Second Temple Jewish writers approached the problem of evil through a comprehensive, interlocking narrative that spans Genesis 3, Genesis 6:1–4, and Genesis 11, with Deuteronomy 32:8–9 as an inspired theological commentary on Babel. The storyline explains not only the depravity of humankind but also the corruption of spiritual powers and the fragmentation of the nations under hostile rule. In what follows, I will exegete these passages using the English Standard Version and highlight critical terms from the Hebrew and Aramaic, locating them within the supernatural worldview of ancient Israel and of Judaism in the Second Temple period. This reading pays close attention to the “divine council” background of the Hebrew Bible, the Enochic elaboration of Genesis 6 within a Mesopotamian frame, and the Deuteronomy 32 worldview that interprets Babel as a judicial disinheritance of the nations.
Reading with the Authors’ Worldview
The Biblical writers consistently assume a populated unseen realm. Psalm 82:1 (ESV) states, “God has taken his place in the divine council; in the midst of the gods he holds judgment.” The Hebrew elohim appears twice in this verse. The first elohim is singular by grammar, the God of Israel, while the second is plural, referring to other elohim in whose midst He judges. This verse is not polytheism, but a claim about Yahweh’s unique rule over lesser, created spiritual beings, a pattern that Second Temple Jews also presupposed. The council setting is the canonical backdrop to a number of texts, including Genesis 1:26, Genesis 3:22, 1 Kings 22, and Daniel 7. The Scriptures present Yahweh as incomparably unique among elohim, yet surrounded by a deliberative entourage of “holy ones” who can be judged for malpractice, as in Psalm 82.
With that frame in place, we now turn to the three rebellion narratives and the way Deuteronomy 32 interprets Babel.
The Fall and the Depravity of Humankind in Genesis 3
Serpent, Council, and “Knowing Good and Evil”
Genesis 3 introduces the serpent. The Hebrew noun nachash can mean serpent, and in the narrative, it functions as a personal, supernatural rebel in Yahweh’s Edenic court. The textual echoes in Ezekiel 28 strengthen this reading by pictures of an anointed guardian figure in Eden, “on the holy mountain of God,” who falls through pride, imagery that exceeds anything the text of Genesis says about Adam and fits a heavenly throne guardian cast from the divine mount.
The temptation centers on the knowledge claim. Genesis 3:5 ESV: “For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.” The underlying Hebrew uses elohim. In Genesis 3:22, the Lord says, “Behold, the man has become like one of us in knowing good and evil.” The plural “us” signals the council. Hence, Genesis 3:5 is best read with the plural sense latent in elohim: the serpent suggests that the humans will become “like the elohim,” that is, like the divine council who “know good and evil.”
The phrase “knowing good and evil” is not a mere abstract cognitive capacity. Deuteronomy 1:39, for instance, uses the same wording for moral and experiential discernment: “your children… who today have no knowledge of good or evil…” The point in Genesis 3 is that Adam and Eve would enter a morally freighted realm known already to the council, not simply acquire a neutral ability.
The Seed Conflict and the Escalation of Human Depravity
In the wake of the fall, God declares enmity between the serpent’s seed and the woman’s seed (Genesis 3:15). The “seed” theme unfolds through Scripture as both genealogical and spiritual. The New Testament can speak of those who practice sin as “of the devil,” and those born of God as bearing “imperishable seed,” signaling that “seed” functions as a moral and spiritual lineage as well. Cain’s murder of Abel aligns Cain with the serpent’s way. The narrative culmination appears in Genesis 6:5 ESV, which reports an all-encompassing human depravity: “The LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.” Yet that verdict follows four verses that introduce a different kind of transgression in the unseen realm, which Scripture places alongside human sin in explaining the world’s disorder.
The Watchers and Genesis 6:1–4 in Second Temple Perspective
Text, Terms, and the Enochic Elaboration
Genesis 6:1–4 ESV introduces “the sons of God” (bĕnê hā’elohim), “the daughters of man,” and the Nephilim who were “on the earth in those days, and also afterward.” The passage closes, “These were the mighty men [gibborim] who were of old, the men of renown.” Second Temple literature, especially 1 Enoch 6–11, calls the transgressing heavenly beings “Watchers” and narrates their descent, transgression, and punishment. The account influenced both 2 Peter 2:4 and Jude 6, which refer to sinning angels imprisoned until judgment.
