Inside the 130 Books: Enoch, Jubilees, Jasher and the Wider Canon

Ask most readers what is in the Bible and you will hear sixty-six answers. Ask what almost made it — what early communities read, copied, translated and treasured — and the conversation gets much larger, and much more interesting.

Holosbiblion™ exists for that larger conversation. The 130-book chronological canon gathers the familiar books together with the wider library of early sacred literature: Enoch, read and quoted in the ancient world; Jubilees, with its calendar-driven retelling of Genesis; Jasher, twice named in the canonical text itself; the books of the Apocrypha; and many more.

Here is the important part: we present these books as timeline placement, not as a doctrinal verdict. Each work is set where its narrative and composition history place it in the chronological sequence, so you can read it in context and study it against the books beside it. We make no claims about inspiration or canonicity — that conversation belongs to you, your tradition, and your own study.

What the edition gives you is order: the wider canon arranged so that its stories, genealogies and prophecies can actually be compared, followed, and understood as reading.

For newcomers, the Lost Books Starter Guide is a free orientation to the wider canon. The flagship 130-Book Chronological Bible carries the complete governed sequence, and the Companion Source Record documents the source posture behind it, volume by volume.

Which of the wider books are you most curious about — Enoch, Jubilees, Jasher, or something more obscure? Tell us in the comments and we will cover it in a future post.

Back to blog

Leave a comment

Please note, comments need to be approved before they are published.