The same famous people who
want us to believe we are evolved from apes personally believe they are “royal”
descendants of Cain. “Fans” are to resign themselves to the fact that their own
bloodline goes through Cain and therefore they cannot be saved and are doomed
to hell.
Bruce Springsteen opines in
his lullaby Adam Raised a Cain: “In
the Bible Cain slew Abel
And East of Eden he was cast,
You're born into this life paying,
for the sins of somebody else's past,
Daddy worked his whole life, for nothing but the pain,
Now he walks these empty rooms, looking for something to blame,
You inherit the sins, you inherit the flames,
Adam raised a Cain.
Lost but not forgotten, from the dark heart of a dream,
Adam raised a Cain”
And East of Eden he was cast,
You're born into this life paying,
for the sins of somebody else's past,
Daddy worked his whole life, for nothing but the pain,
Now he walks these empty rooms, looking for something to blame,
You inherit the sins, you inherit the flames,
Adam raised a Cain.
Lost but not forgotten, from the dark heart of a dream,
Adam raised a Cain”
Bon Jovi sings in his Blaze of Glory: “When you're brought
into this world
They say you're born in sin
Well at least they gave me something
I didn't have to steal or have to win
Well they tell me that I'm wanted
Yeah I'm a wanted man
I'm a colt in your stable
I'm what Cain was to Abel
Mister catch me if you can”
They say you're born in sin
Well at least they gave me something
I didn't have to steal or have to win
Well they tell me that I'm wanted
Yeah I'm a wanted man
I'm a colt in your stable
I'm what Cain was to Abel
Mister catch me if you can”
*****
Genesis 4 informs that
“Adam knew Eve his wife; and she conceived, and bare Cain, and said, I have
gotten a man from the LORD.
[2] And she again bare his brother Abel. And Abel was a keeper of sheep, but Cain was a tiller of the ground.
[3] And in process of time it came to pass, that Cain brought of the fruit of the ground an offering unto the LORD.”
[2] And she again bare his brother Abel. And Abel was a keeper of sheep, but Cain was a tiller of the ground.
[3] And in process of time it came to pass, that Cain brought of the fruit of the ground an offering unto the LORD.”
Jordan explains, “Eve was
trusting God’s promise, looking for the promised seed, so she names the boy
Cain. The name Cain means ‘to possess; to acquire.’ He was the one she believed
they were going to get it all back (i.e., the fallen creation resulting from eating of ‘the Tree’) through.
“Then she bears his brother
Abel. The name Abel means vanity. He was just an add-on. He was useless, futile; he’s
not going to do anything to ease their burden. All their hope was in Cain. And
they signify that by the name.
“It says in verse 2 ‘Abel
was a keeper of sheep.’ In the Bible, keepers of sheep are sort of not very
important. You remember David was a keeper of sheep? Samuel comes to pick one
of Jesse’s boys to be king. None of them qualify so he says, ‘You got anybody
else?’ and they say, ‘Well, yeah, we got the kid out keeping the sheep.
Somebody’ll have to send for him; it’ll take two to three days to find him
because he’s out there by himself.’
“Cain was a
tiller of the ground. You know what Adam did with Cain? It was, ‘Here’s my
boy!’ He brought him into the family business: Adam & Son. He taught him
what he knew about keeping the Garden. That’s what God gave Adam to do. Adam
and Eve’s hope was in Cain: ‘Gonna be the Promised Seed!’
“When it says, ‘And in the
process of time it came to pass that Cain brought the fruit,’ notice that time
passes. They had some understanding. God’s Word was accessible to them. Mom and
Dad talked to them. Cain knew God had created all things. Adam had actually
seen God create things on the sixth day.
*****
“The family knew God had a
plan and a purpose for man in the earth. They knew about the serpent; they knew
he was an enemy. They knew he was a liar and they were supposed to stay away
from him. They knew about sin and punishment; why they weren’t in the Garden
any longer. They knew about God’s mercy and grace.
“They knew about that first
sacrifice. I’m really struck by the fact Cain brought the fruit of the
ground because you got to understand Cain—he’s the first Pharisee (Abel was the
first prophet). Cain is Mr. Religious. Cain brings the sacrifice, the
offering..
“Cain had a desire to have
God’s approval. He longed for the day when God would say, ‘You’re the seed!’ He
had that desire, that motivation, that fervor of religion to have God’s
approval; to be the one who’s praised by God as the promised seed and magnified
before all of his family as the ‘Chosen One.’
“The problem is he didn’t
bring the right thing. He thought, ‘I’m gonna go and offer something to the
Lord; I’m gonna make it the best it could ever be!’ And he worked and toiled
and he made it the best HE could make it so that he could prove to God just how
worthy he was to be the promised seed.
“Jesus said that’s where
the Pharisees come from. Paul said that’s what he was—‘a Pharisee of the
Pharisees.’ Paul said, ‘I had confidence in what I could do.’
“This was supposed to be
Cain’s day and it didn’t work out. Cain’s best turned into rage and anger and
blood lust for murder. It didn’t turn into good things. It didn’t bring peace
and joy and happiness. It brought destruction to his brother and to all that followed
him.
*****
“You go down through the
rest of this chapter and you’ll see ‘the way of Cain.’ He develops a whole
culture of people who follow him, and that generation that begins to follow him
when Jesus comes along . . .
“Jesus looks at the Pharisees
and He says, ‘You are of your father the devil, the lust of your fathers you
will do!’ Cain bought into Satan’s lie and all the Pharisees in the ages . .
. Paul says, ‘That’s where I was. I was over there trusting my works, my
efforts, what I was going to accomplish, and I figured out that’s all just
dung. Everything I do is just filthy rags.’
“You can translate that
‘dung-covered rags’ if you want to. You see, what’s going on in Philippians 3
is something that’s been going on all through the ages. There are just two
choices and the question he asked Cain about ‘Why?’ is the question we have to
answer today.
“Genesis 4 says, ‘And the
LORD said unto Cain, Why art thou wroth? and why is thy countenance fallen?
[7] If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted? and if thou doest not well, sin lieth at the door.
[7] If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted? and if thou doest not well, sin lieth at the door.
“You see, he was giving
Cain a hope even then. Cain wasn’t a helpless victim who was run by sin. He had
the opportunity to make some choices; he could have believed God’s Word and
God’s Word would have liberated him.
“Cain’s desire was to usurp
God’s authority and trust his own resources. Abel had no confidence in his own
ability and just believed God, trusting God’s Word and doing what it
said. That’s life.”
(new article tomorrow)
No comments:
Post a Comment