Noun1.Cain- (Old Testament) Cain and Abel were the first children of Adam and Eve born after the Fall of Man; Cain killed Abel out of jealousy and was exiled by God Old Testament- the collection of books comprising the sacred scripture of the Hebrews and recording their history as the ...
Out of envy Cain killed his brother Abel, a “shepherd of sheep,” because Abel’s offerings were accepted by the god Yah-weh, whereas Cain’s were rejected. God cursed him for the murder of his brother and marked him with a special sign (the “mark of Cain”). The legend of Cain...
In a world devastated by a post-apocalyptic future, you take on the role of Cain, a man marked by a dark past. After committing the terrible sin of murdering his brother Abel, Cain was cursed by God with a visible mark on his skin. To hide this curse, he wraps himself in bandages...
“Where is your brother Hevel?” He said, “I don’t know; am I my brother’s keeper?” 10Then the Just Godasked, “What have you done?
But, then God marked Cain and told him to leave. Cain never knew how to murder He was a farmer, his brother was the herder, He didn't use his hands to strangle his brother with pain Nor did he use vegetables or his wheat or grain. Cain never used a turnip or a yam Or the ...
Thus Ephraem-Syrus asserts that the Chaldees in the time of Terah and Abram worshipped a graven god called Cainan; and Gregory BarHIebraeus, another Syriac author, also applies it to the son of Arphaxad (Mill, Vindlca. of Genea!ogies, p. 150). The origin of the tradition is not ...
In a world devastated by a post-apocalyptic future, you take on the role of Cain, a man marked by a dark past. After committing the terrible sin of murdering his brother Abel, Cain was cursed by God with a visible mark on his skin. To hide this curse, he wraps himself in bandages...
The phrase begins with a reference to Cain, the firstborn son of Adam and Eve, who committed the first murder by killing his brother Abel. The Hebrew word for "avenged" is "naqam," which implies a form of divine retribution or justice. In Genesis 4:15, God declares that anyone who ...
(the blacks) are the seed of Cain . . . and that Godput a dark stain upon us, that we might be known as their slaves!!!”1Theblack mark of Cain, although far less common than the Curse of Ham, isnevertheless found among a number of antebellum writers from 1733 on-ward.2Phyllis ...
This one Bible verse, “Not so; if anyone kills Cain, he will suffer vengeance seven times over”, and God “set a mark upon Cain, lest any finding him should kill him” Genesis 4:15 has puzzled historians for centuries. Cain Body of Abel Discovered by Adam and Eve by William Blake ...