Bible Quiz – Enoch (True/False) with Answers and the Complete Reference Verse.

 

Bible Quiz – Enoch (True/False) with Answers and the Complete Reference Verse. 

Step into the mysterious and fascinating life of Enoch, one of the most intriguing figures in the Bible. Known for his close walk with God and his unusual departure from earth, Enoch’s story is brief—but deeply powerful.

This quiz will challenge your understanding of Enoch through carefully crafted True/False statements, testing both your memory and attention to Scripture.

 

📝 Instructions

Read each statement carefully.

Decide whether it is True (T) or False (F).

Don’t rush—some questions are subtle and designed to test deeper knowledge.

Answers with complete reference verses are provided after the quiz.

 

🔍 Quiz Section: True or False

 

1.        Enoch was the son of Jared.

 

2.        Enoch lived for 365 years.

 

3.        Enoch was taken by God without experiencing death.

 

4.        Enoch is mentioned only in the Old Testament.

 

5.        Enoch walked with God after the birth of Methuselah.

 

6.        Methuselah lived longer than Enoch.

 

7.        Enoch built an ark to survive the flood.

 

8.        Enoch is listed in the genealogy of Jesus.

 

9.        Enoch was the father of Noah.

 

10.  Enoch pleased God by his faith.

 

11.  Enoch wrote one of the canonical books of the Bible.

 

12.  Enoch’s story is found in the Book of Exodus.

 

13.  Enoch prophesied about the coming judgment.

 

14.  Enoch lived longer than Adam.

 

15.  Enoch disappeared and no one knew what happened to him.

 

Answers with Reference Verses

 

1.        True

📖 Genesis 5:18 — “And Jared lived an hundred sixty and two years, and he begat Enoch.”

 

2.        True

📖 Genesis 5:23 — “And all the days of Enoch were three hundred sixty and five years.”

 

3.        True

📖 Genesis 5:24 — “And Enoch walked with God: and he was not; for God took him.”

 

4.        False

📖 Hebrews 11:5 — “By faith Enoch was translated that he should not see death...”

 

5.        True

📖 Genesis 5:22 — “And Enoch walked with God after he begat Methuselah three hundred years...”

 

6.        True

📖 Genesis 5:27 — “And all the days of Methuselah were nine hundred sixty and nine years...”

 

7.        False

📖 Genesis 6:13–14 — (This refers to Noah, not Enoch.)

 

8.        True

📖 Luke 3:37 — “…the son of Methuselah, the son of Enoch…”

 

9.        False

📖 Genesis 5:29 — Noah was the son of Lamech, not Enoch.

 

10.  True

📖 Hebrews 11:5–6 — “…before his translation he had this testimony, that he pleased God.”

 

11.  False

📖 (No canonical book of the Bible is attributed to Enoch.)

 

12.  False

📖 Genesis 5:21–24 — Enoch’s story is found in Genesis, not Exodus.

 

13.  True

📖 Jude 1:14–15 — “And Enoch also… prophesied… Behold, the Lord cometh…”

 

14.  False

📖 Genesis 5:5 — Adam lived 930 years, far longer than Enoch.

 

15.  False

📖 Hebrews 11:5 — “…he was not found, because God had translated him…”

 

📖 Advanced “Trick the Scholar” Round – Enoch (True/False)

 

Now we move deeper into the mystery of Enoch—this round is designed to challenge even the most attentive Bible readers. These statements are subtle, layered, and sometimes deceptive. Read carefully—details matter!

 

📝 Instructions

Mark each statement as True (T) or False (F).

Expect close wording, partial truths, and tricky contrasts.

Base your answers strictly on Scripture (not tradition or assumptions).

Answers with complete reference verses follow after the quiz.

 

🔍 Quiz Section: True or False (Advanced)

 

1.        Enoch began walking with God at the age of 65.

 

2.        The Bible explicitly states that Enoch did not die.

 

3.        Enoch lived fewer years than his son Methuselah before being taken.

 

4.        Enoch is the seventh generation from Adam.

 

5.        Enoch lived at the same time as Noah.

 

6.        The phrase “Enoch walked with God” appears only once in Scripture.

 

7.        Enoch’s translation is described using the same concept as Elijah’s departure.

 

8.        Enoch’s prophecy in Jude directly quotes from the Book of Genesis.

 

9.        Enoch’s lifespan (365 years) symbolically corresponds to the solar year.

 

10.  Enoch is the only person in Genesis 5 of whom it is not said “and he died.”

 

11.  Enoch’s son Methuselah was born before Enoch began walking with God.

 

12.  The genealogy in Genesis 5 presents Enoch as a break in the pattern of death.

 

13.  Enoch’s account suggests that faith can result in escaping death.

 

14.  Enoch’s story occupies more verses in Genesis than Noah’s genealogy.

 

15.  The New Testament confirms that Enoch was taken because of his righteousness.

 

Answers with Reference Verses

 

1.        False

📖 Genesis 5:21–22 — Enoch was 65 when he begat Methuselah; he walked with God after that.

 

2.        False

📖 Hebrews 11:5 — “…that he should not see death…” (implied, not stated directly as “he did not die”).

 

3.        True

📖 Genesis 5:23, 27 — Enoch lived 365 years; Methuselah lived 969 years.

 

4.        True

📖 Genesis 5:1–24 — Counting from Adam: Adam Seth Enos Cainan Mahalaleel Jared Enoch.

