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Genesis Chapter
Four
Genesis 4
Chapter Contents
The birth
employment
and religion of Cain and Abel.
(1-7) Cain murders Abel
The curse of Cain. (8-15) The conduct of Cain
His
family. (16-18) Lamech and his wives
The skill of Cain's descendants. (19-24)
The birth of another son and grandson of Adam. (25
26)
Commentary on Genesis 4:1-7
When Cain was born
Eve said
I have gotten a man from
the Lord. Perhaps she thought that this was the promised seed. If so
she was
wofully disappointed. Abel signifies vanity: when she thought she had the
promised seed in Cain
whose name signifies possession
she was so taken up
with him that another son was as vanity to her. Observe
each son had a
calling. It is the will of God for every one to have something to do in this
world. Parents ought to bring up their children to work. Give them a Bible and
a calling
said good Mr. Dod
and God be with them. We may believe that God
commanded Adam
after the fall
to shed the blood of innocent animals
and
after their death to burn part or the whole of their bodies by fire. Thus that
punishment which sinners deserve
even the death of the body
and the wrath of
God
of which fire is a well-known emblem
and also the sufferings of Christ
were prefigured. Observe that the religious worship of God is no new invention.
It was from the beginning; it is the good old way
Jeremiah 6:16. The offerings of Cain and Abel
were different. Cain showed a proud
unbelieving heart. Therefore he and his
offering were rejected. Abel came as a sinner
and according to God's
appointment
by his sacrifice expressing humility
sincerity
and believing
obedience. Thus
seeking the benefit of the new covenant of mercy
through the
promised Seed
his sacrifice had a token that God accepted it. Abel offered in
faith
and Cain did not
Hebrews 11:4. In all ages there have been two
sorts of worshippers
such as Cain and Abel; namely
proud
hardened despisers
of the gospel method of salvation
who attempt to please God in ways of their
own devising; and humble believers
who draw near to him in the way he has
revealed. Cain indulged malignant anger against Abel. He harboured an evil
spirit of discontent and rebellion against God. God notices all our sinful
passions and discontents. There is not an angry
envious
or fretful look
that
escapes his observing eye. The Lord reasoned with this rebellious man; if he
came in the right way
he should be accepted. Some understand this as an
intimation of mercy. "If thou doest not well
sin
that is
the
sin-offering
lies at the door
and thou mayest take the benefit of it."
The same word signifies sin
and a sacrifice for sin. "Though thou hast
not done well
yet do not despair; the remedy is at hand." Christ
the
great sin-offering
is said to stand at the door
Revelation 3:20. And those well deserve to
perish in their sins
that will not go to the door to ask for the benefit of
this sin-offering. God's acceptance of Abel's offering did not change the birthright
and make it his; why then should Cain be so angry? Sinful heats and disquiets
vanish before a strict and fair inquiry into the cause.
Commentary on Genesis 4:8-15
Malice in the heart ends in murder by the hands. Cain
slew Abel
his own brother
his own mother's son
whom he ought to have loved;
his younger brother
whom he ought to have protected; a good brother
who had
never done him any wrong. What fatal effects were these of our first parents'
sin
and how must their hearts have been filled with anguish! Observe the
pride
unbelief
and impenitence of Cain. He denies the crime
as if he could
conceal it from God. He tries to cover a deliberate murder with a deliberate
lie. Murder is a crying sin. Blood calls for blood
the blood of the murdered for
the blood of the murderer. Who knows the extent and weight of a Divine curse
how far it reaches
how deep it pierces? Only in Christ are believers saved
from it
and inherit the blessing. Cain was cursed from the earth. He found his
punishment there where he chose his portion
and set his heart. Every creature
is to us what God makes it
a comfort or a cross
a blessing or a curse. The
wickedness of the wicked brings a curse upon all they do
and all they have.
Cain complains not of his sin
but of his punishment. It shows great hardness
of heart to be more concerned about our sufferings than our sins. God has wise
and holy ends in prolonging the lives even of very wicked men. It is in vain to
inquire what was the mark set upon Cain. It was doubtless known
both as a
brand of infamy on Cain
and a token from God that they should not kill him.
Abel
being dead
yet speaketh. He tells the heinous guilt of murder
and warns
us to stifle the first risings of wrath
and teaches us that persecution must
be expected by the righteous. Also
that there is a future state
and an
eternal recompence to be enjoyed
through faith in Christ and his atoning
sacrifice. And he tells us the excellency of faith in the atoning sacrifice and
blood of the Lamb of God. Cain slew his brother
because his own works were
evil
and his brother's righteous
1 John 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. In this war we are all concerned
none are
neuter; our Captain has declared
He that is not with me is against me. Let us
decidedly
yet in meekness
support the cause of truth and righteousness
against Satan.
Commentary on Genesis 4:16-18
Cain cast off all fear of God
and attended no more on
God's ordinances. Hypocritical professors
who dissemble and trifle with God
are justly left to themselves to do something grossly scandalous. So they throw
off that form of godliness to which they have been a reproach
and of which
they deny the power. Cain went out from the presence of the Lord
and we never
find that he came into it again
to his comfort. The land Cain dwelt in was
called the land of Nod
which means
'shaking
' or 'trembling
' and so shows
the restlessness and uneasiness of his own spirit
or 'the land of a vagabond:'
they that depart from God cannot find rest any where else. Those on earth who
looked for the heavenly city
chose to dwell in tabernacles or tents; but Cain
as not minding that city
built one on earth. Thus all who are cursed of God
seek their settlement and satisfaction here below.
Commentary on Genesis 4:19-24
One of Cain's wicked race is the first recorded
as
having broken the law of marriage. Hitherto
one man had but one wife at a
time; but Lamech took two. Wordly things
are the only things that carnal
wicked people set their hearts upon
and are most clever and industrious about.
So it was with this race of Cain. Here was a father of shepherds
and a father
of musicians
but not a father of the faithful. Here is one to teach about
brass and iron
but none to teach the good knowledge of the Lord: here are
devices how to be rich
and how to be mighty
and how to be merry; but nothing
of God
of his fear and service. Present things fill the heads of most. Lamech
had enemies
whom he had provoked. He draws a comparison betwixt himself and
his ancestor Cain; and flatters himself that he is much less criminal. He seems
to abuse the patience of God in sparing Cain
into an encouragement to expect
that he may sin unpunished.
Commentary on Genesis 4:25
26
Our first parents were comforted in their affliction by
the birth of a son
whom they called Seth
that is
'set
' 'settled
' or
'placed;' in his seed mankind should continue to the end of time
and from him
the Messiah should descend. While Cain
the head of the apostacy
is made a
wanderer
Seth
from whom the true church was to come
is one fixed. In Christ
and his church is the only true settlement. Seth walked in the steps of his
martyred brother Abel; he was a partaker of like precious faith in the
righteousness of our God and Saviour Jesus Christ
and so became a fresh
witness of the grace and influence of God the Holy Spirit. God gave Adam and
Eve to see the revival of religion in their family. The worshippers of God
began to do more in religion; some
by an open profession of true religion
protested against the wickedness of the world around. The worse others are
the
better we should be
and the more zealous. Then began the distinction between
professors and profane
which has been kept up ever since
and will be
while
the world stands.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Genesis¡n
Genesis 4
Verse 1
[1] And
Adam knew Eve his wife; and she conceived
and bare Cain
and said
I have
gotten a man from the LORD.
Adam and Eve had many sons and daughters
Genesis 5:4. But Cain and Abel seem to have been
the two eldest. Cain signifies possession; for Eve when she bare him said with
joy and thankfulness
and great expectation
I have gotten a man from the Lord.
Verse 2
[2] And she again bare his brother Abel. And Abel was a keeper of sheep
but
Cain was a tiller of the ground.
Abel signifies vanity. The name given to this
son is put upon the whole race
Psalms 39:5. Every man is at his best estate
vanity; Abel
vanity. He chose that employment which did most befriend
contemplation and devotion
for that hath been looked upon as the advantage of
a pastoral life. Moses and David kept sheep
and in their solitudes conversed
with God.
Verse 3
[3] And
in process of time it came to pass
that Cain brought of the fruit of the
ground an offering unto the LORD.
In process of time ¡X At
the end of days
either at the end of the year when they kept their feast of
in-gathering
or at the end of the days of the week
the seventh day; at some
set time Cain and Abel brought to Adam
as the priest of the family
each of
them an offering to the Lord; for which we have reason to think there was a
divine appointment given to Adam
as a token of God's favour notwithstanding
their apostacy.
Verse 4
[4] And
Abel
he also brought of the firstlings of his flock and of the fat thereof.
And the LORD had respect unto Abel and to his offering:
And the Lord God had respect to Abel and to
his offering
and shewed his acceptance of it
probably by fire from heaven but
to Cain and to his offering he had not respect. We are sure there was a good
reason for this difference: that Governor of the world
though an absolute
sovereign
doth not act arbitrarily in dispensing his smiles and frowns. 1.
There was a difference in the characters of the persons offering: Cain was a
wicked man
but Abel was a righteous man
Matthew 23:35. 2. There was a difference in the
offerings they brought. Abel's was a more excellent sacrifice than Cain's;
Cain's was only a sacrifice of acknowledgment offered to the Creator; the
meat-offerings of the fruit of the ground were no more: but Abel brought a
sacrifice of atonement
the blood whereof was shed in order to remission
thereby owning himself a sinner
deprecating God's wrath
and imploring his
favour in a Mediator. But the great difference was
Abel offered in faith
and
Cain did not. Abel offered with an eye to God's will as his rule
and in
dependence upon the promise of a Redeemer. But Cain did not offer in faith
and
so it turned into sin to him.
Verse 5
[5] But unto Cain and to his offering he had not respect. And Cain was very
wroth
and his countenance fell.
And Cain was wroth
and his countenance fell
- Not so much out of grief as malice and rage. His sullen churlish countenance
and down-look
betrayed his passionate resentment.
Verse 7
[7] If
thou doest well
shalt thou not be accepted and if thou doest not well
sin
lieth at the door. And unto thee shall be his desire
and thou shalt rule over
him.
If thou dost well
shalt thou not be
accepted? ¡X Either
1. If thou hadst done well
as thy
brother did
thou shouldest have been accepted as he was. God is no respecter
of persons; so that if we come short of acceptance with him
the fault is
wholly our own. This will justify God in the destruction of sinners
and will
aggravate their ruin. There is not a damned sinner in hell
but if he had done
well
as he might have done
had been a glorified saint in heaven. Every mouth
will shortly be stopt with this. Or
2. If now thou do well: if thou repent of
thy sin
reform thy heart and life
and bring thy sacrifice in a better manner;
thou shalt yet be accepted. See how early the gospel was preached
and the
benefit of it here offered even to one of the chief of sinners. He sets before
him death and a curse; but
if not well - Seeing thou didst not do well
not
offer in faith
and in a right manner
sin lieth at the door - That is
sin
only hinders thy acceptance. All this considered
Cain had no reason to he
angry with his brother
but at himself only.
Unto thee shall be his desire ¡X He shall continue in respect to thee as an elder brother
and thou
as
the first-born
shall rule over him as much as ever. God's acceptance of Abel's
offering did not transfer the birth-right to him
(which Cain was jealous of)
nor put upon him that dignity
and power
which is said to belong to it
Genesis 49:3.
Verse 8
[8] And
Cain talked with 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.
And Cain talked with Abel his brother ¡X The Chaldee paraphrast adds
that Cain
when they were in discourse
maintained there was no judgment to come
and that when Abel spoke in defence
of the truth
Cain took that occasion to fall upon him. The scripture tells us
the reason wherefore he slew him
because his own works were evil
and his
brother's righteous; so that herein he shewed himself to be a child of the
devil
as being an enemy to all righteousness. Observe
the first that dies is
a saint
the first that went to the grave
went to heaven. God would secure to
himself the first fruits
the first born to the dead
that first opened the
womb into another world.
Verse 9
[9] And
the LORD said unto Cain
Where is Abel thy brother? And he said
I know not: Am
I my brother's keeper?
And the Lord said unto Cain
Where is Abel
thy brother? ¡X God knew him to be guilty; yet he asks
him
that he might draw from him a confession of his crime; for those who would
be justified before God
must accuse themselves.
And he said
I know not ¡X Thus in Cain the devil was both a murderer
and a liar from the
beginning. Am I my Brother's keeper? - Sure he is old enough to take care of
himself
nor did I ever take charge of him. Art not thou his keeper? If he be
missing
on thee be the blame
and not on me
who never undertook to keep him.
Verse 10
[10] And
he said
What hast thou done? the voice of thy brother's blood crieth unto me
from the ground.
And he said
What hast thou done? ¡X Thou thinkest to conceal it
but the evidence against thee is clear and
uncontestable
the voice of thy brother's blood crieth - He speaks as if the
blood itself were both witness and prosecutor
because God's own knowledge
testified against him
and God's own justice demanded satisfaction. The blood
is said to cry from the ground
the earth
which is said
Genesis 4:11
to open her mouth to receive his
brother's blood from his hand. The earth did as it were blush to see her own
face stained with such blood; and therefore opened her mouth to hide that which
she could not hinder.
Verse 11
[11] And
now art thou cursed from the earth
which hath opened her mouth to receive thy
brother's blood from thy hand;
And now art thou cursed from the earth ¡X 1. He is cursed
separated to all evil
laid under the wrath of God
as
it is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men.
2. He is cursed from the earth. Thence the cry came up to God
thence the curse
came up to Cain. God could have taken vengeance by an immediate stroke from
heaven: but he chose to make the earth the avenger of blood; to continue him
upon the earth
and not presently to cut him off; and yet to make even that his
curse. That part of it which fell to his share
and which he had the occupation
of
was made unfruitful
by the blood of Abel. Besides
A fugitive and a
vagabond shalt thou be in the earth. By this he was here condemned
to
perpetual disgrace and reproach
and to perpetual disquietment and horror in
his own mind. His own guilty conscience should haunt him where ever he went.
Now to justify his complaint
Observe his descants upon the sentence. 1. He
sees himself excluded by it from the favour of his God; and concludes
that
being cursed
he was hid from God's face
and that is indeed the true nature of
God's curse; damned sinners find it so
to whom it is said
Depart from me ye
cursed. Those are cursed indeed that are for ever shut out from God's love and
care
and from all hopes of his grace. 2. He sees himself expelled from all the
comforts of this life; and concludes
Genesis 4:14.
Thou hast driven me out this day from the
face of the earth ¡X As good have no place on earth as not have
a settled place. Better rest in the grave than not rest at all.
And from thy face shall I be hid ¡X Shut out of the church
not admitted to come with the sons of God to
present himself before the Lord.
And it shall come to pass that every one that
finds me shall slay me ¡X Wherever he wanders he goes in peril of
his life. There were none alive but his near relations
yet even of them he is
justly afraid
who had himself been so barbarous to his own brother.
Verse 15
[15] And
the LORD said unto him
Therefore whosoever slayeth Cain
vengeance shall be
taken on him sevenfold. And the LORD set a mark upon Cain
lest any finding him
should kill him.
Whosoever slayeth Cain vengeance shall be
taken on him seven - fold ¡X God having said in Cain's case Vengeance
is mine
I will repay; it had been a daring usurpation for any man to take the
sword out of God's hand.
And the Lord set a mark upon Cain ¡X To distinguish him from the rest of mankind. What the mark was
God has
not told us: therefore the conjectures of men are vain.
Verse 16
[16] And
Cain went out from the presence of the LORD
and dwelt in the land of Nod
on
the east of Eden.
And Cain went out from the presence of the
Lord
and dwelt on the east of Eden ¡X Somewhere distant
from the place were Adam and his religious family resided: distinguishing
himself and his accursed generation from the holy seed; in the land of Nod -
That is
of shaking or trembling
because of the continual restlessness of his
spirit. Those that depart from God cannot find rest any where else. When Cain
went out from the presence of the Lord
he never rested after.
Verse 17
[17] And
Cain knew his wife; and she conceived
and bare Enoch: and he builded a city
and called the name of the city
after the name of his son
Enoch.
And he builded a city ¡X In token of a settled separation from the church of God. And here is an
account of his posterity
at least the heirs of his family
for seven
generations. His son was Enoch
of the same name
but not of the same character
with that holy man that walked with God. The names of more of his posterity are
mentioned
and but just mentioned
as those of the holy seed
Genesis 5:1-32. They are numbered in haste
as
not valued or delighted in
in comparison with God's children.
Verse 19
[19] And
Lamech took unto him two wives: the name of the one was Adah
and the name of
the other Zillah.
And Lamech took two wives ¡X It was one of the degenerate race of Cain who first transgressed that
original law of marriage
that two only should be one flesh. 1. Jabal was a
famous shepherd; he delighted much in keeping cattle
and was so happy in
devising methods of doing it to the best advantage
and instructing others in
them
that the shepherds of those times
nay
the shepherds of after-times
called him Father; or perhaps his children after him
being brought up to the
same employment: the family was a family of shepherds. 2. Jubal was a famous
musician
and particularly an organist
and the first that gave rules for that
noble art or science of music. When Jabal had set them in a way to be rich
Jubal put them in a way to be merry. From Jubal probably the Jubilee trumpet
was so called; for the best music was that which proclaimed liberty and
redemption.
Verse 22
[22] And
Zillah
she also bare Tubalcain
an instructer of every artificer in brass and
iron: and the sister of Tubalcain was Naamah.
From Tubal-Cain
probably the Heathen Vulcan
came. Why Naamah is particularly named
we know not: probably they did
who
lived when Moses wrote.
Verse 23
[23] And
Lamech said unto his wives
Adah and Zillah
Hear my voice; ye wives of Lamech
hearken unto my speech: for I have slain a man to my wounding
and a young man
to my hurt.
This passage is extremely obscure. We know
not whom he slew
or on what occasion: neither what ground he had to be so
confident of the Divine protection.
Verse 25
[25] And
Adam knew his wife again; and she bare a son
and called his name Seth: For
God
said she
hath appointed me another seed instead of Abel
whom Cain slew.
This is the first mention of Adam in the
story of this chapter. No question the murder of Abel
and the impenitency and
apostacy of Cain
were a very great grief to him and Eve
and the more because
their own wickedness did now correct them
and their backsliding did reprove
them. Their folly had given sin and death entrance into the world
and now they
smarted by it
being by means thereof deprived of both their sons in one day
Genesis 27:45. When parents are grieved by their
children's wickedness
they should take occasion from thence to lament that
corruption of nature which was derived from them
and which is the root of
bitterness. But here we have that which was a relief to our first parents in
their affliction
namely
God gave them to see the rebuilding of their family
which was sorely shaken and weakened by that sad event. For
they saw their
seed
another instead of Abel.
And Adam called his name Seth ¡X That is
Set
settled or placed
because in his seed mankind should
continue to the end of time.
Verse 26
[26] And
to Seth
to him also there was born a son; and he called his name Enos: then
began men to call upon the name of the LORD.
And to Seth was born a son called Enos
which
is the general name for all men
and speaks the weakness
frailty
and misery
of man's state.
Then began men to call upon the name of the
Lord ¡X Doubtless God's name was called upon
before
but now
1. The worshippers of God began to stir up themselves to do
more in religion than they had done; perhaps not more than had been done at
first
but more than had been done since the defection of Cain. Now men began
to worship God
not only in their closets and families
but in public and
solemn assemblies. 2. The worshippers of God began to distinguish themselves:
so the margin reads it. Then began men to be called by the name of the Lord
or
to call themselves by it. Now Cain and those that had deserted religion had
built a city
and begun to declare for irreligion
and called themselves the
sons of men. Those that adhered to God began to declare for him and his
worship
and called themselves the sons of God.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on
Genesis¡n
"AM I MY BROTHER'S KEEPER?"
Genesis 4:9
INTRODUCTION
1. Perhaps one of the more thought-provoking questions in the Bible is
that one asked by Cain:
a. Cain had killed his brother because God had accepted Abel's
offering
but not his own - Gen 4:3-8
b. When the Lord inquired concerning Abel
Cain's response was:
"Am I my brother's keeper?" (Gen 4:9)
2. This is a question we would do well to ask ourselves today...
a. Are we our brother's keeper?
b. Do we have a responsibility to watch out for and care for one
another?
[When one turns to the New Testament
it becomes clear that the answer
is in the affirmative. In fact
there are many passages which
emphasize...]
I. OUR RESPONSIBILITIES TO ONE ANOTHER
A. WE ARE TO "LOVE ONE ANOTHER"...
1. As commanded by Jesus - Jn 13:34-35; 15:12
17
2. As taught by Paul - Ro 13:8; 1 Th 4:9
3. As instructed by Peter - 1 Pe 1:22
4. As stressed by John - 1 Jn 3:11 (note v.12)
23; 4:7
11-12;
2 Jn 5
-- But how are we to express such love? Other passages can
provide the answer...
B. HOW WE SHOW OUR LOVE FOR ONE ANOTHER...
1. We are to "receive one another" - Ro 15:7
2. We are to "edify another" - Ro 14:19
3. We are to "serve one another" - Ga 5:13
4. We are to "bear one another's burdens" - Ga 6:1-2
5. We are to be "forgiving one another" - Ep 4:32
6. We are to be "submitting to one another" - Ep 5:21
7. We are to "exhort one another" - He 3:12-13
8. We are to "consider one another" - He 10:24-25
9. We are to be "hospitable to one another" - 1 Pe 4:8-10
[In light of such "one another" passages
is there any doubt that we
are to be our brother's keeper?
But how well are we doing? To stimulate our thinking and help us
re-examine how well we are fulfilling our obligations to one another
consider the following questions...]
II. EVALUATING OUR ROLE AS OUR BROTHER'S KEEPER
A. WHEN ONE BECOMES A BROTHER...
1. Do we receive them into the family of God
or ignore them?
- Ro 15:7
a. Are they properly assimilated in the family life of the
congregation?
b. Do they remain on the fringe?
-- If we do not even know their names
we can be sure that we
are failing as our brother's keeper!
2. Do we edify them
or put stumblingblocks in their way?
- Ro 14:19
a. As individuals
are we "body-builders"
encouraging the
members of the body?
b. Or are we like a cancer
weakening the members of the body
of Christ?
1) By our own example
2) By our words
attitudes
etc.
-- It was said of Philemon that he refreshed the hearts of the
brethren; do people say the same of us?
3. Do we submit to them
or arrogantly rule over them? - Ep 5:21
4. Do we serve them in love
or expect them to serve us?
- Ga 5:13
5. Do we demonstrate hospitality to them? - 1 Pe 4:8-10
a. By visiting them in their need?
b. By inviting them into your home (or accepting invitations
to their home)?
B. WHEN A BROTHER IS OVERTAKEN IN A FAULT...
1. Do we even consider them? - He 10:24-25
a. Are we even aware of who they are?
b. Are we ignorant of their problems? If so
why?
1) Maybe it is because we don't assemble enough ourselves
2) We may "wonder about them"
but that is not sufficient!
c. Do they drift away
with no one making an effort to reach
them?
2. Do we exhort them
lest they become hardened by sin? - He 3:
12-14
a. Or are we afraid to confront them
for fear of running them
away?
1) If we truly love them and approach them with humility
they are not likely to run away
2) If they do
they are running away from God
not you!
b. Remember
such exhortation is to be daily! Perhaps we wait
too long...
3. Are we willing bear their burdens? - Ga 6:1-2
a. So as to help them overcome and become stronger
b. Or do we rather not be bothered?
4. Are we quick to forgive them when they repent? - Ep 4:32
a. Fear of not being forgiven and accepted back into the
family may keep some from repenting and returning to the
fold
b. Do we communicate a willingness to accept with open arms
and offer complete forgiveness?
CONCLUSION
1. How we answer such questions may reveal how well or poorly we are...
a. Fulfilling our responsibility to be our brother's keeper
b. Living up to the one responsibility we have that includes all
others: to love one another as Christ loved us - Jn 13:34-35
2. If we have failed to be our brother's keeper
we need to...
a. Repent of our lack of concern
our inactivity
or whatever has
hindered us
b. Confess our shortcomings in this area to God
c. Resolve to apply with zeal these "one another" passages!
Are you your brother's keeper? Are you even identified with a
congregation whereby you can be a working member who both cares for
those in the family
and be cared for by them?
I hope this study has stimulated your thinking about responsibilities
you have toward your brethren in Christ...
¡Ð¡Ð¡mExecutable
Outlines¡n
04 Chapter 4
Verses 1-16
Abel was a keeper of sheep
but Cain was a tiller of the ground
The story of Cain and Abel
I.
RELIGION
ACTUATED MEN IN THE VERY EARLIEST TIMES.
II. THE MERE
NATURAL RELIGION IS ESSENTIALLY DEFECTIVE.
1. In its offerings.
2. In the power which it exercises over the passions.
3. In its sympathy (Genesis 4:9).
III. SPIRITUAL
RELIGION ALONE COMMENDS A MAN TO GOD. This is illustrated in the life of Abel.
1. He possessed faith.
2. He offered an acceptable sacrifice to God.
3. Spiritual religion has a favourable influence on character.
The quality of Abel¡¦s piety
its depth and spirituality
cost him
his life
and made him at the same time the first martyr for true religion. (D.
Rhys Jenkins.)
The two sacrifices
I. The first
question to be asked is this: WHAT DID CAIN AND ABEL KNOW ABOUT SACRIFICE?
Although we should certainly have expected Moses to inform us plainly if there
had been a direct ordinance to Adam or his sons concerning the offering of
fruits or animals
we have no right to expect that he should say more than he
has said to make us understand that they received a much more deep and awful
kind of communication. If he has laid it down that man is made in the image of
God
if he has illustrated that principle after the Fall by showing how God met
Adam in the garden in the cool of the day and awakened him to a sense of his
disobedience
we do not want any further assurance that the children he begat
would be born and grow up under the same law.
II. It has been
asked again
WAS NOT ABEL RIGHT IN PRESENTING THE ANIMAL AND CAIN WRONG IN
PRESENTING THE FRUITS OF THE EARTH? I must apply the same rule as before. We
are not told this; we may not put a notion of ours into the text. Our Lord
revealed Divine analogies in the sower and the seed
as well as in the shepherd
and the sheep. It cannot be that he who in dependence and submission offers Him
of the fruits of the ground
which it is his calling to rear
is therefore
rejected
or will not be taught a deeper love by other means if at present he
lacks it.
III. THE SIN OF
CAIN--a sin of which we have all been guilty--WAS THAT HE SUPPOSED GOD TO BE AN
ARBITRARY BEING
WHOM HE BY HIS SACRIFICE WAS TO CONCILIATE. The worth of
Abel¡¦s offering arose from this: that he was weak
and that he cast himself
upon One whom he knew to be strong; that he had the sense of death
and that he
turned to One whence life must come; that he had the sense of wrong
and that
he fled to One who must be right. His sacrifice was the mute expression of this
helplessness
dependence
confidence. From this we see--
1. That sacrifice has its ground in something deeper than legal
enactments.
2. That sacrifice infers more than the giving up of a thing.
3. That sacrifice has something to do with sin
something to do with
thanksgiving.
4. That sacrifice becomes evil and immoral when the offerer attaches
any value to his own act and does not attribute the whole worth of it to God. (F.
D. Maurice
M. A.)
Lessons from the history of Cain
From the story of Cain we gather the following thoughts--
I. EVE¡¦S
DISAPPOINTMENT AT THE BIRTH OF CAIN SHOULD BE A WARNING TO ALL MOTHERS.
Overestimate of children may be traced sometimes to extreme love for them; it
may also arise on the part of parents from an overweening estimate of
themselves.
II. We see next in
the history of Cain WHAT A FEARFUL SIN THAT OF MURDER IS. The real evil of
murder (apart from its theftuous character) lies in the principles and feelings
from which it springs
and in its recklessness as to the consequences
especially the future and everlasting consequences
of the act. The red flower
of murder is comparatively rare
but its seeds are around us on all sides.
III. NO ARGUMENT
CAN BE DEDUCED FROM THE HISTORY OF CAIN IN FAVOUR OF CAPITAL PUNISHMENTS. We
object to such punishments--
1. Because they
like murder
are opposed to the spirit of
forgiveness manifested in the gospel of Christ.
2. Because
like murder
they ruthlessly disregard consequences. (G.
Gilfillan.)
Cain and Abel
I. CAIN AND ABEL
AT THE ALTAR.
II. CAIN AND THE
LORD AT THE ALTAR.
III. CAIN AND ABEL
IN THE FIELD.
IV. CAIN WITH GOD
IN THE FIELD. Conclusion:
1. The secret of right living is faith in God. The acceptable
sacrifice is the life of faith.
2. That which makes sacrifice acceptable is faith. A formal
sacrifice is a vain thing. It is Cain¡¦s offering.
3. Faith prepares men to die well. Be ready to die in faith
for the
faith. How much may hinge upon it. Have you religious convictions for which you
are ready to lay down your life? When Martin Luther went to his historic trial
in the Hall of the Diet at Worms
the people crowded the windows and housetops
of the city to see him pass. They knew his danger. But they knew of a higher
danger
theirs and his
of the cause of pure religion on the earth. Their
concern for him was: ¡§Will he stand firm for us? Will he stand for the faith to
the death?¡¨ ¡§In solemn words
¡¨ says Carlyle
¡§they cried out to him not to
recant. ¡¥Whosoever denieth Me before men
¡¦ thus they cried to him as in a kind
of solemn petition and adjuration.¡¨ Luther stood for the human race. Would his
faith fail? Then the faith of the people would fail. Would his stand? Then
theirs would stand
the Reformation would triumph. It was not so important that
he should live
as that he should stand in unconquerable faith. How much
depended upon one man! How much depended on the faith of Abel! Where should Eve
find hope again
with Cain a murderer and Abel dead? Where Seth an example
and
Enoch and Noah
and the antediluvian saints? Where Abraham and the patriarchs
an inspiration? Abel¡¦s faith shone out as a beacon light through all those
early centuries. The heroes of faith all lived in loyalty. But how did they
die? These all died in the faith. Thank God for that sentence! Covet a faith to
live by. But be sure of the faith of Abel to die by. (G. R. Leavitt.)
Naming of children
She called her eldest Cain
which signifieth a possession
and her
second son when she had also borne him
Abel
which signifieth vain or
unprofitable. By which diversity of names evidently appeareth a diversity of
affection in the namers
and so teacheth us two things. First
the preposterous
love that is in many parents
esteeming most oftentimes of those children that
are worst
and least of them that deserve better. Their Cains be accounted
jewels and wealth
but their Abels unprofitable
needless
and naught.
Secondly
it teacheth the lot of the godly in this world many times
even from
their very cradle
to be had in less regard than the wicked are. So was here
Abel
so was Jacob of his father
so was David and many more. Such and so
crooked are men¡¦s judgments often
but the Lord¡¦s is ever straight
and let
that be our comfort: He preferreth Abel before Cain
whatsoever his parents
think
He loveth Jacob better than Esau
and He chooseth little David before
his tall brethren: He seeth my heart
and goeth thereafter when men regard
shows and are deceived. Care away then
if the heart be sound
God esteemeth
me
and let man choose. (Bishop Babington.)
Antiquity of husbandry
Their trade of life and bringing up we see
the one a keeper of
sheep
the other a tiller of the ground
both holy callings allowed of God.
Idleness hated then from the beginning
both of the godly and such as had but
civil honesty
or the use of human reason. The antiquity of husbandry herein
also appeareth
to the great praise of it
and due encouragement unto it. But
alas our days! many things hath time invented since
or rather the devil in
time hatched
of far less credit
and yet more use with wicked men
a nimble
hand with a pair of cards
or false dice
is a way now to live by
and Jack
must be a gentleman
say nay who shall. Tilling of the ground is too base for
farmers¡¦ sons
and we must be finer. But take heed we be not so fine in this
world
that God knows us not in the world to come
but say unto us
¡§I made
thee a husbandman
who made thee a gentleman? I made thee a tiller of the
ground
a trade of life most ancient and honest
who hath caused thee to
forsake thy calling wherein I placed thee? Surely thou art not he that I made
thee
and therefore I know thee not
depart from Me
thou wicked one
into
everlasting fire.¡¨ (Bishop Babington.)
Two kinds of offerings
They both offer
but the one thinketh anything good enough
and
the other in the zeal of his soul and fulness of his Lord thinketh nothing good
enough. He bringeth his gilt
and of the fattest
that is
of the best he hath
and wisheth it were ten thousand times better. This heat of affection towards
God let us all mark and ever think of: it uncaseth such as in these days think
any service enough for God
half
a quarter of an hour in a week
etc. (Bishop
Babington.)
