Let's analyse what you said here....there is so much in my response that you did not address as I assume that there is no response that fits your belief system.
What do we know about Enoch and the situation that precipitated his being "taken"?
Maintaining high standards is hard when surrounded by ungodly people. But Enoch also delivered an uncompromising message of judgment against the wicked. Directed by God’s spirit, Enoch prophetically declared:
“Look! Jehovah came with his holy myriads, to execute judgment against all, and to convict all the ungodly concerning all their ungodly deeds that they did in an ungodly way, and concerning all the shocking things that ungodly sinners spoke against him.” (Jude 14-15)
What effect would that message have on perverse nonbelievers? It is reasonable to suppose that such stinging words made Enoch extremely unpopular, perhaps eliciting threats. Some must have wanted to silence him for good. However, Enoch was not intimidated. He was determined to serve God, come what may.
Enoch was apparently in mortal danger when
“God took him.” (Genesis 5:24) Jehovah did not allow his faithful prophet to suffer at the hands of rabid enemies. According to the apostle Paul,
“Enoch was transferred so as not to see death.” (Hebrews 11:5)
"Transferred"
μετατίθημι (metatithēmi)
Strong: G3346
GK: G3572
to transport, Acts 7:16; to transfer, Heb. 7:12; to translate out of the world, Heb. 11:5; met. to transfer to other purposes, to pervert, Jude 4; mid. to transfer one’s self, to change over, Gal. 1:6"
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=heb+11:5&version=MOUNCE
Many believe that God took him to heaven, where he kept on living. However, Jesus plainly stated:
“No man has ascended into heaven but he that descended from heaven, the Son of man.” as we have discussed.....much of which you have ignored.
God may have put him in a prophetic trance and then terminated his life while he was in that state. Under such circumstances, Enoch would not
"see death". Then
“he was nowhere to be found,” apparently because God disposed of his body, even as he disposed of Moses’ body. (Deuteronomy 34:5-6)
There are different "heavens" in the Bible...one of them is where birds fly. Where do we see whirlwinds?
Although Elijah was seen as he “went up by a whirlwind into heaven,” this does not mean that he went into the spirit realm. Why not? Because he is later reported as sending a letter of reproof to the king of Judah. (2 Kings 2:11; 2 Chronicles 21:1, 12-15) He was merely relocated.
Also fleshly bodies cannot exist in heaven. (1 Corinthians 15:50)
The contradiction comes by realizing that only Christ's disciples were ever offered life in heaven as parties to the new covenant. God's original purpose was to have humans live on earth....he never abandoned that outcome because of the disobedience of the Adam and his wife. He purposed the administration of a Kingdom to facilitate a return to God by those redeemed by Christ's sacrifice. Paul called it
"the ministry of the reconciliation".
God's Kingdom was to take human kind back to what God originally intended in Eden. The detour has been painful but the beneficial outcome will be everlasting. (Isaiah 55:11; Revelation 21:2-4)
King David featured prominently in the outworking of God's purpose for the Messiah to come through his genetic line. David did not go to heaven as the scriptures clearly state.....if David did not go to heaven then neither did any of the other prominent men and women of faith in pre-Christian times.
Hebrews 11:39-40....concerning those pre-Christian men and women of faith, Paul says....
"And yet all of these, although they received a favorable witness because of their faith, did not obtain the fulfillment of the promise, 40 because God had foreseen something better for us, so that they might not be made perfect apart from us."