 

5.        False

📖 Genesis 5:23; 5:32 — Enoch was taken long before Noah was born.

 

6.        False

📖 Genesis 5:22, 24 — The phrase appears twice.

 

7.        True

📖 2 Kings 2:11; Hebrews 11:5 — Both describe being taken/translated by God.

 

8.        False

📖 Jude 1:14–15 — The prophecy is recorded here, not quoted from Genesis.

 

9.        False

📖 Genesis 5:23 — While 365 matches the solar year, Scripture gives no symbolic explanation.

 

10.  True

📖 Genesis 5:5–31 — Others conclude with “and he died,” but not Enoch.

 

11.  True

📖 Genesis 5:21–22 — Methuselah’s birth precedes the statement that Enoch walked with God.

 

12.  True

📖 Genesis 5:24 — Enoch breaks the repeated pattern of death in the genealogy.

 

13.  True

📖 Hebrews 11:5 — His faith is directly linked to his being taken.

 

14.  False

📖 Genesis 5–6 — Noah’s account is far more detailed.

 

15.  True

📖 Hebrews 11:5–6 — He pleased God, which is tied to faith and righteousness.

 

How did you do on this advanced round? 🔥

If a few of these made you pause—you’re exactly where real learning happens.

 

📖 Cross-Reference Trap Round – Enoch (True/False)

 

This round is where even seasoned readers can stumble. The life of Enoch appears across multiple books, and these questions are designed to trap assumptions by blending references. Only careful cross-checking of Scripture will lead you to the right answers.

 

📝 Instructions

Mark each statement as True (T) or False (F).

Each statement may combine multiple Bible passages—watch closely.

Do not rely on memory alone—think in terms of exact wording and context.

Answers with complete reference verses are provided after the quiz.

 

🔍 Quiz Section: Cross-Reference Traps (True/False)

 

1.        The phrase “Enoch walked with God” in Genesis and “Enoch pleased God” in Hebrews describe the same spiritual reality.

 

2.        The statement “he was not” in Genesis is fully explained by “God translated him” in Hebrews.

 

3.        Enoch’s prophecy in Jude is also recorded in the Book of Genesis.

 

4.        The genealogy in Luke confirms the same Enoch mentioned in Genesis 5.

 

5.        The “taking” of Enoch in Genesis is identical in description to Elijah’s ascent in 2 Kings.

 

6.        Hebrews explains that Enoch avoided death because of his righteousness under the Law.

 

7.        Jude identifies Enoch specifically as the seventh from Adam, matching the Genesis genealogy.

 

8.        Genesis and Hebrews together imply that Enoch’s disappearance was witnessed by others.

 

9.        Luke’s genealogy places Enoch before Methuselah in the same order as Genesis.

 

10.  Hebrews adds new theological meaning to Enoch’s story that is not explicitly stated in Genesis.

 

11.  Jude’s quotation of Enoch suggests that Enoch’s words are preserved verbatim in Genesis.

 

12.  The pattern “and he died” in Genesis is interpreted in Hebrews as universal except for Enoch.

 

13.  Enoch and Noah are both described as walking with God using identical phrasing in Genesis.

 

14.  Hebrews and Jude both reference Enoch but emphasize different aspects of his life.

 

15.  Genesis, Hebrews, and Jude together present Enoch as a figure connected with both faith and judgment.

 

Answers with Reference Verses

 

1.        True

📖 Genesis 5:22, 24; Hebrews 11:5–6 — Walking with God and pleasing God reflect the same relationship.

 

2.        True

📖 Genesis 5:24; Hebrews 11:5 — “He was not” is clarified as God taking/translation.

 

3.        False

📖 Genesis 5:21–24; Jude 1:14–15 — The prophecy appears only in Jude, not Genesis.

 

4.        True

📖 Genesis 5:21–24; Luke 3:37 — Both refer to the same Enoch in the lineage.

 

5.        False

📖 Genesis 5:24; 2 Kings 2:11 — Elijah’s ascent includes a chariot of fire; Enoch’s does not.

 

6.        False

📖 Hebrews 11:5–6 — His translation is attributed to faith, not the Law.

 

7.        True

📖 Genesis 5:1–24; Jude 1:14 — Jude confirms Enoch as the seventh from Adam.

 

8.        False

📖 Genesis 5:24; Hebrews 11:5 — No explicit witnesses are mentioned.

 

9.        True

📖 Genesis 5:21–22; Luke 3:37 — Enoch is listed before Methuselah in both.

 

10.  True

📖 Hebrews 11:5–6 — Adds interpretation: faith and pleasing God.

 

11.  False

📖 Jude 1:14–15; Genesis 5:21–24 — Genesis does not record his spoken prophecy.

 

12.  True

📖 Genesis 5:5–31; Hebrews 11:5 — The repeated death pattern excludes Enoch.

 

13.  False

📖 Genesis 5:22; 6:9 — Both “walked with God,” but applied separately; not identical contexts or emphasis.

 

14.  True

📖 Hebrews 11:5; Jude 1:14–15 — Hebrews: faith; Jude: prophecy/judgment.

 

15.  True

📖 Genesis 5:24; Hebrews 11:5–6; Jude 1:14–15 — Together show faith, relationship with God, and prophetic warning.

 

If you navigated these traps well, you’re reading Scripture with real depth. 🔥

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