timetable in God’s hands
Your map of manuscript journeys from Axum to Europe was worth the whole video
“Secrets” felt less sensational and more like wisely veiled warnings for the proud
You showed how Enoch magnifies Christ instead of competing with the Gospels
The ethical punch—repent, repair, walk upright—landed harder than the mysteries
Dead Sea Scrolls fragments plus Ethiopian canon equals receipts, not rumors
Please post high-res scans and dating notes so classrooms can use this tomorrow
The mountain temple imagery connected Eden, Sinai, and Zion in one sweep
Black Jesus here means Jesus remembered through African custodianship—beautiful
The calendar debates were handled with nuance instead of mockery—thank you
I never realized how much Enoch shaped early Christian imagination about justice
Your tone invited study, not superstition—exactly what this topic needs
The refrain “let the manuscripts speak” turned curiosity into courage
If wisdom hides with the humble, Ethiopia has been guarding it faithfully
Leaving this video wanting to learn Ge’ez and live holier—best kind of shock