Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Jealousy

      • Both brothers offered individual sacrifices to God; God accepted Abel's sacrifice and rejected Cain's; out of jealousy, Cain slew Abel – the first ever case of murder committed upon the Earth.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cain_and_Abel
  1. People also ask

  2. While they were in the field, Cain rose up against Abel, his brother, and killed him. Young's Literal Translation. And Cain saith unto Abel his brother, 'Let us go into the field;' and it cometh to pass in their being in the field, that Cain riseth up against Abel his brother, and slayeth him.

    • Parallel Commentaries

      Cain slew his brother, because his own works were evil, and...

    • 8 KJV

      Then Cain said to his brother Abel, “Let us go out to the...

    • 8 Catholic Bible

      Then Cain said to his brother Abel, "Let's go out in the...

    • 8 NLT

      8 NLT - Genesis 4:8 Then Cain said to his brother Abel, "Let...

    • 8 NIV

      8 NIV - Genesis 4:8 Then Cain said to his brother Abel, "Let...

    • 8 NASB

      8 NASB - Genesis 4:8 Then Cain said to his brother Abel,...

    • 8 ESV

      8 ESV - Genesis 4:8 Then Cain said to his brother Abel, "Let...

    • The Serpent Told Her

      The Serpent's Deception … 3 but about the fruit of the tree...

  3. Dec 5, 2022 · The apostle John gives us more insight into Cain’s heart: “Do not be like Cain, who belonged to the evil one and murdered his brother. And why did he murder him? Because his own actions were evil and his brother’s were righteous” (1 John 3:12).

  4. Cain slew his brother, because his own works were evil, and his brother's righteous, 1Jo 3:12. In consequence of the enmity put between the Seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent, the war broke out, which has been waged ever since.

    • The Background: The Rejected Offering
    • The Common Interpretation: Jealousy
    • Destined For Evil: Life of Adam and Eve
    • Premeditated and Gruesome: Conflict of Adam and Eve with Satan
    • A Theological Argument Gets Ugly: The Jerusalem Targums
    • No Connection to The Offering: Genesis Rabbah
    • A Complex Reading of Cain

    Immediately after Cain and Abel’s birth announcement,the Torah tells us the two brothers brought offerings to YHWH from their respective areas of specialization: animal husbandry and agriculture: A reader might imagine that Cain should be rewarded since bringing an offering to YHWH is his idea, while Abel just follows suit. Nevertheless, YHWH’s rea...

    The earliest and perhaps most natural answer we find in the second centuryB.C.E. book of Jubilees (4:2): At the beginning of the third jubilee, Cain killed Abel because the sacrifice of Abel was accepted, but the offering of Cain was not accepted. The Bible explores the theme of jealousy between brothers in the Joseph story, in which Jacob’s favori...

    An extreme example of Cain-as-evil-incarnate appears in the retelling of the story in the Pseudepigraphic work, The Life of Adam and Eve, a Jewish apocalyptic work from the early to mid-first millenniumC.E. We first learn of Cain’s evil disposition upon his birth (21:3a–c): She gave birth to an infant and his color was that of the stars. He fell in...

    The Conflict of Adam and Eve with Satan, a sixth century Christian work (likely reworking a Jewish original), retells the story of Cain and Abel at great length. In this version, Adam rather than his sons give YHWH the first offering, and Cain does not even participate, whereas Abel encourages them. Abel’s piety brings on Satan’s hatred, who then t...

    Rabbinic exegesis also attempts to fill out the story by adding details. One approach, found in all three of the Jerusalem Targums (mid to late 1st millenniumC.E.)presents the fight as a theological argument turned heated: Angered by this response, Cain doubles down and denies God’s involvement in the world entirely, using a phrase (bolded) that ho...

    Genesis is silent about what happened in the field, We are never told whether Abel was entirely the victim of an aggressive brother or whether he himself may have done something to provoke the crisis. Moreover, nothing explicit in the Torah connects the killing of Abel with the previous story about sacrifices. Something else may have taken place to...

    Cain’s “crime” is so well embedded in our consciousness that it is difficult to read this text with an open mind. What really happens in the field (v. 8)? Almost universally, Cain is maligned for committing first degree murder—but how would he have known what murder is? The text is unclear about what leads Cain to kill his brother. Is he a villain,...

  5. And Cain spoke to Abel his brother, and it came to pass when they were in the field that Cain rose up against Abel his brother and slew him.1 In short, Abel was a shepherd and Cain was a farmer. Cain brought an offering to G‑d from the fruit of his harvest, and Abel brought from his firstborn sheep.

    • Yehuda Shurpin
  6. Despite God's loving, clear warning, Cain allows sin to win. Cain talked to his brother, and the two went to the field together. In some manuscripts, the text specifies that Cain wanted to go out into the field with Abel. There Cain attacks and kills Abel: the first recorded murder in human history.

  7. Both brothers offered individual sacrifices to God; God accepted Abel's sacrifice and rejected Cain's; out of jealousy, Cain slew Abel – the first ever case of murder committed upon the Earth. In Islam , the story of Cain and Abel serves as an admonition against murder, and promotes the sanctity of human life .

  1. People also search for