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Metatron

Metatron (Mishnaic Hebrew: מֶטָטְרוֹןMeṭāṭrōn),[1][a][b][5][6] or Matatron (מַטַּטְרוֹן, Maṭṭaṭrōn),[7][8] is an angel in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam mentioned three times in the Talmud, in a few brief passages in the Aggadah, and in mystical Kabbalistic texts within Rabbinic literature. The figure forms one of the traces for the presence of dualist proclivities in the otherwise monotheistic visions of both the Tanakh and later Christian doctrine.[9] In the Jewish kabbalistic tradition, he is sometimes portrayed as serving as the celestial scribe. The name Metatron is not mentioned in the Torah or the Bible, and how the name originated is a matter of debate. In Islamic tradition, he is also known as Mīṭaṭrūn (Arabic: ميططرون), the angel of the veil.[10][11]: 192 

Islamic portrayal of the angel Metatron (Arabic: ميططرون) depicted in the Daqa'iq al-Haqa'iq (دقائق الحقایق 'Degrees of Truths') by Nasir ad-Din Rammal in the 14th century CE.

In Jewish apocrypha and early Kabbalah, 'Metatron' is the name that Enoch received after his transformation into an angel.

Etymology edit

Numerous etymologies have been proposed to account for the name Metatron, but there is no consensus, and its precise origin is unknown.[12][13]: 92–97  Some scholars, such as Philip Alexander, believe that if the name Metatron originated in Hekhalot literature and Merkabah texts such as 3 Enoch, then it may have been a magical word like Adiriron and Dapdapiron.[14]

Hugo Odeberg[15] Adolf Jellinek[16] and Marcus Jastrow[17] suggest the name may have originated from either mattara (מטרא, lit.'keeper of the watch') or the verb memater (ממטר, 'to guard' or 'to protect'). An early derivation of this can be seen in Shimmusha Rabbah, where Enoch is clothed in light and is the guardian of the souls ascending to heaven. Odeberg also suggested that the name Metatron might have been adopted from the Old Persian name Mithra.[15] Citing Wiesner,[18] he drew up several parallels that appeared to link Mithra and Metatron based on their positions in heaven and duties.

Another hypothesis would derive Metatron from a combination of two Greek words, μετά (meta, meaning 'after') and θρóνος (thronos, meaning 'throne'), which, taken together, would suggest the idea of 'one who serves behind the throne' or 'one who occupies the throne next to the throne of glory'.[19] The primary arguments against this etymology are that Metatron's function as a servant of the celestial throne emerges only later in the traditions regarding him, and θρóνος itself is not attested as a word in Talmudic literature.[20]

A connection with the word σύνθρονος (synthronos) used as 'co-occupant of the divine throne', has been advanced by some scholars;[c] This, like the above etymology, is not found in any source materials.[15] It is supported by Saul Lieberman and Peter Schäfer, who give further reasons why this might be a viable etymology.[22] The Latin word metator ('messenger, guide, leader, measurer') had been suggested by Eleazar of Worms (c. 1165c. 1230), Nachmanides, and brought to light again by Hugo Odeberg.[15] When transliterated into the Hebrew language, it is given as מטיטור (mṭyṭwr) or מיטטור (myṭṭwr). Gershom Scholem argues that there is no data to justify the conversion of metator to Metatron.[23] Philip Alexander also suggests this as a possible origin of Metatron, stating that the word metator also occurs in Greek as mitator – a word for an officer in the Roman army who acted as a forerunner. Using this etymology, Alexander suggests the name may have come about as a description of 'the angel of the Lord who led the Israelites through the wilderness: acting like a Roman army metator guiding the Israelites on their way'.[24][25]

Other ideas include μέτρον (metron, 'a measure').[26] Charles Mopsik believes that the name Metatron may be related to the sentence from Genesis 5:24, "Enoch walked with God, then he was no more, because God took him".[27] The LXX version of the Hebrew word לָקַ֥ח ("took") is μετέθηκεν.

In the entry entitled "Paradigmata" in his study "'The Written' as the Vocation of Conceiving Jewishly", John W. McGinley gives an accounting of how this name functions in the Bavli's version of "four entered pardes".[28]

Origins edit

From Hellenistic times, mention of a second divine figure, either beside YHWH or beneath him, occur in a number of 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' (shtei rashuyot ba-shamayim).[29][9] Ultimately, these ideas appear to go back to differing interpretations of the heavenly enthronement passages at Exodus 24:10f., Daniel 7:9f. and perhaps even Ezekiel 1:26f.[30][full citation needed] These different interpretations later came to distinguish what was orthodox from what was heretical in Judaism.[citation needed]

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 one and 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 similarly to the Prayer of Joseph where Jacob is depicted as an angel.[13] 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.[31]

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 seems to be two Metatrons, one spelled with six letters (מטטרון), and one spelled with seven (מיטטרון). The former may be the transformed Enoch, Prince of the Countenance within the divine palace; the latter, the Primordial Metatron, an emanation of the "Cause of Causes", specifically the tenth and last emanation, identified with the earthly Divine Presence.[32] Furthermore, the Merkabah text Re'uyot Yehezkel identifies the Ancient of Days from the Book of Daniel as Metatron.[31]

Scholem's scholastic analysis edit

Many scholars see a discontinuity between how Enoch is portrayed in the early Enoch literature and how Metatron is portrayed. Scholars commonly see the character of Metatron as being based on an amalgam of Jewish literature; in addition to Enoch, Michael, Melchizedek, and Yahoel among others are seen as influences.[13]

Scholem argues Metatron's character was influenced by two streams of thought: One linking Metatron with Enoch, and one fusing different obscure entities and mythic motifs.[33] Scholem argues that this second tradition was originally separate but later fused with the Enoch tradition.[13] He points to texts where this second Metatron is a primordial angel and referred to as Metatron Rabbah.[13] Scholem theorizes that the two Hebrew spellings of Metatron's name represent these two separate traditions.[13] In his view, the second Metatron is linked to Yahoel. Scholem also links Yahoel with Michael.[13] In the Apocalypse of Abraham, Yahoel is assigned duties normally reserved for Michael. Yahoel's name is commonly seen as a substitute for the Ineffable Name.[34]