Second Temple Jews also connected Genesis 6 with Mesopotamian traditions. Several cuneiform texts speak of the apkallū, pre-flood sages, some counted as two-thirds divine, who transmitted forbidden knowledge and were later banished to the deep. These apkallū traditions were well known in the environment of Israel’s Scriptures and frame the polemical brilliance of Genesis 6:1–4, which subverts the prestige of Mesopotamian culture by attributing its revered primordial “wisdom” to a rebellion that God judges.
The Mesopotamian materials even preserve names of giants, including Gilgamesh, described as two-thirds divine, dovetailing with the “mighty” men of renown motif. The broader pattern is that Genesis 6:1–4 functions as a theological and literary polemic. It repurposes motifs in order to undermine the so-called benign status of Mesopotamian civilizational “gods” and their culture heroes.
Keyword Notes: bĕnê hā’elohim, Nephilim, gibborim, and “men of the name”
“Sons of God” translates bĕnê hā’elohim, a phrase elsewhere used for nonhuman, heavenly members of the council, not for human judges. This coheres with the whole Hebrew Bible usage and with the council worldview presupposed in Psalm 82 and Job 38:7.
“Nephilim” is related to the root n-f-l (“to fall”) in popular etymology, but within the Second Temple period, the term came to denote giant figures associated with the Watchers’ transgression. The ESV properly leaves the term transliterated rather than translated.
“Mighty men,” gibborim, “men of renown” dovetail with post-flood descriptions of Nimrod as a gibbor and with Babel’s “name” project, unifying Genesis 6 with Genesis 10–11 in a literary bridge that telegraphs the continuity of rebellion.
Enoch, Peter, Jude, and the Punishment of the Watchers
First Enoch’s story of the Watchers’ binding and imprisonment provides the Second Temple template for understanding 1 Peter 3:19’s “spirits in prison” and 2 Peter 2:4’s reference to God having “cast them into hell,” that is, Tartarus, a Greek term for a part of the underworld. Enoch’s intercession is rejected, and the Watchers await judgment. This intertestamental matrix explains the New Testament’s concise allusions.
The upshot is that, in a Second Temple reading, human depravity after the fall is intensified by a parallel spiritual transgression that corrupts knowledge, amplifies violence, and begets tyrannical rule. Thus, when Genesis 6:5 highlights total human wickedness, Scripture has already introduced the supernatural catalyst in 6:1–4.
Babel, the Disinheritance of the Nations, and the Deuteronomy 32 Worldview
Babel as More Than Linguistic Confusion
Genesis 11:4 ESV reports humanity’s hubristic ambition, “Come, let us build ourselves a city and a tower with its top in the heavens, and let us make a name [shem] for ourselves,” which echoes the “men of the name” idiom in Genesis 6:4. The lexical glue binds the pre-flood and post-flood rebellions. Moreover, the table of nations places Nimrod, the gibbor, as founder of Assyria and Babylon, prefiguring the later empires that will afflict Israel.
Deuteronomy 32:8–9 as Inspired Commentary on Babel
Deuteronomy 32:8-9 ESV reads, “When the Most High gave to the nations their inheritance, when he divided mankind, he fixed the borders of the peoples according to the number of the sons of God. But the LORD’s portion is his people, Jacob his allotted heritage.” The text refers back to Babel’s division. It explains it as a judicial disinheritance of the nations by Yahweh, who chooses Israel as His own portion. The reading “sons of God” reflects the Dead Sea Scrolls and fits the timeline, because Israel did not yet exist at Babel.
This disinheritance is also a delegation. The nations are allotted to lesser elohim, members of the council. The parallel in Deuteronomy 4:19-20, which speaks of the “host of heaven” allotted to the nations, makes the point that the nations come under the administration of these spiritual powers. The Old Testament later indicts these powers for corruption, as Psalm 82 depicts God judging elohim who misrule the nations.
“Demons,” shedim, and the Gods of the Nations
Deuteronomy 32:17 ESV asserts, “They sacrificed to demons that were no gods, to gods they had never known.” The Hebrew shedim has Mesopotamian roots for guardian figures and is used here for the spiritual beings behind idolatry. Paul draws on this Deuteronomic theology when he warns the Corinthians that pagan sacrifices are offered to demons and not to God, and believers must not have fellowship with them. The Biblical writers do not treat the gods of the nations as mere wood and stone. Rather, they warn against the real spiritual beings associated with idolatry.