The first age of the conflict
In the Eden prophecy (Genesis 3:15) there was shadowed forth a
great conflict between good and evil that should last through coming ages. Of
that long conflict this is the first age. It covers the whole time of
antediluvian history. It is important for us to keep in our minds the length of
the time
sixteen hundred years and more--over sixteen centuries at the very
lowest computation. So
of course
we cannot expect anything in the shape of a
continuous history. A few chapters cover the whole ground; and while each
chapter is undoubtedly historical
the whole is not
properly speaking
history. It is not continuous
but fragmentary. First we have the story of Cain
and Abel. We find here a picture
I may say
exhibiting the nature of the
conflict that there is to be between good and evil. We see there the early
development of evil in its antagonism with good. First
what is the great
lesson of Cain¡¦s history? Is it not the fearful nature of sin? On the other
hand
what is the great lesson of Abel¡¦s history? He comes before us
apparently
as an innocent man. There is nothing said against him at all
events. Yet he is required to bring an offering. He is accepted
apparently
not on the simple ground of his goodness
but in connection with the offering
that he brings. It is the offering of ¡§the firstlings of his flock.¡¨ Here we
have the first record of sacrifice. Next
what is the difference between Cain
and Abel? Some are inclined to think it lay entirely in the offering: not in
the men at all; but if you look at the narrative you will find there was a
difference in the men. ¡§Unto Cain and his offering¡¨ the Lord had not respect;
but ¡§the Lord had respect unto Abel and his offering.¡¨ Abel and his offering
Cain and his offering. But what was the difference in the men? The great
difference in the men
as we are taught in the Epistle of the Hebrews
was
faith. ¡§By faith Abel offered unto God a more acceptable sacrifice than Cain.¡¨
So whatever difference there may have been in the men in other respects (and
there no doubt was very much)
the fundamental contrast between them was
that
Abel had faith
while Cain had not. (J. M. Gibson.)
Domestic life
I. THAT IT IS
DESIGNED FOR THE NUMERICAL INCREASE OF HUMANITY.
1. The position of Adam and Eve prior to the birth of their two sons
was unique. Alone in the great world.
2. Their position was interesting. A great crisis in their lives.
Fallen
yet encircled by Divine mercy.
II. THAT IT SHOULD
BE CAREFUL AS TO THE NOMENCLATURE OF ITS CHILDREN.
1. Child nomenclature should be appropriate. ¡§Cain¡¨ signifies
¡§possession.¡¨ A moral possession. The gift of God.
2. Child nomenclature should be instructive. ¡§Abel¡¨ signifies
¡§vanity.¡¨ Our first parents¡¦ verdict on life
gathering up the history of their
past and the sorrows of their present condition.
3. Child nomenclature should be considerate. In harmony with good
taste and refined judgment. Pictures of goodness and patterns of truth.
III. THAT IT SHOULD
JUDICIOUSLY BRING UP CHILDREN TO SOME HONEST AND HELPFUL EMPLOYMENTS.
1. These two brothers had a daily calling.
2. A distinctive calling.
3. A healthful calling.
4. A calling favourable to the development of intellectual thought.
IV. THAT IT SHOULD
NOT BE UNMINDFUL OF ITS RELIGIOUS OBLIGATIONS (Genesis 4:3-4).
1. These offerings are rendered obligatory by the mercies of the
past.
2. These offerings should be the natural and unselfish outcome of
our commercial prosperity.
3. These offerings ought to embody the true worship of the soul.
LESSONS:
1. That domestic life is sacred as the ordination of God.
2. That children are the gift of God
and are often prophets of the
future.
3. That working and giving are the devotion of family life. (J.
S.Exell
M. A.)
The true and false worshipper of God
I. THAT BOTH THE
TRUE AND THE FALSE AMONGST MEN ARE APPARENTLY WORSHIPPERS OF GOD. The false
come to worship God--
1. Because it is the custom of the land so to do.
2. Because men feel that they must pay some regard to social
propriety and conscience.
3. Because men feel that their souls are drawn out to God in ardent
longings and grateful praises. These are the true worshippers of God. Followers
of Abel.
II. THAT BOTH THE
TRUE AND THE FALSE AMONGST MEN PRESENT THEIR MATERIAL OFFERINGS TO GOD.
1. The trade of each brother suggested his offering.
III. THAT BOTH THE
TRUE AND THE FALSE AMONGST MEN ABE OBSERVED AND ESTIMATED BY GOD IN THEIR
WORSHIP AND OFFERINGS.
1. The worship and offerings of the one are accepted. ¡§And the Lord
had respect unto Abel and his offering.¡¨ And why?
2. The worship and offering of the other was rejected. ¡§But unto
Cain and to his offering He had not respect.¡¨ The men who make their religious
offerings a parade
who regard this worship as a form
are not welcomed by God.
IV. THAT THE TRUE
IN THE DIVINE RECEPTION OF THEIR WORSHIP AND OFFERINGS
ARE OFTEN ENVIED BY THE
FALSE.
1. This envy is wrathful. ¡§Why art thou wroth?¡¨
2. This envy is apparent. ¡§Why is thy countenance fallen?¡¨
3. This envy is unreasonable. ¡§If thou doest well
shalt thou not be
accepted?¡¨
4. This envy is murderous. ¡§Cain rose up against Abel his brother
and slew him.¡¨ (J. S. Exell
M. A.)
Cain and Abel
I. THE PARITY OR
EQUALITY OF CAIN AND ABEL IS FOUR FOLD.
1. In their original
as both born of the same parents.
2. In their relation
they were brothers.
3. In their secular condition: both had honest employs
and not only
lawful
but laudable particular callings.
4. In their religious concerns: both were worshippers of God
both
brought sacrifices to God.
(a) That parents ought not to bring up their children in idleness
but in some honest calling wherein they may both serve themselves and their
generation
according to the will of God (Acts 13:36).
(b) That every man must have his trade and calling in the world
as
those two sons of Adam had. Though their father was lord of the world
yet he
brought up both his sons in laborious callings.
(c) It is a sin for any man to live without a calling. One that lives
in idleness (without an honest calling) is but an unprofitable burden of the
earth
and seems to be born for no other end save to spend the fruits of the
world as a useless spendthrift. Why Moses recordeth this service done to God
(by way of sacrifice) in all its circumstances by those two sons of Adam
Cain
and Abel?
1. To demonstrate the antiquity of religion. That it is no new
devised fable
but is as ancient as the world. Hence may be inferred--
2. The account why Moses records this history
is to show the
mixture of religion
that among men who profess and practise religion there
ever hath been a mixture thereof.
3. Moses records this history to declare the disagreements and
contentions that do arise about religion in the world.
1. Of the circumstances of it
which are four.
2. What motive they had at this time to sacrifice to God; ¡¥tis
probable they did so either--
Hence may be inferred--
1. The mischief on mankind by the Fall
to wit
man¡¦s dulness to
learn anything that is good.
2. The misery of those persons who want instruction in families and
assemblies! How blind and brutish must all such be
and how unskilful at this
celestial trade!
3. Oh
what a blessing is the ministry to men
which teacheth them
this trading and trafficking with heaven
that cannot be learnt all at once
but by degrees!
The (3) circumstance is
the place where
which the Scripture of truth mentions not.
The (4) circumstance is
the manner how
which leads me to the second particular
to wit
the substance
of their service
wherein this circumstance is spoke to
the SUCCESS OF THEIR
SERVICE.
The (5) circumstance is
the matter what
to be spoke unto
in the substance. Now
as to the substance
of it
look upon it in common
and both brothers concerned together therein. So
there is still a parity and congruity as to the substance of it.
For--
1. Their service was equally personal
they both made their personal
address to God
and to His altar of oblation; they did not serve God by a
proxy. They did not transmit this their duty to their father Adam. Hence
observe
no man stands exempted from his personal attendance on God¡¦s service
but everyone owes a homage which he must pay in his own person. This is proved
both by Scripture and reason.
The (1) reason is
everyone is personally God¡¦s creature
so the bond of creation obligeth all to
pay their personal respects to their Creator. No man is his own
but God¡¦s;
therefore every man must glorify God with their own bodies and spirits (1 Corinthians 6:19-20).
The (2) reason is
everyone is a sinner
and sins against God in their own persons; therefore
everyone must serve God in their own persons
and sue to Him for pardon and
reconciliation. No man can redeem his brother Psalms 49:7).
The (3) reason
everyone
hath personal dependency on God for a supply both of their temporal and
spiritual wants. Now
¡¥tis but reasonable service Romans 12:1)
that all persons should
carry their own pitchers to this fountain of life
and should turn the cock
both of grace and mercy for their own supply.
The (4) reason is
every
man is already a great debtor to God (his Benefactor); God is behindhand with
none
but much beforehand with all
and therefore as we all have received mercy
from God in our own proper persons
so we should return duty to God in our own
proper persons also.
2. As the service of those two brothers was equally personal
so it
was equally warrantable and lawful service. The second inference is
to look
for Divine warrant for every part of Divine worship. That primitive simplicity
which is in Christ and in His gospel worship
ought not to be corrupted 2 Corinthians 11:3). All modes and
rites of worship which have not Christ¡¦s stamp upon them
are no better than
will worship. How exact was God in tabernacle worship (Exodus 39:43)
and will He not be so in
gospel worship? The third propriety
in the substance of this service is
it
was also costly worship; there was cost in both their sacrifices
they put not
God off with empty compliments
and verbal acknowledgments of superficial and
perfunctory shows. All men can willingly give God the cap and the knee
yea and
the lip too
but when it comes to cost
then they shuffle off His service: men
naturally love a cheap religion. The fourth property of their service is
there
was unity in their worship. Cain did not build one altar
and Abel another
but
one served both; they both offered in one place
and at one time. Hence
observe
it makes much for the honour of religious worship
when it is
performed in the spirit of unity. The first inference is--oh
let it not be
told in Gath
nor published in Askelon--that there is altar against altar
and
prayer against prayer
amongst professors in our day. The apostle presseth to
unity with many arguments Ephesians 4:3-4
etc.). The second
inference is
Yet unity without verity is not unity
but conspiracy. There is
no true concord but in truth. The third inference is
that narrow principles
undo unity. Tile fifth property
¡¥twas equally a solemn service by way of
sacrifice; both these sons paid their homage to their Maker
the one in a
sheaf
and the other in a sheep.
Hence observe
holy sacrifices and services have been tendered and
rendered up to the great God in all ages of the world by the Church of God.
1. As the sacrifice was a real acknowledgment of God¡¦s sovereignty
over the sacrificer (Isaiah 16:1).
2. As it was a sad remembrancer of the sacrificer¡¦s sin
to wit
that he deserved to be burnt (as his burnt offering was) even in everlasting
burnings.
3. As it was a solemn protestation of their faith in Christ
whom
all their sacrifices did prefigure
as He was the Lamb slain from the beginning
of the Revelation 13:18).
4. As it was also an offering of thankfulness; those sacrifices were
eucharistical as well as propitiatory
thank offerings as well as sin
offerings. What shall I render? saith David (Psalms 116:12).
The (2) gospel sacrifice
is praying for what we want
and praising for what we have.
The (3) gospel sacrifice
(in a word) is all the good works both of piety and charity. Now
the success
of it shows a foul disparity; the one is accepted
the other is rejected. God
had respect to Abel
and to his offering
but
etc. Genesis 4:4-5). This disparity is
demonstrated by three remarkable passages or particulars.
1. Of the order inverted; until now
it was Cain and Abel
the
eldest is named first
the order of nature is observed. Hence observe--
1. In regard to their persons; and that is also two fold.
2. As God putteth the difference
so He beholdeth the difference
betwixt good and bad
and here between Cain and Abel.
3. It is the piety or impiety of men¡¦s persons that do commend or
discommend their actions and services to God. It is not the work that so much
commends or discommends the man
but the man the work. As is the cause so is
the effect
and the better that the cause is
the better must the effect be.
These are maxims in philosophy
which hold true in divinity also. A good man
worketh good actions
and the better the man is
the better are his actions. As
the temple is said to sanctify the gold
and not the gold the temple (Matthew 23:17)
so the person gives
acceptance to
and sanctifies the action
not the action the person. ¡§The
sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord
but the prayer of the
upright is His delight¡¨ Proverbs 15:8).
Both do offer
the one a sheaf
and the other a sheep; yet the one
is accepted
the other rejected from a threefold difference in the action.
I. In regard of
the matter of their sacrifice
Abel made choice of the best he had to present
unto God. Hence observe
it cannot consist with a gracious heart to shuffle off
the great God with slight services. Alas! men do but trifle with God
when they
think anything will be sufficient to satisfy Him.
1. Such as spend many hours in vanity
yet cannot spare one hour for
God and the good of their souls.
2. Such as are profuse in villainy upon their lusts
yet can find
nothing to bestow in pious and charitable uses upon the Lord.
3. Such as swatter away all their youth time (while the bones are
full of marrow and veins full of blood
both as ponderous sheaves) in ways of
both vanity and villainy
and think to put off God with the poor pined sheaf of
their old age
as if the great God would be put off with the devil¡¦s leavings.
The second difference in their action was in respect of their devotion and
affections; Abel offered in sincerity
but Cain in hypocrisy. The third and
principal difference that distinguished Cain and Abel¡¦s action was faith
which
is indeed the prime cause of all the other differences. Abel offered in faith
but Cain did not so (Hebrews 11:4). It was faith that
dominated Abel a righteous man
and Cain was a wicked man
because he wanted
faith.
How comes faith to put this difference? There is a two-fold faith.
1. The faith upon God¡¦s precept. Abel offered sacrifice
not so much
because Adam
but because God commanded. This is called the obedience of faith
(Romans 16:26).
2. There is the faith upon God¡¦s promise. Thus Abel did not only lay
a slain sacrifice upon the altar
but he put faith under it. He considered
Christ to be the Lamb slain front the foundation of the world (Revelation 13:8). The inference hence
flowing is
it is Christ
and Christ alone
that gives to all our services
acceptance with God. It is faith in Christ that pleaseth God Hebrews 11:16).
Now
the third and last particular is the success (which is the
second general
as service was the first)
or acceptance
which
as to Abel
is
evident in three things.
1. The Divine allowance or approbation of Abel. He being a righteous
man Matthew 23:35). Both his person and
oblation (through Divine grace) was--
(1) Approvable; hence the first observation is
it is a special
vouchsafement and condescension in God to look on
and allow of the poor
services of man.
2. Unto Cain and his offering God had not respect. To demonstrate
the equity of God in His dealing with wicked men. His ways are always equal
with us (Ezekiel 18:25; Ezekiel 33:17). As Cain respected not God
in his sacrifice
so God respected not him nor his sacrifice.
Inferences hence are--
1. If the sweet success of our services be God¡¦s acceptance
then
oh
what an holy carefulness should we all have about our services and duties.
2. Oh
what holy cheerfulness should we have to work all our works
in John 3:21)
that they may be accepted of
Him
and respected by Him.
3. Oh
what an holy inquisitiveness should we all have
whether God
accept or reject our duties? Our acceptance may be known by these characters.
Hath God inflamed our sacrifice as He did Abel¡¦s
some warm impressions of
God¡¦s Spirit upon our hearts
some Divine touch of a live coal from God¡¦s
altar? (Isaiah 6:6). The second sign or character
of acceptance isthe joy of duty; injections of joy
as well as inspirations of
heat
are sweet demonstrations of acceptance; blessed are they that hear the
joyful sound of God
they shall walk
O Lord
in the light of Thy countenance Psalms 89:15). A third sign is
when God
gives in any supply of that grace which is sued for
either strengthening it
or weakening sin that wars against it.
II. As there is no
life in a wicked man¡¦s duty
so there is no warmth in it; he puts off God with
cold dishes
such as God loves not. As there is no heart
so there is no heat
in any of his services; it is not a sacrifice made by fire unto the Lord
so no
sweet savour to Him (Leviticus 1:13; Leviticus 1:17; Leviticus 2:2; Leviticus 2:9-10
etc.).
III. A wicked man
(as Cain here) regardeth iniquity in his heart
therefore God regardeth not his
prayer (Psalms 66:18). This is the dead fly that
spoils never so sweet ointment (Ecclesiastes 9:1). (C. Ness.)
Formal worship an immense curse
I. IT INVOLVES
OFFENCE TO GOD. ¡§He abhors the sacrifice where not the heart is found.¡¨
II. IT INVOLVES
CRUELTY TO MAN. From real
spiritual worship it would be impossible for a man
to pass to persecution and murder
for genuine piety is the root of
philanthropy. But the distance between formal worship and murderous passions is
not great. Formal worship--
1. Implies bad passions.
2. Strengthens bad passions. Selfishness. Superstition. Pride.
Bigotry. (Homilist.)
Cain and Abel
I. THEIR DIFFERENT
WORSHIP.
1. Cain¡¦s was no more than a mere thank offering
and such
probably
as Adam himself might have offered in a state of innocence: it
implied not any confession of guilt
or any application to the Redeemer.
2. Abel¡¦s offering was a sacrifice presented in faith
not only with
respect to the appointment of God
who had ordained sacrifices in
representation of that method of redemption by which He would deliver man
but
also with dependence on ¡§the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world
¡¨ who
in the fulness of time ¡§by the sacrifice of Himself should take away the sins
of the world.¡¨ Abel¡¦s offering
therefore
is to be considered as a type of
Christ.
II. THEIR
DIFFERENT MORAL CHARACTER.
III. THEIR
DIFFERENT END. Lessons:
1. Let us examine what is the worship we are offering to God. It is
not enough that we are attentive to religious ordinances; but are we
like
Abel
worshipping by faith?
2. Let us inquire
Are none among us discovering the temper of Cain?
Are there none who
like him
are persecutors of God¡¦s people?
3. Let us bless God that the blood of Jesus Christ ¡§speaketh better
things than that of Abel¡¨ (see Hebrews 12:24). (Essex Remembrancer.)
The first patriarchal form of the new dispensation--the seat
the
time
the manner of worship--the contest begun between grace and nature
between faith and unbelief
I. There can be
no doubt that THE STATED PLACE OF WORSHIP under the new order of things was the
immediate neighbourhood of the garden
eastward
within sight of the cherubim
and the flaming sword (Genesis 3:24). And it would seem that
this primitive holy place was substantially identical with the sanctuary and
shrine of the Levitical ritual
and with the heavenly scene which Ezekiel and
John saw. It was within the garden
or at its very entrance
and it was
distinguished by a visible display of the glory of God
in a bright shining light
or sword of flame--on the one hand
driving away in just displeasure a guilty
and rebellious race; but on the other hand
shining with a benignant smile upon
the typical emblems or representations of a people redeemed.
II. The brothers
REPRESENTATIVES OF THE TWO GREAT CLASSES into which
in a religious view
the
family of man is divided
manifest their difference in this respect
not in the
object
nor in the time
but in the spirit of their worship (verses 3
4). They
worship the same God
and under the same revelation of His power and glory.
Their seasons of worship also are the same; for it is agreed on all bands that
the expression ¡§in process of time
¡¨ or ¡§at the end of days
¡¨ denotes some
stated season--either the weekly Sabbath or some other festival. Again
their
manner of service was to a large extent the same. They presented offerings to
God; and these offerings
being of two kinds
corresponded very remarkably to
the two kinds of offerings ordained under the Levitical dispensation
the burnt
offerings
which were expiatory
and the meat offerings
which were mainly
expressive of duty
gratitude
and devotion (Leviticus 1:1-17; Leviticus 2:1-16).
III. The two
brothers
then
worshipped God ACCORDING TO THE SAME RITUAL
BUT NOT WITH THE
SAME ACCEPTANCE. How the Lord signified His complacency in the one and His
rejection of the other does not appear. It may have been by sending fire from
heaven to consume Abel¡¦s offering; as in this way He acknowledged acceptable
offerings on different occasions in after times (Leviticus 9:24; Judges 6:21; 1 Kings 18:38). Why the Lord put
such a distinction between them is a more important point
and more easily
ascertained. It is unequivocally explained by the Apostle Hebrews 11:4). Abel¡¦s sacrifice was more
excellent than Cain¡¦s
because he offered it by faith. Therefore his person was
accepted as righteous
and his gifts as well pleasing to the Lord. (R. S.
Candlish
D. D.)
The religion of nature
and the religion of the gospel
Introduction: Cain¡¦s religion
in common with many false
religions
was one--
1. Which had in it some good.
2. Of expediency.
3. Which lacked faith.
4. Abounding in self-righteousness.
5. That persecuted others.
Abel¡¦s religion--
1. Embodied all the good that was in the other.
2. Surpassed it
even in its own excellencies--¡§more plenteous
sacrifice.¡¨
3. Recognized the existence of guilt
and its merited doom.
4. Was actuated by faith.
5. Was approved of by God. Consider
then--
I. NATURAL
RELIGION. Look at--
1. The principle upon which it is founded--practical goodness. This
principle is intrinsically excellent
is one upon which all men should act; is
one to which no one can object.
2. The standard by which it is to be tested--the moral law of
creation
love to God and man. In order to ¡§do well
¡¨ the act itself must be
perfect; the motive must be good; and the rule must be good.
3. Its reward to its faithful adherents--¡§shalt thou not be
accepted?¡¨ Such a religion will command the approval of God; and will secure
immortality for all its votaries. Now measure your conduct by this religion;
and are you perfect? Think of sin in its nature
its effects
and its ultimate
consequences
and see if you have not sinned. And can natural religion justify
you? No; something else must be found
and something else is to be found. Look
then at--
II. REVEALED
RELIGION. Notice--
1. That revealed religion assumes that men are guilty. It also
recognizes their liability to punishment.
2. That it has provided a sin offering--a substitution of person
of
sufferings.
1. The acceptance of this is accompanied with Divine evidence.
2. It is efficient for all purposes for which it is presented.
3. Having accepted it
the sinner is treated as though he himself
had suffered.
4. That the sin offering reposeth at the door.
This implies that Christ¡¦s atonement is accessible to the sinner;
that it rests with man to avail himself of it; that men often neglect it; that
God exercises great patience towards the sinner; that the sinner cannot go to
hell without first trampling on the Cross; and that he wilt be forever deprived
of every excuse for his destruction. (D. Evans.)
Cain and Abel
I. THE ACCEPTANCE
OF THE OFFERING DEPENDS ON THE ACCEPTANCE OF THE OFFERER. God had respect to
Abel and his offering--the man first and then the offering. God looks through
the offering to the state of soul from which it proceeds; or even
as the words
would indicate
sees the soul first and judges and treats the offering
according to the inward disposition. God does not judge of what you are by what
you say to Him or do for Him
but He judges what you say to Him and do for Him
by what you are.
II. Again
we here
find a very sharp and clear statement of the welcome truth
THAT CONTINUANCE IN
SIN IS NEVER A NECESSITY
that God points the way out of sin
and that from the
first He has been on man¡¦s side and has done all that could be done to keep men
from sinning. Observe how He expostulates with Cain. Take note of the plain
explicit fairness of the words in which He expostulates with him--instance
as
it is
of bow absolutely in the right God always is
and how abundantly He can
justify all His dealings with us. God says as it were to Cain
Come now
and
let us reason together. All God wants of any man is to be reasonable; to look
at the facts of the case. ¡§If thou doest well
shalt thou not (as well as Abel)
be accepted? and if thou doest not well
sin lieth at the door
¡¨ that is
if
thou doest not well
the sin is not Abel¡¦s nor anyone¡¦s but thine own
and
therefore anger at another is not the proper remedy
but anger at yourself
and
repentance. Some of us may be this day or this week in as critical a position
as Cain
having as truly as he the making or marring of our future in our
hands
seeing clearly the right course
and all that is good
humble
penitent
and wise in us urging us to follow that course
but our pride and self-will
holding us back. How often do men thus barter a future of blessing for some
mean gratification of temper or lust or pride; how often by a reckless
almost
listless and indifferent continuance in sin do they let themselves be carried
on to a future as woeful as Cain¡¦s; how often when God expostulates with them
do they make no answer and take no action
as if there were nothing to be
gained by listening to God--as if it were a matter of no importance what future
I go to--as if in the whole eternity that lies in reserve there were nothing
worth making a choice about--nothing about which it is worth my while to rouse
the whole energy of which I am capable
and to make
by God¡¦s grace
the
determination which shall alter my whole future--to choose for myself and
assert myself.
III. The writer to
the Hebrews makes A VERY STRIKING USE OF THIS EVENT. He borrows from it
language in which to magnify the efficacy of Christ¡¦s sacrifice
and affirms
that the blood of Christ speaketh better things
or
as it must rather be
rendered
crieth louder than the blood of Abel. Abel¡¦s blood
we see
cried for
vengeance
for evil things for Cain
called God to make inquisition for blood
and so pled as to secure the banishment of the murderer. The Arabs have a
belief that over the grave of a murdered man his spirit hovers in the form of a
bird that cries ¡§Give me drink
give me drink
¡¨ and only ceases when the blood
of the murderer is shed. Cain¡¦s conscience told him the same thing; there was
no criminal law threatening death to the murderer
but he felt that men would
kill him if they could. He heard the blood of Abel crying from the earth. The
blood of Christ also cries to God
but cries not for vengeance but for pardon.
And as surely as the one cry was heard and answered in very substantial
results; so surely does the other cry call down from heaven its proper and
beneficent effects. (M. Dods
D. D.)
Cain and Abel
I. THE FIRSTBORN
OF EARTH
AND THE FIRSTBORN OF HEAVEN. All is expectation of the promised
Deliverer that shall destroy the serpent; and Eve says
¡§I have gotten a man.¡¨
Nor is God slow to give a prototype of that great redemption
and to set forth
His gospel in earnest and sign
but in far different manner to the
anticipations of man
by Abel¡¦s death. This is the deliverance! this is the
victory! Here is the promise.
II. THEIR
OCCUPATIONS. These were both conditions of life equally acceptable with God.
But the question will occur to us
why it is that through the Scripture there
is something of a sacred character on the shepherd. Perhaps owing in some
degree to the fostering care and gentleness required in such occupation
or the
character of the animal itself; so as to be meet figures of the Good Shepherd
who layeth down His life for the sheep. Such were Abel
Abraham
Jacob
and
David. Or it may be from their connection with sacrifice itself. But when
sacrifices were about to cease
and ¡§the Lamb of God¡¨ appeared
then from the
fishermen were chosen those who should feed the sheep and lambs of Christ¡¦s
flock.
III. THE
INSTITUTION OF SACRIFICE. It must have been
in some manner
originally of God.
That ¡§to obey is better than sacrifice
¡¨ is a Divine law; so that sacrifice
itself would have scarcely been acceptable but as the result of obedience. Add
to which
that death itself being then new
presented its awful character more
strongly that we can now imagine; it was stamped with all its vivid
significancy
and could not have been thus occasioned without a Divine warrant.
Nor does the case of Abel stand alone in this respect; for others afterwards in
succession accepted of God approached Him with sacrifices
as did Noah
and
Abraham
and the patriarchs
without its being mentioned in Holy Writ that it
had been so commanded of God. Bat there is what amounts to something like a
command in the marked acceptance of God. This knowledge of His will is the mode
of access open to the suppliant
which is all that he needs to know. If the
Divine appointment is not expressly recorded
yet instances are mentioned where
God was pleased with such offerings.
IV. THE ACCEPTED
SACRIFICE. What God requires of us is some answer to His own love for us. ¡§My
son
give Me thine heart.¡¨ This is the return which God required of Adam in
paradise; this He renews again
but it must be now through offering and
sacrifice
as expressive of his changed condition. God is no respecter of
persons
but He looks to the heart of the worshipper. The gifts are nothing to
Him
but He prizes the intent of the giver. The heart is the altar that
sanctifies the gift.
V. FAITH IN THE
ATONEMENT. It is not given us to infer that Abel had explicitly this knowledge;
but the question is how far any sense of this hallowing his heart gave efficacy
to that sacrifice. The sacrifice of Christ alone imparted acceptableness to the
animal sacrifices of old. And we may inquire how far any instinctive
apprehension of this was in that faith of Abel by which he was justified. Our
Lord says of Abraham
he ¡§rejoiced to see My day; he saw it and was glad.¡¨ The
same was probably true of Abel
the first of martyrs. And why should not the
secret of the Lord have been in the heart of Abel as it was in that of St.
Peter
when our Lord said unto him
¡§Blessed art thou
for flesh and blood hath
not revealed it unto thee
but My Father which is in Heaven¡¨? not by express
declaration
but by the secret leading of the Spirit. It would be practically
difficult to make a distinction between explicit and implicit acts of this
nature. But the sanctifying of the heart under its secret influence is the
same
and shown in like actions and feelings. Thus the knowledge of God in
Christ became the measure of man¡¦s acceptance; and faith the seal of
forgiveness
although as yet they could not understand that He should die. It
may be that a sense of the Incarnation is not in itself alone the proof of
saving faith; for God appearing as Man was the fond dream of heathen poets; but
that there is no access to God but through His atonement
marks the faith of
the redeemed. And what is much to be noticed--as with Abel in this sacrifice
with Noah in the ark
with Abraham in the offering of his son
with the
children of Israel looking to the brazen serpent in the wilderness--God made
the act of faith to be itself a resemblance of Christ; even it may be beyond
all thought of those that took part in them. So is it with our lives; they are
made of God to set forth great things
which as yet we know not of. ¡§Thou shalt
show us wonderful things in Thy righteousness.¡¨ They have a connection with Christ
crucified more than we can now understand. Seeing what was in the heart of
Abel
God led him on to set it forth on the altar in the slain animal
which
represented ¡§the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world¡¨; and then
prepared him for a yet higher sacrifice
even that of his own life; a martyr to
God
being slain because his ¡§works were righteous
¡¨ whereby ¡§he being dead yet
speaketh.¡¨ Thus is he lifted up before all the world to the end of time as
representing the Great Shepherd of the sheep. (I. Williams
B. D.)
Cain and Abel
I. THE CARNAL AND
SPIRITUAL MIND.
II. THE RELIGION
OF EACH.
III. THEIR LIVES. (A.
Jukes.)
The two offerings
The act mentioned here is evidently not one
but a series of acts
as if it had been said
¡§they were in the habit of bringing.¡¨ Here let us mark
such things as the following:
1. Both worship professedly the same Jehovah.
2. Both worship Him at the same place.
3. Both come at the same appointed times and seasons.
4. Both bring an offering in their hands
thereby acknowledging the
allegiance which was due to Jehovah.
Thus far they are alike. But now the difference begins.
1. Abel comes as a sinner
having no claim upon God
and feeling
that it is only as a sinner that God can deal with him. Cain approaches as a
creature only; not owning sin
though willing to acknowledge the obligations of
creaturehood.
2. Abel comes acknowledging death to he his due; for he brings a
lamb
and slays it before the Lord
as a substitute for himself. Cain
recognizes no sentence of death; he brings only his fruits
as if his grapes or
his figs were all that he deemed God entitled to. His offering might cost him
more toil than his brother¡¦s
but it spoke not of death. It was meant to
repudiate the ideas of sin and death
and salvation by a substitute.
3. Abel comes with the blood in his hand
feeling that he dared not
appear before God without it; that it would not be safe for him to venture
nigh
nor honourable for God to receive him otherwise. Cain brings no
blood--doubtless scorning his brother¡¦s religion as ¡§the religion of the
shambles¡¨; a religion which increased instead of removing creation¡¦s pangs.
4. Abel comes resting on the promise--the promise which revealed and
pledged the rich grace of God. Cain comes as one that needs no promise and no
grace. His is what men call ¡§the religion of nature¡¨; and in that religion
there is no room
no need for these. (H. Bonar
D. D.)
The best offering
A proud king resolved that he would build a cathedral
and
while
most anxious that the credit of it might be all his own
he forbade even from
contributing to its erection
and on it his name was carved as the builder. But
he saw in a dream an angel who came down and erased his name
and a name of a
poor widow appeared in its stead. This was three times repeated
when the
enraged king summoned the woman before him and demanded
¡§What have you been
doing
and why have you broken my commandment?¡¨ The trembling widow replied
¡§I
loved the Lord
and longed to do something for His name
and for the building
up of His church. I was forbidden to touch it in any way; so
in my poverty
I
brought a wisp of hay for the horses that drew the stones.¡¨ And the king saw
that the same God who accepted the offering of Abel and not of Cain regarded
the widow as having done more for the building of the cathedral than he had
done with all his wealth. So he commanded that her name should also be
inscribed upon the tablet.
The Lord had respect unto Abel and to his offering; but unto Cain
and to his offering He had not respect
The two offerings
I.
THE
CAUSE OF CAIN¡¦S REJECTION. His total want of the true spirit of faith. Too
inflated with pride to see and confess himself a grievous sinner. Could not
bring himself to believe the plan God had formed for the salvation of mankind.
Preferred his own kind of offering to that ordained by God.
II. THE CAUSE OF
ABEL¡¦S ACCEPTANCE. Abel believed the word of his God
and presented not a thank
offering alone
but a sin offering. He cast away all idea of
self-justification
and acknowledged the truth of his extreme sinfulness by
nature. He came before God with deep convictions of the need of a crucified
Redeemer
to save him from the wrath to come. Lessons:
1. The great necessity of using only the means appointed in the Word
of God.
2. The value of a right faith.
3. The duty of considering well the motives which lead us to come
before God. (R. Jones
B. A.)
Cain and Abel at their worship
I. THE
RESEMBLANCE BETWEEN CAIN AND ABEL AT THIS TIME IS OUTWARDLY VERY CLOSE.
1. They both worship the same God.
2. They both bring an offering with them.
3. They both desire that themselves and their worship should find
acceptance with God.
II. YET THERE WAS
A VAST DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THEM.
1. They differed in their offerings.
2. They differed in the principle which actuated them.
3. They differed in the reception they and their offerings met with
from God.
III. THE
CONSEQUENCES WHICH FOLLOWED THIS ACT OF WORSHIP.
1. Not sorrow or shame--envy takes possession of Cain¡¦s mind; anger
and hatred soon follow envy; and though God comes and mercifully expostulates
with him
this man
but lately so devout and grateful in appearance before
God¡¦s altar
ends with defying God
lifting up his arm
and becoming his
brother¡¦s murderer.