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."[13] However, Enoch is not referred to as the Lesser YHWH.[13] In 3 Enoch, Metatron is called the Lesser YHWH. This raises a problem since the name Metatron does not seem to be directly related to the name of God YHWH.[13] Scholem proposes that this is because the Lesser YHWH is a reference to Yahoel.[13] In Maaseh Merkabah, the text reasons that Metatron is called the Lesser YHWH because in Hebrew gematria, Metatron is numerically equivalent to another name of God Shaddai.[35] Scholem does not find this convincing.[13][36] 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.[37] 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.[13][38]

Talmud edit

The Babylonian Talmud mentions Metatron by name in three places: Hagigah 15a, Sanhedrin 38b and Avodah Zarah 3b.

Hagigah 15a describes Elisha ben Abuyah in Paradise seeing Metatron sitting down (an action that is not done in the presence of God). Elishah ben Abuyah therefore looks to Metatron as a deity and says heretically: "Perhaps there are, God forbid, two powers in Heaven!"[39] The rabbis explain that Metatron had permission to sit because of his function as the Heavenly Scribe, writing down the deeds of Israel.[40] The Talmud states that it was proved to Elisha that Metatron could not be a second deity by the fact that Metatron received 60 "strokes with fiery rods" to demonstrate that Metatron was not a god, but an angel, and could be punished.[41]

In Sanhedrin 38b, one of the minim tells Rabbi Idith that Metatron should be worshiped because he has a name like his master. Rabbi Idith uses the same passage Exodus 23:21 to show that Metatron was an angel and not a deity and thus should not be worshiped. Furthermore, as an angel, Metatron has no power to pardon transgressions nor was he to be received even as a messenger of forgiveness.[41][42][43]

In Avodah Zarah 3b, the Talmud hypothesizes as to how God spends his day. It is suggested that in the fourth quarter of the day God sits and instructs the school children, while in the preceding three quarters Metatron may take God's place or God may do this among other tasks.[44]

Yevamot 16b records an utterance, "I have been young; also I have been old" found in Psalm 37:25. The Talmud here attributes this utterance to the Chief Angel and Prince of the World, whom the rabbinic tradition identifies as Metatron.[45]

Kirkisani edit

The tenth century Karaite scholar Jacob Qirqisani believed that rabbinic Judaism was the heresy of Jeroboam of the Kingdom of Israel.[46] He quoted a version of Sanhedrin 38b,[47] which he claimed contained a reference to the "lesser YHWH". Scholem suggests that the name was deliberately omitted from later copies of the Talmud.[48] Extra-talmudic mystical texts such as Sefer Hekhalot do speak of a "lesser YHWH", apparently deriving the concept from Exodus 23:21, which mentions an angel of whom God says "my name [understood as YHWH, the usual divine Proper Name] is in him".

Merkabah, Zohar and other mystical writings edit

Metatron also appears in the Pseudepigrapha including Shi'ur Qomah, and most prominently in the Hebrew Merkabah Book of Enoch, also called 3 Enoch or Sefer Hekhalot (Book of [the Heavenly] Palaces). The book describes the link between Enoch, son of Jared (great-grandfather of Noah) and his transformation into the angel Metatron.

Metatron says, "He [the Holy One] called me, 'The lesser YHVH' in the presence of his whole household in the height, as it is written, 'my name is in him.'" (12:5, Alexander's translation.) The narrator of this book, supposedly Rabbi Ishmael, tells how Metatron guided him through Heaven and explained its wonders. 3 Enoch presents Metatron in two ways: as a primordial angel (9:2–13:2) and as the transformation of Enoch after he was assumed into Heaven.[49][50]

And Enoch walked with God: and he was not; for God took him.

— Genesis 5:24, King James Version[51]

This Enoch, whose flesh was turned to flame, his veins to fire, his eye-lashes to flashes of lightning, his eye-balls to flaming torches, and whom God placed on a throne next to the throne of glory, received after this heavenly transformation the name Metatron.[52]

Metatron "the Youth", a title previously used in 3 Enoch, where it appears to mean "servant".[50] It identifies him as the angel that led the people of Israel through the wilderness after their exodus from Egypt (again referring to Exodus 23:21), and describes him as a heavenly priest.

In the later Ecstatic Kabbalah, Metatron is a messianic figure.[53]

The Zohar describes Metatron as the "King of the angels".[54] and associates the concept of Metatron with that of the divine name Shaddai.[55] Zohar commentaries such as the Ohr Yakar by Moses ben Jacob Cordovero explain the Zohar as meaning that Metatron as the head of Yetzira[56] This corresponds closely with Maimonides' description of the Talmudic "Prince of the World",[57] traditionally associated with Metatron,[58] as the core "Active Intellect."[59][60]

The Zohar describes several biblical figures as metaphors for Metatron. Examples are Enoch,[61][62] Joseph,[63][64] Eliezer,[65] Joshua,[66] and others. The Zohar finds the word youth used to describe Joseph and Joshua a hint that the figures are a metaphor to Metatron, and also the concept of servant by Eliezer as a reference to Metatron.[67] The Staff of Moses is also described by the Zohar[62] as a reference to Metatron. The Zohar also states that the two tets in totaphot (the Biblical Hebrew term for the phylacteries) are a reference to Metatron.[68] The Zohar draws distinction between Metatron and Michael.[69] While Michael is described repeatedly in the Zohar as the figure represented by the High Priest, Metatron is represented by the structure of the tabernacle itself.[69]

