Here's the setup: There exists, according to Enoch, a category of divine
beings known as the
Watchers. Their
job is exactly what the name implies — they watch. They observe
humanity. They presumably take notes, mind the store, and generally do
the whole divine oversight thing with appropriate professionalism and
restraint.
Two hundred of them apparently decided that professionalism was
overrated.
"Two hundred of them apparently decided that professionalism was
overrated."
— Steve Gilmore
The text is blunt about what happened. Enoch writes, in what has to be
the most matter-of-fact description of a cosmic catastrophe in ancient
literature, that these Watchers looked down from their heavenly vantage
point, noticed that the daughters of men were beautiful, and
collectively decided they wanted in on that.
Now, I want to pause here for a second. Because we're talking about
beings of divine origin. Celestial. Eternal. Presumably possessed of an
awareness of consequence that should far exceed anything the average
human manages on their best day.
"Yeah. This seems fine. Let's do this."
— The Watchers (Probably)
Their leader is named
Semyaza, and —
credit where it's due — even he seemed to have some awareness that this
was an incredibly bad idea. He said as much to the group. He told them
that if they went through with this plan, the sin would be on him alone,
and he'd bear that. The group's response was essentially: No, no. We'll
all be idiots together. Swear an oath. Mount Hermon. Let's go.
Mount Hermon, by the way, gets its name from the
Hebrew word for "curses." I'll just leave that sitting there.
The descent happened. Two hundred Watchers came down to Earth and took
human wives. And their names — Semyaza, Azazel, Armaros, Baraqel,
Kokabel, Tamiel, Ramiel, and a whole roster of others — get listed out
in Enoch with the kind of specificity that suggests these were not
mythological constructs. These were understood to be actual individuals
whose actual names someone wanted on record.
For reasons that will shortly become obvious.