2. But look now at Abel. He has been humbly and faithfully
worshipping the Lord his God; and what
we may ask
does he get by it? First
hatred
and then a cruel death. Hatred
observe
from a fellow worshipper;
death from a brother¡¦s hand. (C. Bradley
M. A.)
The rejected offering and the accepted sacrifice
I. In attempting
to assign the true reasons why Cain and his offering were rejected
I would
observe
once for all
that that rejection seems to have been attributable
entirely to his UNBELIEF
in presenting the fruits of the ground
instead of an
animal sacrifice.
II. PRACTICAL
INFERENCES. From the rejection of Cain and his offering
it is clear that God
will not be served by just what we choose to give Him. There are some
for
example
who place their trust in what they call the goodness of their heart
and their unimpeachable integrity in all the transactions of life; there are
many also who content themselves with rendering to God the tribute of a
sincere
but imperfect
obedience; there are not a few who rely entirely upon
the infinitude of the Divine mercy
forgetting
at the same time
the
infinitude of the Divine justice; and while several look forward to repentance
as furnishing thereby an adequate price for their absolution
others there are
who make it their boast and their hope that
following the light of revelation
only in subordination to the light of reason
they perform only those actions
which their moral principles can approve of
and they believe only those
doctrines which their understanding can comprehend.
1. Now
while all these are just so many fallacious grounds
upon
which men build their hopes of acceptance with God
they are every one of them
in direct opposition to the only divinely appointed way. They are ¡§the fruits
of the ground
¡¨ if I may so speak
and not the institution of heaven; which
institution most plainly is
that by faith alone in the finished work of the
Redeemer can the sinner expect to be saved. (J. R. Brown
D. D.)
Cain and Abel
I. THE POINTS OF
AGREEMENT TRACEABLE BETWEEN THE TWO BROTHERS.
1. They agree in the fact that they are the descendants of a fallen
and guilty ancestry.
2. Cain and Abel agree
as they are alike placed under a
dispensation of mercy and salvation.
3. They agree also in acknowledging that God had a claim upon them
that He ought to be worshipped
and that stated times ought to be employed for
that purpose.
II. WE NOTICE THE
POINTS OF DIFFERENCE THAT EXISTED BETWEEN THEM.
1. They differed in the method of their approach unto God. Cain¡¦s
offering was eucharistic
Abel¡¦s piacular. The one was a thank offering
the
other sacrificial. It is of importance that we are thankful for providential
blessings; but it is of infinitely greater importance that we form correct
views of God¡¦s method of justifying the ungodly
and cordially acquiesce in His
appointment.
2. They differed in the treatment they met with at the hands of God.
¡§And
the Lord had respect unto Abel and to his offering; but unto Cain and to his
offering He had not respect.¡¨
3. They differed also in the influence by which they were actuated.
¡§Cain was of that wicked one.¡¨ He was led captive by the devil at his will. (R.
Jackson.)
Abel; or
the language of sacrifice
I. THE
COMPREHENSIVENESS AND COMPLETENESS OF THE SCHEME OF OUR SALVATION. Abel
the
leader of the noble army of martyrs
and the first human being that reached
that glory that is to be revealed
was saved through that same atonement
and
through the very same faith in the same atonement
as Abraham
Moses
Isaiah
Paul
Peter
John--as the saint of God who this day winged his triumphant
flight to the mercy seat--as the latest human being that shall ¡§wash his robes
and make them white in the blood of the Lamb.¡¨
II. HOW POWERFUL
AND HOW PRECIOUS IS THE GRACE AND GIFT OF FAITH! Like the philosopher¡¦s stone
like the fabled touch of Midas
it turns into gold all it touches. It is the
instrument of our justification
adoption
sanctification; it transforms the
inner man
and fits him for communing with God on the heavenly Zion!
III. HOW
INDISPENSABLE WAS THE SACRIFICE
THE SHEDDING OF THE BLOOD
THE TAKING OF THE
LIFE! His example is an eminent exhortation. He was dutiful to his parents
and
in all the relationships of life
he was ¡§diligent in business¡¨--the keeper of
sheep--he was ¡§fervent in spirit
serving the Lord
¡¨ not with mere vain and
empty words
but with his substance. Let us ¡§go and do likewise.¡¨ (J. R.
Brown
M. A.)
Abel¡¦s sacrifice
1. First
consider the
offerings of Cain and Abel
and the way in which they were received by the
Almighty. But very different were the feelings with which they brought them.
Cain came with feelings not unlike those of the Pharisee
spoken of by our
blessed Lord
when he went up into the temple to pray
thinking neither of his
hereditary defilement nor of his personal transgressions; whereas Abel gave
evident signs of his deep sense of both
by bringing not only the meat offering
as an acknowledgment to God of his obligations to Him for temporal benefits
but also the firstlings of his flock
as an atoning sacrifice for his sins.
2. I will now
in the second place
make a few observations upon
this Scripture narrative; and
first
I would observe that it is sufficiently
clear
from this passage of Scripture
that not all who worship God are
acceptable worshippers
Natural conscience
which cannot be pacified without
the observance of the outward forms of religion
leads not a few to join in the
public worship of Almighty God
and custom induces still more. ¡§They come unto
God as His people come
and they sit before Him as His people
and they hear
His words; but
¡¨ as the prophet goes on to say
¡§they will not do them; for
with their mouth they show much love
but their heart goeth after their
covetousness¡¨ (Ezekiel 33:31). Now
hence arises an
important duty to all the professing people of God
namely
that of examining
themselves as to the motives which influence them in all their approaches to
the Most High
and in all the services of religion. You are accustomed to pray
to God in public and in private. Is this mere habit? Is it the pacification of
conscience that causes you thus to bow the knee before Him
and to utter words
in which your heart has no part? Or does a sense of your manifold daily wants
bring you to His footstool
and does the tongue give utterance to the feelings
of the heart? The next observation which I would make upon these offerings of
Cain and Abel is
that do we desire to serve God acceptably
we must serve Him
with our best. It is the especial commendation of good Josiah
King of Judah
that he ¡§turned to the Lord with all his heart
and with all his soul
and with
all his might¡¨; and for that he is preferred before all the kings who were
before or came after him. I would observe
lastly
that our persons must be
rendered pleasing unto God
or our offerings will not be accepted by Him. ¡§God
had respect to Abel and to his offering¡¨; first to Abel
and then to his
offering. The reasoning of Manoah¡¦s wife was sound
when she said
in answer to
the fears of her husband
¡§If the Lord were pleased to kill us
He would not
have received a burnt offering and a meat offering at our hands¡¨ Judges 13:23). She infers the acceptance
of the person from the acceptance of the service. It is said
in the Epistle to
the Hebrews (11:4)
that Abel ¡§obtained witness that he was righteous
God
testifying of his gifts.¡¨ Thus we read in the Book of Leviticus (Leviticus 9:24)
¡§And there came a fire
out from before the Lord
and consumed upon the altar the burnt offering and
the fat¡¨; in Ch 7:1
¡§When Solomon had made an end of praying
the fire came
down from heaven and consumed the burnt offering and the sacrifices; and the
glory of the Lord filled the house.¡¨ And the same we know occurred in the case
of the prophet Elijah
when he met the prophets of Baal on Mount Carmel. This
indeed
was the great prerogative of Abel and the Old Testament saint; but
though we have not this
we have what all will allow to be far better
that of
which this was but the figure; for the believer now has assuredly the fire of
God
that is
the Spirit comes down into his heart day by day--not visibly
but
spiritually--and burns up in his heart his sins and corruptions
and lights up
the light of true faith
never to be extinguished.
3. I must now proceed to point out some of the lessons of
instruction derivable from this subject. And
first
we may learn from this
narrative that none can stand before God with acceptance except through the
atoning sacrifice of Christ. It is no uncommon thing to hear people say that if
they diligently follow an honest calling
do no one any harm
and pay everyone
his due
it is sure to be well with them; that is to say
that they will
certainly find acceptance with God at the last
and be received into His
kingdom. Learn
secondly
from this subject
that ¡§the visible Church of God
hath ever been a mixed company
consisting of the evil as well as the good.¡¨
Learn
lastly
from this subject
that a sacrifice has been appointed of God
for the sins of the whole world
and that
through it
all who believe shall
assuredly be saved. (T. Grantham
B. D.)
Cain and Abel
I. CAIN AND ABEL
WORSHIPPING.
1. The time of worship. ¡§In the process of time¡¨; literally
¡§from
the end of days.¡¨
(a) This suggests habits of worship taught by their parents.
(b) Regular periods of worship.
2. Cain¡¦s offering.
3. Abel¡¦s offering.
4. God¡¦s dealings with the worshippers.
(b) Abel¡¦s offering was expressive of both these characteristics of
faith.
(c) Cain¡¦s offering was expressive of his wilful rejection of both.
(d) But without faith it is impossible to please God. Hence the
acceptance of the one and the rejection of the other.
(e) A Divine revelation of the necessity of blood in an acceptable
sacrifice for sin is implied in the Divine acceptance of Abel¡¦s offering
and
that this acceptance was conditioned on his faith.
II. CAIN¡¦S ANGER
AND JEHOVAH¡¦S EXPOSTULATION.
1. Cain¡¦s anger suggests two things:
2. Jehovah¡¦s expostulation.
(3) ABEL MURDERED BY CAIN HIS BROTHER Full of warning to the
evil-doer.
III. 1. The
dreadful crime and its preliminaries.
2. The retribution.
3. God¡¦s reply to the despairing man.
Lessons:
1. All forms of worship
however sincere
are not equally
acceptable.
2. No form of worship is acceptable which does not recognize the
guilt of sin and the need of blood for its expiation.
3. The spiritual effect of the religion of faith and the religion of
reason upon the moral character is exemplified in Cain and Abel.
4. How vain is the sinner¡¦s hope to escape either the eye or the
hand of a just and holy God. (D. C. Hughes
M. A.)
Cain and Abel
I. THE FIRST
RECORDED SACRIFICE. The need of sacrifice felt
and the nature of it revealed.
Without doubt Adam had offered sacrifices in the presence of his children. From
him they learned what to select
and how to offer it
and the sign of
acceptance. Plain from Hebrews 11:4 that both a right feeling
and a right thing are needed to constitute an acceptable sacrifice. The right
sacrifice without faith
or faith without the right sacrifice
would have
failed. The presence of both made the sacrifice of Abel more acceptable than
Cain¡¦s. Cain a daring innovator. He chose what God had not appointed
and
offered it in a wrong spirit.
II. THE FIRST
RECORDED DEATH.
1. A violent death. Death in any form the occasion of deep sorrow.
Such a death most appalling. The more so that it was now unprecedented. A
serious subtraction from the world¡¦s population at that time.
2. Probably unintentional. Cain evidently meditated violence
but
not death. Hence a lesson to us on the consequences of ungoverned rage. What
has passion done since this event!
III. THE FIRST
MURDERER.
1. Could not undo the deed.
2. His dreadful remorse and despair.
3. The criminality of the act may be judged by the curse pronounced.
4. Cain himself felt that
though his life was spared
he must leave
the society of men.
5. At last has a son
Enoch (= dedication). May we not indulge the
hope that this was indicative of his true repentance?
6. Ceased to be a wanderer; built a city
also called Enoch. (J.
C. Gray.)
Cain and Abel
Cain was not without a kind of religiousness
remember. He did go
to the unroofed church sometimes; but he went so unwillingly
so slouchingly
so coldly
that it was no church to him. He begrudged the few roots and fruits
that he took
just as we begrudge the weekly offering
and therefore God let
him take them home
just as we would do if we could get secretly at the box.
God takes nothing from our unwilling hand. He loves a cheerful giver! He will
take two mites
He will take a cup of cold water
He will take a box of
ointment if given gladly; but none of your grudging
none of your dropping a
penny as if it were a half-crown
none of your grunting
none of your
porcupinishness: all must be free
glad
honest
open
and joyous; then the
fire will come down and take back to heaven the gift of your love. Abel was
religious in the right way. He gave the best he had with an open heart
and the
Lord said
¡§Of such is the kingdom of heaven.¡¨ Now
observe
if you please
for
it will help you through your whole life
that brothers are not necessarily
akin. The greatest contrasts I have perhaps ever known have been between
brothers. Yes
and they have been utter strangers to one another
have been
these very brothers. And if you think of it
the thing is reasonable enough:
the human family in all its bearings is one; human nature is not incoherent
but consolidated. We live in flats
and think that one flat has no connection
with another; that is our foolish and ruinous mistake. Your brother may be on
the next continent; your mate heart may be a stranger you have never seen. Cain
and Abel were not akin. Cain did things with his hand; Abel did them with his
heart. Cain flung his gifts at you
and if you did not catch them so much the
more pleased was he; Abel gave them with a hearty love
and was sorry he had
not more to give. So Cain killed Abel
and will kill him to the end of the
world
spite of all preachers and moralists
but now in a cunning enough way to
escape the gaoler and the gibbet. But he will kill him! The man who lost the
prize for which his essay was written will kill the man whose essay was
accepted; he will sneer at him
and a sneer may be murder. The man who lost the
election
being ¡§defeated
not disgraced
¡¨ will kill the man who got in; he
will shrug a shoulder when his name is up
and a shrug may be homicide! You and
I may have killed a good many people
and a good many people may have tried to
kill us; they will take away our trade
they will say unkind things of us
they
will close an eye or pucker a lip villainously
and then dry their mouths as
those who have been drinking in secret. It is very horrible; it smells
sulphurously; hell cannot be far away
and we are not to windward. (J.
Parker
D. D.)
The superiority of Abel¡¦s sacrifice
1. Some have said that the
superiority of Abel¡¦s sacrifice consisted in this: that he brought the best to
God. He brought the ¡§firstlings of his flock
¡¨ while
it is said
Cain did not
bring the best products of the soil
it being simply stated that ¡§Cain brought
of the fruit of the ground
¡¨ making no selection of the best. Abel was careful
out of his flock to select the firstlings
while Cain was careless
and in the
spirit of ¡§anything will do
¡¨ ¡§brought of the fruit of the ground.¡¨ Now
this
looks very much like the invention of an explanation
and is far from
satisfactory
for there is no statement to indicate that Cain did not bring as
superior a production as the ground afforded
and there is nothing either in
the narrative or elsewhere
which shows that the virtue of Abel¡¦s offering
consisted in the fact that he brought ¡§the firstlings of his flock.¡¨ But while
we must reject this as the true explanation
the view here brought before us is
deeply suggestive of important practical lessons. We
doubtless
whether Cain
did or not
frequently fail to offer God our best. The man of business immerses
himself for six whole days out of every seven in exclusively worldly cares
and
then on the Sabbath boasts that he gives to God its sacred hours
whereas
prudential considerations render it advisable
and physical laws determine it
necessary
that he should take one day¡¦s rest in seven. So in reality he gives
to God the time that he cannot spare for the world. In the disposal of wealth
too
we sadly fail to think first of God. Men are prodigal of their wealth in
providing splendid mansions for themselves
and fruitful fortunes for their
families
and only think of giving God what is to spare after these selfish
distributions are made.
2. Others affirm that the difficulty is to be solved by referring it
to the difference of material used in the sacrifices offered. Abel¡¦s was flesh
and Cain¡¦s was fruit. In this view
Cain¡¦s was merely a eucharistic
while
Abel¡¦s was an expiatory sacrifice: the former only a thank offering
the latter
an offering for sin. We have failed to find scriptural support for this
opinion. It seems to us that the advocates of this theory must
to make it
tenable
prove at least three things. First
that there was that in a thank
offering which was necessarily offensive to God. Secondly
it must be shown
that Cain¡¦s employment was a dishonourable one
for if the fruit of the ground
could not be acceptably offered
it must be because to till the ground was an
illegitimate occupation. But this cannot be shown
for it was an employment to
which God had Himself committed man only in the previous chapter
¡§In the sweat
of thy face shalt thou eat bread.¡¨ Thirdly
in order to make it believable that
the bloodshedding of Abel¡¦s sacrifice was the ground of his acceptance
it must
be shown that Abel had been made acquainted with the Divine regulation
¡§Without shedding of blood is no remission
¡¨ whereas there is nothing either
stated or implied to show that he had this knowledge
and it is not likely that
God would accept Abel¡¦s sacrifice on the grounds of which Abel himself could
know nothing.
3. The reason of Cain¡¦s defective and unacceptable sacrifice was to
be found in Cain¡¦s defective and unacceptable character
and the cause of
Abel¡¦s acceptable and pleasing offering was to be found in Abel¡¦s acceptable
and pleasing person. It was his goodness that made his sacrifice ¡§more
excellent¡¨ than Cain¡¦s. This view seems adequate to account for the difference
in Divine estimation
and it only remains to derive arguments in its support
from the sources which are available for the purpose
and which
in their
cumulative character
will be considered sufficiently conclusive. These are
three in number.
4. supplies us with two sorts of evidence.
(a) The terms of the statement which sets forth Abel¡¦s acceptance and
Cain¡¦s rejection
are proof. From these it appears that their persons as well
as their offerings are regarded
nay
that their persons are first regarded.
¡§Unto Abel and to his offering He had respect.¡¨ ¡§Unto Cain and to his offering
He had not respect.¡¨ Obviously Abel¡¦s sacrifice pleased because Abel pleased;
Cain¡¦s offering was unacceptable
because Cain¡¦s person was unacceptable.
(b) The explanation offered to Cain is further proof. ¡§And the Lord
said unto Cain
Why art thou wroth
and why is thy countenance fallen? If thou
doest well
shalt thou not be accepted? and if thou doest not well
sin lieth
at the door.¡¨ Here Cain¡¦s rejection is fully accounted for by God. Had he
like
his brother
been a good man
his offering
like his brother¡¦s
would have been
accepted. ¡§If thou doest well
shalt thou not be accepted?¡¨ What is this but a
declaration that well-doing is the condition of acceptance? ¡§If thou doest not
well
sin lieth at the door.¡¨
(a) The writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews abundantly testifies in
support of the view now presented. ¡§By faith Abel offered unto God a more
excellent sacrifice than Cain
by which he obtained witness that he was
righteous
God testifying of his gifts
and by it he being dead yet speaketh¡¨ Genesis 11:4). The conclusion can be no
other than that Abel¡¦s sacrifice was more excellent
because Abel was himself
more excellent. He was righteous
and in sacrificing obtained witness of his
righteousness. Cain was unrighteous
and therefore by his sacrifice could obtain
no such witness as
on account of the rectitude of his character
was awarded
to his brother.
(b) The testimony of St. John may finally be quoted in confirmation
of the view that the different moral character of the parties was the reason of
the different estimation in which their sacrifices were respectively held. ¡§Not
as Cain
who was of that wicked one
and slew his brother
and wherefore slew
he him? Because his own works were evil
and his brother¡¦s righteous.¡¨ On the
plan adopted in this particular instance
God ever proceeds. He is pleased to
accept the offerings of righteousness: He refuses to recognize the sacrifices
of sin. Let us first realize that rectitude of heart and life
without which
all outward efforts at pleasing will be of no avail. And realizing this
we
shall be prepared to offer our bodies a living sacrifice
holy and acceptable
to God
which is our reasonable service. And this reasonable service of
sacrifice is the old institution Christianized. (W. Brooks.)
One sin leads to another
Sins are like circles formed in the water when a stone is thrown
into it; one produces another. When anger was in Cain¡¦s breast
murder was not
far off. (Eliza Cook.)
The origin of sacrifice
Respecting the origin of sacrifice
it has been made a point by
some to contend strenuously for its being of human device. The argument on
which reliance is chiefly placed by those who advocate this view is that no
mention is made in Scripture of the Divine institution of sacrifice--an
omission which
it is contended
would not have occurred had such been the
case. To this it may be replied
That the whole of this argument rests on an
unsound assumption
viz.
that nothing can be held to be of Divine institution
which is not expressly announced as being so in Scripture. Now to this assumed
premise we can by no means assent. God has in various ways conveyed to us the
intimation of His will in His Word; and whilst in some cases he has explicitly
enacted what He would have us believe and practise
He has in other cases left
us to gather His will by induction and inference from various statements of His
Word. But shall we say that in eases of the latter sort we have less His will
than in cases of the former sort? May not the very fact that an institution is
of such a kind that
if God had not appointed it
it never would have existed
at all
be reason sufficient for omitting all formal announcement of its Divine
origin? It may be remarked
further
that if Scripture nowhere expressly
asserts the Divine origin of sacrifice
it as little asserts the human origin
of it. The question
then
fairly rises before us
Have we any good grounds for
the inference that animal sacrifice is of Divine origin? In reply to this the
following things deserve to be carefully pondered
1. Reason constrains us to exclude all other possible sources of
such a practice. It will occur to you as a safe and guiding principle that no
such universally prevalent usage can be accounted for except on one of two
suppositions: either that it has been dictated by some conviction or necessity
common to all mankind
or that it has been presented by some authority to which
all mankind in common have felt themselves bound to defer.
(a) It has been suggested that sacrifice might have originally been
presented as a gift or present to the Deity
and it has been asked whether it
might not very naturally occur to man to present of his flocks and herds to
God
as a token of acknowledgment of His bounty? To this it may be replied
in
the first place
that this is altogether irrelevant
inasmuch as the question
relates
not to the offering of gifts
but to the slaying of sacrifices
between which there is no sort of analogy
nor any affinity that might lead to
the one growing out of the other; and then
secondly
this is an attempt to
remove one difficulty by suggesting another equally great; for it is just as
far Item probability that a man should
from the reason of the thing
conclude
that the great Being to whom he acknowledged he owed everything would be
pleased by his destroying part of what he had received
by laying it on the
altar as a present
as it is that He would be pleased by its being destroyed as
a sacrifice. It may also be observed that there is reason to doubt whether the
idea of sacrifice is not historically anterior to that of a gift. Gifts can
come into existence
and the idea of them into men¡¦s minds
only when property
is possessed. In the Adamic family there might be differences of occupation
and each might contribute his share to the common fund; but there is no
probability that anything of the nature of property was claimed by any of them
in what he produced. We cannot conceive of Abel appropriating his sheep
and
Cain his fruits
and the one bartering with the other
or bestowing a portion
on the other as a gift. At this early period
then
men could have no
experience of gifts or of their effects on men
and hence could not have the
idea suggested to them from such experience of procuring the Divine favour by a
gift. But as sacrifice already was known and practised
the idea of it must
have preceded the idea of a gift.
(b) Not less valueless is a second suggestion
viz.
that sacrifice
arose out of the idea of a friendly meal shared by the Deity and His
worshippers. For not only is there nothing in the reason of things to suggest
such an idea to the mind
but it seems excluded by the very form in which
sacrifice
in its most ancient as well as most solemn and highest form
was
presented
viz.
in that of a holocaust or whole burnt offering. Where the whole
animal was consumed on the altar
it is obvious that the idea of a partition of
it between the offerer and his God is excluded. Apart from this
however
this
idea seems so little natural that it would be absurd to trace to it the
spontaneous origin of this universal usage. The idea is undoubtedly a true one
and we find it to a certain extent recognized in the Mosaic offerings
where
the priest
in certain cases
as the mediator between God and the offerer
and
who had appeared for the latter
partook of the sacrifice in token of the
reconciliation having been effected between God and the worshipper; but the
idea
though true
is wholly artificial; it is learned by education and from
the sacrificial institute
and can never be regarded as a natural conviction of
reason giving spontaneously birth to that act. It may be added
that it leaves
wholly unexplained the practice of human sacrifices--a practice which prevailed
most in the earliest periods
and extendedthrough nations the most widely
separated from each other; as well as the fact that among some nations the
highest of all sacrifices were of animals which either are or were never used
as food
such as the horse
which among the Brahmanical worshippers is called
the King of Sacrifice
and that some of the most important sacrifices were of
the same kind
as that of the wolf to Mars
the ass to Priapus
and the dog to
Hecate. The considerations are conclusive against the hypothesis that sacrifice
arose out of the idea of a friendly feast between God and the worshipper. When
the oldest
the most sacred
and the most solemn sacrifices were such as were
either wholly consumed or were of animals which never were eaten
it is absurd
to say that the practice could have originated in the idea of a feast.
(c) The only other suggestion worth noticing
which has been offered
an accounting on grounds of natural reason for the practice of sacrifice
is
that of Abraham Sykes
who in an essay on Sacrifice explains sacrifices as
¡§federal rites
¡¨ ¡§implying the entering into friendship with God
or the renewal of that friendship when broken by the violation of former
stipulations¡¨ (p. 59). In accordance with this he suggests that sacrifices had
their origin in the fact that eating and drinking together were common and accredited
modes of contracting covenants or cementing alliances among the ancients (p.
73). This theory of the origin of sacrifice rests on the assumption of the
theory last considered
viz.
that the sacrifice was of the nature of a
friendly meal shared between God and the worshippers
and is consequently
liable to all the objections which may be urged against that. Sykes¡¦s theory is
thus inconsistent with itself. It makes sacrifice at once the procuring cause
of the feast of reconciliation; and it makes the feast of reconciliation the
source and origin of the sacrifice. If there bad been no reconciliation there
would have been no feast; and there would have been no reconciliation had there
been no sacrifice. How was it possible in such circumstances for the feast to
originate the sacrifice--the effect to give birth to the cause? The futility of
these hypotheses shows how untenable is the attempt to find the origin of
sacrifice in the reason of the thing itself. As little can it be sought for in
any natural and universal conviction or felt necessity of the human mind; for
there is nothing in the common natural workings or passions of the mind which
would of itself suggest such a mode of serving and worshipping God. On the
contrary
to the natural reason and heart of man it is rather repugnant than
otherwise.
(a) We cannot assume such an authority to have resided in any
priestly body so as to resolve sacrifices into an invention of priestcraft
because
(b) sacrifices were known and practised long before the priesthood
became a separate profession; they were practised when each individual acted as
his own priest
or when at the utmost each father acted as the priest of his
own household; so that there was no room for the operation of any priestcraft
in the case.
(a) supposing some one priest or body of priests had fallen on this
invention
that will not account for the universality of the practice; it is as
difficult to account for all the priests in the world adopting it as it is to
account for all the people in the world following it.
(b) But if we exclude the supposition of priestcraft
we are shut up
to the supposition of some common father of the race
such as Adam or Noah
by
whom the rite was practised
and from whom it was handed down to all mankind.
But as the rite was practised in the family of Adam
and as Noah himself
derived it from him
we must go back to the very cradle of the human race for
the commencement of this practice. From whom
then
did Adam derive it? Only
from Him from whom Adam derived everything--from God Himself.
2. In support of the conclusion at which we have arrived we may
appeal to the authority of Scripture. It is true that nowhere there is the
origin of sacrifice ascribed to God
but there are certain principles laid down
and certain facts recorded which lead to the conclusion that this rite was not
of human invention
but was one enjoined on man by God. Of these the following
may be mentioned:--
Of the deep hatred some have conceived against their own brethren
Sir Henry Blunt
in his voyage to the Levant
tells us that at
Belgrade
in Hungary
where Danubius and Sava meet
their waters mingle no more
than water and oil; and though they run sixty miles together
yet they no way
incorporate
but the Danube is clear and pure as a well
while the Sava
that
runs along with it
is as troubled as a street channel. After the manner of
these rivers it is with some brethren; though bred up together
and near enough
each other in respect of their bodies
yet their minds have been as distant
from each other as the poles are; which
when opportunity hath served
they
have shewn in the effects of an implacable hatred. On the death of the Emperor
Severus
his two sons
Bassianus and Geta
could not agree about the parting of
the empire
nor did they omit any means whereby they might supplant each other;
they endeavoured to bribe each other¡¦s cooks and butlers to poison their
masters; but when both were too watchful to be thus circumvented
at last
Bassianus grew impatient
and burning with ambition to enjoy the rule alone
he
set upon his brother
gave him a deadly wound
and shed his blood in the lap of
Julia
their mother; and having executed this villainy
threw himself amongst
the soldiers
and told them that he had with difficulty saved his life from the
malice of his brother. Having parted amongst them all that Severus
his father
had been eighteen years heaping up
he was by them confirmed in the empire. (N.
Wanley.)
The man makes the sacrifice
The heathens had a notion that the gods would not accept the
sacrifice of any but those who were like themselves; and therefore none could
be admitted to the sacrifices of Hercules who were dwarfs
and none to those of
merry Bacchus who were sad and pensive. An excellent truth may be drawn from
this folly. He that would please God must be like God. (W. Gurnall.)
The true temper of an accepted offering
The offering of Cain was like a beautiful present
but there was
no sorrow for sin in it--no asking for pardon--and so God would not receive it.
¡§Mother won¡¦t take my book
¡¨ once sobbed out a little boy--holding in his hand
a very beautiful little volume prettily bound
with gilt edges to the leaves.
It was a pretty present
purchased with the pocket money which he had been for
weeks saving for his mother¡¦s birthday; and now she would not have it. But she
did take the needle book and purse which her little daughter presented to her.
Why did she refuse the beautiful gift of her boy? He had been naughty--selfish
passionate
false--and had not at all repented; and so when hebrought his
offering
she put it gently on one side
saying
¡§No
Charlie.¡¨ He turned away
sullenly
muttering that he did not care
and beginning to cherish feelings of
a bad kind towards his sister. But after a while he came to himself--stole into
the room
flung himself on her shoulder
confessed his fault with tears
and
found favour with his mother. By-and-by
she tenderly whispered
¡§You may bring
your present.¡¨ So God acted with Cain
but he would persist in obduracy of
heart. (W. Adamson.)
Unacceptable offerings
Some people are very curious to know what these sacrifices were
and grey-headed commentators
who ought to have known better
have spent no end
of time in trying to gratify their idle curiosity. Some have thought that the
virtue was in the thing taken
as if that could be! No; you must find out what
the heart is
what the motive is
what the will is. ¡§A broken and a contrite
heart
O God
thou wilt not despise.¡¨ It is forever true that God abhors the
sacrifice where not the heart is found. If you want to find out Cain¡¦s
condition of heart you will find it after the service which he pretended to
render; you know a man best out of church; the minister sees the best side of a
man
the lawyer the worst
and the physician the real. If you want to know what
a man¡¦s religious worship is worth
see him out of church. Cain killed his
brother when church was over
and that is the exact measure of Cain¡¦s piety.
And so
when you went home the other day you charged five shillings for a three-shilling
article
and told the buyer it was too cheap: and that is exactly the value of
your psalm singing and sermon hearing. You said you enjoyed the discourse
exceedingly last Thursday; then you filled up the income tax paper falsely: and
you will be judged by the schedule
not by the sentiment. (J. Parker
D. D.)
If thou doest well
shalt
thou not he accepted? and if thou doest not well
sin lieth at the door
Sin lying at the door
The key to the interpretation of these words is to remember that
they describe what happens after and because of wrong-doing. They are all
suspended on
¡§If thou doest not well.¡¨ The word translated here ¡§lieth¡¨ is
employed only to express the crouching of an animal
and frequently of a wild
animal: ¡§Unto thee shall be its desire
and thou shalt rule over it.¡¨ Words
like these were spoken to Eve: ¡§Thy desire shall be to thy husband
and he
shall rule over thee.¡¨ In horrible parody of the wedded union and love
we have
the picture of the sin that was thought of as crouching at the sinner¡¦s door
like a wild beast
now
as it were
wedded to him.
I. THINK OF THE
WILD BEAST WHICH WE TETHER TO OUR DOORS BY OUR WRONG-DOING. Every human deed is
immortal; the transitory evil thought
or word
or act
which seems to fleet by
like a cloud
has a permanent being
and hereafter haunts the life of the doer
as a real presence. This memory has in it everything you ever did. A landscape
may be hidden by mists
but a puff of wind will clear them away
and it will
all be there
visible to the farthest horizon.
II. The next
thought is put into a strong and
to our modern notions
somewhat violent
metaphor--THE HORRIBLE LONGING
AS IT WERE
OF SIN TOWARD THE SINNER: ¡§Unto
thee shall be its desire.¡¨ Our sins act towards us as if they desired to draw
our love to themselves. When once a man has done a wrong thing it has an awful
power of attracting him and making him hunger to do it again. All sin is linked
together in a slimy tangle
like a field of seaweed
so that the man once
caught in its oozy fingers is almost sure to be drowned.
III. THE COMMAND
HERE IS ALSO A PROMISE. ¡§Sin lies at thy door--rule thou over it.¡¨ The text
proclaims only duty
but it has hidden in its very hardness a sweet kernel of
promise. For what God commands God enables us to do. The words do really point
onwards through all the ages to the great fact that Jesus Christ
God¡¦s own
Son
came down from heaven
like an athlete descending into the arena
to fight
with and overcome the grim wild beasts
our passions
and our sins
and to lead
them transformed in the silken leash of His love. (A. Maclaren
D. D.)
Sin
guilt
and retribution
Sin finds in the very constitution of the human mind the enginery
of its own retribution.
I. The very
consciousness of sin is destructive of a sinner¡¦s peace.
II. Sin tends to
develop sin.
III. The
consciousness of guilt is always more or less painfully attended with the
apprehension of its discovery.
IV. A foreboding
of judicial and eternal retribution is incident to sin.
V. From all this
we see the preciousness of the work of Christ. He becomes a reality to us
only
because He is a necessity; He gives Himself to blot out the past. (A.
Phelps.)
God¡¦s expostulation with Cain
I. THAT THOSE WHO
DO WELL CANNOT FAIL TO SECURE DIVINE ACCEPTANCE. What is it to do well? We must
not suffer our judgments to be biased by the opinions of men. To do well
with
some
is to succeed in business. ¡§He is doing very well
¡¨ is a common phrase
applied to a successful tradesman. Jonah thought he did well to be angry even
unto death. To do well
in the sense in which the expression must be understood
here
is--to bring an acceptable sacrifice to the Lord
and to offer it in an
acceptable manner.