Apocalyptic texts edit

In the Apocalypse of Zerubbabel, Metatron is not identified as Enoch. Instead he is identified as the archangel Michael.[13][33] The text also records that Metatron in gematria is the equivalent of Shaddai.[33] While he also appears in other apocalyptic writings, he is most prominent in the Apocalypse of Zerubbabel.[33] In these writings, he plays the role of heavenly interlocutor delivering knowledge about the coming messianic age.[33]

Islam edit

The earliest account of Metatron within Islamic scriptures might derive directly from the Quran itself. Uzair, according to Surah 9:30–31 venerated as a Son of God by Jews, commonly interpreted as an Arabic transliteration of the Hebrew name of the prophet Ezra, who was also identified with Enoch and Metatron in Merkabah Mysticism.[11]: 184  Islamic heresiologists repeatedly accused Jews for venerating an angel as a lesser god (or an Incarnation of God), especially for celebrating Rosh Hashanah.[70] The name itself is attested early in Islam by Al-Kindi and Al-Masudi.[11]: 192  Al-Suyuti identifies him as the angel of the veil and only he knows about that which lies beyond.[71][10][11]: 193  He is also frequently mentioned in the magical works by Ahmad al-Buni, who describes Metatron as wearing a crown and a lance, probably constituting the Staff of Moses.[11]: 198  In other magical practises, he is invoked to ward off evil jinn, devils, sorcerers and other magical threats.[11]: 199 

Ibn Hazm mentions that Jews, although regarding Metatron as an angel, would celebrate Metatron as a lesser god ten days each year, perhaps a reference to Rosh Hashanah in connection with Merkabah mysticism that Metatron took part on the creation of the world.[70]

In popular culture edit

 
Alan Rickman played Metatron in 1999

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also written as מְטַטְרוֹן, Məṭaṭrōn,[2] מֵיטַטְרוֹן, Mēṭaṭrōn, מִיטַטְרוֹן, Mīṭaṭrōn,[3] מֶיטַטְרוֹן, Meṭaṭrōn,[4] מִטַּטְרוֹן, Mīṭṭaṭrōn
  2. ^ There are two spelling variations of the name Metatron that can be found in the Talmud. Firstly there is the more full spelling of מיטטרון, as can be seen in Chagigah 15a:6. The consonant yod (י) acts as a mater lectionis (mother of reading), usually indicating the vowel hiriq (ī). Secondly there is the slightly shorter and more common spelling of מטטרון without the yod, as can be seen in Sanhedrin 38b:19 for example. With the absence of the yod representing the vowel hiriq, this vowel would be pronounced shorter. This short hiriq (ī) would also cause the teth (ט) following the mem (מ) to geminate, giving the pronunciation of Mīṭṭaṭrōn (מִטַּטְרוֹן). The full spelling with yod representing hiriq may also indicate that the name has its origins in the word Mīṭāṭōr (מִיטָטוֹר), referring to a measurer of boundaries; an officer sent in advance of persons of high rank, or of troops, to lay out the camp or to arrange quarters; a quartermaster.
  3. ^ synthronos, the Greek term metatyrannos, which can be translated as "the one next to the ruler".[21]

References edit

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  3. ^ "Incantation bowl, late-post Sasanian, 6th C.-8th C." The British Museum.
  4. ^ "Chagigah 15a:6". Sefaria.
  5. ^ Jastrow, Marcus (1903). "Jastrow, מִיטָטוֹר". Sefaria.
  6. ^ Jastrow, Marcus (2004) [1903]. A Dictionary of the Targumim, the Talmud Babli and Yerushalmi, and the Midrashic Literature. Judaica Treasury. p. 767. ISBN 978-1-932-44320-2.
  7. ^ Jastrow, Marcus (1903). "Jastrow, מַטַּטְרוֹן". Sefaria.
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  15. ^ a b c d Odeberg, Hugo, ed. (2012) [1928]. "Origin of the Word 'Metatron'". 3 Enoch or The Hebrew Book of Enoch. CreateSpace. pp. 125–142. ISBN 978-1-479-37227-0.
  16. ^ Jellinek, Adolf (1852). Contributions to the History of Kabbalah - Parts I & II. Leipzig: C.L. Fritzsche. p. 4.  
  17. ^ Jastrow, Marcus (1903) [1887]. A Dictionary of the Targumim, the Talmud Babli and Yerushalmi, and the Midrashic Literature. Vol. II. London: Luzac. p. 767. ISBN 978-1-565-63860-0.
  18. ^ in Ben Chananja, 1862, p. 384; 1866, pp. 600–625
  19. ^ Schäfer, Peter (2012) [1992]. The Hidden and Manifest God - Some Major Themes in Early Jewish Mysticism. SUNY Series in Judaica. State University of New York Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-1-438-41882-7. most probable is the etymology of Lieberman: Metatron = Greek metatronos = metathronos = synthronos; i.e. the small "minor god" whose throne is beside that of the great "God"
  20. ^ Gershom Scholem, 'Metatron,' in Encyclopedia Judaica, 2nd edition 2007, vol.14 pp.132–134. Also his Major Trends, p. 69, and his Jewish Gnosticism, pp.43, 91. Scholem dismissed this hypothesis as 'without merit'.
  21. ^ Philip Alexander, "3 Enoch"
  22. ^ Gruenwald, Ithamar (2018) [1980]. "Metatron, the Meaning of His Name and His Functions". Apocalyptic and Merkavah Mysticism. Leiden/Cologne: E. J. Brill. pp. 235–241. ISBN 978-9-004-33267-6.
  23. ^ Gershom Scholem, Jewish Gnosticism, Merkabah Mysticism, and Talmudic Tradition, Jewish Theological Seminary of America 2nd. ed. 1965 pp41,93.
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  26. ^ Black, Matthew (1951). "The Origin of the Name of Metatron". Vetus Testamentum. E.J. Brill. 1 (3): 217–219. doi:10.2307/1515863. JSTOR 1515863. Can be linked back to the title praemetitor in Philos QG which can be connected to the Greek word for Metator "measurer"
  27. ^ Mopsik, Charles (1989). Le Livre hébreu d'Hénoch ou Livre des palais. Paris: Verdier. ISBN 978-2-864-32088-3.
  28. ^ McGinley, John W. (2006). "The Written" as the Vocation of Conceiving Jewishly. iUniverse. p. 432. ISBN 978-0-595-40488-9. The entry "Paradigmata" gives an accounting of the meaning of "Metatron" as it is used in the Bavli's version of "four entered pardes".
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  30. ^ Segal ibid. p.60
  31. ^ a b Deutsch, Nathaniel (1999). Guardians of the Gate - Angelic Vice Regency in Late Antiquity. E.J. Brill. pp. 45–47. ISBN 978-9-004-10909-4.
  32. ^ von Nettesheim, Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa (1993). Tyson, Donald; Freake, James (eds.). Three Books of Occult Philosophy. Llewellyn Worldwide. p. 473. ISBN 978-0-875-42832-1.
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  60. ^ Guide for the Perplexed. Part 2, Chapter 4:3.
  61. ^ Zohar 3. p. 189a.
  62. ^ a b Zohar 1. p. 27a.
  63. ^ Zohar 1. p. 47a.
  64. ^ Zohar 2. p. 43a.
  65. ^ Zohar 1. p. 130b.
  66. ^ Zohar 2. p. 65b.
  67. ^ Zohar 2. p. 94a.
  68. ^ Zohar 3. p. 226b.
  69. ^ a b Zohar 2. p. 159a.
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  76. ^ Geddo, Benedetta (January 27, 2023). "A Look Into the Figure of The Authority in 'His Dark Materials'". The Mary Sue. Retrieved June 13, 2023.
  77. ^ Dean, Tyler (January 3, 2023). ""Love Takes a Million Forms": His Dark Materials' Series Finale". tor.com.
  78. ^ Fry, Carrol Lee (2008). Cinema of the Occult: New Age, Satanism, Wicca, and Spiritualism in Film. Associated University Presse. pp. 39–40. ISBN 978-0-934223-95-9.
  79. ^ Heath, Chris (16 March 2000). "The Epic Life of Carlos Santana". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 16 June 2023.
  80. ^ Giannini, Erin (7 November 2017). Joss Whedon Versus the Corporation: Big Business Critiqued in the Films and Television Programs. McFarland. p. 184. ISBN 978-1-476-66776-8.
  81. ^ "Mars Volta encounters demons and spirits during recording of Bedlam in Goliath". The Marquee Magazine.
  82. ^ "The Mars Volta". The Week. 8 January 2015. Retrieved 14 June 2023.