Why the World Is Like It Is
Second Temple Judaism explains the world’s present condition through three rebellions that operate together.
Genesis 3 exposes the primal human fall under the influence of a supernatural rebel in God’s court. Humanity’s vocation as God’s earthly imagers is marred, and death enters the story.
Genesis 6:1–4 reveals a supernatural transgression that corrupts wisdom and magnifies violence, a read amplified by Enochic tradition and echoed in the New Testament’s references to imprisoned spirits.
Genesis 11 combined with Deuteronomy 32:8–9 records God’s judgment of Babel by disinheriting the nations and allotting them to lesser elohim, whose misrule provokes further idolatry and injustice.
These events yield a world in which humanity is enslaved to sin, the nations are estranged from their Creator, and malevolent powers exploit that estrangement.
Exegetical Key Words and Phrases
Nachash “serpent” and the Divine Council Setting
As argued above, nachash in Genesis 3 functions as a title for a personal, divine rebel who disrupts God’s Edenic council. Ezekiel 28’s Eden references to an anointed guardian on the mountain of God point to a heavenly being, not Adam.
Elohim and Psalm 82
The plural elohim can refer to the God of Israel or to other divine beings, depending on grammar and context. Psalm 82:1 uses both singular and plural in the same verse and depicts Yahweh presiding in judgment over other elohim. This council conception is foundational to understanding Genesis 1:26 and 3:22, where the plurals reflect God addressing His heavenly court, while the singular verbs in Genesis 1:27 insist that God alone creates.
Bĕnê hā’elohim “sons of God”
In Genesis 6:1–4, bĕnê hā’elohim are heavenly beings, not human rulers. That reading coheres with ancient council language and with the intertestamental development in 1 Enoch, and it explains New Testament echoes of angelic sin and imprisonment.
Nephilim and gibborim
The Nephilim appear “in those days, and also afterward,” which the narrative picks up by calling Nimrod a gibbor. Genesis links this to Mesopotamia and Babylon, setting up Babel. The “men of the name” (’anshê shem) language in Genesis 6:4 anticipates the Babel project to “make a name” (shem) in 11:4. The intertextual bond is deliberate.
Shedim “demons,” “host of heaven,” and “allotment”
Deuteronomy 32:17 calls the gods of the nations shedim. Deuteronomy 4:19–20 speaks of the “host of heaven” allotted to the nations. Deuteronomy 32:8–9 clarifies that the Most High fixed the borders of the peoples “according to the number of the sons of God,” while choosing Jacob as His portion. This is the cosmic-geographical map of the Old Testament.
Watcher (‘îr) and Enoch
Daniel 4 uses the Aramaic ‘îr “Watcher” for heavenly “holy ones” who decree judgments, and 1 Enoch adapts this title for the rebellious heavenly beings of Genesis 6. The intertestamental Enochic template, widely read in Second Temple Judaism, preserves ancient Mesopotamian connections and supplies the conceptual matrix for Peter and Jude.
The Gospel and the Reversal of Babel
This Second Temple schema is not merely a diagnosis. It frames the Gospel as God’s answer to a threefold catastrophe.
Human sin is answered in the atoning death and resurrection of the Messiah, who, as the Last Adam, restores true image bearing.
The Watchers’ corruption is answered by the Messiah’s victory over the powers, and by His proclamation to the “spirits in prison” of their defeat.
Babel’s disinheritance is answered by the Messiah’s mission to reclaim the nations. Jesus refuses Satan’s shortcut in the wilderness and inaugurates His kingdom ministry by proclaiming good news and casting out demons. The Gospels frame this exorcistic work as the arrival of God’s reign, subduing the hostile powers over the nations.
When Jesus appoints the Twelve and then “seventy” or “seventy-two” others, He signals that the mission is aimed at the full table of nations that were once scattered. The number seventy in some manuscripts calls to mind the Genesis 10 roster and the Deuteronomy 32 worldview. The mission of the Church is therefore nothing less than the repatriation of the nations to the God of Israel through the Gospel.
