The Ethiopian biblical tradition is broader than the canon most English readers know. This guide introduces key Ethiopian Bible books and related texts, while linking directly into the Master Codex digital library for structured reading and exploration.
When people search for Ethiopian Bible books, they are usually trying to understand how the Ethiopian canon differs from the narrower biblical collections more familiar in many Western traditions. The Ethiopian tradition preserves a wider body of scriptural and scripturally associated literature, including texts that are often absent from standard Protestant Bibles and less commonly encountered in mainstream English editions.
That wider tradition is one reason texts such as the Book of Enoch and the Book of Jubilees draw so much attention. Readers often encounter them as isolated downloads, partial scans, or disconnected excerpts. Master Codex was built to make these works easier to locate, read, and compare inside a single coherent system.
This page is the search-entry guide. The Codex itself is the reading library.
The Ethiopian biblical tradition is known for preserving a broader canon and a wider surrounding textual tradition than the narrower biblical collections many readers know from standard English Protestant editions.
The Book of Enoch is one of the most recognized texts associated with Ethiopian biblical tradition, which is a major reason it attracts so much interest from readers, researchers, and comparative students.
You can begin with the Master Codex library index, which organizes available texts into a structured, readable system rather than leaving them scattered across isolated pages.
The guide explains the landscape. The Codex is where the reading begins.