Further reading edit

  • "Form(s) of God - Some Notes on Metatron and Christ" by G. G. Stroumsa, Harvard Theological Review, vol. 76 (1983), 269–288
  • "The Boundaries of Divine Ontology - The Inclusion and Exclusion of Metatron in the Godhead" by Daniel Abrams, Harvard Theological Review, vol. 87 (1994)
  • Orlov, Andrei A. (2005). The Enoch-Metatron tradition. Texte und Studien zum antiken Judentum. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. ISBN 978-3-16-148544-2.

External links edit

metatron, confused, with, megatron, magnetron, mettaton, other, uses, disambiguation, mishnaic, hebrew, רו, meṭāṭrōn, matatron, רו, maṭṭaṭrōn, angel, judaism, christianity, islam, mentioned, three, times, talmud, brief, passages, aggadah, mystical, kabbalistic. Not to be confused with Megatron Magnetron or Mettaton For other uses see Metatron disambiguation Metatron Mishnaic Hebrew מ ט ט רו ן Meṭaṭrōn 1 a b 5 6 or Matatron מ ט ט רו ן Maṭṭaṭrōn 7 8 is an angel in Judaism Christianity and Islam mentioned three times in the Talmud in a few brief passages in the Aggadah and in mystical Kabbalistic texts within Rabbinic literature The figure forms one of the traces for the presence of dualist proclivities in the otherwise monotheistic visions of both the Tanakh and later Christian doctrine 9 In the Jewish kabbalistic tradition he is sometimes portrayed as serving as the celestial scribe The name Metatron is not mentioned in the Torah or the Bible and how the name originated is a matter of debate In Islamic tradition he is also known as Miṭaṭrun Arabic ميططرون the angel of the veil 10 11 192 Islamic portrayal of the angel Metatron Arabic ميططرون depicted in the Daqa iq al Haqa iq دقائق الحقایق Degrees of Truths by Nasir ad Din Rammal in the 14th century CE In Jewish apocrypha and early Kabbalah Metatron is the name that Enoch received after his transformation into an angel Contents 1 Etymology 2 Origins 2 1 Scholem s scholastic analysis 3 Talmud 4 Kirkisani 5 Merkabah Zohar and other mystical writings 6 Apocalyptic texts 7 Islam 8 In popular culture 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEtymology editNumerous etymologies have been proposed to account for the name Metatron but there is no consensus and its precise origin is unknown 12 13 92 97 Some scholars such as Philip Alexander believe that if the name Metatron originated in Hekhalot literature and Merkabah texts such as 3 Enoch then it may have been a magical word like Adiriron and Dapdapiron 14 Hugo Odeberg 15 Adolf Jellinek 16 and Marcus Jastrow 17 suggest the name may have originated from either mattara מטרא lit keeper of the watch or the verb memater ממטר to guard or to protect An early derivation of this can be seen in Shimmusha Rabbah where Enoch is clothed in light and is the guardian of the souls ascending to heaven Odeberg also suggested that the name Metatron might have been adopted from the Old Persian name Mithra 15 Citing Wiesner 18 he drew up several parallels that appeared to link Mithra and Metatron based on their positions in heaven and duties Another hypothesis would derive Metatron from a combination of two Greek words meta meta meaning after and 8ronos thronos meaning throne which taken together would suggest the idea of one who serves behind the throne or one who occupies the throne next to the throne of glory 19 The primary arguments against this etymology are that Metatron s function as a servant of the celestial throne emerges only later in the traditions regarding him and 8ronos itself is not attested as a word in Talmudic literature 20 A connection with the word syn8ronos synthronos used as co occupant of the divine throne has been advanced by some scholars c This like the above etymology is not found in any source materials 15 It is supported by Saul Lieberman and Peter Schafer who give further reasons why this might be a viable etymology 22 The Latin word metator messenger guide leader measurer had been suggested by Eleazar of Worms c 1165 c 1230 Nachmanides and brought to light again by Hugo Odeberg 15 When transliterated into the Hebrew language it is given as מטיטור mṭyṭwr or מיטטור myṭṭwr Gershom Scholem argues that there is no data to justify the conversion of metator to Metatron 23 Philip Alexander also suggests this as a possible origin of Metatron stating that the word metator also occurs in Greek as mitator a word for an officer in the Roman army who acted as a forerunner Using this etymology Alexander suggests the name may have come about as a description of the angel of the Lord who led the Israelites through the wilderness acting like a Roman army metator guiding the Israelites on their way 24 25 Other ideas include metron metron a measure 26 Charles Mopsik believes that the name Metatron may be related to the sentence from Genesis 5 24 Enoch walked with God then he was no more because God took him 27 The LXX version of the Hebrew word ל ק ח took is mete8hken In the entry entitled Paradigmata in his study The Written as the Vocation of Conceiving Jewishly John W McGinley gives an accounting of how this name functions in the Bavli s version of four entered pardes 28 Origins editFrom Hellenistic times mention of a second divine figure either beside YHWH or beneath him occur in a number of 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 shtei rashuyot ba shamayim 29 9 Ultimately these