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From the 1728 Figures de la Bible illustrated by Gerard Hoet (1648–1733) |
Sorry. Dylan puns just kinda make themselves.
I may have mentioned in an earlier post that Jude has an
interesting way of referencing Old Testament stories: he seems to know
considerably more about them than the original writers told us.
One explanation is that Jude was a prophet, and in writing a
letter that was itself God-breathed and therefore not subject to the normal
limitations of knowledge under which most writers labor, he was free to
introduce entirely new revelation. Another possibility is that written or oral Jewish
religious lore was transmitted more extensively and more accurately than we
know, and that the Old Testament only contains a portion of the truth revealed
to man by God over the centuries during which it was compiled (though of course
all the necessary bits).