A Close Reading of the Passages
Genesis 3, in situ
The Eden narratives presuppose God’s presence among His earthly imagers within an Eden that blends garden and mountain imagery, the classic setting of the divine abode. Ezekiel 28 speaks of “Eden, the garden of God,” and “the holy mountain of God,” reinforcing that humans were created to be God’s vice-regents within a sacred space that reflects the heavenly court on earth. The serpent’s temptation thus targets not merely a prohibition, but the human role in God’s two-realm economy.
When the Lord says, “The man has become like one of us,” He acknowledges that the human couple has gained experiential knowledge of moral evil, trespassing into a realm beyond vocation. Yet, the context also insists that God continues a plan to dwell among His people. The later tabernacle and temple, and ultimately the Church as God’s temple, are developments of Eden’s intention, not detours.
Genesis 6:1–4, in situ
The short but dense pericope achieves several things at once. It situates the intensification of violence within a cosmic revolt, it links pre-flood rebellion to post-flood politics through gibborim and shem, and it prepares the reader for the flood as a purgation that nonetheless will not, by itself, heal the deeper disorder. The Enochic retelling interprets the Watchers as corrupting wisdom and generating giants, while New Testament writers assume a memory of angelic incarceration that draws on this tradition.
Genesis 11 and Deuteronomy 32:8–9, in situ
Babel is not only about languages. It is about lordship. Humanity seeks to storm heaven, to reverse Eden on human terms, to create a synthetic sacred geography “with its top in the heavens” and thereby to secure a name. God judges the project by confusion and dispersion. Deuteronomy 32 announces the deeper judicial move. God allots the nations to lesser powers and begins anew with Abraham, thereby launching a redemptive strategy that will culminate in the Messiah’s universal reign.
Psalm 82 within the Arc
Psalm 82 is a courtroom scene. The Most High indicts elohim for corrupt administration, a poem that presumes the Deuteronomy 32 allotment and anticipates the Messiah’s inheritance of the nations. The psalm reassures the faithful that the Most High will reclaim what He has allotted, that He will judge unjust rulers, human and superhuman alike.
Theological Synthesis
A Second Temple Jewish reading offers a robust theodicy and missiology.
Theodicy. Suffering and injustice arise not only from human fallenness, but also from the misrule of malevolent powers who were allotted to the nations after Babel. This does not excuse human sin. Rather, it explains the synergy between human rebellion and spiritual oppression.
Missiology. The Gospel is a kingdom announcement that the God of Israel has reclaimed the disinherited nations through the crucified and risen Messiah. Exorcism in the Gospels is not peripheral. It is a sign that the inferior elohim are being dispossessed and that the nations are being repatriated to their true Lord.
Eschatology. Psalm 82’s vision of divine judgment, the prophetic expectation that the nations will stream to Zion, and the New Testament proclamation that Jesus has been enthroned above every power converge in the promise that the cosmos will be reordered under the true King.
Practical Implications for the Church
For the Church, this reading yields pastoral and spiritual benefits.
Exegetical integrity. It requires interpreting Scripture in the context that produced it, not through modern filters. Such integrity deepens confidence in the Word.
Moral seriousness. The Bible’s diagnosis of depravity is comprehensive. It refuses shallow accounts of evil, insisting that sin has human and supra-human dimensions. Christians should take sin, idolatry, and spiritual warfare seriously, without sensationalism.
Missionary breadth. The Great Commission is the reversal of Babel. Evangelism, discipleship, and the formation of holy communities are the means by which the nations are reclaimed.
Christocentric focus. The Messiah’s cross and resurrection are the hinge by which God’s long plan to reunite heaven and earth swings open.
Conclusion
A Second Temple Jewish worldview reads Genesis 3, Genesis 6:1–4, Genesis 11, and Deuteronomy 32:8–9 as a coherent narrative of three rebellions that explain the world's current state. Humans fell under the seduction of a supernatural rebel. Heavenly beings transgressed their proper estate, corrupting knowledge and magnifying violence. Humanity's collectivized hubris at Babel provoked God to assign the nations to lesser elohim while choosing Israel as His portion. The Scriptures then unveil the divine strategy to restore Eden by another way. In the Gospel, the Messiah defeats the powers, forgives sinners, and inaugurates the reclamation of the nations, so that one day the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea. The Church participates in this drama as the community of the King, called to proclaim His victory and to live as holy imagers of God in the present age.
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