ideas appear to go back to differing interpretations of the heavenly enthronement passages at Exodus 24 10f Daniel 7 9f and perhaps even Ezekiel 1 26f 30 full citation needed These different interpretations later came to distinguish what was orthodox from what was heretical in Judaism citation needed 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 one and 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 similarly to the Prayer of Joseph where Jacob is depicted as an angel 13 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 31 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 seems to be two Metatrons one spelled with six letters מטטרון and one spelled with seven מיטטרון The former may be the transformed Enoch Prince of the Countenance within the divine palace the latter the Primordial Metatron an emanation of the Cause of Causes specifically the tenth and last emanation identified with the earthly Divine Presence 32 Furthermore the Merkabah text Re uyot Yehezkel identifies the Ancient of Days from the Book of Daniel as Metatron 31 Scholem s scholastic analysis edit Many scholars see a discontinuity between how Enoch is portrayed in the early Enoch literature and how Metatron is portrayed Scholars commonly see the character of Metatron as being based on an amalgam of Jewish literature in addition to Enoch Michael Melchizedek and Yahoel among others are seen as influences 13 Scholem argues Metatron s character was influenced by two streams of thought One linking Metatron with Enoch and one fusing different obscure entities and mythic motifs 33 Scholem argues that this second tradition was originally separate but later fused with the Enoch tradition 13 He points to texts where this second Metatron is a primordial angel and referred to as Metatron Rabbah 13 Scholem theorizes that the two Hebrew spellings of Metatron s name represent these two separate traditions 13 In his view the second Metatron is linked to Yahoel Scholem also links Yahoel with Michael 13 In the Apocalypse of Abraham Yahoel is assigned duties normally reserved for Michael Yahoel s name is commonly seen as a substitute for the Ineffable Name 34 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 13 However Enoch is not referred to as the Lesser YHWH 13 In 3 Enoch Metatron is called the Lesser YHWH This raises a problem since the name Metatron does not seem to be directly related to the name of God YHWH 13 Scholem proposes that this is because the Lesser YHWH is a reference to Yahoel 13 In Maaseh Merkabah the text reasons that Metatron is called the Lesser YHWH because in Hebrew gematria Metatron is numerically equivalent to another name of God Shaddai 35 Scholem does not find this convincing 13 36 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 37 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 13 38 Talmud editThe Babylonian Talmud mentions Metatron by name in three places Hagigah 15a Sanhedrin 38b and Avodah Zarah 3b Hagigah 15a describes Elisha ben Abuyah in Paradise seeing Metatron sitting down an action that is not done in the presence of God Elishah ben Abuyah therefore looks to Metatron as a deity and says heretically Perhaps there are God forbid two powers in Heaven 39 The rabbis explain that Metatron had permission to sit because of his function as the Heavenly Scribe writing down the deeds of Israel 40 The Talmud states that it was proved to Elisha that Metatron could not be a second deity by the fact that Metatron received 60 strokes with fiery rods to demonstrate that Metatron was not a god but an angel and could be punished 41 In Sanhedrin 38b one of the minim tells Rabbi Idith that Metatron should be worshiped because he has a name like his master Rabbi Idith uses the same passage Exodus 23 21 to show that Metatron was an angel and not a deity and thus should not be worshiped Furthermore as an angel Metatron has no power to pardon transgressions nor was he to be received even as a messenger of forgiveness 41 42 43 In Avodah Zarah 3b the Talmud hypothesizes as to how God spends his day It is suggested that in the fourth quarter of the day God sits and instructs the school children while in the preceding three quarters Metatron may take God s place or God may do this among other tasks 44 Yevamot 16b records an utterance I have been young also I have been old found in Psalm 37 25 The Talmud here attributes this utterance to the Chief Angel and Prince of the World whom the rabbinic tradition identifies as Metatron 45 Kirkisani editThe tenth century Karaite scholar Jacob Qirqisani believed that rabbinic Judaism was the heresy of Jeroboam of the Kingdom of Israel 46 He quoted a version of Sanhedrin 38b 47 which he claimed contained a reference to the lesser YHWH Scholem suggests that the name was deliberately omitted from later copies of the Talmud 48 Extra talmudic mystical texts such as Sefer Hekhalot do speak of a lesser YHWH apparently deriving the concept from Exodus 23 21 which mentions an angel of whom God says my name understood as YHWH the usual divine Proper Name is in him Merkabah Zohar and other mystical writings editMetatron also appears in the Pseudepigrapha including Shi ur Qomah and most prominently in the Hebrew Merkabah Book of Enoch also called 3 Enoch or Sefer Hekhalot Book of the Heavenly Palaces The book describes the link between Enoch son of Jared great grandfather