II. THAT THOSE WHO
NEGLECT TO DO WELL WILL HAVE TO BLAME THEMSELVES ALONE FOR IT.
1. Those neglect to do well who offer to God no acceptable
sacrifice. Sinners offer to God nothing but insults. Their tongue and their
doings are against the Lord
to provoke the eves of His glory; their souls and
bodies
time and talents
are all desecrated from their original purpose.
2. Those neglect to do well who offer their sacrifices in an
unacceptable manner.
Cain did this in conclusion we observe;
1. God¡¦s expostulation with Cain reminds us of His willingness to
save sinners. Expostulations
containing similar sentiments
may be found
Ezekiel 18:29; Ezekiel 18:31; Hosea 11:8; Matthew 23:37.
2. It also serves as a ground of encouragement for those who have
been doing ill
but wish to do better; If thou doest well
shalt not thou be
accepted? Let not the evil actions of the former part of thy life discourage
thee.
3. It leaves sinners without reasonable excuse. (Sketches of
Sermons.)
The croucher at the door
Cain is here warned that
while he is nursing his angry
jealous
thoughts
sin
like a ravening beast
as crafty as it is cruel
is crouching
outside the door of his heart
only waiting for the door to be opened by any
touch of passion to spring in; and he is admonished to keep the door shut lest he
be overcome of evil. He is warned that the ¡§desire¡¨ of the sin
which looks so
fair and tempting to the eye stained and discoloured by passion
is against
him
that his only safety consists in subduing and ruling over it.
I. THE
COMPARISON.
1. Craft. Sin is subtle
full of wiles and ¡§all deceivableness.¡¨
2. Cruelty
no less than craft
characterizes the croucher at the
door. The most crafty beasts are the most cruel. They crouch that they may
spring
and rend
and tear. And sin is cruel
and fatal in its cruelty. If it
crouch
it is that it may spring; if it spring
it is that it may destroy.
II. THE WARNING.
¡§If thou doest not well
sin is a croucher at the door; and his desire is
against thee
but thou shouldest rule over him.¡¨
1. The warning points out our danger.
2. The warning indicates our safety. ¡§His desire is against thee
but thou shouldest rule over him.¡¨ The croucher cannot be tamed. It must be
caged
starved
slain. But how is this wily foe to be caught? how are the
strength and fierceness of this cruel foe to be subdued? Truly
if we were
called to the task alone
we might well despair. Sin has too firm a hold on us
to be readily dislodged. But our comfort is that we are not called to the task
alone. He who warned Cain that the croucher was at his door
would have helped
Cain to repel him. And He who warns us that sin is our subtle and implacable
antagonist
will help us to detect its wiles and to withstand its assaults. It
only needs that Christ show Himself on our side
and evil will not court
another overthrow. (S. Cox
D. D.)
To those who are angry with their godly friends
Sinners are not all of the laughing sort: Cain¡¦s mind was angry
and his heart was heavy. The short life of the vicious is not always a merry
one. The present does not content them
and they have no future from which to
borrow the light of hope. They have a religion of their own
even as Cain
brought an offering of the fruit of the ground; but it yields them no comfort
for God has no respect to their offering
and therefore they are displeased
about it. They would like to have the enjoyments of religion very much
they
would like to have peace of conscience
they would like to be uplifted beyond
all fear of death
they would like to be as happy as Christian people are; but
they do not want to pay the price
namely
obedience to God by faith in Jesus
Christ. They are in a bitter state of heart
and it is fair to ask each one of
them
¡§Why art thou wroth?¡¨ Alas! they are not angry with themselves
as they
ought to be
but angry with God; and often they are angry with God¡¦s chosen
and envious of them
even as Cain was malicious and vindictive towards Abel.
¡§Why should my neighbour be saved
and not I? Why should my brother rejoice
because he has peace with God
while I cannot get it?¡¨ Now
I want to call
attention to a very gracious fact connected with this text; and that is
that
although Cain was in such a bad temper that he was very wroth
and his
countenance fell
yet God
the infinitely gracious One
came and spoke with
him
and reasoned with him patiently. God gives none up until they fatally
resolve to give themselves up
and even then His good Spirit strives with them
as long as it is possible to do so
consistently with His holiness.
I. I shall take
the last sentence of the text first: ¡§Unto thee shall be his desire
and thou
shalt rule over him.¡¨ In these words God argues with Cain
and answers the
charge of favouritism which was lurking in his mind. He tells him
in effect
that NO DIFFERENCE IS MADE IN THE ARRANGEMENT OF SOCIAL LIFE BECAUSE OF THE
ARRANGEMENTS OF GRACE. Notice that He says to him
¡§Unto thee shall be his
desire
and thou shalt rule over him¡¨--which I understand to mean just this:
¡§Why are you so angry against Abel? It is true that I have accepted his
offering; it is true that he is a righteous man
and you are not; but
for all
that
you are his elder brother
and he looks up to you
his desire is toward
you
and you shall rule over him. He has not acted otherwise than as a younger
brother should act towards an elder brother
but he has admitted your seniority
and priority.¡¨ Observe this
then--that if a man shall be angry with his wife
because she is a Christian
we may well argue with him
Why are you thus
provoked? Is she not a loving and obedient wife to you in all things
except in
this matter touching her God? Is she not all the better for her religion?
1. Now
this is an important thing to note
because first of all it
takes away from governments their excuse for persecution. Christianity does not
come into a nation to break up its arrangements
or to break down its fabric.
All that is good in human society it preserves and establishes. It snaps no
ties of the family; it dislocates no bonds of the body politic. Let all who are
in authority
whether as kings or petty magistrates
beware of wantonly
molesting a people who cause them no trouble
lest they be found in this matter
to be fighting against God.
2. That being so in the broad field of national life
it is just the
same if you bring it down to the little sphere of home. There is no reason why
Cain should be so angry with Abel because God loves him; for the love of God to
Abel does not take away from Cain his right as an elder brother. It does not
teach Abel to refuse to Cain the rights of his position
nor lead him to act
rudely and wrongfully to him. No: Abel¡¦s desire is unto Cain
and Cain rules
over him as his elder brother. Wily
then
should Cain be wroth
and his
countenance fall? I could hope
my angry friend
that God means to give a
greater blessing still to you--that He means to entice you to heaven by showing
your wife the way; or He means to lead you to Christ by that dear child of
yours. I have known parents brought to repentance by the deaths of daughters or
of sons who have died in the faith. I hope you will not have to lose those you
love that you may be brought to Jesus by their dying words. But it may be so:
it may be so. It will be better for you to yield to their gentle example while
yet they are spared to you
than for you to be smitten to the heart by their
sickness and death.
II. Now let us
advance farther into the text. There is no room for being angry
for THOUGH THE
DIFFERENCE LIES FIRST WITH THE GRACE OF GOD
YET IT LIES ALSO WITH THE MAN¡¦S
OWN SELF. ¡§If thou doest well
shalt thou not be accepted? and if thou doest
not well
sin lieth at the door.¡¨
1. First
then
if you are not accepted
and you are angry because
you are not accepted
is there not a just cause for it? If you do not enjoy the
comforts of religion
and you grow envious because you do not
you should cool
your wrathfulness by considering this question--¡§If thou doest well
shalt thou
not be accepted?¡¨ That is to say
will you not be accepted on the same terms as
Abel? You will be accepted in the same way as your brother
your sister
your
child. How is it that the one you envy is full of peace? It is because he has
come to Jesus and confessed his sin
and trusted his Redeemer. If thou doest
this
shalt not thou also be accepted? Has not the Lord said
¡§Him that cometh
to me I will in no wise cast out¡¨? Instead of being angry with another
for
believing and rejoicing
taste for thyself the joys which faith secures. May
infinite grace lead thee to do so now!
2. God¡¦s second word with Cain was
however
¡§If thou doest not
well
sin lieth at the door.¡¨ That is to say
¡§If religion does not yield thee
joy as it does thy brother
what is the reason? Surely sin stops the entrance
as a stone blocking the doorway. If you cannot gain an entrance to mercy
it is
because sin like a huge stone
has been rolled against it
and remains there.
3. I think this word of Divine expostulation bears another meaning.
¡§If thou doest not well
sin lieth at the door.¡¨ That is to say
not only as a
stone to block your way
but as a lion to pounce upon you. It is true that sin
is hindering you from peace
but it is also true that a greater sin is lurking
at the door ready to spring upon you. What a warning this word ought to have
been to Cain! Perhaps at that moment he had not seriously thought of killing
his brother. He was angry
but he was not yet implacable and malicious. But God
said
¡§There is a sin lying at your door that will come upon you to your
destruction.¡¨ May it not be the same with you?
4. But there is yet another meaning which I must bring out here
and
that is one which is held by many critics
though it is questioned by others. I
am content to go with a considerable fallowing
especially of the old divines
who say that the word here used may be rendered
¡§If thou doest ill
a sin
offering lieth at the door.¡¨ And what a sweet meaning this gives us! God
graciously declares to angry Cain
¡§Thou canst bring a sin offering
as Abel
has done
and all will be well. Thou canst present a bleeding sacrifice
typical of the great atonement: a sin offering lies at the door.¡¨ This should
be an encouraging assurance to anyone who is anxious
and at the same time
greatly afraid that pardon is not possible. ¡§Where can I find Christ?¡¨ says
one. He standeth at the door: He waiteth for thee. The offering is not far to
seek. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The personal causes of human misery
I do not understand the same thing by the words misery and
calamity. Calamities may be occasions for sorrow
and they may become
ingredients in misery; but they do not become misery until they have taken a
certain hold upon the whole constitution of the man. Perhaps I might illustrate
this distinction by comparing the character of Cain
referred to in the text
with that of the Apostle Paul. Paul was the subject of numerous afflictions
as
here stated; yet we cannot call him a miserable man. But Cain exclaims in the
bitterness of his soul
¡§My punishment is greater than I can bear.¡¨ His spirit
was broken down under the influence of his circumstances; and we call him
miserable
whilst we only say that the Apostle Paul was afflicted. It is
then
into the causes of this breaking up of the inward peace of a man¡¦s mind in the
condition which God has been pleased to assign him
that we have to inquire.
But before I name the causes
and describe to you their operation severally
permit me to point out one or two conjectures
by which individuals endeavour
to account for their misery
but to which it cannot properly be attributed.
There are several mistakes of this kind. And
in the first place
I do not
think that human misery can be ascribed to the personal organization of a man¡¦s
constitution. For the frame of man is most delicately constructed by a wise and
benevolent hand
devised by One who was capable of contemplating the end from
the beginning of our existence; there is no part in all its original
constitution
which seems to have been formed for the purpose of producing
misery. In the second place
we cannot ascribe the misery that is found in this
world to any order of circumstances connected with an individual¡¦s station in
life. Some people are almost ever ready to attribute their sorrows and miseries
to the position which they occupy. ¡§Raise me
¡¨ they say
¡§to another station in
society
and I shall be happy enough.¡¨ But all experience tells us that men are
commonly as happy in the lower situations of life as in the higher. In point of
fact
happiness and misery are not at all deducible from an individual¡¦s
position in society. Let me add one other remark to this explanation: I do not
think that you can ever trace the misery of this world to any diseases of the
human frame. It is true that disease may become very painful; but yet the man
in disease is not always a miserable man. He may be a dying man
but yet not a
miserable man. That
then
which breaks down the spirit of a man in the midst
of this world¡¦s affairs
must be bred within him. It is not misfortune
but
sin
which
operating in diverse kinds
is like a brood of scorpions nursed
within the breast
which spend their first life in devouring the very heart
that cherished them. Yes
it is to sin cherished within the heart of man
that
you must trace the misery of his present condition. In the first place
observe
what is accomplished by the teaching and guidance of a father. So soon
therefore
as a man has broken away from the governance and guidance of his
Father in heaven
what is the result? What is it that he throws away? The
commandment of God brings down the wisdom of infinity for the direction of human
affairs; and the man throws away infinite wisdom
to prefer in its stead his
own most futile and childish speculations. They are
in fact
vain wishes; and
vain wishes must occupy the mind that has let go the Deity
and ceased to find
its happiness in God. But there is a second cause of sorrow
more bitter
which
operates in conjunction with this; I mean the indulgence of known sins--or
rather the seeking our happiness in known sins. Let me take three examples:
first
avarice; secondly
lust; and in the third place
pride. All these are
sources of misery which are personal
because they exist and operate in the
man¡¦s own mind. Consider
then
the other mode by which men pursue their
happiness; and suffer man to cultivate his pride. And when pride is gratified
perfectly
man becomes a devil. Our great poet has shown this in making it the
sin of the master devil. Avarice
then
makes a man a stone; lust makes him a
beast; and pride makes him a devil; and thus the whole creation of God becomes
blasted by the sinful pursuits of His creature
and misery must be the
inevitable result. Let me add
further
the effect which these sins have in
provoking the Divine anger. Much of the misery which results to men in this
world flows from the effect of their personal guiltiness in the sight of
heaven. In conclusion; if human misery thus flow from ourselves
you can see
that human happiness must be obtained by the cultivation of our own hearts. It
is not in a change of circumstances; it is not in modifying the organization of
your bodies; it is not in passing from earth to heaven
for if you were to take
with you into heaven the vices which you pursue on earth
they would make even
heaven itself a hell. And further
if these views of the personal causes of
human misery be just
you may perceive the extreme kindness of Divine
chastisement
and even of Divine judgment. (C. Stovel.)
Natural and revealed religion
I. NATURAL
RELIGION. This consists in ¡§doing well.¡¨ Look at the principle on which it is
founded. The principle is practical goofiness. This principle is intrinsically
excellent. Man was created to do well. It is to be desired that all men should
act upon this principle. The world would be different if men were to. No need
of police--prison. It is a principle to which none can object. Let us look at
the standard by which it is to be tested. The standard is the moral law of
creation. In order to do well
man must love God with all his heart
etc. There
must be no omission. The act must be perfect. It must be a gem without a flaw.
The motive must be good. The rule must be good. It must be done as God directs.
Look at the reward
¡§Shalt thou not be accepted?¡¨ Such a religion will command
the approval of the Almighty. It will secure immortality for its votaries. Had
Adam continued to do well
he would have continued to live. This
then
is the
religion of nature--is glorious. Have you performed its requirements? Think of
sin--its nature
its effects
its ultimate consequences. How can we escape
them? Ask natural religion. Will she suggest repentance? Will repentance
replace things as they were--reformation? This cannot alter the past. An
offering--man has none to present--the mercy of the Eternal? God is
merciful
but how can He show it to the sinner
in harmony with justice? Nature
has no reply.
II. REVEALED
RELIGION. ¡§A sin offering lieth at thy door.¡¨
1. That revealed religion assumes that men are guilty. If there is
no sin
there can be no need of a sin offering; and if there is a sin offering
it is presumed that there is sin. Men have not done well. They are sinners.
They are liable to punishment.
2. That revealed religion has provided a sin offering. Three kinds
of sacrifices were offered by the Jews: eucharistic--peace offerings--atoning.
The last the most prominent. Type of Calvary. In the sin offering there was a
substitution of person--a substitution of sufferings--the acceptance of the sin
offering was accompanied with Divine evidence. This sacrifice is efficient.
3. That this sin offering reposeth at the door. The atonement of
Christ is accessible to the sinner--it rests with man to avail himself of
it--men neglect it--God exercises great long suffering--sinners cannot go to
hell without trampling on the sacrifice of the Cross--they will be deprived of
exercise if they neglect it. (Homilist.)
Three experiments and three failures
I. The FAMILY
idea won¡¦t keep men right. Cain and Abel were brothers.
II. RELIGIOUS
CEREMONIAL won¡¦t keep men light. Cain and Abel both offered sacrifice.
III. RELIGIOUS
PERSECUTION won¡¦t keep men right. Cain killed his brother
but a voice cried
against him. What will keep men right? The love of God through Jesus Christ. (J.
Parker
D. D.)
The principles of the Divine government
The text declared a great and lasting truth to the mind of Cain
thousands of years back
as it does to each of us this day. It grounds its
appeal upon the immutable principles of right and wrong
and projects its
Divine authority through every generation from the birth of man to the very end
of time. It speaks to the conscience as well as to the judgment of an
intelligent being
and it leaves him to act as a free agent in accordance with
its dictates.
I. In the first
place we notice the EXTREME CONDESCENSION of the Most High in thus
expostulating with Cain
who
it appears from the context
was angered at the
reception of his brother¡¦s offering and the rejection of his own. Then observe
the gentleness of manner with which God is pleased to address Cain. It does not
appear that Cain was startled or overwhelmed with terror at the voice of God.
There were no thunderings
no earthquakes
no supernatural wonders
but all was
gentle and kind on the part of Deity. And it is in this way He continues still
to appeal to the hearts and consciences of His people. The plague and the
pestilence
the famine and the sword
the blight of earthly hopes and the
sadness of the death-chamber
are only the agencies through which He speaks.
The voice of God itself heard within us is yet calm and inviting.
II. THE TEXT IS A
DECLARATION OF THE GREAT PRINCIPLES OF THE DIVINE ADMINISTRATION SIMILAR TO
WHAT IS STATED BY ISAIAH (Isaiah 3:10-11)
and in Ecclesiastes 8:12-13.
III. CONSIDER THAT
THE DECISIONS OF THE FUTURE JUDGMENT WILL BE CONDUCTED IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE
LAWS REFERRED TO.
IV. The great
practical lesson we derive from the text is this: that God
through every
period of man¡¦s existence
down to the very date of our first creation
HAS
EVER DEALT WITH MAN AS A FREE AGENT as a moral and responsible being
endowed
with the power of will
and with faculties which place him above the mere
animal world. This is a great and very important truth
and we commend it
specially to your consideration. According to the unchangeable laws or
principles of moral government
you perceive it is impossible for any man to
commit sin with impunity. True
judgment does not always immediately follow
crime. The seeds of evil are permitted to grow and develop themselves in their
different forms of iniquity
but they are uprooted at last
as the destructive
weed is torn up from the earth and cast into the fire. (W. D. Horwood.)
Sin ready to enter
A young friend was one day calling upon an old Christian woman
nearly eighty years of age
just waiting for the summons. Said this friend
¡§Oh
granny
I wish I was as sure of heaven
and as near it
as you are!¡¨ With
a look of unspeakable emotion
the old woman answered
¡§And do you really think
the devil cannot find his way up an old woman¡¦s garret stair? Oh
if He hadn¡¦t
said
¡¥None shall pluck them out of My hand.¡¦ I would have been away wandering
long ago!¡¨ (Old Testament Anecdotes.)
Cain rose up against Abel his brother and slew him
The first murder
I.
IT
WAS THE MURDER OF ONE BROTHER BY ANOTHER. We should have thought that the
members of this small family could have lived on amicable terms with each
other. We should never have dreamed of murder in their midst. See here:--
1. The power of envy.
2. The ambition of selfishness.
3. The quick development of passion.
II. IT WAS
OCCASIONED BY ENVY IN THE RELIGIOUS DEPARTMENT OF LIFE. Brothers ought to
rejoice in the moral success of each other. Envy in the church is the great
cause of strife. Men envy each other¡¦s talents. They murder each other¡¦s
reputation. They kill many of tender spirit. You can slay your minister by a
look--a word--as well as by a weapon. Such conduct is:--
1. Cruel.
2. Reprehensible.
3. Astonishing.
4. Frequent.
III. THAT IT WAS
AVENGED BY HEAVEN.
1. By a convicting question.
2. By an alarming curse.
3. By a wandering life. (J. S. Exell
M. A.)
The beginning of the fatal operations of sin on human society
I. THE FIRST
RECORDED ACT OF WORSHIP OCCASIONS THE FIRST MURDER. Is not that only too
correct a forecast of the oceans of blood which have been shed in the name of
religion
and a striking proof of the subtle power of sin to corrupt even the
best
and out of it to make the worst? What a lesson against the bitter hatred
which has too often sprung up on so-called religious grounds!
II. SIN HERE
APPEARS AS HAVING POWER TO BAR MEN¡¦S WAY TO GOD. Much ingenuity has been spent
on the question why Abel¡¦s offering was accepted and Cain¡¦s rejected. But the
narrative itself shows in the words of Jehovah
¡§If thou doest well
is there
not acceptance?¡¨ that the reason lay in Cain¡¦s evil deeds (See 1 John 3:12; Hebrews 11:4). Plenty of worship nowadays
is Cain¡¦s worship. Many reputable professing Christians bring just such sacrifices.
The prayers of such never reach higher than the church ceiling.
III. Note in one
word THAT WE HAVE HERE AT THE BEGINNING OF HUMAN HISTORY THE SOLEMN DISTINCTION
WHICH RUNS THROUGH IT ALL. These two
so near in blood
so separate in spirit
head the two classes into which Scripture decisively parts men
especially men
who have heard the gospel.
IV. The solemn
Divine voice reads the lesson of THE POWER OF SIN
WHEN ONCE DONE
OVER THE
SINNER. Like a wild beast
it crouches in ambush at his door
ready to spring
and devour. Or
by another metaphor
it hungers after him with a longing which
is a horrible parody of the wife¡¦s love and desire (comp. Genesis 3:16 with Genesis 4:7). The evil deed once
committed takes shape
as it were
and waits to seize the doer. Remorse
inward
disturbance
and
above all
the fatal inclination to repeat sin till it
becomes a habit
are set forth with terrible force in these grim figures.
What a menagerie of ravenous beasts some of us have at the doors
of our hearts! The eternal duty of resistance is farther taught by the words.
Hope of victory
encouragement to struggle
the assurance that even these
savage beasts may be subdued
and the lion and adder (the hidden and the
glaring evils which wound unseen
and which spring with a roar)
may be
overcome
and led in a silken leash
are given in the command
which is also a
promise
¡§Rule thou over it.¡¨
V. THE DEADLY
FRUIT OF HATE IS TAUGHT US IN THE BRIEF ACCOUNT OF THE ACTUAL MURDER. Notice
the impressive plainness and fewness of the words. ¡§Cain rose up against his
brother
and slew him.¡¨ Observe the emphasis with which ¡§his brother¡¨ is
repeated in the verse and throughout. Observe
also
the vivid light thrown by
the story on the rise and progress of the sin. It begins with envy and
jealousy. Cain was not wroth because his offering was rejected. What did he
care for that? But what angered him was that his brother had what he had not.
So selfishness was at the bottom
and that led on to envy
and that to hatred.
Then comes a pause
in which God speaks remonstrances
as God¡¦s
voice--conscience--does now to us all
between the imagination and the act of
evil. A real or a feigned reconciliation is effected. The brothers go in
apparent harmony to the field. No new provocation appears
but the old
feelings
kept down for a time
come in again with a rush
and the man is swept
away. Hatred left to work means murder.
VI. MARK HOW CLOSE
ON THE HEELS OF SIN GOD¡¦S QUESTION TREADS. How God spoke
we know not.
Doubtless in some fashion suited to the needs of Cain. But He speaks to us as
really as to him
and no sooner is the rush of passion over
and the bad deed
done
than a revulsion comes. What we call conscience asks the question in
stern tones
which make a man¡¦s flesh creep. Our sin is like touching the
electric bells which people sometimes put on their windows to give notice of
thieves. As soon as we step beyond the line of duty we set the alarm going
and
it wakens the sleeping conscience.
VII. CAIN¡¦S DEFIANT
ANSWER TEACHES US HOW A MAN HARDENS HIMSELF AGAINST GOD¡¦S VOICE. It also shows
us how intensely selfish all sin is
and how weakly foolish its excuses are.
VIII. THE STERN
SENTENCE IS NEXT PRONOUNCED. First we have the grand figure of the innocent
blood having a voice which pierces the heavens. That teaches in the most
forcible way the truth that God knows the crimes done by ¡§man¡¦s inhumanity to
man
¡¨ even when the meek sufferers are silent. According to the fine old legend
of the cranes of Ibycus
a bird of the air will carry the matter. It speaks
too
of His tender regard for His saints
whose blood is precious in His sight;
and it teaches that He will surely requite. Then follows the sentence
which
falls into two parts--the curse of bitter
unrequited toil
and the doom of
homeless wandering. The blood which has been poured out on the battlefield
fertilizes the soil; but Abel¡¦s blasted the earth. It was a supernatural
infliction
to teach that bloodshed polluted the earth
and so to shed a
nameless horror over the deed. We see an analogous feeling in the common belief
that places where some foul sin has been committed are cursed. We see a weak
natural correspondence in the devastating effect of war
as expressed in the
old saying that no grass would grow where the Turk had stabled his horses. The
doom of wandering
which would be compulsory by reason of the earth¡¦s
barrenness
is a parable. The murderer is hunted from place to place
as the
Greek fable has it
by the Furies
who suffer him not to rest. Conscience
drives a man ¡§through dry places
seeking rest
and finding none.¡¨ All sin
makes us homeless wanderers. Every sinner is a fugitive and a vagabond. But if
we love God we are still wanderers
indeed
but we are ¡§pilgrims and sojourners
with Thee.¡¨
IX. CAIN¡¦S
REMONSTRANCE COMPLETES THE TRAGIC PICTURE. We see in it despair without
penitence. (A. Maclaren
D. D.)
The first murderer
I. THIS HISTORY
PRESENTS A PICTURE OF THE BASENESS OF SELFISHNESS.
1. Selfishness overlooks the means employed by others to become
great.
2. Destroys the sacredness of natural ties.
3. Considers the virtues of others hostile to itself.
4. Is not scrupulous in injuring the innocent.
II. THE INJURIES
DONE TO THE GOOD ARE NOTICED IN HEAVEN.
III. AN IMPARTIAL
INVESTIGATION WILL BE MADE TOUCHING THESE WRONGS.
1. A righteous Judge sitting on the judgment seat.
2. An opportunity will be offered to the accused to prove his
innocence.
3. Only integrity can stand the investigation.
IV. THE EVIL DOER
IS THE GREATEST SUFFERER IN THE END.
1. No prosperity.
2. No home.
3. No peace. (Homilist.)
Cain the murderer
I. THE HISTORY OF
HIS CRIME.
II. THE INSTRUCTIONS
AND ADMONITIONS WHICH THE HISTORY OF HIS CRIME SUGGESTS.
1. The history affords a melancholy instance of the disappointment
which sometimes follows parental hopes.
2. The history teaches that no professions of religion are
acceptable to God if they be unaccompanied with faith.
3. We learn from the history
the rapid and extensive progress which
sin is capable of making.
4. The history suggests to us the awful criminality which is
connected with the murder of a soul!--the infusion of a deadly poison
or the
infliction of a deadly blow on the character
and happiness
and hopes of an
immortal spirit!--the perdition of a soul by our influence and by our
instrumentality! Oh! this is a solemn thought for the minister
and for the
parent
and for everyone who possesses any degree of influence in society.
¡§Deliver me from blood guiltiness
O God.¡¨
5. You also perceive from the history
that the sinner who is bold
in crime becomes a coward in the presence of punishment. This was strikingly
exemplified in the case of Cain. In the field he was courageous--brave enough
to shed a brother¡¦s blood! But how he fled trembling when the deed was done.
How he endeavoured to persuade Jehovah that he had not been guilty of the
crime. And though his punishment was mild and merciful for such a monster of
iniquity
yet when it is pronounced he faints
and cries
¡§My punishment is
greater than I can bear.¡¨ Nor is there in punishment alone
anything that is
calculated to soften the heart or to reform the character.
6. Again
the history is connected with the gospel truth that ¡§the
blood of sprinkling speaketh better things than the blood of Abel.¡¨ Both of
these are represented in the Scriptures as endowed with speech. The blood of
Abel was not sacrificial; the blood of sprinkling is the propitiation for our
sins. The blood of Abel proclaims the depravity and malevolence of man; the
blood of sprinkling proclaims the purity and the love of God. The blood of Abel
cried for punishment on the murderer; the blood of sprinkling cries for pardon
and salvation. The blood of Abel produced wretchedness and terror in the mind
of Cain; the blood of sprinkling produces joy unspeakable and full of glory.
7. The history teaches that the death of a believer
under whatever
circumstances it occurs
is always safe and happy. Such was the death of Abel.
(J. Alexander.)
The first murderer
Our text presents us with a narrative which happened nearly six
thousand years ago; a period almost bordering upon that golden age of the
world¡¦s infancy
when the bowers of Eden still blossomed as the garden of the
Lord
and when man yet walked in innocence. But already had ¡§the gold become
dim¡¨; and a little space of time had sufficed to change each scene. ¡§Why art
thou wroth? and why is thy countenance fallen?¡¨ It may be useful
too
to make
this also our first inquiry--the cause of Cain¡¦s sorrow. Our second will be
how God sought to remove it.
I. In inquiring
into THE CAUSE OF CAIN¡¦S SORROW
we may be sure that sin was the first cause;
for to that source alone we ourselves may trace our every trouble. Cain
possibly
as we often do
might impute it to what he considered God¡¦s harsh and
unjust treatment of him
in having no respect to his offering; he should
however
have looked further
and considered his sin. Cain¡¦s sin appears to
have been of a three-fold character
and consisted first in this: that
though
he was a sinner both by nature and by practice
yet
as if unconscious that he
was such
he made no acknowledgment of guilt. Scripture everywhere speaks of two
distinct classes of offerings. In the New Testament the apostle calls them
¡§gifts¡¨; where
in speaking of one of the particular duties of priests
he
mentions both kinds of offerings: ¡§For every high priest is ordained to offer
gifts and sacrifices¡¨ (Hebrews 8:3; Hebrews 5:1). In these gifts
or thank
offerings
to have offered blood would have been the grossest abomination; a
sin
however
into which the heathen fell. So David says: ¡§Their drink
offerings of blood will I not offer.¡¨ God
therefore
instituted the ordinance
of sacrifice
typical of that blood which should one day be shed upon the
cross; and therefore it was only when a sacrifice had been first offered
by
way of typical atonement
that then God could delight in the thanksgiving of
the reconciled sinner. Now
Cain brought a thank offering only; clearly
then
he was practically unconscious of his guilty state before God. In this respect
every unconvinced and every self-righteous sinner resembles Cain; born in
Cain¡¦s nature
and alas! still unchanged. If you have never yet felt yourself
to be a lost sinner
and have never yet by faith washed your guilty soul in the
blood of Christ¡¦s sacrifice
which alone can cleanse from sin
then
in that
case
your best offerings
your prayers and your praises
your charities
or
even your sacramental eucharists
are but the offering that Cain brought; and
God can neither respect you nor your offering: He does not accept you. But let
us now go on to observe the next particular in Cain¡¦s sin. It was want of faith
in God¡¦s method of acceptance. It is just in this way that thousands now
who
like Cain
are without faith
argue respecting God¡¦s ordinances
especially
respecting His great ordinance
Christ. Some will satisfy themselves with an
ideal or speculative faith
who nevertheless have never really come to Christ
have never pleaded earnestly the merit of His sacrifice
or sought
as Abel
did
the blood of sprinkling. Others altogether exclude from their religion
faith in Christ as the only means by which they can be accepted of God; and
this they do
not avowedly perhaps
but by a garbled sophistry. Whilst they profess
to hold the fundamental doctrine of justification by faith alone
they so mix
up with it the nonsensical quackeries of some thing of their own fancied
merits
and so-called inherent righteousness
that they weaken it
and fritter
it down into a mere unscriptural idea. We have yet to trace another particular
in Cain¡¦s sin
and one which is the certain result of being in an unconvinced
and unbelieving state--it is disobedience. Unconscious of need
and exercising
no faith in God¡¦s ordinance
he thought to serve God after his own fashion. And
here you have the test by which to try the character of your faith. The true
believer has respect to all God¡¦s commandments
and would not willingly pass by
one
even the most seemingly trifling; for he is aware that
however apparently
unimportant it may be in itself
yet the mere fact of its being a Divine
command invests it with infinite sanction
and with a claim to most unreserved
obedience. The unbeliever
on the other hand
is for serving God according in
his own loose notions of morality
by endeavouring to distinguish between
duties which are essential and duties which are not essential
as well as also
between great sins and little sins.
II. We have seen
that there were three particulars in this sin: in answering our second inquiry
as to how God sought to remove Cain¡¦s sorrow
we shall find THAT THERE WERE
THREE CORRESPONDING PARTICULARS IN THE OFFER OF MERCY WHICH GOD MADE TO HIM.
