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In Matthew, Jesus’ description of a lawless generation that turns inward and betrays one another resembles 1 Enoch’s portrayal of a generation that is lawless and rejects wisdom. Jesus may have been influenced by a similar Jewish apocalyptic tradition.
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2500 BCE
1000+ CE

1 Enoch 93:8

Pseudepigrapha
7 After that, in the sixth week, all who live in it will be blinded, and the hearts of all of them will godlessly forsake wisdom. And in it a man will ascend; and at its close the house of dominion will be burnt with fire, and the whole race of the chosen root will be scattered. 8 After that, in the seventh week, an apostate generation will arise, and many will be its deeds, and all its deeds will be apostate. 9 At its close the elect righteous of the eternal plant of righteousness will be chosen, to receive sevenfold instruction concerning all His creation. 10 For who among all the children of men is able to hear the voice of the Holy One without being troubled? And who can think His thoughts? And who is there that can look on all the works of heaven?
Date: 200-50 B.C.E. (based on scholarly estimates)

Matthew 24:10

New Testament
8 All these things are the beginning of birth pains. 9 “Then they will hand you over to be persecuted and will kill you. You will be hated by all the nations because of my name. 10 Then many will be led into sin, and they will betray one another and hate one another. 11 And many false prophets will appear and deceive many, 12 and because lawlessness will increase so much, the love of many will grow cold.
Date: 70-90 C.E. (based on scholarly estimates)
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Notes and References

#4036
"... If we conclude that the sayings about “this generation” were not created by the Q circle, but rather stem from pre-existing tradition and probably even the original Jesus movement, may we not, by the same historical logic that produced the communal history of the Q people, infer that Jesus himself was led to this way of speaking not by a theological system but rather by concrete experiences of rejection? I not only think we can, but we should. (a) Even in the Gospels the sayings have been placed in contexts where Jesus is speaking to crowds or opponents. That is, the “hortatory tendency” of the Gospels could not transform these sayings into general teaching about the state of Jesus’ contemporaries. They have retained their polemical edge, and it is hard to imagine that they at one time functioned differently. (b) In addition, it is unlikely that Jewish eschatological expectations are sufficient to explain the state of the tradition as it stands. To be sure: one finds in Second Temple texts the idea that lawlessness would increase as birth pangs of the Messianic age (4 Ezra 5:2; m. Sotah 9:15). Jesus may even have inherited a belief in “the dismal state of Israel in the time preceding the final judgment” (see 1 Enoch 93:9; Jubilees 23:14). However, those notions cannot sufficiently explain the Jesus tradition, since what we find is not general commentary on “this generation” and its depravity, but rather sayings that have opposition to and/or rejection of Jesus in view. For instance: why is “this generation” worse than the Ninevites? Because the Ninevites repented at the preaching of Jonah, whereas “this generation” has not. Even if Jesus entered his ministry with some eschatological expectation about a sinful generation preceding the end, these sayings imply it was his own rejection that triggered him to speak about it ..."
Ferda, Tucker S. Jesus and the Galilean Crisis: Interpretation, Reception, and History (pp. 371-372) University of Pittsburgh, 2016

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