
Ancient texts,
plain words,
Protestant roots.
Making the intertestamental world accessible.
EnochUnveiled exists because there is a gap: millions of Christians have heard about the Book of Enoch — from podcasts, YouTube, or offhand references in sermons — but have no reliable, theologically grounded place to actually read and understand it.
Most resources on Enoch come from one of two extremes: academic papers written for scholars, or sensationalist content that treats every verse as a secret revelation overturning established Christianity. We occupy the middle ground that most Christians actually need.
Our commentary is written for the person who loves their Bible, takes their faith seriously, and is curious about what the world of Jesus and the apostles actually looked like — including the texts they read, the ideas they engaged, and the theological framework they inhabited.
Scripture First
Every commentary is evaluated against the 66 books of the Protestant Bible. Enoch illuminates; it does not replace.
Scholarly Integrity
We engage seriously with Second Temple scholarship, Dead Sea Scrolls research, and early church history.
Accessible to All
No seminary required. We write for curious Christians, not academics. Plain English is the goal, always.
Theological Caution
We flag where Enoch diverges from canonical teaching. Curiosity without discernment is dangerous.

Nathan Calloway
Reformed Baptist · Biblical Studies
Nathan is a lay theologian with 12 years of study in Second Temple Judaism, biblical theology, and non-canonical literature. He holds a B.A. in Biblical Studies and has taught Sunday school on the intertestamental period for over a decade. He is a member of a Reformed Baptist congregation in Nashville, Tennessee.
Frequently asked questions.
Ready to start reading?
Open the chapter reader and begin with 1 Enoch chapter 1 — the blessing of the righteous.