The first particular in Cain¡¦s sin was that he was unconvinced of his sinfulness
and impenitence: the first step
therefore
in God¡¦s exhibition of mercy
towards him was an endeavour to lead him to true repentance by convincing him
that he was a sinner. God usually seizes the most convenient seasons for the
operations of His mercy. He comes to knock at the sinner¡¦s heart when His
visits might seem to be most welcome; and
if in the sinner¡¦s sorrow there is
any even the most remote semblance of repentance
oh
then a gracious and
loving Father steps forth to meet him. God comes to Cain when in trouble
and
when vexed in spirit with disappointment
and then mildly expostulates with
him: ¡§Why art thou wroth? and why is thy countenance fallen?¡¨ Surely these
questions should have touched him
and reminded him of his sin. Cain sorrowed;
but
alas! it was not after a godly sort: it did not prove to be that ¡§godly
sorrow which worketh repentance unto salvation not to be repented of.¡¨ This is
one reason ¡§wherefore serveth the law¡¨; and the result is blessed
when it
comes with such power to a sinner¡¦s heart as to convince him of sin. Such it
proved to St. Paul (Romans 7:7-11). We have already observed
that the second particular of Cain¡¦s sin was want of faith in God¡¦s appointed
method of acceptance
namely
in the shedding of blood. The second particular
therefore
in the exhibition of God¡¦s mercy was the assurance of pardon and
acceptance through faith in the blood of a sacrifice: ¡§And if thou doest not
well
sin lieth at the door¡¨; that is
¡§If
in consequence of the utter
corruption of your nature
you are unable to make amends to My law already
broken
or in future to fulfil all its spiritual requirements
yet in mercy I
have provided a remedy
the use of which will restore you to My favour. And
now
that I have brought your sin to your knowledge
go to the door of your
tent
and see lying there the goat on which
typically
I am ready to lay all
your sin: take
and offer it for a sin offering¡¨ (Leviticus 4:23-24). In support of this
interpretation
I would first remark that
in the language of Scripture
sin
and its punishment
or atonement
are so intimately connected together
that
the same word of the original (chattath)
represents both ideas; and this word
which in our text has been translated
¡§sin
¡¨ is in other parts of the Old Testament rendered one hundred and
twenty-four times ¡§sin offering.¡¨ We may further add
in support of the
interpretation which we have given
that the literal meaning of the verb
¡§lieth¡¨ is in the original ¡§coucheth
¡¨ and is
moreover
of the masculine
gender; whereas the name ¡§chattath¡¨ is feminine; thus proving that the verb
refers both in its meaning and its gender to the male animal connected with the
idea of the sin offering. From what we have said
then
it will appear that
God¡¦s gracious offer of mercy to Cain consisted in this
that
though he was
unable himself to fulfil God¡¦s requirements
yet a substituted victim which
would be accepted for him was at hand. This
however
was not the only promise
of mercy which God made to Cain. The third particular of Cain¡¦s sin was
disobedience; and
in consequence
he
although the firstborn
forfeited the
blessing of birthright. The third particular
therefore
in the exhibition of
God¡¦s mercy was that
if he would be obedient
he should still enjoy his
forfeited preeminence: ¡§And unto thee shall be his [Abel¡¦s] desire
and thou
shalt rule over him.¡¨ As though God had said
¡§Why should you be angry
and
imagine that I deal harshly or unfairly with you in choosing your brother and
rejecting you? It is true
indeed
that he is My chosen
My elect
and that I
have given him that preeminency which is yours by nature; so that
if he lives
from him shall descend My chosen seed
and of him Messiah shall be born--not of
you. But do not think that this can furnish you with excuse
or that this My
election of him to the rights of the firstborn shall
for one moment
stand in
your way. I now pledge My word to you that
if you will be obedient
and
propitiate My anger by the sacrifice of the sin offering which is near at hand
even at the door--then Abel shall indeed regard you as the eldest born: ¡¥his
desire shall be towards thee¡¦; and thou shalt still enjoy the preeminence
¡¥thou shalt rule over him.¡¦¡¨ To offers so full of mercy the hardened Cain
turned a deaf ear
determining to obtain the preeminence--which
possibly
he
thought rightly belonged to him--in his own way
not God¡¦s way; and
spurning
the victim of God¡¦s choice
which was crouching at his feet
and whose offered
blood
crying for mercy on his behalf
might have saved him
he chose his own
victim
and with a brother¡¦s hand he shed a brother¡¦s blood
blood which cried
for vengeance on the murderer¡¦s head. How short the step from the richest
offers of mercy to a final reprobation! Reject the preaching of the cross
today
and tomorrow you may be sealed in final impenitency. And let the
believer learn from this narrative how to present all his offerings to God.
They must all have reference to the blood of Christ. (C. P. Carey
M. A.)
Envy
Beware of envy; it was one of the first windows that corrupt
nature looked out at; a sin that shed the first blood. Cain¡¦s envy hatched
Abel¡¦s murder. (W. Gurnall.)
The first murder
I. CAIN¡¦S CRIME.
Anger and hatred are the seed of murder. We need to pray always: ¡§Incline our
hearts to keep this law.¡¨
II. CAIN¡¦S
QUESTION. ¡§Am I my brother¡¦s keeper?¡¨
1. Defiance of God.
2. Disregard of humanity.
III. CAIN¡¦S
PUNISHMENT.
1. Fruitless toil.
2. A restless life.
IV. CAIN¡¦S
REMORSE. If we wish to avoid the way of Cain
let us--
1. Subdue angry feelings.
2. Love our neighbour.
3. Confess our sins to God
instead of trying to conceal them.
4. Ask God for pardon
instead of trying to flee from His face. (W.
S. Smith
B. D.)
Unbelief working by wrath
malice
and envy
I. THE LORD DID
NOT ALL AT ONCE FINALLY REJECT CAIN on the contrary
He gave him an opportunity
of finding acceptance still
as Abel had found it. The very intimation of his
rejection
made to him immediately upon the first offence
was a merciful
dealing with Cain
and ought to have been so received by him
and improved for
leading him to humiliation
penitence
and faith. Instead of being humbled
however
he is irritated and provoked. Still
the Lord visits him
and
graciously condescends to plead and expostulate with him. ¡§Why art thou wroth?
and why is thy countenance fallen?¡¨ Wilt thou mend matters by thine angry and
sullen gloom? Nay
there is a more excellent way. Retrace thy steps. Do as Abel
did. And if like him thou doest well
thou canst have no doubt of thine
acceptance. Thy rueful and downcast looks will be elevated into the gladness of
a spirit in which there is no guile. But
on the other hand
beware. If thou
rejectest the only true and effectual remedy--if thou doest not well--think not
that any passionate complaints or moody discontent of thine will avail for thy
relief. Sin--the sin to which by complying with its solicitations thou hast
given the mastery over thee--is not thus to be got rid of. Nay
thou canst not
keep it at a distance
or even at arm¡¦s length. It lieth at thy door; ever
crouching for thee; ever ready to fawn upon thee for further concessions
or to
grasp thee in its fangs of remorse and shame and terror. Cain would not be
subject to the law of God--nor would he submit himself to the righteousness of
God. He thought that he did well to be angry. And as his wrath could not reach
the great Being of whom chiefly he complained
he vented it on his brother
who
was within his reach. Being of the wicked one
he slew his brother.
II. Returning from
the field
CAIN SCRUPLES NOT
APPARENTLY
TO REVISIT THE SANCTUARY--the very
¡§presence of the Lord¡¨; for it is afterwards said that upon receiving his
sentence he went out from thence (Genesis 4:16). He seems to think that he
may calmly meet both his parents and his God. He even assumes an air of defiance.
Thus the infidel regards religion
in the persons of its professors
as
insulting and injurious to himself. He is not its keeper. It is no concern of
his to save its credit or its character; rather he may be justified in putting
it out of his way as best he can.
III. But Cain
though thus far spared
WAS MADE FULLY AND TERRIBLY AWARE OF THE DIVINE
DISPLEASURE. He had hitherto been a tiller of the ground; and the ground
though cursed for man¡¦s sake
yielded a return to his toil. This employment of
a cultivator of the soil seems originally to have possessed a certain
preeminence of rank
and it had this manifest advantage
that it was a
stationary occupation--a settled line of life. It permitted those who engaged
in it to remain quietly resident in their hereditary domains
and to exercise
their hereditary dominion. Above all
it left them in the neighbourhood of the
place where the Lord manifested His presence--the sanctuary--the seat and
centre of the old primeval religion. But Cain was henceforth to be debarred
from the exercise of his original calling; at least on the spot where he had
previously enjoyed his birthright privileges. For not only is the ground cursed
to him--he is ¡§cursed from the earth.¡¨ (R. S. Candlish
D. D.)
The progress of sin
The last chapter described the origin of sin; our narrative
develops its progress. Eve was tempted by an external object of pleasure. Cain
allowed his heart to be impregnated with the poison of jealousy; the mother was
disobedient in the hope of obtaining a high intellectual boon
the son sinned
merely to destroy the happiness of another without thereby increasing his own;
the former brought death into the world
the latter murder. The sin of Eve
marked the period when the innocence of childhood is endangered by the
consciousness of good and evil
and when the first act of free will is also the
first error; the deed of Cain describes the more advanced epoch of manhood when
the strife and struggle with practical life is hottest; when the heart is
assailed by numberless perils and collisions; when ambition excites the
imagination; and the welfare of competition taxes and stimulates all the
energies of man. The first sin was against God; the second both against God and
a brother. But the source of either was the covetous desire of the heart. The
Bible reminds man
incessantly
that within himself is the spring of life and
death. (M. M.Kalisch
Ph. D.)
Murder of a brother
Sir George Sands
a gentleman living in Kent
had two sons
grown
up to that age wherein he might have expected most comfort from them; but in
the year 1655
the younger of them
without any apparent provocation
did in a
most inhuman manner murder his brother
as he lay sleeping by him in bed;
first
he beat out his brains with a hatchet
and then
observing his poor
victim to be still lingering in life
he stabbed him seven or eight times in
and about the heart; after which
he went to his aged father and told him of
it
glorying in his in human and dastardly deed. (N. Wanley.)
Am I my brother¡¦s keeper?
Exaggerated individualism
The feeling of our sonship to God in Christ is a topic which
requires to be constantly dwelt upon
because our conventional acceptance of
such a relationship is apt to be compatible with a life which has no real
apprehension of it.
I. Of the dangers
which are partly rooted in our animal nature and partly fostered and
intensified by the drift of our time
the one likely to press most heavily on
us is that of exaggerated Individualism. Where this is not tempered by an
infusion of the religious spirit
we find it working with a disintegrating
power
and in various ways vitiating both our personal and social life.
II. Almost every
advance of civilization which distinguishes our century has tended to give this
principle some new hold on the common life. There is no corner of society
commercial or social
political or artistic
which it does not invade. The
volume of its force is intensified as wealth increases and easy circumstances
become more common. Our time is preeminently a time of materialistic egoism.
III. The
evolutionist
telling us of the growth of all our sentiments
taking us back to
germinal forms and then leading us upward through struggle and survival
makes
the ruling motive in every early life essentially egoistic. The question
arises
Where and how is this motive to change its character? Is this last
utterance to be still but an echo of the primeval question
¡§Am I my brother¡¦s
keeper?¡¨
IV. But we cannot
rest in this conclusion. There is no possibility of rest until we have settled
it with ourselves that our higher consciousness gives us touch of the reality
of the Divine and everlasting
when it declares that we are the children of
God
and if children
then heirs
joint heirs with Christ. This we believe to
be the last word for us on the mystery of our being and destiny. (J.
Percival.)
Brotherhood
The first time the relationship of brotherhood is brought before
us in Scripture does not present it in the most harmonious or endearing aspect
and yet the very rivalry and resentment which were engendered by it give an
incidental sign of the closeness of the tie which it involves.
I. The brother
tie is one whose visible and apparent closeness of necessity diminishes under
the common conditions of life.
II. Although it is
a link whose visible association vanishes
it ought never to be an association
which fades out of the heart. There is always something wrong when a relationship
like this disappears behind maturer attachments.
III. Whether from
the hearth of home or from the wider range of brotherhood which the
commonwealth supplies
the pattern and inspiration of true brotherhood is found
in Christ
the Elder Brother of us all. (A. Mursell.)
The gospel of selfishness
¡§Am I my brother¡¦s keeper?¡¨ This is the very gospel of
selfishness
and a murderer is its first preacher. The gospel of selfishness
is
that a man must take care of his own interests; and out of that universal self-seeking
provided it be wise and restrained
will come the well-being of all.
I. This is an age
of rights rather than of duties. It is very notable that there is almost
nothing about rights in the teaching of Christ. The Lord seeks to train the
spirit of His followers into doing and suffering aright. By preaching love and
duty
the gospel has been the lawgiver of nations
the friend of man
the
champion of his rights. Its teaching has been of God
of duty
and of love; and
wherever these ideas have come
freedom and earthly happiness and cultivation
have followed silently behind.
II. Our age needs
to be reminded that in one sense each of us has the keeping of his brethren
confided to him
and that love is the law and the fulfilling of the law. The
rights of men to our love and consideration
rest upon an act of Divine love.
Their chartered right to our reverence is in these terms: That God loved them
and sent His Son to be the propitiation for their sins; and the Saviour set to
it His seal
and signed it with His blood. (Archbishop Thomson.)
Cain and Abel
I. LET EVERY
CHRISTIAN FULLY AND WILLINGLY RECOGNIZE THE FACT THAT HE IS HIS BROTHER¡¦S
KEEPER. There is an old French proverb to the effect that ¡§nobility has its
obligations
¡¨ the neglect to remember and act upon which resulted in the rapine
and blood of the French Revolution. Position has its special responsibilities
which can not safely be disregarded
and when one is fully convinced of the
fact that he is ¡§his brother¡¦s keeper
¡¨ he will be anxious to meet the
liabilities of the situation. And a right-minded person will not merely accept
the fact under compulsion. He will be glad that things are as they are. What
wide ranges of usefulness are open before him. What an opportunity he has to
impress himself for good upon multitudes around him
and even upon times
remote. And that empire of gracious influence is the lordliest and most
satisfying of all sovereignties. How the world loves to keep alive the names of
single men who have made their personality felt in helpful directions. Scores
of Union generals deserved well of their country
but Sheridan
riding ¡§from
Winchester twenty miles away
¡¨ and turning disaster into victory by the simple
power of his presence
receives the applause of thousands who have forgotten
the names of equally loyal leaders. It is a great thing to have an efficient
part in determining the destiny of others
to have control of the rudder that
may steer them away from dangerous coasts and out into wide seas of prosperity.
II. EVERY
CHRISTIAN OUGHT TO MAKE THE DISCHARGE OF HIS DUTY AS HIS BROTHER¡¦S KEEPER A
MATTER OF CONSTANT THOUGHT AND PRAYER. It is not enough merely to accept our
responsibility as an article of creed
and then lay it away on the shelf as a
matter proved and concluded. How will this thing
if I do it
or leave it
undone
affect others? is a question that ought to be asked and answered all
the time. And especially ought we to take counsel of God
not as to how little
we can consistently d
but as to how much we can possibly do in this
direction.
III. IN MATTERS OF
DOUBT
A CHRISTIAN SHOULD LEAN TO THE SAFE SIDE. It was a rule of President
Edwards never to do anything about whose influence he had a question unless he
was equally in doubt as to whether the not doing it might not have as bad
or a
worse
effect. That is a hard rule to follow
but it is certainly a safe one.
Men will never be turned away from God and religion because we deny ourselves
what seem to us legitimate pleasures for fear of the evil influence we may
exert. That very sacrifice will evidence a genuineness and depth of conviction
which is the strongest of all arguments to the truth and worth of religion. (E.
S.Atwood
D. D.)
Earthly relationship the medium of spiritual influence
I. THAT EARTHLY RELATIONSHIPS
INVOLVE THE DUTY OF SPIRITUAL CARE. Relation
taken in its widest sense
if not
the ground of all moral obligation
is certainly intimately connected
therewith. No man can be a parent
a son
or a master
without being specially
bound to care for his own. Men have to provide for their households in earthly
things
and ought to in spiritual. In proportion to the closeness of the
relationship is the force of the obligation.
II. THAT EARTHLY
RELATIONSHIPS AFFORD PECULIAR OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE DISCHARGE OF THIS DUTY. God
has constituted the varied relationships of life for purpose of promoting the
moral good of man. Opportunity and power should be voluntarily used. Families
have little thought of the opportunity they have of bringing each other to Jesus.
III. THAT ACCORDING
AS THE SPIRIT OF CHRIST OR OF SELFISHNESS IS POSSESSED
WILL THIS DUTY BE
FULFILLED OR NEGLECTED. Sin
whose essence is selfishness
is a severing
principle. But Christ¡¦s spirit is a spirit of love. We must come to Christ
ourselves to get the incentive to this duty.
IV. THAT
CONCERNING THE PERFORMANCE OF THIS DUTY AN ACCOUNT WILL BE REQUIRED. And the
Lord said unto Cain
etc. Vain will be excuse. God will speak. So will
conscience.
V. THAT EARTHLY
RELATIONSHIPS
ACCORDING TO THE MANNER IN WHICH THEY ARE USED
BECOME AN
ETERNAL BLESSING OR BANE. (Homilist.)
The word of Cain
All men
the poor
the ignorant
the fallen
the heathen
are our
brethren. Such is the Christian notion of humanity. We are
therefore
the
keepers of our brethren. Man is two fold; he has a body and a soul. Thence for
us a two-fold mission: we are called to alleviate the miseries of the body
and
to save souls. Jesus Christ has been brought into contact with both these forms
of suffering. Let us examine His conduct in reference to them.
I. THE SUFFERINGS
OF THE BODY. Christ has come into contact with them under their two most common
forms--sickness and poverty. What He has done for their victims all the gospel
tells. We see Him ever surrounded by the poor and the sick. He has a partiality
for their society. With what tender solicitude He treats them! And mark the
results of this sublime teaching. The faithful Church has always regarded the
poor as the representatives of Christ.
II. That is what
Christianity has done towards alleviating the miseries of the body; but that is
only a part of its mission. ABOVE THE BODY THERE IS THE SOUL. The soul is man
eternal. If we must sympathize with the temporal interests of our fellow men
what shall it be when their souls are in question? But if I have understood
what is my soul
if I have felt that it constitutes my dignity
my greatness
and my true life
then will I endeavour to awaken that life in others.
III. THIS MISSION
HOW DO WE FULFIL IT? What
in the first place
shall we say of those who do not
fulfil it at all? There are people who believe they are saved and who have
never loved. If selfishness has never prompted you to utter the words of the
text
have you never uttered them from discouragement? There are times when the
thought of all that ought to be done pursues and paralyses us. Let us therefore
learn of Christ. But I hear your final objection: Yes
say you
we are ready to
work
but on condition that our labour shall produce some results. And then
follows the sad story of those vain efforts
of those humiliating failures
of
those discouragements which every Christian knows and might in his turn
recount. To all these objections let me again reply
¡§Look to Jesus!¡¨ Did He
succeed on earth? (E. Bersier
D. D.)
My brother¡¦s keeper
I. THAT GOD DOES
HOLD MAN RESPONSIBLE FOR THE SAFETY AND WELFARE OF HIS FELLOW MEN.
1. For their temporal welfare.
2. For their moral condition.
3. For their religious well-being.
II. THAT THE
WELL-DISPOSED ACKNOWLEDGE THEIR RESPONSIBILITY AND ACT UPON IT.
1. By attending to their bodily condition. Hospitals
almshouses
refuges
etc.
2. By caring for their souls. (Homilist.)
The claims of a perishing world upon Christian zeal and liberality
founded in human fraternity
I. THAT THE WHOLE
HUMAN RACE ARE ONE FAMILY AND STAND IN RELATION OF BRETHREN TO EACH OTHER. To
prove this
it is necessary only to remark two things--
1. God has made us all of one blood.
2. We have all proceeded from the same pair.
II. THAT IT IS OUR
DUTY TO CARE FOR OUR BRETHREN.
1. The law of consanguinity requires it. This law dictates affection
and sympathy.
2. The law of God requires it. ¡§Thou shalt love thy neighbour as
thyself.¡¨
3. Our common Christianity requires it. It enjoins love to God; but
we cannot love God without loving our brother also (1 John 4:20). It enjoins an
imitation of the example of Christ; but Christ so loved the world as to die for
it. It enjoins obedience to Christ; but He commands His gospel to be preached
in all the world.
III. THAT THOSE
EVILS WHICH BEFALL OUR BRETHREN THROUGH OUR INATTENTION ARE CHARGEABLE UPON US.
To illustrate this let me suppose a few cases.
1. That any of your brethren were compelled to perform a long and
dangerous voyage
and that they were total strangers to navigation
and without
a single chart or compass; and suppose that you abounded in charts and
compasses
and in skilful navigators; and that you refused to grant them either
the one or the other; and suppose these should all perish
to whom would their
loss be ascribed? To you. Or suppose--
2. That they were compelled to journey through a land of pits and
precipices
abounding in beasts of prey; and that they were ignorant of the path
to be pursued
and knew not where the pits and precipices were
and had nothing
by which they could defend themselves from the beasts; and suppose you had it
in your power to furnish them with a guide and a sufficient defence
but did
not
and that they should in consequence perish; their blood would be upon your
head. Or suppose--
3. That they were dying of disease
without the knowledge of any
remedy; and suppose you were in possession of an infallible one
and that you
withheld it; their death would be at your door. In each case the consequences
would be as fatal as if you had by some positive act
as that of Cain
destroyed them.
IV. THAT WE HAVE
BEEN SINFULLY INATTENTIVE TO THE ETERNAL INTERESTS OF OUR BRETHREN GENERALLY
AND TO THOSE OF THE HEATHEN PART OF THEM IN PARTICULAR. (Sketches of
Sermons.)
God¡¦s question and man¡¦s answer
I. GOD¡¦S
QUESTION--¡§Where is Abel thy brother?¡¨ Has God a right to expect this knowledge
at our hands? He has; and that on many accounts.
1. For instance
there is the constitution of our nature. When man
was created
the whole race were involved in one parent
they all sprang from
one root; so that there was provision made for forming a family
and for
brotherly feeling among them. God
therefore
reasonably expects that we should
all feel a kindly interest and concern in one another¡¦s welfare.
2. We might argue the same from the covenant in which we were all
wrapped up
to stand or fall together; from the law
which requires us to love
our neighbour; and
above all
from the gospel. Has the great God loved me
pitied me
been patient with me
and at a great
unspeakable cost saved me; and
shall I not be ready to deny myself and make sacrifices
in order to save and
bless my fellow men?
II. MAN¡¦S
ANSWER--¡§I know not; am I my brother¡¦s keeper?¡¨ Here is a two-fold plea--the
first
ignorance; the second
an insinuation that God has no right to expect
such knowledge at his hand.
1. Cain excused himself on the ground of ignorance. This is either
true or false.
2. Cain denies that God has a right to expect that he should take
trouble about Abel. ¡§Am I my brother¡¦s keeper? Have I anything to do with him
any charge of him? Can he not take care of himself?¡¨ Is not this the feeling in
many hearts? You say
Am I that poor wretch¡¦s keeper? What have I to do with
him? He has no claim upon me. I have other work to do
other interests to
attend to. But look again
Is he thy brother; and has he no claim upon thee? (J.
Milne.)
The examination of Cain
The world was yet young
and there were no judicatories to take
cognizance of offences; therefore did God
who
though His creatures had
rebelled against Him
still hold in His hands the government of the world
come
forth from His solitude
and make ¡§inquisition for blood.¡¨ But why--omniscient
as God was
and
by His own after statement
thoroughly cognizant of the guilt
of Cain--why did He address the murderer with the question
¡§Where is Abel thy
brother?¡¨ in place of taxing him at once with the atrocious commission?
Assuredly there could have been no need to God of additional information: it
was in no sense the same as at a human tribunal
where questions are put that
facts may be elicited. And in following this course
God acted as He had done
on the only former occasion when He had sat
as it were
in judgment on human
offenders (see Genesis 3:9; Genesis 3:11; Genesis 3:13). But the method of question
is again employed
so soon as there is again a human offender to be tried. ¡§The
Lord said unto Cain
Where is Abel thy brother?¡¨ It can hardly be doubted that
in all these instances
the gracious design of God was to afford the criminals
opportunity of confessing their crimes. You must be aware how
throughout
Scripture
there is attached the greatest importance to confession of sin
so
that its being forgiven is spoken of as though it depended upon nothing but its
being acknowledged. ¡§If we confess our sins
¡¨ says the evangelist
¡§God is
faithful and just to forgive us our sins
and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness.¡¨ And did the crime
then
of Cain come within the range of forgiveness?
Supposing it to have been confessed
might it also have been pardoned? The
crime had been fearful; and we must believe that
in any case
the moral
Governor of the universe would have so treated the criminal as to mark His
sense of the atrociousness of that which he had done. But there is no room for
doubt that there was forgiveness even for Cain; even then there was blood which
spake better things than that of Abel
the blood of Him who
on the cross
besought pardon for His murderers
and who
in thus showing that His death made
expiation even for its authors
showed also that there was no human sin which
its virtue would not reach. But if Cain might have been pardoned
had he been
but penitent
where was the contrite sinner who need despair of the forgiveness
of his sins? Ay
it is thus that the questions under review might have served
as a revelation
during the infancy of the world
of the readiness of the
Almighty to blot out our iniquities as a cloud
and as a thick cloud our sins.
But let us now observe the manner in which Cain acted
whilst God was thus
graciously endeavouring to lead him to repentance. If we had not abundant
evidence
in our own day--yea
in our own cases--of the hardening power of sin
we might wonder at the effrontery which the murderer displayed. Did he
could
he
think that denial would avail anything with God
so that
if he did not
confess
he might keep his crime undetected? It may be that it was not in mere
insolence that Cain affirmed to God that he knew nothing of Abel; he may have
been so blinded by his sin as to lose all discernment of the necessary
attributes of God
so that he actually imagined that not to confess would be
almost to conceal. Under this point of view
his instance ought to serve as a
warning to us of the deadening power of wrong-doing
informing us that there is
no such ready way of benumbing the understanding
or paralysing the reason
as
the indulging passion
and withstanding conscience. But Cain did more than
assert ignorance of what had happened to Abel: he taxed God with the
unreasonableness of proposing the question
as though it were a strange thing
to suppose that he might concern himself with his brother. ¡§Am I my brother¡¦s
keeper?¡¨ There were then no brothers in the world but Cain and Abel; and he who
could insolently ask
¡§Am I my brother¡¦s keeper?¡¨ when that brother was
missing
might have been convicted
by those very words
of a fierceness which
was equal to murder
and an audacity which would deny it even to God. But we
wish to dwell for a moment on this question of Cain as virtually containing the
excuse which numbers in our own day would give
were God to come visibly down
and make inquisition for blood. But we have how to consider to what God
appealed in the absence of confession from the murderer himself: He had striven
to induce Cain to acknowledge his guilt; but
failing in this
He must seek
elsewhere for evidence on which to convict him. And where did He find this
evidence? He made the inanimate creation rise up
as it were
against the
assassin
and dumb things became eloquent in demanding his condemnation. ¡§The
voice of thy brother¡¦s blood crieth unto Me from the ground.¡¨ Who has not read
who has not heard
how murderers
though they have succeeded in hiding their
guilt from their fellow men
have seemed to themselves surrounded with
witnesses and avengers
so that the sound of their own foot tread has startled
them as if it had been the piercing cry of an accuser
and the rustling of
every tree
and the murmur of every brook
has sounded like the utterance of
one clamorous for their punishment? It has been as nothing that they have
screened themselves from those around them
and are yet moving in society with
no suspicion attaching to them of their having done so foul a thing as murder.
They have felt as though
in the absence of all accusation from beings of their
own race
they had arrayed against themselves the whole visible creation
sun
and moon and stars and forests and waters growing vocal that they might publish
their crime. And I know not whether there may be anything more in this than the
mere goading and imaging of conscience; whether the disquieted assassin
to
whose troubled eye the form of his victim is given back from every mirror in
the universe
and on whose ear there falls no sound which does not come like
the dying man¡¦s shriek
or the thundering call of the avenger of blood--whether
he is simply to be considered as haunted and hunted by his own evil thoughts
or whether he be indeed subjected to some mysterious and terrible influences
with which his crime has impregnated and endowed the whole material system. I
cannot help feeling
when I consider the language of our text
as though there
might be more than the mere phantasms of a diseased and distracted mind in
those forms of fear
and these sounds of wrath
which agitate so tremendously
the yet undiscovered murderer. It may be that
fashioned as man is out of the
dust of the earth
there are such links between him and the material creation
that
when the citadel of his life is rudely invaded
the murderous blow is
felt throughout the vast realm of nature; so that
though there be no truth in
the wild legend that
if the assassin enter the chamber where the victim is
stretched
the gaping wounds will bleed afresh
yet may earth
sea
air
have
sympathy with the dead
and form themselves into furies to hunt down his
destroyer. But it is not exclusively
nor even chiefly
as indicating a
possible
though inexplicable. Sympathy between material things and the victim
of the murderer
that we reckon the statement before us deserving of being
carefully pondered. Setting aside this sympathy
there is much that is very
memorable in the appeal of God to a voice from Abel¡¦s blood
when there were
other witnesses which might have been produced. Had not the soul of Abel
entered the separate state? was not his spirit with God? and might not the
immortal principle
violently detached as it had been from the body
have cried
for vengeance on the murderer? We read in the Book of Revelation of ¡§the souls
of them that were slain for the Word of God
and for the testimony which they
held.¡¨ And of those souls we are told that ¡§they cried with a loud voice
saying
How long
O Lord
holy and true
dost Thou not judge and avenge our blood
on them that dwell on the earth?¡¨ It may
therefore
be that the souls of the
dead cry for judgment upon those who have compassed their death: why
then
might not the soul of Abel
rather than his blood
have been adduced by God?
Even had it been silent
surely its very presence in the invisible world gave a
more impressive testimony than the stream which had crimsoned the ground. In
answer to this
we are to consider
in the first place
that it did not please
God to vouchsafe any clear revelation of the invisible state
during the
earlier ages of the world. That Abel had fallen by the hand of his brother was
the most terrible of all possible proofs that the original transgression had
corrupted human nature to the core. But it would have done much--not indeed to
counterbalance this proof
but to soften the anguish which it could not fail to
produce--had there been any intimation that the death of the body was not the
death of the man
and that Cain had but removed Abel from a scene of trouble to
one of deep repose. This
however
was denied them: they must struggle on
through darkness
sustained only by a dim conjecture of life and immortality.
Indeed
indeed
I know not whether there be anything more affecting in the
history of our first parents. Oh
bless God
ye who have had to sorrow over
dead children
that ye live when life and immortality have been brought to
light by the gospel. Yours has not been the deep and desolate bitterness of
those on whom fell no shinings from futurity. Unto you have come sweet
whisperings from the invisible world
whisperings as of the one whom you loved
telling you of a better land
where ¡§the wicked cease from troubling
and the
weary are at rest.¡¨ But alas for Adam and Eve! theirs was grief
stern
dark
unmingled. But
indeed
there are better things to be said on the fact that it
was Abel¡¦s blood
and not his soul
which found a voice to demand vengeance on
the murderer. We know not how Abel
the first martyr
died. Oh
I cannot but
think that in God¡¦s reference to the blood of Abel as the only accuser there
was a designed and beautiful lesson as to the forgiveness of injuries. You know
that
in the gospel
our obtaining forgiveness from God is made conditional on
our forgiving those by whom we may be wronged. ¡§For if ye forgive men their
trespasses
your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if ye forgive not
men their trespasses
neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.¡¨ And
was not the same truth taught
by example
if not by word
from the earliest days
seeing that
when God would bring an accusing voice against Cain
He could only
find it in the dumb earth reeking with blood
though the soul of Abel was
before Him
and might have been thought ready to give witness with an exceeding
great and bitter cry? Abel forgave his murderer
otherwise could he not have
been forgiven of God; and we learn that he forgave his murderer from the fact
that it was only his blood which cried aloud for vengeance. Thus is there
something very instructive in the absence of any voice but the voice from the
ground. There is also matter for deep thought in the fact that it was blood
which sent up so penetrating a cry. It was like telling the young world of the
power which there would be in blood to gain audience of the Most High. What was
there in blood that it could give
as it were
life to inanimate things
causing them to become vocal
so that the very Godhead Himself was moved by the
sound? The utterance
we think
did but predict that when one
to whom Abel had
had respect in presenting in sacrifice the firstlings of his flock
should
tall
as Abel fell
beneath the malice of the wicked
there would go up item
the shed blood a voice that would be hearkened to in the heavenly courts
and
prevail to the obtaining whatsoever it should ask. Blessed be God that this
blood does not plead for vengeance alone. It does plead for vengeance on the
obdurate
who
like Cain
resist the invitation of God; but it pleads also for
pardon of the murderers
so that it can expiate the crime which it proves and
attests. (H. Melvill
B. D.)
Am I my brother¡¦s keeper?
The cool impudence of Cain is an indication of the state of heart
which led up to his murdering his brother; and it was also a part of the result
of his having committed that terrible crime. He would not have proceeded to the
cruel deed of bloodshed if he had not first cast off the fear of God and been
ready to defy his Maker. Having committed murder
the hardening influence of
sin upon Cain¡¦s mind must have been intense
and so at last he was able to
speak out to God¡¦s face what he felt within his heart
and to say
¡§Am I my
brother¡¦s keeper?¡¨ This goes a long way to explain what has puzzled some
persons
namely
the wonderful calmness with which great criminals will appear
in the dock. I remember to have heard it said of one who had undoubtedly
committed a very foul murder
that he looked like an innocent man. He stood up
before his accusers as calmly and quietly
they said
as an innocent man could
do. I remember feeling at the time that an innocent man would probably not have
been calm. The distress of mind occasioned to an innocent man by being under
such a charge would have prevented his having the coolness which was displayed
by the guilty individual. Instead of its being any evidence of innocence that a
man wears a brazen front when charged with a great crime
it should by wise men
be considered to be evidence against him. Save us
O God
from having our
hearts hammered to the hardness of steel by sin; and daily keep us by Thy grace
sensible and tender before Thee
trembling at Thy word. The very same thing
no
doubt
lies at the bottom of objections to Bible truths. There are some who do
not go to Scripture to take out of it what is there
but seeing what is clearly
revealed
they then begin to question and judge and come to conclusions
according to their notions of what ought to have been there. Nay
but
O man
who art thou that repliest against God? If He says it
it is so. Believe it.