of Noah and his transformation into the angel Metatron Metatron says He the Holy One called me The lesser YHVH in the presence of his whole household in the height as it is written my name is in him 12 5 Alexander s translation The narrator of this book supposedly Rabbi Ishmael tells how Metatron guided him through Heaven and explained its wonders 3 Enoch presents Metatron in two ways as a primordial angel 9 2 13 2 and as the transformation of Enoch after he was assumed into Heaven 49 50 And Enoch walked with God and he was not for God took him Genesis 5 24 King James Version 51 This Enoch whose flesh was turned to flame his veins to fire his eye lashes to flashes of lightning his eye balls to flaming torches and whom God placed on a throne next to the throne of glory received after this heavenly transformation the name Metatron 52 Metatron the Youth a title previously used in 3 Enoch where it appears to mean servant 50 It identifies him as the angel that led the people of Israel through the wilderness after their exodus from Egypt again referring to Exodus 23 21 and describes him as a heavenly priest In the later Ecstatic Kabbalah Metatron is a messianic figure 53 The Zohar describes Metatron as the King of the angels 54 and associates the concept of Metatron with that of the divine name Shaddai 55 Zohar commentaries such as the Ohr Yakar by Moses ben Jacob Cordovero explain the Zohar as meaning that Metatron as the head of Yetzira 56 This corresponds closely with Maimonides description of the Talmudic Prince of the World 57 traditionally associated with Metatron 58 as the core Active Intellect 59 60 The Zohar describes several biblical figures as metaphors for Metatron Examples are Enoch 61 62 Joseph 63 64 Eliezer 65 Joshua 66 and others The Zohar finds the word youth used to describe Joseph and Joshua a hint that the figures are a metaphor to Metatron and also the concept of servant by Eliezer as a reference to Metatron 67 The Staff of Moses is also described by the Zohar 62 as a reference to Metatron The Zohar also states that the two tets in totaphot the Biblical Hebrew term for the phylacteries are a reference to Metatron 68 The Zohar draws distinction between Metatron and Michael 69 While Michael is described repeatedly in the Zohar as the figure represented by the High Priest Metatron is represented by the structure of the tabernacle itself 69 Apocalyptic texts editIn the Apocalypse of Zerubbabel Metatron is not identified as Enoch Instead he is identified as the archangel Michael 13 33 The text also records that Metatron in gematria is the equivalent of Shaddai 33 While he also appears in other apocalyptic writings he is most prominent in the Apocalypse of Zerubbabel 33 In these writings he plays the role of heavenly interlocutor delivering knowledge about the coming messianic age 33 Islam editThe earliest account of Metatron within Islamic scriptures might derive directly from the Quran itself Uzair according to Surah 9 30 31 venerated as a Son of God by Jews commonly interpreted as an Arabic transliteration of the Hebrew name of the prophet Ezra who was also identified with Enoch and Metatron in Merkabah Mysticism 11 184 Islamic heresiologists repeatedly accused Jews for venerating an angel as a lesser god or an Incarnation of God especially for celebrating Rosh Hashanah 70 The name itself is attested early in Islam by Al Kindi and Al Masudi 11 192 Al Suyuti identifies him as the angel of the veil and only he knows about that which lies beyond 71 10 11 193 He is also frequently mentioned in the magical works by Ahmad al Buni who describes Metatron as wearing a crown and a lance probably constituting the Staff of Moses 11 198 In other magical practises he is invoked to ward off evil jinn devils sorcerers and other magical threats 11 199 Ibn Hazm mentions that Jews although regarding Metatron as an angel would celebrate Metatron as a lesser god ten days each year perhaps a reference to Rosh Hashanah in connection with Merkabah mysticism that Metatron took part on the creation of the world 70 In popular culture edit nbsp Alan Rickman played Metatron in 1999In Thomas Pynchon s novel Gravity s Rainbow 1973 a man visiting a dominatrix in an insane asylum hears an inmate proclaiming himself to be Metatron Critics regard this scene as parodying Kabbalistic accounts of the ascent of the soul 72 73 Metatron appears as an angel and the spokesperson of God in the novel Good Omens 1990 and its 2019 TV adaptation played in the series by Derek Jacobi 74 75 Metatron appears in Phillip Pullman s novel series His Dark Materials 1995 as the main antagonist 76 He was originally a human named Enoch before becoming a high ranking angel and Regent of the Kingdom of Heaven In the 2019 BBC HBO TV adaptation he is portrayed by Alex Hassell 77 Metatron appears in the 1999 movie Dogma as an angel and the voice of God played by Alan Rickman 78 Guitarist Carlos Santana said in 2000 that he has been in contact with Metatron since 1994 and that the angel gives him messages 79 Metatron appears in the TV series Supernatural 2005 as the scribe of God played by Curtis Armstrong 80 Both the lyrics and title of the second track on The Mars Volta s 2008 album The Bedlam in Goliath refer to Metatron 81 82 In the Japanese Light Novel Date A Live Origami Tobiichi possesses Metatron one of the spiritual weapons