Wes Huff on Enoch, Nephilim, and Demons
Divine Coucil, Biblical Theology Anthony Delgado Divine Coucil, Biblical Theology Anthony Delgado

Wes Huff on Enoch, Nephilim, and Demons

Anthony reacts to Wes Huff’s comments from The Shawn Ryan Show by pulling out the “weird” biblical themes—because “if it’s weird, it’s important”—and frames the episode around five linked topics: ethics of technology and Watcher “secret knowledge” (connecting modern tech questions to 1 Enoch 8 and Azazel’s teaching of warfare and seduction), the Dead Sea Scrolls as a major confirmation that the Old Testament we have today is materially the same text Israel had then (while also clarifying that real textual variants existed before Christ, especially Deuteronomy 32’s “sons of God / angels of God / sons of Israel,” with implications for Psalm 82), Astronomical Enoch (1 Enoch 72–82, “Book of the Luminaries”) as an ancient stream of thought that helps explain the conceptual world New Testament authors wrote within, the Nephilim/giants debate (Genesis 6; LXX “giants”), pressing for taking Peter and Jude’s angel-sin framing seriously (2 Peter 2:4; Jude 6) against the Sethite view, and finally demons as disembodied spirits of the Nephilim/giants (a major Second Temple thread) with biblical touchpoints in the Rephaim passages (Job 26:5–6; Psalm 88:10; Isaiah 14:9) and Jesus’ “abyss” language (Luke 8:30–31), arguing that what scripture “whispers” may be whispered because it was assumed, and that reading Enoch—without treating it as canon—can still illuminate how early Jewish and Christian readers made sense of the Bible’s supernatural worldview and storyline.

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The Watchers: Ancient Entities in Modern Fatih (Truth and Shadow Podcast)
Podcast, Watchers, 1 Enoch Anthony Delgado Podcast, Watchers, 1 Enoch Anthony Delgado

The Watchers: Ancient Entities in Modern Fatih (Truth and Shadow Podcast)

This conversation examines the biblical and theological significance of sinister spiritual forces, with a particular focus on the watchers and holy ones mentioned in Daniel and 1 Enoch. Scripture presents human history as a cosmic battlefield where unseen powers oppose God’s purposes, a theme often neglected in modern preaching out of caution, skepticism, or overemphasis on Christ’s victory. The discussion examines how early church fathers addressed these beings without embarrassment, how post-Enlightenment rationalism and modern esotericism have distorted our view of the supernatural, and how texts like 1 Enoch shed light on the origin of demons as the disembodied spirits of the Nephilim. Attention is given to passages such as Genesis 6, Psalm 82, Deuteronomy 32, Ephesians 6, and Revelation 12, showing their interconnection with the watchers. The narrative links ancient rebellion to contemporary cultural confusion, arguing that distorted echoes of the watchers appear in modern fascinations with aliens and fringe spirituality. Ultimately, the call is for Christians to reclaim a robust biblical theology of the supernatural, recognizing Christ not only as the Savior who comforts but also as the Warrior who conquers, and to prepare for renewed hunger for truth and deliverance in an age marked by deception and spiritual searching.

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Is the divine council biblical? (25 Divine Council Bible Passages)
divine council, Bible Anthony Delgado divine council, Bible Anthony Delgado

Is the divine council biblical? (25 Divine Council Bible Passages)

Have you ever come across the phrase “the divine council” or “divine council worldview” and wondered why you haven’t heard much about it in the Bible? It’s there. But you may still ask, Who or what is the divine council in the Bible? What does it mean? And is the divine council really biblical? In short, Scripture presents God as surrounding himself with heavenly beings who deliberate and govern the cosmos on his behalf. What if I told you this concept runs from Genesis to Revelation and is central to understanding the biblical story?

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