Now
let us look quietly at what Cain said. He said to the Lord
¡§Am I my
brother¡¦s keeper?¡¨ May the Holy Spirit guide us in considering this question.
I. First it is to
be noted that MAN IS NOT HIS BROTHER¡¦S KEEPER IN SOME SENSES. There is some
little weight in what Cain says.
1. For instance
first
every man must bear his own responsibility
for his own acts before Almighty God. It is not possible for a man to shift
from his own shoulders to those of another his obligations to the Most High.
2. And again
no one can positively secure the salvation of another
nay
he cannot even have a hope of the salvation of his friend
so long as that
other remains unbelieving.
3. And here let me say
in the next place
that those do very
wrongly who enter into any vows or promises for others in this matter
when
they are quite powerless.
4. It is proper here to say that the most earnest minister of Christ
must not so push the idea of his own personal responsibility to such an extreme
as to make himself unfit for his work through a morbid view of his position. If
he has faithfully preached the gospel
and his message is rejected
let him
persevere in hope
and not condemn himself.
II. So now
secondly
IN A HIGH DEGREE WE ARE
EACH ONE OF US
OUR BROTHER¡¦S KEEPER. We
ought to regard ourselves in that light
and it is a Cainish spirit which
prompts us to think otherwise
and to wrap ourselves up in hardheartedness and
say
¡§It is no concern of mine how others fare. Am I my brother¡¦s keeper?¡¨ Far
from that spirit let us be.
1. For
first
common feelings of humanity should lead every
Christian man to feel an interest in the soul of every unsaved man.
2. A second argument is drawn from the fact that we have all of us
especially those of us who are Christians
the power to do good to others. We
have not all the same ability
for we have not all the same gifts
or the same
position
but as the little maid that waited on Naaman¡¦s wife had opportunity
to tell of the prophet who could heal her master
so there is not a young
Christian here but what has some power to do good to others. Converted children
can lisp the name of Jesus to their sires and bless them. We have all some
capacity for doing good. Now
take it as an axiom that power to do good
involves the duty of doing good.
3. Another argument is very plainly drawn from our Lord¡¦s version of
the moral law. What is the second and great commandment according to Him? ¡§Thou
shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.¡¨
4. Yet again
without looking to other men¡¦s souls
we cannot keep
the first of the two great commands in which our Lord has summarised the moral
law.
5. Once more. To the Christian man
perhaps
the most forcible
reason will be that the whole example of Jesus Christ
whom we call Master and
Lord
lies in the direction of our being the keeper of our brother; for what
was Jesus¡¦ life but entire unselfishness? What was said of Him at His death but
that ¡§He saved others: Himself He could not save¡¨?
6. Let the thought next rise in our minds that we are certainly
ordained to the office of brother keeper
because we shall be called to account
about it. Cain was called to account. ¡§Where is Abel thy brother?¡¨
7. Now
I close this second head about our really being our
brother¡¦s keeper by saying this--that there are some of us who are our
brother¡¦s keeper voluntarily
but yet most solemnly
by the office that we
hold. We are ministers. O brother ministers
we are our brother¡¦s keepers.
III. IT WILL BE
HIGH PRESUMPTION ON OUR PART IF
FROM THIS NIGHT FORWARD
WE SHIRK DUTY OF
BEING OUR BROTHER¡¦S KEEPER.
1. I will set it very briefly in a strong light. It will be denying
the right of God to make a law
and to call upon us to obey it
if we refuse to
do as we are bidden.
2. Notice
next
that you will be denying all claim on your part to
the Divine mercy; because if you will not render mercy to others
and if you
deny altogether your responsibility to others
you put yourself into the
position of saying
¡§I want nothing from another¡¨--consequently
nothing from
God. Such mercy as you show
such mercy shall you have.
3. Indeed
there is this about it too--that your act is something
like throwing the blame of your own sin upon God if you leave men to perish.
When Cain said
¡§Am I my brother¡¦s keeper?¡¨ he meant
probably
¡§You are the
preserver of men. Why did You not preserve Abel? I am not his keeper.¡¨ Some
throw on the sovereignty of God the weight which lies on their own indolence.
4. And again
there is to my mind an utter ignoring of the whole
plan of salvation in that man who says
¡§I am not going to have any responsibility
about others
¡¨ because the whole plan of salvation is based on substitution
on
the care of another for us
on the sacrifice of another for us; and the whole
spirit of it is self-sacrifice and love to others. If you say
¡§I will not
love¡¨--well
the whole system goes together
and you renounce it all. If you
will not love
you cannot have love¡¦s benediction.
5. Last of all
it may turn out--it may turn out--that if we are not
our brother¡¦s keeper
we may be our brother¡¦s murderer. Have any of us been so
already? (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Responsibility for welfare of others
I. That an
enlightened regard to the spiritual and eternal interests of others is
recognized as a duty by nature and revelation
none of you
I trust
is
disposed to question. You have only to look into the law
written by the finger
of God
to know that six out of the ten requirements are based upon this very
principle. Nor must this interest in the well-being of others be confined to
the narrow circle of relatives and friends. How different is the
world--contracted
selfish
and reckless of the misery of others
inasmuch as
it does not regard the sufferings it may produce
provided its own imagined
interests are secured!
II. That all are
furnished with means and opportunities less or more available for the discharge
of this duty. This duty
as enjoined on human beings
presupposes many evils to
be removed
many wants to be supplied
and much suffering to be mitigated and
relieved. And where is the individual to whom God has not
in some degree
imparted the means of promoting this great end? (J. MacGilchrist.)
Man his brother¡¦s keeper
I. One of the
most terrible effects of sin on humanity is the obliteration of the sense of
personal responsibility.
II. The tendencies
of infidel science in our day are strongly in the line of this perverse and
morally stultifying effect of depravity.
III. The family
institution was ordained as the first and fundamental condition of society
in
order to imbed the idea of responsibility in the very foundation and structure
of society.
IV. The strongest
tendencies of the times are antagonistic to the sense of personal
responsibility.
V. Jesus came
into the world to restore and enthrone again in the human mind and conscience
the great doctrine of strict individual accountability to God on high. (J.
M. Sherwood
D. D.)
Man
the keeper of man
The person who first asked this question was a man whose heart
was
at the time
filled with evil passions
and his hands stained with a
brother¡¦s blood. It was Cain. Yes
thou guilty Cain
thou art thy brother¡¦s
keeper. He was given thee to love. He was given thee that thou mightest do him
good.
1. ¡§Am I my brother¡¦s keeper?¡¨ each one should say to himself. It is
answered
¡§Yes
you are.¡¨ But how? Take the following as some of the instances
in which your brother has a claim upon your kindly offices. You are your
brother¡¦s keeper
inasmuch as you are bound by ties
both of humanity and
religion
to care for him
and to do him all the good you can. The humblest and
the poorest can
in some way or other
help forward every agency for good
in
the prosperity of which they take a hearty interest. Money may be given--if
ever such a trifle
it betokens the mind of the giver. Trouble may be
given--wherever pains are bestowed with a good intent
God will return some
fruit. And the most destitute can always give prayer--when this comes from a
fervent heart
it does great things. In your private sphere you can do much for
your brother¡¦s good. You can show him little acts of kindness: you can relieve
some of his smaller wants: you can help him in one or more of those numberless
ways which readily suggest themselves to a benevolent disposition. You are your
brother¡¦s keeper in the exercise of your influence. Every man has influence.
The good man has influence
and the bad man has influence. The rich man has
influence
and the poor man has influence. The aged person has influence
and
the veriest child has influence.
2. But we will pass on to notice
secondly
the good results which
may reasonably be expected to follow a more general and more conscientious
observance of this Christian duty. ¡§A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump.¡¨
A little moral
godly principle constantly manifested before the eyes of those
with whom you mix
could not fail of diffusing itself
even though it should be
your manner of life rather than your words that indicated your possession of
it. Your brother would be made to feel that you are his keeper
although he
might not openly acknowledge you to be so. You would be the best of preachers
the best of patriots
the best of philanthropists; and many whom your silent
influence had won would be sure
at the judgment day
to rise up with you and
confess their obligation. (F. W.Naylor
B. A.)
Social duties
Such was the answer of the first Deist
the first infidel
and the
first murderer
to God¡¦s inquiry
¡§Where is thy brother?¡¨ It was not only a lie
(for the father of Cain was a liar from the beginning)
but it was a daring
jest upon his brother¡¦s employment. ¡§Am I his shepherd? Am I answerable for his
life? Am I to take care of him as he does of his sheep?¡¨ Such is infidelity. It
is sin that makes the infidel. He does not believe
not because he cannot
but
because he will not. He may talk of morality
and sport himself in his own
deceiving
when
like Cain
he says he can worship God as well with the flowers
of the field and the fruits of the earth as through the blood of atonement; but
when we cut into the core of his heart
we shall find the worm of all
rottenness still there
the love of self--we shall find that the only principle
of true morality is wanting
the love of God and our brother--we shall find the
very element of murder there
the dislike of God and those who love and are
like Him. And is not the truth he denied and the principle he rejected this:
that man is answerable for his brother¡¦s life and his brother¡¦s soul as far as
his positive acts can injure
or his neglect destroy? I will not stay to prove
this. Cain¡¦s rejection of it is a proof. Parents
how nearly does this
principle affect you in your important relation!--the very relation in which
God Himself is pleased to place Himself with regard to His own obedient people
His redeemed ones from earth; for while the angels are called ¡§the sons of
God
¡¨ ¡§the Father hath bestowed on us¡¨ this wonderful love
¡§that we should be
called the sons of God¡¨ also; and His Spirit--the Spirit of His Son--teaches us
to cry
¡§Abba
Father.¡¨ God has made you parents. Beings who can never die are
entrusted to your care. Your children¡¦s character is greatly in your hands.
Their eternal destiny hangs on your discharge of duty. Watch for their souls as
those who must give account. Masters and mistresses
the principle of which we
have spoken bears powerfully on your relation. (W. W.Champney.)
Five questions
1. The first question is
this: Is there no one who stands related to you as a brother?--
¡§Have we not all
¡¨ says Malachi
¡§one father
¡¨ Adam? and have we
not all one mother
Eve? Have we not all the same animal wants? Are we not all
exposed to the same infirmities and diseases? Are we not all capable of the
same improvements? Are we not all to turn to the same dust? Are we not all
heirs of the same immortality? Are we not all redeemed by the same blood of the
Lamb? Nothing
therefore
that is human should ever be deemed or felt alien
with regard to you.
2. The second question: If you were asked
Where is thy brother?
what would truth compel you now to answer? We know what truth would have
constrained Cain to answer--¡§Oh! I hated him
I envied him; I drew him into a
field
and I murdered him; and he lies there dead.¡¨ What would you say
if you
spoke truth
in answer to this question
Where is thy brother? Perhaps you
would be constrained to say
¡§Living a few doors off from the subject of want
and indigence and hunger
and I having all this world¡¦s goods
and more than
heart could wish
I never send him any supplies.¡¨ Or perhaps you would say
¡§I
have calumniated
I have run down his religion; I have called him a hypocrite
or an enthusiast
or a mercenary.¡¨ Or perhaps you would say
¡§Oh! I have
poisoned his mind with error¡¨; or
¡§I have seduced him by my wicked example.¡¨
Or perhaps you would say
¡§He hath sinned
and instead of reproving him
I have
¡¥suffered sin upon him¡¦¡¨; ¡§Hellas been a stranger to the advantages of
religion
while I was well acquainted with it; and I have never gone to him and
said
¡¥Oh! taste and see that the Lord is good; blessed is the man that
trusteth in Him¡¦¡¨; ¡§Oh! he is ignorant
and I have not been trying to enlighten
him.¡¨ Where is he? Why
living in such and such a dark village
where they are
perishing for lack of knowledge; or living in the sister island
enslaved by a
vile superstition.
3. The third question: Will not your conduct towards your fellow
creatures be inquired into as well as Cain¡¦s? Can you imagine that you are to
live as you please even with regard to your fellow creatures? Is not God your
Governor as well as your Maker? Are you not God¡¦s subjects as well
as God¡¦s creatures?
4. The fourth question: If you are guilty
will not your guilt be
followed by punishment? Why should God deal with Cain
and suffer you to
escape?
5. The last question we have to ask is
If you are guilty and
exposed to all this
what should be your concern now? Should it be to seek to
deny or to palliate your transgressions? Should you not rather confess your
sin
and exclaim with Joseph¡¦s brethren
¡§We are verily guilty concerning our
brother¡¨? (W. Jay.)
Cain¡¦s answer
1. The falsehood of it--¡§I
know not.¡¨ We feel astonished that a man can dare to lie in the presence of his
Maker; yet how many lies are uttered before Him by formalists and hypocrites 1
2. The insolence of it--¡§Am I my brother¡¦s keeper?¡¨ This man had no
fear of God before his eyes; and where this is wanting
regard to man will be
wanting also. Even natural affection will be swallowed up in selfishness. (A.
Fuller.)
Human brotherhood
Man is ever a questioner. Man even questions God. But there are
different kinds of questioners
as there are of questions. There are docile
questioners
there are defiant questioners. ¡§Am I my brother¡¦s keeper?¡¨
1. Human sin says mournfully
¡§Yes.¡¨ See how this was confirmed by
Cain¡¦s vile action. If you have a right (assumed) to sin against a man
you
have a right to love him. If he comes into your life and sphere
all reasonable
law claims for him blessing rather than blows.
2. Human sorrow says pathetically
¡§Yes.¡¨ We have a common heritage
of sorrow.
3. Human joy says hopefully
¡§Yes!¡¨ We cannot tell how much of the
joy of life depends upon others.
4. Human success says triumphantly
¡§Yes!¡¨ No such thing as
independence. We only succeed so far as our fellow man will let us succeed.
5. Human philanthropy says benevolently
¡§Yes.¡¨ Look at the
development of philanthropy!
6. Human conscience says righteously
¡§Yes!¡¨ Conscience is the voice
of God within us. But no ¡§quiet conscience¡¨ for him who denies that he is his
¡§brother¡¦s keeper.¡¨ (J. E. Smallow.)
Personal relations
Am I my brother¡¦s keeper? The success or failure of this world
turns on the question
Is the law of self or the law of love adopted? The same
is true of individuals. Is it mutual help of all
or every man for himself
against all? Is it Ishmael
hand against every man
or Jesus
bearing others¡¦
burdens
that gives the law of being? Man is constitutionally made to work for
and with others. He is full of sympathy
finds in union strength; hence
families
railroads
civilization. A thousand minister to the comfort of every
breakfast table. Mutual help is the law of angelic nature--they are ministering
spirits. Christ carries our sickness and our sins. God is love
and the whole
outgoing of love is service. Heaven
the greatest product of the universe
is
the outcome of the united effort of men
angels
and God. Cain tries the other
way; he destroys what differs from him
that his littleness need not appear
instead of joining the great
and becoming a part of it. That act not only puts
away the ideal
destroys the possibility of its help
but also dwarfs him still
more. Cain slays himself more than Abel. Sin ravages him more than he can bear.
An aristocrat requires a thousand serfs to support him
but slavery harms the
master more than the slaves. The latter is simply arrested in his development
the former is developed awry. He cannot see that all art
architecture
agriculture
and literature perishes. So Cain sees not sin
thinks nothing of
separation
asks not for pardon
but says
I am punished more than I can bear.
He goes from God; all his own nobility is murdered
all his possibility of
aspiration after God lies slain. Of the two
the one to be envied is Abel. It
is better to have our bodies slain by others
than to slay our own souls. In
every relation of life
to servants
workmen
neighbours
households
our
nation
all nations
envy must be banished
lest we dwarf ourselves; murder in
every degree must be spurned
lest we murder ourselves; love and mutual help
must be exercised; for thereby we greaten ourselves. (H. W. Warren
D. D.)
Care for the fallen
A writer in one of the English reviews relates that during a
conversation with George Eliot
not long before her death
a vase toppled over
on the mantelpiece. The great writer quickly and unconsciously put out her hand
to stop its fall. ¡§I hope
¡¨ said she
replacing it
¡§that the time will come
when we shall instinctively hold up the man or woman who begins to fall as
naturally and unconsciously as we arrest a falling piece of furniture or an
ornament.¡¨
The voice of thy brother¡¦s blood crieth
The first prayer on record
God taught Cain that all facts which take place here
are recorded
too; aye
that they need no kind of attendant watcher
who supervising their
proceedings shall note them in a book (though for ought we know to the
contrary
this is true as well); but that they each have that peculiar quality
attached by God to themselves that not a deed of any kind can happen but it
becomes a witness in itself and bears record of its own occurrence.
The general principles of revelation intimate this idea
and the promise of God
that ¡§He will bring every work and every secret thing into judgment
whether
good or bad
¡¨ confirms it. And such
I conceive
was the truth conveyed to this
fratricide when he heard the appalling words
¡§Thy brother¡¦s blood crieth unto
Me from the ground.¡¨ Perhaps he had carefully concealed all beneath the sod
and with the greatest attention removed every visible trace to the superficial examiner
of any record of his foul proceeding
but he now learnt that things which he
thought dumb could raise their voice in the ear of Omnipotence
and that the
blood of a brother which he had shed
could rise vocal in the words of prayer.
Yes
depend upon it
that each act of your moral life leaves enough of a trace
behind it
to give a proof that it has been performed. Nature
ever ready as
the handmaid of religion
may instruct us here--let science not precede
but
follow after faith: let it be used as I feel it ought to be; not to prove
Scripture doctrines
but to illustrate and confirm them
and you will then find
what I have so often asserted
that the best commentary on the Word of God will
be found in His works! I have said then that
in the moral world
each moral
deed leaves enough of evidence behind it in its effects
to bear witness of the
fact here after; that each act of man¡¦s history leaves a record behind it in
its effects upon his soul who does it
upon other individuals and upon society
by which it may be traced out
and traced up to its originator. Now look to
nature. The astronomer will demonstrate to you
not by a worn pathway in the
heavens
but yet with as much certainty as though this existed
the exact line
in which divers planets have moved through many thousands of years. The
geologist digs into the crust of the earth
and proves beyond all question the
former existence of animals long since extinct
and incapable of living in the
earth in its present condition
and can show also what food
and what state of
earth and atmosphere they enjoyed. Nay
he will descend with you into the
quarry
and there point out
to your amazement proofs as clear as you can
desire them
which shall satisfy you of the showers of rain which in past ages
watered the fair garden of the earth with refreshing distillation. And when
accompanying you into the coal shaft
he shall almost bewilder you with yet
more mysterious revelations
as he shall point out the mighty forest of
gigantic plants
once waving in grandeur and elegance upon the boundless
prairie
and which have engraved their beauteous forms upon the solid
carbonaceous block; you will then acknowledge (but perhaps only because you
cannot longer deny it)
that such a principle exists at least in nature that
events record themselves. Or
once more
and to speak of things known to most
of you. We are told that the Red Indian traces
without doubt or difficulty
the devious path by which the puny game he is pursuing has sought to escape
him
and that accustomed to the rapid investigation of the tiniest footprint
he can do so with an ease and accuracy which astounds the traveller. Or
see
again the power of chemical analysis! Blend together as many gases or as many
fluids as you choose
and lo
obedient to the laws of Him who first created
them
they call be severed each again into their respective characteristics
and each component particle shall stand forth in its own pristine original
condition. Here assuredly
brethren
we have enough to illustrate
and (I
think) to confirm our position. Shall the astronomer tell me the path in which
yon planet walked in past centuries
and think you then that it is a difficult
task for Him who made that planet to discover the actions of His creatures
there? Shall the geologist unfold
from the dark recesses of the deep
the
deeds and proceedings of former ages and of former existences
and even show
the mark of the falling rain drop; and shall I hope to conceal my sins
either
outwardly in the earth or inwardly in my heart
when God shall call them forth?
Shall the habit of rapidly tracing out the smallest footstep so strengthen the
unlettered Indian that he does so free from trouble
and shall we deem it
inconceivable that the moral footprints of human life are trackless through any
one step of our probationary way? Shall the hunter follow with unerring
precision until he overtakes the victim whom he has resolved to make his prey;
and can I look to escape the avenger of God¡¦s holiness by avoiding him
when
all the while
every step I take in my moral course leaves a record (whether I
will it or no)
plain and unerring
of the course of life I am leading? Shall
the chemical investigator untangle the compounds which ingenuity has mixed
and
setting all free again
distinctly point out the proportions which each
component part had in the whole conglomerate
and shall I
by a mingling of bad
actions with outwardly good ones
or by an amalgamation of my sins with those
of other men
hope thus to prove myself free from all because I may be innocent
of some? Ah
no! All nature too shuts me up in difficulty! Each loop hole is
barred up and there is no escape I Sinner
sinner
I must confess myself; and
oh
whither shall I flee? The heights of heaven
the depths of hell
the mysteries
and mazes of darkness
the rapidity of flight
each
all
fail me together I
Fool
madman that I was
shall the sceptic cry out when (too late) he discovers
his error presently: for he must learn then that every action of his life has
recorded itself even when it was performed; a truth
a principle which nature
confirms and illustrates in every particular
and which God taught him when He
said to Cain long ago
¡§The voice of thy brother¡¦s blood crieth unto Me from
the ground.¡¨ (G. Venables
S. C. L.)
Sin coming back upon the sinner
Two brothers started to go West to seek their fortune. One had
money
the other had not. When they got to the frontier
the one without money
murdered the other
and taking his money fled to California. Doctors took the
head of the murdered man and preserved it in alcohol. No ]proof of the murder
could be found. No one was present when the deed was done. The brother was
accused
but declared his innocence. No one was there but he and God. He was
brought before jury and judge and declared his innocence. The dead face of his
brother was brought into court. He gazed on it
he fainted and fell to the
floor
and confessed his sin. There is a time when all these unconfessed sins
will come in before us
tramp
tramp
tramp
till they all come back. (Dr.
Talmage.)
Sin its own detective
One night in Edinburgh a person awoke to find that his house had
been plundered. The alarm was raised
nor was it long ere the officers of
justice found a clue. The thief
wounding his hand as he escaped by the window
had left a red witness behind him. The watchman flashed his lantern upon the
spot. Drop by drop the blood stained the pavement. They tracked it on and on
and ever on
till their silent guide conducted them along an open passage and
up a flight of steps
stopping at the door of a house. They broke in and there
they found the bleeding hand
the booty
and the pale criminal. And so unless
they be forgiven
washed away in the blood of Jesus
shall your sins find you
out. (T. Guthrie
D. D.)
The punishment of sin
We might illustrate the evil of sin by the following comparison:
¡§Suppose I were gems along a street and were to dash my hand through a large
pane of glass
what harm would I receive?¡¨ ¡§You would be punished for breaking
the glass.¡¨ ¡§Would that be all the harm I should receive?¡¨ ¡§Your hand would be
cut by the glass.¡¨ Yes; and so it is with sin. If you break God¡¦s laws
you
shall be punished for breaking them; and your soul is hurt by the very act of
breaking them. (J. Inglis.)
Everlasting punishment
If you cut a gash in a man¡¦s head you may heal it; but you can
never rub out
nor wash out
nor cut out
the scar. It may be a witness against
you in his corpse: still
it may be covered by the coffin
or hidden in the
grave; but then it is not till decomposition shall take place that it shall
entirely disappear. But if you smite a soul
the scar remains: no coffin or
grave shall hide it; no revolution
not even the upturning of the physical
universe
shall obliterate it; no fire
not even the eternal furnaces of hell
shall burn it out. (Dr. Thomson.)
Blood will out!
How strangely deeds of blood are disclosed! Two French merchants
relates Clarke
were travelling to a fair
and
while passing through a wood
one of them murdered the other
and robbed him of his money. After burying him
to prevent discovery
he proceeded on his journey; but the murdered man¡¦s dog
remained behind. His howling attracted passers-by
who were led to search the
spot. The fair being ended
they watched the return of the merchants; and the
murderer no sooner made his appearance than the dog sprung furiously upon him.
¡§Be sure your sin will find you out.¡¨ How terribly was this exemplified in the
case of Eugene Aram
whose very conscience at last unfolded the tale:--
¡§He
told how murderers walk the earth
Beneath
the curse of Cain
With
crimson clouds before their eyes
And
flames about their brain.¡¨
The blood of Abel and the blood of Jesus
I. In the first
place
JESUS¡¦ BLOOD SPEAKS BETTER THINGS IN GENERAL. What did the blood of Abel
say?
1. Was it not the blood of testimony? When Abel fell to the ground
beneath his brother¡¦s club
he bore witness to spiritual religion. Our Lord
Jesus Christ
being also a testifier and witness for the faith of God
spake
better things than Abel because He had more to speak
and spake from more
intimate acquaintance with God. He was a fuller witness of Divine truth than
Abel could be
for He brought life and immortality to light
and told His
people clearly of the Father. Our Lord Jesus Christ had been in the bosom of
the Father
and knew the Divine secret; this secret He revealed to the sons of
men in His ministry
and then He sealed it by His blood.
2. Moreover
the blood of Abel spake good things in that it was the
proof of faithfulness. His blood as it fell to the ground spake this good
thing;--it said
¡§Great God
Abel is faithful to Thee.¡¨ But the blood of Jesus
Christ testifies to yet greater faithfulness still
for it was the sequel of a
spotlessly perfect life
which no act of sin had ever defiled; whereas Abel¡¦s
death furnished
it is true
a life of faith
but not a life of perfection.
3. Moreover
we must never forget that all that Abel¡¦s blood could
say as it fell to the ground
was but the shadow of that more glorious
substance of which Jesus¡¦ death assures us.
4. It is well to add that our Lord¡¦s person was infinitely more
worthy and glorious than that of Abel
and consequently His death must yield to
us a more golden-mouthed discourse than the death of a mere man like Abel.
II. Now we will
enter the very heart of our text
while we remember that THE BLOOD OF JESUS
SPEAKS BETTER THINGS TO GOD than the blood of Abel did. Now
what did Abel¡¦s
blood say to God? It said just this
¡§O God
one of Thine own creatures
the
product of Thy matchless skill
has been dashed in pieces
and barbarously
destroyed.¡¨ Yet the blood of Abel said more than this; it said
¡§O God
the
blood shed here was shed for Thee.¡¨ It seemed to say
¡§If it were not for love
of Thee
this blood had not been shed!¡¨ Do you hear
what a cry the blood of
Abel must have had
and with what power it arose to heaven? But we are not left
to conjecture as to the power of that cry
for we are told that God heard
and
when He heard it He came to reckoning with Cain
and He said
¡§What hast thou
done? The voice of thy brother¡¦s blood crieth to Me from the ground.¡¨ Can you
stand at Calvary now and view the flowing of the Saviour¡¦s blood from hands
and feet
and side? What are your own reflections as to what that blood says to
God? Think now at the cross foot. That blood crieth with a loud voice to God
and what doth it say? Does it not say this? ¡§O God
this time it is not merely
a creature which bleeds
but
though the body that hangs upon the cross is the
creature of Thy Holy Spirit
it is Thine own Son who now pours out His soul
unto death. O God
it is Thine only-begotten One
dear to Thyself
essentially
one with Thee
one in whom Thou art well pleased
whose obedience is perfect
whose love to Thee has been unwavering--it is He who dies. O God
wilt Thou
despise the cries and the tears
the groans
the moans
the blood of Thine own
Son? Most tender Father
in whose bosom Jesus lay from before the foundations
of the earth
He dies
and wilt Thou not regard Him? Shall His blood fall to
the ground in vain?¡¨ Then
moreover
the voice would plead
¡§It is not only Thy
Son
but Thy perfectly innocent Son
in whom was no necessity for dying
because He had no original sin which would have brought corruption on Him
who
had moreover no actual sin
who throughout life had done nothing worthy of
death or of bonds. O God
it is Thine only-begotten
who
without a fault
is
led as a lamb to the slaughter
and stands like a sheep before her shearers.
Canst Thou see it
Thou God of all
canst Thou see the infinitely holy and just
Son of Thy heart led here to die--canst Thou see it
and not feel the force of
the blood as it cries to Thee? ¡§Yet over and above this the blood must have
pleaded thus with God:--¡§O God
the blood which is now being shed
thus
honourable and glorious in itself
is being poured out with a motive which is
Divinely gracious. He who dies on this cross dies for His enemies
groans for
those who make Him groan
suffers for those who thrust the dart into His soul
and then mock at the agony which they themselves have caused. O God
it is a
chain for God in heaven which binds the victim to the horns of the altar
a
chain of everlasting love
of illimitable goodness.¡¨ Now
dear friends
you and
I could not see a man suffer out of pure benevolence without being moved by his
sufferings
and shall God be unmoved? the perfectly holy and gracious God
shall He be indifferent where you and I are stirred to deep emotion? Abel¡¦s
blood had mighty prevalence to curse
but Jesu¡¦s blood has prevalence to bless
the sons of men.
III. Furthermore
JESUS¡¦ BLOOD SPEAKS BETTER THINGS TO US IN OUR OWN HEARTS than the blood of
Abel. Oh
it must have been a remembrance clinging like a viper around the
murderer wherever he might be! He might well build a city
as we are told he
did
in order to quench these fiery remembrances. Then would the thought come
upon him
¡§You slew him though he was your brother.¡¨ The innocence of his
victim
if Cain had any conscience
must have increased his uneasiness
for he
would recollect how inoffensively he had kept those sheep of his
and had been
like one among them
so lamblike
that shepherd man himself
a true sheep of
God¡¦s pasture. ¡§Yet
¡¨ would Cain say
¡§I slew him because I hated God
the God
before whose bar I am soon to stand
the God who set this mark on me.¡¨ Can you
picture the man who had thus to be daily schooled and upbraided by a brother¡¦s
blood? It needs a poet¡¦s mind to teach him. Think how you would feel if you had
killed your own brother
how the guilt would hang over you like a black cloud
and drop horror into your very soul. Now
brethren
there is more than equal
force in the cry of the blood of Jesus
only it acts differently
and it
speaketh better things. Let it be remembered
however
that it speaks those
better things with the same force. Comforts arise from the blood of Jesus as
powerful as the horrors which arose from the blood of Abel. Just in proportion
as thought of murder would make Cain wretched
in the same proportion ought
faith to make you happy as you think upon Jesus Christ slain; for the blood of
Christ
as I said at the beginning of the sermon
cannot have a less powerful
voice; it must have a more powerful voice than that of Abel
and it cries
therefore more powerfully for you than the blood of Abel cried against his
brother Cain.
IV. Two or three
words to close with. JESUS¡¦ BLOOD
EVEN IN MY TEXT
SPEAKS BETTER THINGS THAN
THAT OF ABEL. It speaks the same things
but in a better sense. Did you notice
the first text? God said unto Cain
¡§What hast thou done?¡¨ Now
that is what
Christ¡¦s blood says to you: ¡§What hast thou done?¡¨ My dear hearer
dost thou
not know that thy sins slew the Saviour? If we have been playing with sin
and
fancied it to be a very little thing
a trifle to play with and laugh at
let
us correct the mistake. Our Saviour hangs on the cross
and was nailed there by
those sins of ours; shall we think little of them? What I want mainly to
indicate is this. If you notice in the second text
this blood is called ¡§the
blood of sprinkling.¡¨ Whether Abel¡¦s blood sprinkled Cain or not I cannot say
but
if it did
it must have added to his horror to have had the blood actually
upon him. But this adds to the joy in our case
for the blood of Jesus is of
little value to us until it is sprinkled upon us. Faith dips the hyssop in the
atoning blood and sprinkles it upon the soul
and the soul is clean. There is
another matter in the text with which I conclude. The apostle says
¡§We are
come to the blood of sprinkling.¡¨ He mentions that among other things to which
we are come. Now
from the blood of Abel every reasonable man would flee away
He that has murdered his fellow desires to put a wide distance between himself
and the accusing corpse. But we come to the blood of Jesus. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Am I clear of his blood?
I. First
we are
to MAKE A SEARCHING INQUIRY FOR THE CRIMINALS. There are many persons whose
brother¡¦s blood cries to God from the ground.
1. There is the seducer; he spake with honeyed words
and talked of
love
but the poison of asps was under his tongue
for lust was in his heart.
2. Then there are men who educate youth in sin
Satan¡¦s captains and
marshals; strong men with corrupt hearts
who are never better pleased than
when they see the buds of evil swelling and ripening into crime. Beware
ye who
hunt for the precious life!
3. Ay
and I know some base men who
if they see young converts
will take a pride in putting stumbling blocks in their way. They no sooner
discover that there is some little working of conscience
than they laugh
they
sneer
they point the finger.
4. Then there is the infidel
the man who is not content to keep his
sin in his own breast
but must needs publish his infamy; he ascends the
platform and blasphemes the Almighty to his face; defies the Eternal; takes
Scripture to make it the subject of unhallowed jest; and makes religion a theme
for comedy.
5. And what shall I say of the unfaithful preacher--the slumbering
watchman of souls; the man who swore at God¡¦s altar that he was called of the
Holy Ghost to preach the Word of God; the man upon whose lips men¡¦s ears waited
with attention while he stood like a priest at God¡¦s altar to teach Israel
God¡¦s law; the man who performed his duties half-asleep
in a dull and careless
manner
until men slept too and thought religion but a dream? What shall I say
of the minister of unholy life
whose corrupt practice out of the pulpit has
made the most telling things in the pulpit to be of no avail
has blunted the
edge of the sword of the Spirit
and turned the back of God¡¦s army in the day
of battle?