known as Angels Metatron takes the form a crown and has the power to control light See also editAdam Kadmon Abatur in Mandaeism Sandalphon Theophany Yufin Yufafin in Mandaeism List of angels in theologyNotes edit Also written as מ ט ט רו ן Meṭaṭrōn 2 מ יט ט רו ן Meṭaṭrōn מ יט ט רו ן Miṭaṭrōn 3 מ יט ט רו ן Meṭaṭrōn 4 מ ט ט רו ן Miṭṭaṭrōn There are two spelling variations of the name Metatron that can be found in the Talmud Firstly there is the more full spelling of מיטטרון as can be seen in Chagigah 15a 6 The consonant yod י acts as a mater lectionis mother of reading usually indicating the vowel hiriq i Secondly there is the slightly shorter and more common spelling of מטטרון without the yod as can be seen in Sanhedrin 38b 19 for example With the absence of the yod representing the vowel hiriq this vowel would be pronounced shorter This short hiriq i would also cause the teth ט following the mem מ to geminate giving the pronunciation of Miṭṭaṭrōn מ ט ט רו ן The full spelling with yod representing hiriq may also indicate that the name has its origins in the word Miṭaṭōr מ יט טו ר referring to a measurer of boundaries an officer sent in advance of persons of high rank or of troops to lay out the camp or to arrange quarters a quartermaster synthronos the Greek term metatyrannos which can be translated as the one next to the ruler 21 References edit Sanhedrin 38b 19 Sefaria Bereshit Rabbah 5 4 Sefaria Incantation bowl late post Sasanian 6th C 8th C The British Museum Chagigah 15a 6 Sefaria Jastrow Marcus 1903 Jastrow מ יט טו ר Sefaria Jastrow Marcus 2004 1903 A Dictionary of the Targumim the Talmud Babli and Yerushalmi and the Midrashic Literature Judaica Treasury p 767 ISBN 978 1 932 44320 2 Jastrow Marcus 1903 Jastrow מ ט ט רו ן Sefaria Schechter Solomon Levias Caspar GEMAṬRIA Metatron Jewish Encyclopedia a b Stroumsa Guy G 2015 The Making of the Abrahamic Religions in Late Antiquity Oxford University Press p 15 ISBN 978 0 198 73886 2 a b Burge Stephen R 2015 Angels in Islam Jalal Al Din Al Suyuti s Al Haba ik Fi Akhbar Al mala ik Taylor amp Francis p 48 ISBN 978 1 136 50474 7 a b c d e f Wasserstrom Steven M 2014 Between Muslim and Jew The Problem of Symbiosis Under Early Islam Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 400 86413 3 Orlov Andrei A The Name Metatron PDF The Enoch Metatron Tradition pp 92 96 Archived PDF from the original on 30 October 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Orlov Andrei A 2005 Evolution of the Roles and Titles in Early Enochic Booklets The Enoch Metatron Tradition Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism Vol 107 Mohr Siebeck pp 83 86 140 142 doi 10 1628 978 3 16 158687 3 ISBN 978 3 161 48544 2 S2CID 198676033 Alexander Philip S 1977 The Historical Settings of the Hebrew Book of Enoch Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies p 162 a b c d Odeberg Hugo ed 2012 1928 Origin of the Word Metatron 3 Enoch or The Hebrew Book of Enoch CreateSpace pp 125 142 ISBN 978 1 479 37227 0 Jellinek Adolf 1852 Contributions to the History of Kabbalah Parts I amp II Leipzig C L Fritzsche p 4 nbsp Jastrow Marcus 1903 1887 A Dictionary of the Targumim the Talmud Babli and Yerushalmi and the Midrashic Literature Vol II London Luzac p 767 ISBN 978 1 565 63860 0 in Ben Chananja 1862 p 384 1866 pp 600 625 Schafer Peter 2012 1992 The Hidden and Manifest God Some Major Themes in Early Jewish Mysticism SUNY Series in Judaica State University of New York Press p 29 ISBN 978 1 438 41882 7 most probable is the etymology of Lieberman Metatron Greek metatronos metathronos synthronos i e the small minor god whose throne is beside that of the great God Gershom Scholem Metatron in Encyclopedia Judaica 2nd edition 2007 vol 14 pp 132 134 Also his Major Trends p 69 and his Jewish Gnosticism pp 43 91 Scholem dismissed this hypothesis as without merit Philip Alexander 3 Enoch Gruenwald Ithamar 2018 1980 Metatron the Meaning of His Name and His Functions Apocalyptic and Merkavah Mysticism Leiden Cologne E J Brill pp 235 241 ISBN 978 9 004 33267 6 Gershom Scholem Jewish Gnosticism Merkabah Mysticism and Talmudic Tradition Jewish Theological Seminary of America 2nd ed 1965 pp41 93 Alexander P From Son of Adam to a Second God and Alexander P 3 Enoch Urbach Ephraim Elimelech 1987 1979 The Sages Their Concepts and Beliefs Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 78523 6 OCLC 15489564 Black Matthew 1951 The Origin of the Name of Metatron Vetus Testamentum E J Brill 1 3 217 219 doi 10 2307 1515863 JSTOR 1515863 Can be linked back to the title praemetitor in Philos QG which can be connected to the Greek word for Metator measurer Mopsik Charles 1989 Le Livre hebreu d Henoch ou Livre des palais Paris Verdier ISBN 978 2 864 32088 3 McGinley John W 2006 The Written as the Vocation of Conceiving Jewishly iUniverse p 432 ISBN 978 0 595 40488 9 The entry Paradigmata gives an accounting of the meaning of Metatron as it is used in the Bavli s version of four entered pardes Segal Alan F 2002 Chapter Three Aher Metatron Merkabah and the Angel of YHWH Two Powers in Heaven Early Rabbinic Reports about Christianity and Gnosticism E J Brill p 60 ISBN 978 0 391 04172 1 Segal ibid p 60 a b Deutsch Nathaniel 1999 Guardians of the Gate Angelic Vice Regency in Late Antiquity E J Brill pp 45 47 ISBN 978 9 004 10909 4 von Nettesheim Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa 