Books
3 Baruch 4
4/17

Source: Public domain translation

1And I Baruch said, Behold, Lord, Thou didst shew me great and wondrous things; and now shew me all things for the sake of the Lord. And the angel said unto me, Come, let us proceed. And I proceeded with the angel from that place about an hundred and fourscore and five days' journey. And he shewed me a plain and a serpent, which appeared to be two hundred plethra in length.

2And he shewed me Hades, and its appearance was dark and abominable. And I said,

3Who is this dragon, and who is this monster around him? And the angel said, The dragon is he who devoureth the bodies of those who spend their life in wickedness, and he is nourished by them. And this is Hades, which itself also closely resembleth him, in that it also drinketh about a cubit from the sea, which doth not sink at all. Baruch said, And how doth this come to pass? And the angel said, Hearken; the Lord God made three hundred and threescore rivers, of which the chief of all are Alphias, Abyrus, and the Gericus; and because of these the sea doth not sink. And I said, I pray thee shew me which is the tree which led Adam astray. And the angel said unto me, It is the vine, which the angel Sammael planted, whereat the Lord God was wroth, and He cursed him and his plant, while also on this account He did not suffer Adam to touch it; and therefore the devil being envious deceived him through his vine. And I Baruch said, Since also the vine hath been the cause of such great evil, and is under judgement of the curse of God, and was the destruction of the first created, how is it now so profitable? And the angel said, Thou askest aright. When God caused the deluge upon earth, and destroyed all flesh, and four hundred and nine thousand giants, and the water rose fifteen cubits above the highest mountains, then the water entered into paradise and destroyed every flower; but it removed wholly without the bounds the shoot of the vine and cast it outside. And when the earth appeared out of the water, and Noah came out of the ark, he began to plant of the plants which he found. But he found also the shoot of the vine; and he took it, and was reasoning within himself, What then is it? And I came and spake unto him the things concerning it. And he said, Shall I plant it, or what shall I do? Since Adam was destroyed because of it, let me not also meet with the wrath of God because of it. And saying these things he prayed that God would reveal unto him what he should do concerning it. And when he had fulfilled the prayer which lasted forty days, and having besought many things and wept, he said: Lord, I entreat Thee to reveal unto me what I shall do concerning this plant. But God sent His angel Sarasael, and said unto him, Arise, Noah, and plant the shoot of the vine, for thus saith the Lord: Its bitterness shall be changed into sweetness, and its curse shall become a blessing, and that which is brought forth from it shall become the blood of God; and as through it the race of men obtained condemnation, so again through Jesus Christ the Immanuel shall they receive in Him the upward calling, and the entry into paradise. Know therefore,

4O Baruch, that as Adam through this very tree obtained condemnation, and was divested of the glory of God, so also the men who now drink insatiably the wine which is begotten of it, transgress worse than Adam, and are far from the glory of God, and are surrendering themselves unto the everlasting fire. For no good cometh through it. For those who drink it unto excess do these things: neither doth a brother pity his brother, nor a father his son, nor children their parents; but from the drinking of wine come all manner of evils, such as murders, adulteries, fornications, perjuries, thefts, and such like. And nothing good is wrought thereby.