The Book of Enoch is an ancient Jewish apocalyptic work traditionally attributed to Enoch, the great-grandfather of Noah. It is canonical only in the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church and the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church. The original language was either Hebrew or Aramaic, and the only complete extant version is in Ge'ez. This translation by R.H. Charles (1917) remains the standard scholarly English translation. The book is pseudepigraphal and was highly influential on early Christian and Jewish mystical thought. It is not included in the Protestant, Catholic, or most Orthodox canons.
Enoch
Chapter 23 — The Fire that deals with the Luminaries of Heaven.
From thence I went to another place to the west of the ends of the earth.
And I saw a "burning" fire which ran without resting, and paused not from its course day or night but (ran) regularly.
And I asked saying: 'What is this which rests not?'
Then Raguel, one of the holy angels who was with me, answered me "and said unto me": 'This course 'of fire' "which thou hast seen" is the fire in the west which 'persecutes' all the luminaries of heaven.'