6. To come yet closer home to this present audience. How much of the
blood of man will lie at the door of careless professors. You that make a
profession of being Christians and yet live in sin
you are the murderers of
souls by thousands.
II. But to pass
on; I was
in the second place
to HOLD UP THIS CRIME TO EXECRATION
the chief
point being whose blood it is; it is the blood of our brethren. ¡§The voice of
thy brother¡¦s blood crieth unto Me from the ground.¡¨
1. Perhaps
young man
it is your natural brother¡¦s blood that cries
against you.
2. It may be
however
it is the blood of your father or mother.
Some of you young people have come to London
and God has met with you in this
house of prayer; you still have ungodly parents in the country
have you quite
forgotten them? What if your grey-headed sire should die!
3. But what shall I say to those who are not only careless of
parents
but are neglecting their own children? Mother
what if the voice of
your child¡¦s blood should cry to God against you!
III. We are in the
third place TO EXPECT THE JUDGMENT. ¡§The voice of thy brother¡¦s blood crieth
unto Me from the ground.¡¨ It does not cry to a deaf ear
but to the ear of One
who hears and feels the cry
and will certainly make bare His arm to smite the
offender and to avenge the wrong.
IV. I hope that
these terrible things have prepared our minds to hear the better THE VOICE OF
EXHORTATION. If there be the voice of blood crying against us today
and we
affirm that none of us can altogether escape from it
what shall we do to be
rid of the past? Can tears of repentance do it? No. Can promises of amendment
make a blank page where there are so many blots and blurs? Ah
no! Nothing that
we can do can put away our sin. But may not the future atone? May not future
zeal wipe out past carelessness? But a sweeter and a louder cry comes
up--¡§Mercy
mercy
mercy¡¨; and the Father bows His head and says
¡§Whose blood
is that?¡¨ and the voice replies
¡§It is the blood of Thine only-begotten
shed
on Calvary for sin.¡¨ The Father lays His thunders by
sheathes His sword
stretches out His hand
and crieth to you
the sons of men
¡§Come unto Me
and
I will have mercy upon you; turn ye
turn ye; I will pour out My Spirit upon
you and ye shall live.¡¨ (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Blood crying to God
Thus from the days of Abel has pleaded the blood of the
saints:--¡§How long
O Lord
wilt Thou not judge and avenge our blood?¡¨ Thus the
voice has been going up for ages from the ground
from the cell
from the cave
from the rock
from the glen
from the moorland
from the flood
from the
flame
from the scaffold. What spot of Europe
not to take in more
is there
from which this cry is not ascending? From the plains of Italy
from the valleys
of Piedmont
from the dungeons of Spain
from the streets of Paris
from the
stones of Smithfield
from the fields of Ireland
from the moors of Scotland;
from all these has been ascending for ages the cry
¡§How long!¡¨ a cry
unsilenced and unsatisfied; deepening and swelling as the ages roll on; a cry
which will ere long be fully answered by the coming of Him who is the great
avenger of blood and rewarder of His saints. (H. Bonar
D. D.)
Undone
The Rev. Rowland Hill
preaching on one occasion from this text at
Cowes
began his sermon as follows: ¡§In my way to your island
I visited the
county jail at Winchester
and there I saw many who were accused of heavy
crimes
but who seemed careless and indifferent
and to have but little sense
of their awful situation. But one young man attracted my attention: he kept
separate from the rest
and seemed very much troubled. I went up to him and
said
¡§And what have you done
young man?¡¨ ¡§Sir
¡¨ said he
deeply affected
¡§I
have done that which I cannot undo
and which has undone me.¡¨ This
my dear
friends
said the minister
¡§is the situation of every one of you. You have
each of you done that which has undone you
and which you cannot undo.¡¨
The stain of blood
The mind of man has been compared to a white sheet of paper. Now
it is like a white sheet of paper in this
that whatever we write upon it
whether with distinct purpose or no
nay
every drop of ink we let fall upon
it
makes an abiding mark
a mark which we cannot rub out without much injury
to the paper; unless
indeed
the mark has been very slight from the first
and
we set about erasing it while it is fresh. In one of the grandest tragedies of
our great English poet
there is a scene which
when one reads it
is enough to
make one¡¦s blood run cold. A woman
whose husband had made himself king of
Scotland by means of several murders
and who had been the prompter and partner
of his crimes
is brought in while in her sleep
and continually rubbing her
hands
as though she were washing them
crying ever and anon
¡§Yet here¡¦s a
spot . . . What! will these hands ne¡¦er be clean?. . .here¡¦s the smell of blood
still; all the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand.¡¨ In these
words there is an awful power of truth. We can stain our souls; we can dye them
and double dye them and triple dye them; we can dye them all the colours of
bell¡¦s rainbow
but we cannot wash them white. All the perfumes of Arabia will
not sweeten them
all the fountains of the deep will not wash one little spot
out of them. The usurping Queen of Scotland had been guilty of murder; and the
stain of blood
it has been very generally believed
cannot be washed out. But
it is not the stain of blood alone; every stain soils the soul and none of them
can be washed out. Every speck of ink eats into the paper; every sin
however
small we may deem it
eats into the soul. If we try to write over it
we make a
deeper blot; if we try to scratch it out
the next letters which we write on
the spot are blurred. Therefore is it of such vast importance that we should be
very careful of what we write. In the tragedy which I was quoting just now
the
Queen says
¡§What¡¦s done
cannot be undone.¡¨ This amounts to the same thing as
what I have written
in the sense in which I am now calling upon you to consider
these words. What¡¦s done cannot be undone. You know that that is true. You know
you cannot push back the wheels of time
and make yesterday come again
so as
to do over afresh what you did wrongly then. That which you did yesterday
yesterday will keep: you cannot change it; you cannot make it less or greater;
if it was crooked you cannot make it straight. (J. C. Hare.)
Horror of a murderer
Coleridge tells of an Italian who assassinated a nobleman in Rome
and fled to Hamburg for safety. He had not passed many weeks before
one day
in the crowded street
he heard his name called by a voice familiar to him; he
turned short round
and saw the face of his victim looking at him with a fixed
eye. From that moment he no peace: at all hours
in all places
and amidst all
companies
however engaged had he might be
he heard the voice
and could never
help looking around; and whenever he so looked round he always encountered the
same face
staring close upon him. The Italian said he had struggled long
but
life was a burden which he could now no longer bear; and he was resolved to
return to Rome
to surrender himself to justice
and expiate his crime on the
scaffold.
A fugitive and a vagabond shalt thou be
Cain cursed by God
¡§Cursed art THOU.
¡¨ Fearful words
coming straight from the lips of God into the very ear of man
standing in the presence of God. No lightning bursting on him from the clouds
could be half so terrible. The blessing is revoked
and the curse goes forth.
It is a curse because of innocent blood
as if foreshowing the curses which the
shedding of innocent blood was yet to bring upon men. This curse is represented
as coming up from the ground
as if the ground which had been moistened with
the blood were to be the instrument of inflicting the curse. In Ezekiel we read
of the ¡§mountains devouring men¡¨ (36:12-14)
and elsewhere of the land ¡§spewing
out¡¨ (Leviticus 18:28; Leviticus 20:22); so here the very ground
is impregnated with evil to Cain
and sends up its curses on him. The soil is
to cast him off; the earth is to loathe him! inanimate nature
more
tender-hearted than he (inasmuch as it drank in the blood)
is to set its face
against him. It had received the innocent blood into its bosom
and it was to
send up unceasingly on the murderer an endless curse. (H. Bonar
D. D.)
The fruits of envy
Such are the fruits of envy. Burden upon burden
stroke upon
stroke
sorrow upon sorrow! From above
from beneath
and from around
the
torment
and the terror
and the bitterness pour in. There is no peace to the wicked
no rest
no settlement. How sin uproots and unsettles
making a man to flee
hither and thither
in order to get away from himself! How vain! O SIN
sin!
what horrid things are all wrapt up even in its smallest indulgence! An unkind
thought
a harsh word
an envious feeling
--then sullenness
anger
murder--a
brother¡¦s murder!
How little do we know sin
or reckon on its results
or calculate
the fruits that come from its womb! (H. Bonar
D. D.)
The bitter curse which sin brings on an individual life
I. THAT IT
RENDERS A MAN SUBJECT TO THE SOLEMN AND CONVINCING ENQUIRIES OF GOD.
II. THAT IT SENDS
A MAN ON THROUGH LIFE WITH THE MOST TERRIBLE MEMORIES OF WRONG-DOING WITHIN HIS
SOUL.
III. THAT IT OFTEN
RUINS THE TEMPORAL PROSPERITY OF A MAN.
1. It destroys reputation.
2. Wastes earnings.
3. Enfeebles agencies.
IV. THAT IT
COMMITS A MAN TO A WANDERING AND RESTLESS LIFE.
V. THAT IT
CRUSHES MAN WITH A HEAVY BURDEN AND ALMOST RENDERS HIM DESPAIRING. Lessons--
1. That sin is the greatest curse of human life.
2. That God is the avenger of the good.
3. That the sinner is the greatest sufferer in the end.
4. That good men go from their worship into heaven. (J. S.Exell
M. A.)
My punishment is greater than I can hear
Cain¡¦s despair
1.
Behold
Thou hast cast me out this day from (or from upon)
the face of the ground. Thou hast driven me! He sees it to be Jehovah¡¦s own
doing. He who drove Adam out of paradise
now drives Cain out of Eden. Adam¡¦s
sin brought expulsion from the inner circle
Cain¡¦s from the outer. He is to be
cast out from the land where he had been born
where was his home; from the
ground which he had tilled. He was now doubly banished; compelled to go forth
into an unknown region
without a guide
or a promise
or a hope.
2. From Thy face I shall be hid. God¡¦s face means
doubtless
the
Shekinah or manifested glory of Jehovah at the gate of Eden
where Adam and Eve
and their children had worshipped
where God was seen by them
where
He met them
and spake to them as from His mercy seat. From this
place of Jehovah¡¦s presence Cain was to go out. And this depresses him. Not
that he really cared for the favour of God
as one ¡§in whose favour was life¡¨;
but still he could not afford to lose it
especially when others were left
behind to enjoy it. And all his religious feelings
such as they were
were
associated with that spot.
3. I shall be a fugitive and a vagabond in the earth. Unchanged from
his primeval home
he was now to drift to and fro
he knew not whither. He was
to be a leaf driven to and fro
a man without a settlement and without a home.
Poor
desolate sinner! And all this is thine own doing! Thy sin has found thee
out. Thine own iniquities have taken thee
and thou art holden with the cords
of thy sins (Proverbs 5:22). (H. Bonar
D. D.)
The severity of self-inflicted punishment
The punishment which a man inflicts upon himself is infinitely
severer than any punishment that can be inflicted upon him. ¡§A wounded spirit
who can bear?¡¨ You remember how you ill-treated that poor child now dead; you
saw the anguish of his soul
and he besought you and you would not hear; and
now a great distress is come upon you
and your bread is very bitter. Who is
punishing you? Not the magistrate. Who then? You are punishing yourself. You
cannot forgive yourself. The child touches you at every corner
speaks to you
in every dream
moans in every cold wind
and lays its thin pale hand upon you
in the hour of riot and excitement. You see that ill-used child everywhere; a
shadow on the fair horizon
a background to the face of every other child
a
ghastly contrast to everything lovely and fair. Time cannot quench the fire.
Events cannot throw into dim distance this tragic fact. It surrounds you
mocks
you
defies you
and under its pressure you know the meaning of the words
which no mere grammarian can understand--¡§The wicked shall go away into
everlasting punishment.¡¨ All this will come the more vividly before us if we
remember that a man who has done wrong has not only to be forgiven
he has to
forgive himself. That is the insuperable difficulty. He feels that an external
view of his sin
which even the acutest man can take
is altogether partial and
incomplete; and
consequently
that any forgiveness which such a man can offer
is also imperfect and superficial. That is so philosophically
but
thank God
not evangelically. God¡¦s forgiveness
through Jesus Christ our Lord
is not
mere forgiveness
however abundant and emphatic. It is not merely a royal or
even a paternal edict. It is an act incomplete in itself; it is merely
introductory or preparatory
as the uprooting of weeds is preliminary to a
better use of the soil. It is an essential act
for in the absence of pardon
the soul is absolutely without the life that can lay hold of any of the higher
blessings or gifts of God. To what
then
is forgiveness preparatory? To
adoption
to communion with God
to absorption into the Divine nature
to the
witness of the Holy Ghost. (J. Parker
D. D.)
Impenitent misery
There is a great change since he spoke last
but not for the
better. All the difference is
instead of his high tone of insolence
we
perceive him sinking into the last stage of depravity
sullen desperation.
Behold here a finished picture of impenitent misery. What a contrast to the
fifty-first Psalm! There the evil dwelt upon and pathetically lamented is sin;
but here is only punishment. See how he expatiates upon it . . . Driven from
the face of the earth . . . deprived of God¡¦s favour and blessing
and
in a
sort
of the means of hope . . . a wanderer and an outcast from men . . . to
all which his fears add
¡§Wherever I am by night or by day
my life will be in
perpetual danger!¡¨ Truly it was a terrible doom
a kind of hell upon earth. ¡§It
is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God!¡¨ (A. Fuller.)
Remorse
Tiberius felt the remorse of conscience so violent
that he protested
to the senate that he suffered death daily; and Trapp tells us of Richard III
that
after the murder of his two innocent nephews
he had fearful dreams and
visions
would leap out of his bed
and catching his sword
would go
distractedly about the chamber
everywhere seeking to find out the cause of his
own occasioned disquiet. If
therefore
men more or less familiarized with
crime and deeds of blood
had the fangs of the serpent ever probing their
breasts
is it unreasonable to conclude that Cain knew seasons of sad regrets?
If he had not
God¡¦s inquiry soon stirred up the pangs! The cruel Montassar
having assassinated his father
was one day admiring a beautiful painting of a
man on horseback
with a diadem encircling his head
and a Persian inscription.
Inquiring the significance of the words
he was told that they were: ¡§I am
Shiunjeh
the son of Kosru
who murdered my father
and possessed the crown
only six months.¡¨ Montassar turned pale
horrors of remorse at once seized on
him
frightful dreams interrupted his slumbers until he died. And no sooner did
God address the first fratricide
than conscience roused herself to inflict
poignant pains:--
¡§Oh
the wrath of the Lord is a terrible thing!
Like
the tempest that withers the blossoms of spring
Like
the thunder that bursts on the summer¡¦s domain
It
fell on the head of the homicide Cain.¡¨
Condemnation
Very little idea can be formed of the sufferings of Cain
when we
read that God visited him with life-long remorse. John Randolph
in his last illness
said to his doctor: ¡§Remorse! Remorse! Remorse! Let me see the word! show it to
me in a dictionary.¡¨ There being none at hand
he asked the surgeon to write it
out for him; then
having looked at it carefully
he exclaimed: ¡§Remorse! you
do not know what it means.¡¨ Happy are those who never know. It gives
as Dr.
Thomas says
a terrible form and a horrible voice to everything beautiful and
musical without. It is recorded of Bessus--a native of Polonia
in Greece--that
the notes of birds were so insufferable to him
as they never ceased chirping
the murder of his father--that he would tear down their nests and destroy both
young and old. The music of the sweet songsters of the grove was as the shrieks
of hell to a guilty conscience. And how terribly would the familiar things of
life become to Cain a source of agony!
¡§The
kiss of his children shall scorch him like flame
When
he thinks of the curse that hangs over his name
And
the wife of his bosom--the faithful and fair
Can
mix no sweet drop in his cup of despair:
For
her tender caress
and her innocent breath
But
still in his soul the hot embers of death.¡¨
Wakeful conscience
Though in many men conscience sleeps in regard to motion
yet it
never sleeps in regard to observation and notice. It may be hard and seared
it
can never be blind. Like letters written with the juice of lemon
that which is
written upon it
though seemingly invisible and illegible
when brought before
the fire of God¡¦s judgment shall come forth clear and expressive. (J. M¡¦Cosh.)
Sin and punishment
Cain said
¡§My punishment is greater than I can bear.¡¨ Saul
king
of Israel
had a minstrel to soothe him when the evil spirit rose within him.
King Richard III of England
after he killed his two nephews
had horrible
dreams. He thought all the devils in hell
in terrible shapes
were coming to
pull him about; and
in his fright
he leaped out of bed
and seized the naked
sword which he kept beside him
to find and punish the cause of his trouble.
Charles IX
of France
had similar anguish after he had ordered the massacre of
St. Bartholomew.
A ruined life
Sailing down the Thames one occasionally sees a green flag
in
tatters
inscribed with the word ¡§wreck
¡¨ floating in the breeze over a piece
of the mast or the funnel of a steamer which is just visible above the water.
How many lives might thus be marked
and how needful that they should be so
labelled
lest they prove ruinous to others!
The Lord set a mark upon Cain.
The mark upon Cain
What this mark was we cannot tell. It might be his name affixed by
the pen of the lightning in red characters upon his brow
or it might simply be
the stain of his brother¡¦s blood left by his own fingers
which he had raised
up while yet wet and reeking to cover his forehead
rendered miraculously
indelible; or it might be some general aspect of grief and guilt
which told
too plainly that he had become the first murderer; or
perhaps
it was written
on his brow
¡§Kill not this man
murderer as he is
lest thou thyself be
punished.¡¨ (G. Gilfillan.)
A sign given to Cain
Render--¡§Gave a sign to Cain.¡¨ It is difficult to conceive of any
visible mark which should warn men not to touch Cain
and a mark which should
merely identify him would of course be rather a danger than a benefit. An
interesting parallel occurs in the ¡§Laws of Men
¡¨ which enjoin branding as a
punishment of certain crimes:--
¡§Let
them wander over the earth
Branded
with indelible marks
They
shall be abandoned by father and mother
Treated
by none with affection:
Received
by none with respect.¡¨
(M.
Dods
D. D.)
Cain¡¦s preservation by God
But why is God so anxious to preserve Cain from death
and to give
him the assurance of this security? Some reasons are obvious
besides those
which run us up directly to the sovereignty of God.
1. God¡¦s desire is to manifest the riches of His grace
and the
extent of His forbearance
and that He has no pleasure in the death of the
wicked
but wishes by His long suffering to lead him to repentance.
2. Death would not have answered God¡¦s end at all. It was needful
that Cain should be preserved alive as an awful monument of sin
a warning
against the shedding of man¡¦s blood.
3. Cain was spared
too
because of this partial repentance. God
accepted Ahab¡¦s repentance (1 Kings 21:29)
poor and hollow as
it was; so does He Cain¡¦s; for He is gracious and merciful
looking for the
first and faintest sign of a sinner¡¦s turning to Himself
willing to meet him
at once without upbraiding
and putting the best possible construction on all
he says and does. To what length is not the grace of our God able to gel Sin
abounds
but grace superabounds. How desirous is Jehovah not to curse
but to
bless; not to smite
but to heal; not to destroy
but to save. (H. Bonar
D.
D.)
God¡¦s mode of dealing with Cain
This passage unfolds to us a mode of dealing with the first
murderer which is at first sight somewhat difficult to be understood. But we
are to bear in mind that the sentence of death has been already pronounced upon
man
and therefore stood over Adam and all his posterity
Cain among the rest.
To pronounce the same sentence therefore upon him for a new crime would have
been weak and unmeaning. Besides
the great crime of crimes was disobedience to
the Divine will
and any particular form of crime added to that was
comparatively unimportant. Wrong done to a creature even of the deepest dye was
not to be compared in point of guilt with wrong done to the Creator. The grave
element in the criminality of every social wrong is its practical disregard of
the authority of the Most High. Moreover
every other sin to the end of time is
but the development of that first act of disobedience to the mandate of heaven
by which man fell
and accordingly every penalty is summed up in that death
which is the judicial consequence of the first act of rebellion against heaven.
We are also to best in mind that God still held the sword of justice in His own
immediate hands
and had not delegated His authority to any human tribunal. No
man was
therefore
clothed with any right from heaven to call Cain to account
for the crime he had committed. To fall upon him with the high hand in a wilful
act of private revenge
would be taking the law into one¡¦s own hands
and
therefore a misdemeanour against the majesty of heaven
which the Judge of all
could not allow to pass unpunished. It is plain that no man has an inherent
right to inflict the sanction of a broken law on the transgressor. This right
originally belongs only to the Creator
and derivatively only to those whom He
has entrusted with the dispensation of civil government according to
established laws. (Prof. J. G. Murphy.)
God¡¦s dealings with Cain
We may ask
with some degree of surprise
why God granted this
uncommon indulgence to a murderer
who had insidiously killed his own brother?
Did not God Himself give the distinct precept: ¡§He who sheddeth man¡¦s blood
by
man shall his blood be shed?¡¨ Why was it necessary to take such anxious
precautions to save a life forfeited according to human and Divine rights? We
hesitate to speak with decision where the text is entirely silent. But we may
venture the supposition that
if Cain¡¦s blood was to be ¡§shed by man
¡¨ it would
also have been by the hand of a brother
for no other man existed; the
firstborn of Adam¡¦s strength
and the pride of his mother
would have perished
by a cold law of retaliation; the avenging of the crime would
in the result
have been as horrible as the crime itself; and the human family
just called
into being
would have perpetrated self-destruction in its first generations.
It was thus necessary that God should Himself exercise the duty of punishment
and dispense a chastisement commensurate with the unnatural and fatal offence.
A long
laborious life in exile
with the fear of sanguinary retribution
perpetually impending
was deemed equivalent to death; and the lamentations of
Cain
when he heard the verdict of his flight
prove the bitterness of his
pangs. And this is the other side of a profound Biblical idea which we have
above pointed out. As the early death of Abel was no curse
so was the long
life of Cain no blessing. He was permitted to protract an existence
veiled by
the gloom of the past
and uncheered by any hope of the future. No earthly
boon
not even long life
the greatest of all
is
in itself
either a pledge
of happiness
or a mark of the Divine favour. (M. M.Kalisch
Ph. D.)
Marks on conscience
Whatever was the mark which Cain carried upon his person after
that murderous deed
there is no doubt that the mark on his conscience was more
deep
more tormenting
more irremovable. Men who sin in these days often carry
a mark upon them by which others know them to be sinners; but could you read
the inner man you would see stronger marks there
by which they themselves know
and feel that they are sinners more sensibly than you see it. (John Bate.)
Marks of crime
We may find
in this part of our narrative
the important
practical and philosophical truth
that the traces of crime are indelibly
visible in the person of the criminal; the ¡§human form divine¡¨ is degraded and
corrupted by vice; it loses that sublime dignity with which a pure and noble
soul never fails to impress it; the shy look
the uncertain step
the sinister
reserve
the lurking passion
these and many other symptoms of the highest
interest for the physiognomist
mark the outcast of society
and make the man
conspicuous upon whose conscience weighs the burden of an enormous misdeed. (M.
M. Kalisch
Ph. D.)
Cain went out from the
presence of the Lord
The future of a
God-forsaken life
I.
THAT A GOD-FORSAKEN MAN IS
NOT CUT OFF FROM THE MITIGATING INFLUENCES OF DOMESTIC LIFE.
1. Here the future of the cursed life has some relief. Cain had his
wife to share his sorrow
and
for all we know
to help him in it. The domestic
relationship is a great relief and comfort to a sad life. When all goes wrong
without
it can find a refuge at home.
2. The children of a cursed life are placed at a moral disadvantage.
They are the offspring of a God-forsaken parent. It is awful to commence life
under these conditions.
II. THAT A
GOD-FORSAKEN MAN IS LIKELY VERY SOON TO SEEK SATISFACTION IN EARTHLY
EMPLOYMENTS AND THINGS. Cain built a city. This would find occupation for his
energies. It would tend to divest his mind of his wicked past. It would enrich
his poverty. It might become the home of his posterity.
III. THAT OFTEN A
GOD-FORSAKEN MAN IS DISPOSED TO TRY TO BUILD A RIVAL TO THE CHURCH FROM WHENCE
HE HAS BEEN DRIVEN. If he has been driven from God
he will engage his energies
to build a city for Satan. In this work some wicked men are active. And today
the city of evil is of vast dimensions
is thickly populated
but is weak in
its foundation
and will ultimately be swept away by the prayerful effort of
the Church
and the wrath of God..
IV. THAT MEN WHOSE
NAVIES ARE NOT WRITTEN IN HEAVEN ARE VERY ANXIOUS TO MAKE THEM FAMOUS ON EARTH.
They build cities rather than characters. Lessons:
1. Earth cannot give the soul a true substitute for God.
2. Family relationship is unsanctified without Him.
3. Cities are useless without Him. (J. S. Exell
M. A.)
Cain going out from God¡¦s
presence
It is an awful thought
that of the lost
to the sound of the dead march
¡§Depart
ye cursed
into
everlasting fire
¡¨ flocking away from the judgment seat. But scarcely inferior
in horror is the sight of Cain going out from the presence of the Lord. He goes
out alone
save for his poor weeping wife
for children as yet he had none. He
goes out in silence
without venturing to utter one word of remonstrance or
regret. He goes out withered and accursed
although not utterly crushed. He
goes out bearing
and showing that he is conscious of bearing
his character
burnt and branded on his brow. He goes out
preserved indeed
but preserved as
the criminal on the scaffold is preserved from the guns of the soldiery and the
missiles of the crowd
that he may abide the executioner¡¦s axe
or feel the
hangman¡¦s gripe. He goes out alone
but you see in him the representative of
the giant race of transgressors
who are yet in his loins as he goes forth. He
goes out into a thinly peopled earth
but into an earth where he knows that
every man is aware of his crime
and would kill him but for a mark which
identifies and renders infamous while it secures him. He goes forth into the
young world
a region as silent as it is vast; but hark! as he leaves the
presence of the Lord a peal of harsh thunder behind proclaims the departure of
the murderer
and worse than this still
the trembling hollows of his ear (like
the sea shell by the sound of the deep) are filled with the cry
which he feels
is forever his music
¡§Cain
Cain
where is thy brother?¡¨ (G. Gilfillan.)
Cain¡¦s banishment
Like Judas from the
presence of Jesus
so does Cain go out from the face of God
from the place
where the visible glory of God
the Shekinah
had its abode. Partly troubled at
his banishment
and partly relieved at getting away from the near presence of
the Holy One
he goes forth
a banished criminal
whose foot must no longer be
permitted to profane the sacred circle of Eden; an excommunicated man
who must
no longer worship with the Church of God
round the primeval altar. He goes
out
not like Abraham to the land of promise
the land flowing with milk and
honey
but to the land of the threatening
the land where no divine presence was
seen and on which no glory shone
and where no bright cherubim foreshadowed
redemption
and proclaimed restoration to paradise
and the tree of life. He
goes out to an unknown and untrodden land; a land which
from his own character
as ¡§the wanderer
¡¨ received in after days the name of Nod. He goes out
the
flaming sword behind him
driving him out of his native seat
and forbidding
his return. A banished man
an excommunicated worshipper (the sentence of
excommunication pronounced by God Himself)--one ¡§delivered over to Satan¡¨ (1 Timothy 1:20)
he takes up his abode in the land of Nod. There he ¡§sits down
¡¨
not as if at rest
for what had he to do with rest? Can the cloud rest? Can the
sea rest? Can the guilty conscience rest? He sits down in Nod
but not to rest
only to drown his restlessness in schemes of labour. He went towards the rising
sun. He and his posterity spread eastward
just as Seth and his posterity
spread westward. (H. Bonar
D. D.)
The land of Nod
The land of Nod
Cain settled ¡§in the land
of Nod
in the east of Eden.¡¨ It is evident that the name Nod expresses the
nature and character of the locality; it signifies flight or exile; and the
same root means
sometimes
grief and mourning. Nod is
therefore
the land of
misery and exile. But
although this appellative signification of Nod is clear
it is not less certain that the historian intended to describe thereby a
distinct country. He designates its position in the east of Eden
and he
mentions a town which Cain built in that land of flight
Nod is
therefore
as
little as Eden itself
a mere abstraction
or a fictitious name
invented for
the embodiment of a myth. But
as it is only described by its relative position
to Eden
its situation is
naturally
as disputed as that of paradise itself.
It has been placed in Susiana
Lydia
and Arabia; in Nysa and China; in the
mountains of the Caucasus and the vast steppes in the east of Cashmere; in
Tartary
in Parthia
or any part of India. However
it appears that the whole
extent of Asia eastward of Eden
was comprised under the name of Nod. Cain was
expelled to the east of paradise
where the cherubim with their flaming swords
forever prevented the access; we are
thus
expressly reminded that the
murderer who with one audacious step ascended the whole climax of crime
was
removed far from the seat of blessedness and innocence. (M. M.Kalisch
Ph.
D.)
Built a city
The first city
It was a very decided step towards civilization
when the idea of
building a city was first conceived and realized.
The roaming life of the homeless savage was abandoned; social ties were formed;
families joined families
and exchanged in friendly intercourse their
experience and observations; communities arose
and submitted to the rule of
self-imposed laws; the individuals resigned the unchecked liberty of the beasts
of the forest
and felt the delight of being subservient links in the universal
chain. Social and personal excellence depend on and strengthen each other.
Therefore
when the first communities were organized
the way to a steady and
continuous progress was paved
and the first beams of dawning humanity trembled
over the night of barbarism and ferocity. It is a deep trait in the Biblical
account to ascribe the origin of cities to none but the agriculturist. Unlike
the nomad
who changes his temporary tents whenever the state of the pasture
requires it
the husbandman is bound to the glebe which he cultivates; the soil
to which he devotes his strength and his anxieties becomes dear to him; that
part of the earth to which he owes his sustenance assumes a character of
holiness in his eyes; and if
besides
pledges of conjugal love have grown up
in that spot
he is more strongly still tied to it; he fixes there his
permanent abode
and considers its loss a curse of God. Thus
even in the ¡§land
of flight
¡¨ the agriculturist Cain was compelled to build houses and to form a
city. Many inventions of mechanical skill are inseparable from the building of
towns; ingenuity was aroused and exercised; and whilst engaged in satisfying
the moral desire of sociability
man brought many of his intellectual powers
into efficient operation. Necessity suggested
and perseverance executed
inventions which safety or comfort required; and when man left the caverns
which nature had beneficently provided for his dwelling place
to inhabit the
houses which his own hands had built
he entered them with that legitimate
pride which the consciousness of superior skill begets
and with the consoling
conviction that
although God had doomed him
on account of his own and his
ancestors¡¦ sins
to a life full of fatigue and struggles
He had graciously
furnished him with a spark of that heavenly fire which strengthens him to
endure and to conquer. (M. M. Kalisch
Ph. D.)
The generations of Cain
1. Nothing good is said of
any one of them; but
heathen-like
they appear to have lost all fear of God
and regard to man.
2. Two or three of them became famous for arts; one was a shepherd
another a musician
and another a smith; all very well in themselves
but
things in which the worst of men may excel.
3. One of them was infamous for his wickedness
namely Lamech. He
was the first who violated the law of marriage; a man giving loose to his
appetites
and who lived a kind of lawless life. Here ends the account of
cursed Cain. We hear no more of his posterity
unless it be as tempters to the
sons of God
till they were all swept away by the deluge! (A. Fuller.)
Lessons
In Cain¡¦s building a city
and calling it after his son¡¦s name
we
see the care of the wicked
ever more to desire to magnify themselves than to
glorify God
more to seek after a name in earth than a life in heaven
more to
establish their seed with towns and towers than with God¡¦s favour. But such
course is crooked and like Cain¡¦s here. If we desire a name
the love of God
and His word
the love of Christ and His truth is the way. You remember a silly
woman that
in a true affection to her Lord and Master
poured upon Him a box
of ointment
and what got she: ¡§Verily
¡¨ saith Christ
¡§wheresoever this gospel
shall be preached throughout the world
this shall be told of the woman for a
remembrance of her.¡¨ Here was a name well gotten
and firmly continued to the
very world¡¦s end. The memory of the righteous shall remain forever
and the
name of the wicked
do what they can
in God¡¦s good time shall rot and take an
ending. For which cause Moses
if you mark it
maketh no mention of the time
that either Cain or any of his sons lived
as he doth of the godly. Filthy
polygamy
you see
in this place began with wicked Lamech
that is
to have
more wives than one at a time: so old is this evil
that from the beginning was
not so. That mention that is made of the children here of the wicked
telleth
us how they flourish for a time with all worldly things whom yet God hateth.
The last words show you what eclipses true religion suffereth often in this
world
and let us mark it. (Bp. Babington.)
The race of Cain
I. IT IS SINGULAR
HOW MENTAL EFFORT AND INVENTION SEEK CHIEFLY CONFINED TO THY RACE OF CAIN.
Feeling themselves estranged from God
they are stung to derive whatever solace
they can from natural research
artistic skill
and poetic illusion. It is
melancholy to think that so many of the arts appeared in conjunction with some
shape or other of evil. The music of Jubal in all probability first sounded in
the praise of some idol god
or perhaps mingled with some infernal sacrifice.
The art of metallurgy and its cognate branches became instantly the instruments
of human ferocity and the desire of shedding blood. Even poetry first appeared
on the stage linked with the immoral and degrading practice of polygamy. Gifts
without graces are but lamps enabling individuals and nations to see their way
down more clearly to the chambers of death.
