A wicked plan is carried to a
tragic conclusion. Cain is frightened.
"Am I my brother's keeper?" The seven
punishments.
Peace is shattered.
Book I. Chapter LXXIX.
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And so they went on, until
they came to a lonely place, where there were no sheep; then Abel said
to Cain, "Behold, my brother, we are weary of walking; for we see
none of the trees, nor of the fruits, nor of the verdure, nor of the
sheep, nor any one of the things of which thou didst tell me.
Where are those sheep of thine thou didst tell me to bless?"
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Then Cain said to him,
"Come on, and presently thou shalt see many beautiful things, but
go before me, until I come up to thee."
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Then went Abel forward, but
Cain remained behind him.
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And Abel was walking in his
innocence, without guile; not believing his brother would kill him.
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Then Cain, when he came up to
him, comforted him with his talk, walking a little behind him; then he
hastened, and smote him with the staff, blow upon blow, until he was
stunned.
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But when Abel fell down upon
the ground, seeing that his brother meant to kill him, he said to
Cain, "O, my brother, have pity on me. By the breasts we
have sucked, smite me not! By the womb that bare us and that
brought us into the world, smite me not unto death with that
staff! If thou wilt kill me, take one of these large stones, and
kill me outright."
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Then Cain, the hard-hearted,
and cruel murderer, took a large stone, and smote his brother with it
upon the head, until his brains oozed out, and he weltered in his
blood, before him.
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And Cain repented not of what
he had done.
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But the earth, when the blood
of righteous Abel fell upon it, trembled, as it drank his blood, and
would have brought Cain to naught for it.
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And the blood of Abel cried
mysteriously to God, to avenge him of his murderer.
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Then Cain began at once to
dig the earth wherein to lay his brother; for he was trembling from
the fear that came upon him, when he saw the earth tremble on his
account.
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He then cast his brother into
the pit he made, and covered him with dust. But the earth would
not receive him; but it threw him up at once.
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Again did Cain dig the earth
and hid his brother in it; but again did the earth throw him up on
itself; until three times did the earth thus throw up on itself the
body of Abel.
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The muddy earth threw him up
the first time, because he was not the first creation; and it threw
him up the second time and would not receive him, because he was
righteous and good, and was killed without a cause; and the earth
threw him up the third time and would not receive him, that there
might remain before his brother a witness against him.
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And so did the earth mock
Cain, until the Word of God, came to him concerning his brother.
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Then was God angry, and much
displeased at Abel's death; and He thundered from heaven, and
lightnings went before Him, and the Word of the Lord God came from
heaven to Cain, and said unto him, "Where is Abel thy
brother?"
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Then Cain answered with a
proud heart and a gruff voice, "How, O God? am I my brother's
keeper?"
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Then God said unto Cain,
"Cursed be the earth that has drunk the blood of Abel thy
brother; and thou, be thou trembling and shaking; and this will be a
sign unto thee, that
whosoever find thee, shall kill thee."
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But Cain wept because God had
said those words to him; and Cain said unto Him, "O God,
whosoever finds me shall kill me, and I shall be blotted out from the
face of the earth."
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Then God said unto Cain,
"Whosoever shall find thee shall not kill thee;" because
before this, God had been saying to Cain, "I shall forego seven
punishments on him who kills Cain." For as to the word of
God to Cain, "Where is thy brother?" God said it in
mercy for him, to try and make him repent.
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For if Cain had repented at
that time, and had said, "O God, forgive me my sin, and the
murder of my brother," God would then have forgiven him his sin.
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And as to God saying to Cain,
"Cursed be the ground that has drunk the blood of thy
brother" that also, was God's mercy on Cain. For God did
not curse him, but He cursed the ground; although it was not the
ground that had killed Abel, and had committed iniquity.
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For it was meet that the
curse should fall upon the murderer; yet in mercy did God so manage
His thoughts as that no one should know it, and turn away from Cain.
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And He said to him,
"Where is thy brother?" To which he answered and said,
"I know not." Then the Creator said to him, "Be
trembling and quaking."
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Then Cain trembled and became
terrified; and through this sign did God make him an example before
all the creation, as the murderer of his brother. Also did God
bring trembling and terror upon him, that he might see the peace in
which he was at first, and see also the trembling and terror he
endured at the last; so that he might humble himself before God, and
repent of his sin, and seek the peace he enjoyed at first.
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And in the word of God that
said, "I will forego seven punishments on whomsoever kills
Cain," God was not seeking to kill Cain with the sword, but He
sought to make him die of fasting, and praying and weeping by hard
rule, until the time that he was delivered from his sin.
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And the seven punishments are
the seven generations during which God awaited Cain for the murder of
his brother.
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But as to Cain, ever since he
had killed his brother, he could find no rest in any place; but went
back to Adam and Eve, trembling, terrified, and defiled with blood...
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