In the
Hellenistic period, mention of a second divine figure, either beside
Yahweh or beneath him, occurs in several Jewish texts, mostly
apocryphal. These Jewish traditions implying a divine dualism were most frequently associated with Enoch. In the rabbinic period, they center on 'Metatron', often in the context of debates over the heretical doctrine of 'two powers in heaven' (). Ultimately, these ideas appear to go back to differing interpretations of the heavenly enthronement passages at Exodus 24:10, Daniel 7:9. and perhaps even Ezekiel 1:26. These different interpretations later came to distinguish what was orthodox from what was heretical in Judaism. Among the
pseudepigrapha 1 Enoch: Book of Parables presents two figures: the
son of man and Enoch. At first, these two characters seem to be separate entities. Enoch views the son of man enthroned in Heaven. Later, however, they prove to be the same. Many scholars believe that the final chapters in the Book of Parables are a later addition. Others think they are not and that the son of man is Enoch's heavenly double, similar to the
Prayer of Joseph, where
Jacob is depicted as an angel. The
Book of Daniel displays two similar characters: the
Ancient of Days and the
one like a man. Parts of the text in Daniel are
Aramaic and may have been changed in translation. The
Septuagint reads that the son of man came as the Ancient of Days. All other translations say the son of man gained access to the Ancient of Days and was brought before that one. The identification of Enoch with Metatron in 3 Enoch, where the name first appears, is not explicitly made in the
Talmud, although it does refer to a Prince of the World who was young but now is old. However, some of the earliest
kabbalists assumed the connection. There also seem to be two Metatrons, one spelled with six letters (), and one spelled with seven (). The former may be the transformed Enoch, Prince of the Countenance within the
divine palace; the latter, the Primordial Metatron, a
sephira "persona" of the "Cause of Causes", specifically the tenth and last persona, identified with the earthly
Shekhina. Furthermore, the
Merkabah text identifies the
Ancient of Days from the
Book of Daniel as Metatron. Scholem argues that this second tradition was originally separate but later fused with the Enoch tradition. In
2 Enoch, Enoch is assigned titles commonly used by Metatron such as "the Youth, the Prince of the Presence and the Prince of the World." Scholem does not find this convincing. Scholem points to the fact that both Yahoel and Metatron were known as the Lesser YHWH. In 3 Enoch 48D1, Metatron is called both Yahoel Yah and Yahoel. In addition to being one of the seventy names of Metatron from 3 Enoch 48D, Yahoel and Metatron are also linked in Aramaic
incantation bowl inscriptions. == Talmud ==