II. THERE ARE
CERTAIN STRIKING ANALOGIES BETWEEN OUR OWN AGE AND THE AGE BEFORE THE FLOOD.
Both are ages of--
1. Ingenuity.
2. Violence.
3. Great corruption and sensuality.
4. Distinguished by the striving of the Spirit of God. (G.
Gilfillan.)
Cain¡¦s descendants
The natural man is fertile in all things pertaining to this
present evil world; and Satan
the god of this world
sharpens and quickens his
ingenuity and skill.
1. Pastoral pursuits make progress. Jabal was the father of such as
dwell in tents
and have cattle (Genesis 4:20). Jabal takes the lead as
the great shepherd of his day--gentler
perhaps
and more peaceful in his
nature--morn like Abel in his disposition. The Spirit of God does not here cast
censure on such employments
as if there were sin in them. He simply points out
these children of Cain as sitting down contented with earth
and engrossed with
its pursuits. These children of Cain seem to have shrunk from tillage. The soil
was too full of terror
as well as of toil
for them to attempt its tillage.
How a man¡¦s sin finds him out! How it traces him out wherever he sets his foot!
2. The fine arts. Jabal had a brother by name Jabal
who betakes
himself to the harp and the organ. Yes--music--the world must soothe its
sorrows or drown its cares with music! The world must cheat its hours away with
music! The world must set its lusts to music (Job 21:12). Yet
sweet sounds are not
unholy. There is no sin in the richest strains of music. And God
by bringing
into His own temple all the varied instruments of melody
and employing them in
His praises
showed this. But these Cainites make music of the siren kind. God
is not in all their melodies. It is to shut Him out that they devise the harp
and the organ. Yet these inventions He makes use of for Himself afterwards;
employing these men as the hewers of wood and the drawers of water for His
temple.
3. The mechanical arts. Zillah bare Tubal-Cain to Lamech: and this
Tubal-Cain was an instructor of every artificer in brass and iron. The arts
flourish under Cain¡¦s posterity. They can prosper without God
and among those
in whose hearts His fear is not. God suffers them to go on forgetting Himself
and occupying themselves with these engrossing employments. He does not
interfere; and this not only because He is long suffering
but because one of
His great purposes is
that man shall have full scope to develop himself
mentally
morally
and physically. Man has torn himself off from God; and God
will let it be seen how the branch can unfold its leaves and fruit
or rather
what kind of leaves and fruit it can put forth when thus severed from Himself.
God will let the world roll on its own way
that it may be seen what a world it
is. What is earth without the God that made it
or the Christ by whom it is yet
to be made new? What are the arts and sciences; music
painting
statuary? What
are the wisdom
skill
energy
power
genius of the race
developed to the
full? What are the mind¡¦s resources
the heart¡¦s fulness
the body¡¦s pliant
power
man¡¦s strength or woman¡¦s beauty
youth¡¦s fervour or age¡¦s grey-haired
wisdom? What are all these in a world from which its Creator has been banished;
a world whose wisdom is not the knowledge of Christ
and whose sunshine is not
the love of God? (H. Bonar
D. D.)
The first city and the last
In the Book of Genesis we have the first city built by Cain
in
the Book of the Revelation the last city built by Christ. Now
what I specially
wish to show is how the spirit of Christ will purify and exalt city life
how
it will arrest the evil of the multitude within the city walls
how it will
develop the good
and bring the corporate life to a glorious perfection. It was
said of Augustus that he found Rome brick and left it marble; but Christ shall
work a far grander transformation
for
finding the cities of the earth cities
of Cain
He shall change them into new Jerusalems
holy cities
cities of God.
We must not look for the city that John saw in some future world strange and
distant; we must look for it in the purification of the present order
that
city is already coming down from God out of heaven
it is even now purging and
beautifying the cities of the earth
and it will never cease coming down until
the corrupt cities of the nations are built up in the crystal and gold of truth
and justice and peace. The city of Cain is the city of the past; it is also
alas! to a large extent the city of the present. It is impossible to think of
London
Paris
Berlin
St. Petersburg
New York
without being deeply impressed
by the spectacles they present of human genius and power and splendid
aspiration. And yet in these very cities how much there is to give us pain! How
much there is of ignorance
poverty
crime
suffering--of low life
sad life
shameful
life. Now
what makes a great city a sad sight
what is the cause of its
terrible and perplexing contrasts
and how will Christ cure these evils and
bring the clean thing out of the unclean? Let us see.
1. The spirit of Cain was the spirit of ungodliness. It was the
spirit of worldliness
it was the fastening to the earthly side of things and
the leaving out of the spiritual and divine; it made material life a substitute
for God
and in all things aimed to make man independent of God. It was government
without God. ¡§Cain builded a city¡¨--he laid the foundation of the worldly rule
and laid it in the spirit of pride and independence. It was culture without
God. It was wealth and power without God. It was fashion and pleasure without
God. The names of their women signify their appreciation of personal beauty and
adornment. The spirit of Cain was
throughout
the spirit of ungodliness
the
acceptance and development of all the gifts of God yet ignoring the Giver
and
in this spirit Cain built his city. The consciousness of God is the salt of our
personal life
and the consciousness of God is the salt of our social and
national life. National atheism
whether practical or theoretical
works
national ruin. There is no adequate check then to our pride
our selfishness
our license. Without God
the more power we have the sooner we destroy
ourselves; without God
the richer we are the sooner we rot. In opposition to
this Christ brings into city life the element of spirituality. ¡§Coming down out
of heaven from God.¡¨ It is in the recognition of the living God that Christ
creates the fairer civilization. He puts into our heart assurance of God¡¦s
existence
government
watchfulness
equity
faithfulness. It is comparatively
easy to see God in nature
in the landscape
the sky
the sea
the sun
but
Christ has brought God into the city
identified Him with human life and
interests and duties and joys and sorrows
and just as we accept and enforce
the divine element in city life so shall our cities flourish in strength and
happiness. We cannot do without God in the city--here where temptation is most
bitter
pleasure most enticing
sorrow most tragical
where material is most
abundant
opportunity most common
secrecy most practicable
passion most
excited
where character suffers most fiery trial
here can be no good thing
except as we are kept in awe of God¡¦s majesty
comforted by His sympathy
strengthened by His government
inspired by His love. We cannot build cities
without God
and if we do they fall to pieces again.
2. The spirit of Cain was the spirit of unbrotherliness. ¡§Cain slew
his brother.¡¨ It was Cain who asked
¡§Am I my brother¡¦s keeper?¡¨ He specially
denied the brotherly relation
he specially affirmed the selfish policy. And in
Lamech you see how the hateful spirit has prevailed. The first city was built
in the spirit of a cruel egotism
built by a fratricide
and Cain¡¦s red finger
marks are on the city still. The blood stains of the old builder are
everywhere. The rich things of commerce are stained by extortion and
selfishness--the bloody finger marks are not always immediately visible; but
they are generally there. There are red fingerprints on the palaces of the
great
red stains on the gold of the opulent. Look at the gorgeous raiment of
fashion
and the dismal blot is there. Go into the flowery paths of pleasure
and you will see selfishness spilling blood for its indulgence. And what is the
outcome of this selfishness? It creates everywhere weakness and wretchedness
and peril. It throws a strange black shadow on all the magnificence of
civilization. The spirit of Christ is the spirit of brotherliness. ¡§Cain slew
his brother.¡¨ ¡§Christ died for us.¡¨ Christ brings a new spirit and a new law
into society; we must love one another. There are red marks once more on the
new city
but this time they are the Builder¡¦s own blood teaching us that as He
laid down His life for us so we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren.
Oh! what a mighty difference will the working of this spirit make in all our
civilization. Can you measure it? How it will inspire men
soften their
antagonisms
lighten their burdens
wipe away their tears
make rough places
smooth
dark places bright
crooked places plain.
3. The spirit of Cain was the spirit of unrighteousness. ¡§Cain
who
was of that wicked one
and slew his brother. And wherefore slew he him?
Because his own works were evil
and his brother¡¦s righteous.¡¨ Cain acted in
untruthfulness
injustice
violence. And in that spirit he built his city. ¡§He
was of that wicked one.¡¨ The devil was the architect of the first city and Cain
its builder
and the spirit of faction
lying
robbery
and fratricide has
prevailed in the city ever since. Our great populations are full of
wretchedness because there is everywhere such lack of truth and equity and
mercy. The spirit of Christ is the spirit of righteousness. Christ comes not
only with the sweetness of love
but with the majesty of truth and justice. He
creates
wherever He is received
purity of heart
conscientiousness
faithfulness
uprightness of spirit and action. And in this spirit of righteousness shall we
build the ideal city. Some time ago
in one of the Reviews
a writer gave a
picture of the London of the future when all sanitary and political
improvements shall have been perfected. No dust in the streets
no smoke in the
air
no noise
no fog
spaces everywhere for flowers and sunlight
the sky
above always pure
the Thames running below a tide of silver; but think of the
city of the future in whose life
laws
institutions
trade
polities:
pleasure
the righteousness of Christ shall find full and final manifestation
Let us have great faith in the future. We say sometimes
¡§God made the country
and man the town
¡¨ but God will make the town before He finishes
and the town
that He makes shall outshine all the glory of nature as much as living immortal
beings are beyond all material things. Let us be co-workers with Christ. Put
your chrysolite in somewhere. In our personal life
in our domestic life
in
our public life
in our evangelistic life let us put in some real work. We are
poor creatures if we have no part in this. We must have a brick in this time.
Let us be true to the grand Master Builder
and when the earth in her beauty is
taken to the breast of God we shall sit down at the bridal feast and share the
immortal joy. (W. L. Watkinson.)
The city of Cain
Cain is a type of the worldling
cut off from God
whose all is in
this life
and who has no hope of heaven.
I. His thought is
of living here always. A city is a settled place of residence meant to endure
long.
II. His ambition
and pride. Great pomp and state in cities.
III. His
covetousness. Money made and hoarded in cities.
IV. His
luxuriousness. Cities are scenes of luxury and vice. There is Satan¡¦s seat. (T.
G. Horton.)
Cain¡¦s life
It is not difficult to detect the spirit he carried with him
and
the tone he gave to his line of the race. The facts recorded are few but
significant. He begat a son
he built a city; and he gave to both the name
Enoch
that is
¡§initiation
¡¨ or ¡§beginning
¡¨ as if he were saying in his
heart
¡§What so great harm after all in cutting short one line in Abel? I can
begin another and find a new starting point for the race. I am driven forth
cursed as a vagabond
but a vagabond I will not be; I will make for myself a
settled abode
and I will fence it round with knife blade thorns so that no man
will be able to assault me.¡¨ In this settling of Cain
however
we see not any
symptom of his ceasing to be a vagabond
but the surest evidence that now he
was content to be a fugitive from God
and had cut himself off from hope. His
heart had found rest
and had found it apart from God. It is in the family of
Lamech the characteristics of Cain¡¦s line are most distinctly seen
and the
significance of their tendencies becomes apparent. As Cain had set himself to
cultivate the curse out of the world
so have his children derived from him the
self-reliant hardiness and hardihood which are resolute to make of this world
as bright and happy a home as may be. They make it their task to subdue the
world and compel it to yield them a life in which they can delight. They are so
far successful that in a few generations they have formed a home in which all
the essentials of civilized life are found--the arts are cultivated and female
society is appreciated. Of his three sons
Jabal--or ¡§Increase ¡§--was ¡§the
father of such as dwell in tents and of such as have cattle.¡¨ He had
originality enough to step beyond all traditional habits and to invent a new
mode of life. Hitherto men had been tied to one spot by their fixed
habitations
or found shelter
when overtaken by storm
in caves or trees. To
Jabal the idea first occurs
I can carry my house about with me and regulate
its movements
and not it mine. I need not return every night this long
weary
way from the pastures
but may go wherever grass is green and streams run cool.
He and his comrades would thus become aware of the vast resources of other
lands
and would unconsciously lay the foundations both of commerce and of wars
of conquest. For both in ancient and more modern times the most formidable
armies have been those vast moving shepherd races bred outside the borders of
civilization and flooding as with an irresistible tide the territories of more
settled and less hardy tribes. Jubal again was
as his name denotes
the
reputed father of all such as handle the harp and the organ
stringed and wind
instruments. The stops of the reed or flute and the divisions of the string
being once discovered
all else necessarily followed. The twanging of a
bowstring in a musical ear was enough to give the suggestion to an observant
mind; the varying notes of the birds; the winds expressing at one time
unbridled fury and at another a breathing benediction
could not fail to move
and stir the susceptible spirit. The spontaneous though untuned singing of
children
that follows no mere melody made by another to express his joy
but
is the instinctive expression of their own joy
could not but give
however
meagrely
the first rudiments of music. But here was the man who first made a
piece of wood help him; who out of the commonest material of the physical world
found for himself a means of expressing the most impalpable moods of his
spirit. Once the idea was caught that matter inanimate as well as animate was
man¡¦s servant
and could do his finest work for him
Jabal and his brother
Jubal would make rapid work between them. If the rude matter of the world could
sing for them
what might it not do for them? They would see that there was a
precision in machine work which man¡¦s hand could not rival--a regularity which
no nervous throb could throw out and no feeling interrupt
and yet at the same
time when they found how these rude instruments responded to every finest shade
of feeling
and how all external nature seemed able to express what was in man
must it not have been the birth of poetry as well as of music? Jubal
in short
originates what we now compendiously describe as the fine arts. The third
brother
again
may be taken as the originator of the useful arts--though not
exclusively--for being the instructor of every artificer in brass and iron
having something of his brother¡¦s genius for invention and more than his
brother¡¦s handiness and practical faculty for embodying his ideas in material
forms
he must have promoted all arts which require tools for their culture.
Thus among these three brothers we find distributed the various kinds of genius
and faculty which ever since have enriched the world. Here in germ was really
all that the world can do. The great lines in which individual and social
activity have since run were then laid down. This notable family circle was
completed by Naamah
the sister of Tubal-Cain. The strength of female influence
began to be felt contemporaneously with the cultivation of the arts. Very early
in the world¡¦s history it was perceived that
although debarred from the
rougher activities of life
women have an empire of their own. Men have the
making of civilization
but women have the making of men. It is they who form
the character of the individual and give its tone to the society in which they
live. (M. Dods
D. D.)
The cultivation of the fine arts
The inexorable necessaries of daily life absorbed no more the
whole attention or the entire strength; the soul and the heart
also
demanded
and obtained their food and nurture! Lamech was the first poet (Genesis 4:23-24)
and his son the first
musician; the ¡§sweat of the brow¡¨ was temporarily dried by the heavenly
sunshine of art; the curse of Adam was
in a great measure
conquered by the
perseverance and the gentleness of his descendants. Everybody will readily
admit that this was a most important step in the advancement of society; for
materialism with its degrading tendencies of cold expediency was
in some
measure
dethroned; it became a co-ordinate part of a higher striving
which
found its reward
not in selfish utility
but in a free and elevating
recreation. It is true that most of the ancient nations ascribed the invention
of musical instruments to their deities: the Egyptians believed that Thor
the
god of wisdom and knowledge
the friend of Osiris
invented the three-stringed
lyre; the Greeks represented Pan or Mercury as the first artists on the flute;
and music was generally considered a Divine gift
and an immediate
communication from the gods. But our context describes the invention of these
instruments in a far deeper manner; it embodies it organically in the history of
the human families
and assigns to it that significant place which its internal
character demands. It is not an accidental fact that the lyre and the flute
were introduced by the brother of a nomadic herdsman (Jabal). It is in the
happy leisure of this occupation that music is generally first exercised and
appreciated
and the idyllic tunes of the shepherd find their way
either with
his simple instruments
or after the invention of others of a more developed
description
into the house of the citizen and the palace of the monarch. But
we must not be surprised to find here Jabal described as ¡§the father of those
who dwell in tents
and of those who have cattle¡¨ (Genesis 4:20)
although Abel had already
followed the same pursuits (Genesis 4:2). Every single remark proves
the depth of thought
and the comprehensiveness of the views of the Hebrew
writer. Abel had been murdered
most probably without leaving children; yet his
occupation could not die out with him; breeding of cattle is a calling too
necessary
and at the same time too inviting
not to be resumed by some later
born individual. But in the family of Cain rested the curse of bloodshed; the
crime was to be expiated by severe labour; in the fourth generation it was
atoned for (Exodus 20:5); and now were the Cainites
permitted to indulge extensively in the easy life of herdsmen; the blood of
Abel was avenged
and with the restored guiltlessness returned affluence
and--mirth
which is aptly symbolized by the invention of music. Jabal and
Jubal were Lamech¡¦s sons with Adah; but he had another wife
Zillah
who bore
him also a son
Tubal-Cain. He was a ¡§sharpener of all instruments of braes and
iron¡¨; and this seems to imply that he continued the ancestral pursuit of
agriculture
but that he also improved the necessary implements; he invented the
practical art of whetting ploughs
and of making
by the aid of fire
other
instruments materially mitigating the toil and hardship which the cultivation
of the soil imposes upon the laborious countryman. And are we not justified in
finding in this alleviation of the manual labour also
a relaxation of the
severe curse pronounced against his ancestor Cain? (M. M. Kalisch
Ph. D.)
I have slain a man to my
wounding
and a young man to my hurt
The song of the sword
It may be translated thus:--
¡§Adah
and Zillah! hear my voice;
Ye
wives of Lamech I give ear to my speech:
I
will slay men for smiting me
And
for wounding me young men shall die.
If
Cain shall be avenged sevenfold
Lamech
seventy and seven.¡¨
This is the most antique song or poem in the world
the only poem
which dates from before the Flood
the sole literary relic of the antediluvian
race. Of course
it has been read in many different senses
and its meaning has
at times been darkened by those who assumed to explain it. According to some
Lamech is a murderer stung by remorse into a public confession of his guilt.
According to others
he
the polygamist
acknowledges that his sin will bear a
more fruitful progeny of ills than that of Cain
that polygamy will prove more
fatal to human peace than murder. But the interpretation which the ablest
critics are rapidly adopting
and which I hold to be incomparably the best
is
that which names it ¡§the Song of the Sword.¡¨ Whatever else may be doubtful
this seems certain
that Lamech is in a vaunting humour as he sings: that he is
boasting of an immunity from vengeance superior to that of Cain; and that
because of some special advantage which he possesses
he is encouraging himself
to deeds of violence and resentment. Now
just before the song of Lamech we have
the verse which narrates that Tubal-Cain had learned to hammer out edge-tools
in brass and iron. Suppose this great smith to have invented a sword or a
spear
to have shown his father how effective and mortal a weapon it was
would
not that have been likely to put Lamech into the vainglorious mood which
inspires his poem? May we not rationally conclude that his song is ¡§the Song of
the Sword¡¨; that
as he wields this new product of Tubal-Cain¡¦s anvil
Lamech
feels that he has a new strength and defence put into his hand
a weapon which
will make him even more secure than the mark of God made Cain? (S. Cox
D.
D.)
The case of Lamech
I. THE CASE OF
LAMECH SHOWS THE EFFECT OF AN ABANDONMENT OF THE CHURCH¡¦S FELLOWSHIP.
1. The end and use of ordinances.
2. These are enjoined only in the Church.
3. Cain and his posterity forsook the fellowship of the Church
and
lost its privileges.
4. Mark the effect of this in Lamech.
II. THE CASE OF
LAMECH SHOWS THAT OUTWARD PROSPERITY IS NO SURE MARK OF GOD¡¦S FAVOUR.
1. We have seen Lamech¡¦s character.
2. He was remarkable for family prosperity (verses 20-22).
3. God¡¦s dealings with His people have all a reference to their
spiritual and eternal good.
4. Hence they have not uninterrupted prosperity.
5. To the ungodly
temporal good is cursed
and becomes a
curse--increased responsibility
increased guilt.
6. Splendid masked misery--embroidered shroud--sculptured tomb.
7. The graces of poetry given here--speech of Lamech.
III. THE CASE OF
LAMECH SHOWS THAT THE DEALINGS OF GOD ARE MISUNDERSTOOD AND MISINTERPRETED BY
THE UNGODLY.
1. God protected Cain by a special providence
that His sentence
might take effect.
2. Lamech argues from this
that he is under a similar special
providence.
3. Common--they who despise Divine things still know as much of them
as is convenient for their reasonings. Doctrines--depravity
election
justification by faith. Incidents--Noah
David
Peter
malefactor on the
cross--¡§All things work
¡¨ etc. ¡§Because sentence against
¡¨ etc. Ecclesiastes 8:11).
4. Satan thus uses something like the sword of the Spirit--infuses
poison into the Word of Life.
5. The Scriptures are thus by men made to injure them fatally. They
rest them to their own destruction--food in a weak stomach--a weed in a rich
soil.
Lamech
Without professing to regard him as either ¡§an antediluvian
Thug--a patriarchal ¡¥old man of the mountain¡¦--the true type of the assassin in
every age
whose sacrificial knife is a dagger
whose worship is homicide
and
his inspiration that apostate spirit who was a liar and a murderer from the
beginning¡¨ (Revelation J.B. Owen
M.A.
¡§Pre-Calvary Martyrs
¡¨ p. 97); or
on
the other band
¡§the afflicted one
a type and prophecy
in the first ages of
the world
of afflicted Israel in the hour of Jacob¡¦s trouble
when they shall
look on the pierced Saviour with godly sorrow¡¨ (Revelation T.R. Birks
M.A.
in
Family Treasury
February
1863
p. 85); we see in him--
I. A VIOLATOR OF
THE DIVINE LAW OF MARRIAGE. Lamech was a polygamist. Monogamy was the Divine
law of marriage
and in all likelihood this rule had been observed till
Lamech¡¦s time. Dr. Cox says
¡§He is the first of the human race who had more
wives than one. The father of a family of inventors
this was his invention
his legacy to the human race--a legacy which perhaps the larger half of men
still inherit to their cost and ours¡¨ (Sunday Magazine
1873
p. 158)
. Kitto quaintly remarks
¡§Lamech had his troubles
as a man with two wives was
likely to have
and always has had; but whether or not his troubles grew
directly out of his polygamy is not clearly disclosed.¡¨
II. A PROOF THAT
WORLDLY PROSPERITY IS NO NECESSARY SIGN OF THE DIVINE FAVOUR. Lamech was a
prosperous man
as things went in those primitive times. His family was
numerous and rarely gifted (Genesis 4:20-22). But gifts and graces do
not necessarily go together.
III. A CASE OF
GOD¡¦S DEALINGS BEING MISCONSTRUED AND PERVERTED. ¡§If Cain be avenged
sevenfold.¡¨ The mark set on Cain was not only a protection but a punishment.
Whilst it saved him from death
it confined him to a vagabondage almost worse
than death. Lamech
however
sees in it not punishment
but only protection. He
interprets Cain¡¦s case as a premium put by God upon violence; as a Divine
connivance at murder. ¡§If God
¡¨ he argues
¡§took the part of a homicide
I need
not scruple to destroy with my glittering blade any man
old or young
who
dares to molest me. God is merciful to murderers.¡¨ A true case of turning the
grace of God into licentiousness
of sinning that grace may abound.
IV. AN INSTANCE OF
CULTURED AND CIVILIZED GODLESSNESS. Lamech argues that
if God avenged Cain
sevenfold (Genesis 4:15)
he
with his new weapon
the sword
will not need nor ask a Divine avenger. He will act for himself on
the principle
¡§Vengeance is mine
I will repay
¡¨ and that not merely seven
fold but seventy-and-seven times. The song thus ¡§breathes a spirit of boastful
defiance
of trust in his own strength
of violence
and of murder. Of God
there is no further acknowledgment than that in a reference to the avenging of
Cain
from which Lamech argues his own safety¡¨ (Edersheim). Looked at in the
light of this savage ¡§sword song
¡¨ we cannot but see that the culture and
civilization introduced by Lamech and his family were essentially godless; ¡§of
the earth
earthly.¡¨ (T. D.Dickson
M. A.)
Lamech
1. As the first violator of God¡¦s primeval law of marriage. That law
most strictly enjoined one wife; and doubtless had been observed till Lamech¡¦s
time. It was the foundation of family peace
of true religion
of social order
of right government in the state. Take away this foundation
or place two
instead of one
and the whole fabric shakes
the nation crumbles to pieces.
2. As a murderer. Lust had led to adultery
and adultery had led to
violence and murder.
3. As a boaster of his evil deeds. He does the deed of blood
and he
is not ashamed of it; nay
he glories in it--nay
glories in it to his own
wives. There is no confession of sin here
no repentance
not even Cain¡¦s
partial humbling. Thus iniquity lifts up its head and waxes bold in
countenance
defying God and vaunting before men
as if the deed had been one
of honour and not of shame (2 Timothy 3:2; Psalms 52:7; Psalms 10:3).
4. As one taking refuge in the crimes of others. He makes Cain not a
warning
but an example.
5. As one perverting God¡¦s forbearance. He trifles with sin
because
God showed mercy to another. He tramples on righteousness
because it is
tempered with grace. He sets vengeance at nought
because God is long
suffering.
6. As a scoffer. He believes in no judgment
and makes light of
sin¡¦s recompense. Is not this the mocking that we hear on every side? No day of
judgment
no righteous vengeance against sin
no condemnation of the
transgressor! God has borne long with the world
He will bear longer with it
still! He may do something to dry up the running sore of its miseries; but as
for its guilt
He will make no account of that
for ¡§God is love¡¨! But what
then becomes of law
or of righteousness
or of the difference between good and
evil? And what becomes of God¡¦s past proclamations of law
His manifestations
of righteousness
His declarations of abhorrence of all sin? (H. Bonar
D.
D.)
Another seed
instead of Abel
Seth
To Eve is born a third son; and he comes to them as the gift of
love and the pledge of hope.
Eve names him Seth
which means ¡§set¡¨ or ¡§placed¡¨ or ¡§appointed
¡¨ as being
expressly given to her in room of Abel
whom Cain slew. In this her faith shows
itself again; for in the ease of her three sons it is she herself who gives the
names
and in them displays her faith. In Cain
it was simple and triumphant
faith
that had not yet entered into conflict
nor known what trials and
crosses are. In Abel¡¦s
it was the utterance of hope deferred making the heart
sick
and realizing strangership on earth and ¡§vanity¡¨ in creation. And now
in
Seth
it is faith reassured and comforted
brought to rest in God
as able to
fulfil to the uttermost all that He had promised.
1. She recognizes God in this. It is not the mere ¡§law of nature¡¨;
it is the Lord. It is in the fulfilment of His sovereign purpose that He is
doing this.
2. She gives a name expressive of her faith. She calls her infant
the appointed one
the substituted one. She saw God making up her lose
filling
up the void
providing a seed
through which the promised Deliverer was to
come.
3. She fondly calls to mind her martyred son. The way in which she
does this
shows the yearning of her heart over him who was taken away
as if
his place was one which needed to be supplied
as if there were a blank in her
bosom which God only knew how to supply. (H. Bonar
D. D.)
Then began men to call upon the name of the Lord
Prayer
Prayer is speaking to God--on any subject
with any object
in any
place
and in any way.
I. PRAYER SO
REGARDED IS AN INSTINCT. It seems to be natural to man to look upwards and
address himself to his God. Even in the depth of lost knowledge and depraved
feeling
the instinct of prayer will assert itself. A nation going to war with
another nation will call upon its God for success and victory; and an
individual man
from the bedside of a dying wife or child
will invoke the aid
of One supposed to be mighty
to stay the course of a disease which the earthly
physician has pronounced incurable and mortal. Just as the instinct of nature
brings the child in distress or hunger to a father¡¦s knee or to a mother¡¦s
bosom
even so does created man turn in great misery to a faithful Creator
and
throw himself upon His compassion and invoke His aid.
II. BUT PRAYER IS
A MYSTERY TOO. The mysteriousness of prayer is an argument for its
reasonableness. It is not a thing which common men would have thought of or gone
after for themselves. The idea of holding a communication with a distant
an
unseen
a spiritual being
is an idea too sublime
too ethereal for any but
poets or philosophers to have dreamed of
bad it not been made instinctive by
the original Designer of our spiritual frame.
III. PRAYER IS ALSO
A REVELATION. Many things waited for the coming of Christ to reveal them
but
prayer waited not. Piety without knowledge there might be; piety without prayer
could not be. And so Christ had no need to teach as a novelty the duty or the
privilege of prayer. He was able to assume that all pious men
however
ignorant
prayed; and to say therefore only this--¡§When ye pray
say after this
manner.¡¨ (Dean Vaughan.)
The first public revival of religion
I. Consider THE STATE
OF THE TIMES HERE REFERRED TO. ¡§Then¡¨--¡§then began men to call upon the name of
the Lord.¡¨ What was the state of the times
when this revival of religion took
place? It was very bad. There were evidently two parties--the children of men
and the sons of God--the men of this world and the men not of this world--the
faithful in Christ Jesus and the unbelieving and ungodly. And these
it
seems--the worldly-minded and corrupt--were growing greatly in boldness and
recklessness of crime. They congregated in cities
and so kept each other in
countenance; they had their unions for pleasure
for business
for sin; they
poured contempt on God and godliness. Meanwhile the godly seed were few and
separated. They worshipped God in privacy in their families. They wanted more
of union with each other. It was now necessary to make a stand for true
religion. What they believed with their heart
it was high time to confess with
their lips.
II. Consider THE
PUBLIC REVIVAL OF RELIGION WHICH THEN TOOK PLACE. The pious found it necessary
and desirable to unite more closely together; and they found their bond of
union in ¡§the name of the Lord.¡¨ ¡§They began
¡¨ the margin of our Bible says it
may be rendered--¡§they began to call themselves by the name of the Lord.¡¨
Probably the expression includes both ideas; they ¡§began to call themselves by
the name of the Lord
¡¨ and they also ¡§began to call upon His name.¡¨
1. They ¡§called themselves by His name.¡¨ They owned themselves
openly His people. They were not ashamed of Him--of His name
of His truth
of
His cause
nor of His people. They knew God in His grace
in the promise of the
Messiah
by the help of the Spirit. What they knew
they believed; what they
believed
they confessed; they ¡§called themselves by the name of the lord.¡¨
2. And then they also ¡§called upon the name of the Lord.¡¨ We cannot
think that so many years had passed away
and men had not yet begun to pray by
themselves in secret
or with their households in family worship. But ¡§then men
began to call upon the name of the Lord¡¨ in social
united
and public worship.
This probably is the meaning. The enemies of God were publicly united
and the
people of God began publicly to unite. Those
for ungodly purposes; these
to
promote vital godliness. The former
for profaneness; the latter
for prayer.
This was a decided step; when they came out of their family circles and
closets
to join together in public worship. Doubtless it attracted much
observation
and excited much ridicule. Can you not fancy the ungodly of that
day mocking the men of God as they went to their place of worship? disturbing
(it may be) the little band when assembled
or following them with their
taunts? But in vain. The Spirit of God brought His children to unite as
brethren.
III. Consider our
OWN INSTRUCTION in this subject. What is the state of our times? Is it good or
bad? It is very mixed--much as it was then. Numbers have altogether erroneous
views of the way of salvation. Numbers advocate another gospel than that of
Jesus Christ. Infidelity also prevails to a fearful extent. But
still
there
is a bright side also. There are more than a few now who know and who believe
from the heart the promise of the Seed of the woman
and all its glorious
fulfilment in the person
in the work
in the doctrine
in the grace of Jesus
Christ. These also do ¡§call upon the name of the Lord¡¨ in private. Oh! we are
not of their number
if we neglect private prayer. Then
also
most persons of
true piety do now call upon God in their families. But would we see religion revived?
We must ¡§call ourselves after the name of the Lord¡¨; confess Christ faithfully
before men; be not ashamed of Christian principles. And there must also be
revived delight in public worship. This has ever been the case in revivals of
true religion. Religion never flourishes without diligent and faithful use of
the appointed means of grace. (J. Hambleton
M. A.)
A change in mode of worship
Some change is here intimated in the mode of approaching God in
worship. The gist of the sentence
however
does not lie in the name of
Jehovah. For this term was not then new in itself
as it was used by Eve at the
birth of Cain; nor was it new in this connection
as the phrase now appears for
the first time
and Jehovah is the ordinary term employed in it ever afterwards
to denote the true God. As a proper name
Jehovah is the fit and customary word
to enter into a solemn invocation. It is
as we have seen
highly significant.
It speaks of the Self-existent
the Author of all existing things
and in
particular of man; the Self-manifest
who has shown Himself merciful and
gracious to the returning penitent
and with him keeps promise and covenant.
Hence it is the custom itself of calling on the name of Jehovah
of addressing
God by His proper name
which is here said to have been commenced. Growing man
now comprehends all that is implied in the proper name of God
Jehovah
the
Author of being
of promise
and of performance. He finds a tongue
and
ventures to express the desires and feelings that have been long pent up in his
breast
and are now bursting for utterance. These petitions and confessions are
now made in an audible voice
and with a holy urgency and courage rising above
the depressing sense of self-abasement to the confidence of peace and
gratitude. These adorations are also presented in a social capacity
and
thereby acquire a public notoriety. The father
the eider of the house
is the
master of words
and he becomes the spokesman of the brotherhood in this new
relationship into which they have spontaneously entered with their Father in
heaven. The spirit of adoption has prompted the confiding and endearing terms
Abba
Father
and now the winged words ascend to heaven
conveying the
adorations and aspirations of the assembled saints. (Prof. J. G. Murphy.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n