1993 Tyson Donald Freake James eds Three Books of Occult Philosophy Llewellyn Worldwide p 473 ISBN 978 0 875 42832 1 a b c d e Reeves John C 2005 Trajectories in Near Eastern Apocalyptic A Postrabbinic Jewish Apocalypse Reader Society of Biblical Literature Atlanta pp 55 180 185 ISBN 978 1 589 83102 5 Ginzberg Louis 1906 Abraham Apocalypse of Jewish Encyclopedia Wolfson Elliot R 1994 Through a Speculum That Shines Vision and Imagination in Medieval Jewish Mysticism Princeton University Press p 259 ISBN 978 0 691 01722 8 Charlesworth James H 1983 The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha Hendrickson Publishers p 227 ISBN 978 1 598 56491 4 Deutsch Nathaniel 1999 Guardians of the Gate Angelic Vice Regency in Late Antiquity E J Brill pp 36 37 ISBN 978 9 004 10909 4 Charlesworth James H 2006 The Bible and the Dead Sea Scrolls The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Qumran Community Baylor University Press p 369 ISBN 978 1 932 79220 1 Chagigah 15a 5 www sefaria org Retrieved 10 June 2023 Scholem Gershom 1974 Kabbalah Quadrangle pp 378 380 ISBN 978 0 812 90352 2 a b Society for Jewish Study 1983 The Journal of Jewish Studies Volumes 34 35 Journal of Jewish Studies Oxford Centre for Postgraduate Hebrew Studies 26 Retrieved 5 March 2014 Sanhedrin 38b 19 www sefaria org Retrieved 10 June 2023 Herford Robert Travers 1903 Christianity in Talmud and Midrash Williams amp Norgate pp 286 290 Metatron christianity Avodah Zarah 3b 12 www sefaria org Retrieved 10 June 2023 Matt Daniel Chanan ed 2005 The Zohar Volume 3 Volume 2006 Stanford University Press p 86 ISBN 978 0 804 75210 7 Solomon Norman 2009 The A to Z of Judaism Scarecrow Press p 217 ISBN 978 0 810 87011 6 Scholem Gershom 2011 Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group p 366 ISBN 978 0 307 79148 1 Cohon Samuel S 1987 Essays in Jewish Theology Hebrew Union College Press ISBN 978 0 878 20117 4 Weimer Christopher M ed 2002 1893 Hebrew Visions of Hell and Paradise Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Archived from the original on 2 January 2007 a b Alexander P 1983 3 Hebrew Apocalypse of Enoch In Charlesworth James H ed The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha New York Doubleday p 223 ISBN 978 0 385 19491 4 Genesis 5 24 Scholem Gershom G 2011 1941 Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism Knopf Doubleday p 67 ISBN 978 0 307 79148 1 Koslowski P ed 2002 Progress Apocalypse and Completion of History and Life after Death of the Human Person in the World Religions Springer p 58 ISBN 978 1 402 00647 0 Zohar 3 p 293a Zohar Chadash Sifra Tanina 11 Matok Midvash on Zohar 2 p 149a Babylonian Talmud Yebamoth p 16b Tosaphoth on Babylonian Talmud p 16b Guide for the Perplexed Part 2 Chapter 6 Guide for the Perplexed Part 2 Chapter 4 3 Zohar 3 p 189a a b Zohar 1 p 27a Zohar 1 p 47a Zohar 2 p 43a Zohar 1 p 130b Zohar 2 p 65b Zohar 2 p 94a Zohar 3 p 226b a b Zohar 2 p 159a a b Lazarus Yafeh Hava 2004 Intertwined Worlds Medieval Islam and Bible Criticism Princeton University Press p 32 ISBN 978 1 400 86273 3 JSTOR j ctt7ztthw Knight Michael Muhammad 2016 Magic in Islam New York TarcherPerigee p 120 ISBN 978 1 101 98349 2 Pederson Joshua 2010 The Gospel of Thomas Pynchon Abandoning Eschatology in Gravity s Rainbow Religion and the Arts 14 1 2 139 160 doi 10 1163 107992610X12592913031865 Weisenburger Steven 1995 Fables of Subversion Satire and the American Novel 1930 1980 University of Georgia Press p 7 ISBN 978 0 820 31668 0 Clemons Amy Lea 2017 Adapting Revelation Good Omens as Comic Corrective Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts 28 1 98 86 101 ISSN 0897 0521 JSTOR 26390195 Bryan Anna 26 January 2022 Good Omens All star cast confirmed for second season of Amazon show filming in Edinburgh and Bathgate Edinburgh Evening News Retrieved 11 June 2023 Geddo Benedetta January 27 2023 A Look Into the Figure of The Authority in His Dark Materials The Mary Sue Retrieved June 13 2023 Dean Tyler January 3 2023 Love Takes a Million Forms His Dark Materials Series Finale tor com Fry Carrol Lee 2008 Cinema of the Occult New Age Satanism Wicca and Spiritualism in Film Associated University Presse pp 39 40 ISBN 978 0 934223 95 9 Heath Chris 16 March 2000 The Epic Life of Carlos Santana Rolling Stone Retrieved 16 June 2023 Giannini Erin 7 November 2017 Joss Whedon Versus the Corporation Big Business Critiqued in the Films and Television Programs McFarland p 184 ISBN 978 1 476 66776 8 Mars Volta encounters demons and spirits during recording of Bedlam in Goliath The Marquee Magazine The Mars Volta The Week 8 January 2015 Retrieved 14 June 2023 Further reading edit Form s of God Some Notes on Metatron and Christ by G G Stroumsa Harvard Theological Review vol 76 1983 269 288 The Boundaries of Divine Ontology The Inclusion and Exclusion of Metatron in the Godhead by Daniel Abrams Harvard Theological Review vol 87 1994 Orlov Andrei A 2005 The Enoch Metatron tradition Texte und Studien zum antiken Judentum Tubingen Mohr Siebeck ISBN 978 3 16 148544 2 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Metatron nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Metatron Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metatron amp oldid 1206370794, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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