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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Biblical Scholarship of the Dead Sea Scrolls, According to Wes Huff on the Joe Rogan Experience

Biblical Scholarship of the Dead Sea Scrolls, According to Wes Huff on the Joe Rogan Experience

In January 2025, biblical scholar Wesley Huff appeared on The Joe Rogan Experience to discuss the profound significance of the Dead Sea Scrolls (DSS) for biblical scholarship. During this wide-ranging conversation, Huff highlighted several key aspects of these ancient texts, including their role in validating biblical manuscript transmission, their diverse material composition, and the ongoing challenges scholars face in studying them. His insights were heard by millions of people–Christians and non-Christians alike. Wes outlined a framework for understanding how the DSS discoveries continue to shape our knowledge of ancient Judaism and early Christianity and support the authority of the Scriptures. 

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