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قراءة كتاب Commentary on Genesis, Vol. II Luther on Sin and the Flood
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"

Commentary on Genesis, Vol. II Luther on Sin and the Flood
Adam had many children besides Cain and Abel, but these two only are mentioned, on account of their important and memorable history, and because these two were their first and most remarkable children. It is my full belief that the marriage of our first parents was most fruitful during the first thirty years of their union. Somewhere Calmana and Dibora are mentioned as daughters of Adam, but I know not whether the authors are worthy of credence. Inasmuch, therefore, as the birth of Seth is recorded as having taken place a long time after this murder, it seems to me very probable that the parents, distressed beyond measure at this monstrous crime in the bosom of their family, refrained for a long time from procreation. While Moses does not touch upon all these things, he intimates enough to arouse in the reader a desire to dwell upon the noteworthy events which the absence of detailed information permits us to survey only from a distance.
149. But I return to the text before us. Cain is an evil and wicked man, and yet, in the eyes of his parents, he is a divine possession and gift. Abel, on the contrary, is in the eyes of his parents nothing; but in the eyes of God he is truly a righteous man; an appellation with which also Christ honors him when he calls him "righteous Abel"! Mt 23, 35. This divine judgment concerning Abel, Cain could not endure, and, therefore, he thought that by murder not only the hatred against his brother could be satisfied, but also his birthright be retained. But he was far from thinking that was sin; as the first-born he thought he had exercised his right. He killed Abel, not with a sword, as I think, but with a club or a stone, for I hold that there were as yet no iron weapons.
150. After the murder, Cain remained unconcerned, for he thought the deed could be concealed by hiding the body, which he buried, or perhaps cast into a river, thinking that thus it would surely remain undiscovered by his parents.
When Abel, however, had been from home a longer time than had been his habit, the Holy Spirit prompted Adam to inquire of Cain concerning Abel, saying, "Where is Abel thy brother?" The above-mentioned utterance of Adam, "If not, sin lieth at the door," was a prophecy which now began to come true. Cain thought he had laid his sin to rest, and all would thus remain hidden. And true it was that his sin did lie at rest, but it lay at rest "at the door." And who opens the door? None other than the Lord himself! He arouses the sleeping sin! He brings the hidden sin to light!
151. The same thing must come to pass with all sinners. For, unless by repentance you first come to God, and yourself confess your sin to God, God will surely come to you, to disclose your sin. For God cannot endure that any one should deny his sin. To this fact the psalmist testifies: "When I kept silence, my bones wasted away through my roaring all the day long. For day and night thy hand was heavy upon me; my moisture was changed as with the drouth of summer." Ps 32, 3-4. For, although sin has its sleep and its security, yet that sleep is "at the door"; it cannot long last, and the sin cannot remain hidden.
152. When Moses introduces Jehovah as speaking, I understand him to mean, as above, that it was Adam who spoke by the Holy Spirit in the place of God, whom he represented in his relation as father. The expression of the Holy Spirit, therefore, is intended to set forth the high authority of parents; when children dutifully hear and obey these, they hear and obey God. And I believe Adam knew by the revelation of the Holy Spirit that Abel had been slain by his brother; for his words intimate the commission of murder at a time when Cain still dissembled as to what he had done.
V. | CAIN PUNISHED FOR HIS MURDER. | |||
A. | CAIN'S PUNISHMENT IN GENERAL. | |||
1. | By whom and how he is punished 153. | |||
2. | Why he was not put to death 153. | |||
* | The double grief of the first parents 154. | |||
* | What was Adam's church and altar 155. | |||
3. | How Cain was excommunicated 156. | |||
* | God's inquiry about Abel's blood. | |||
a. | How unbelievers refer to it 157. | |||
b. | How a theologian should use it 158. | |||
c. | It is a great and important matter 159. | |||
* | How Abel's death is to be viewed 159. | |||
d. | Why God does not inquire after the blood of beasts 160-161. | |||
e. | Whether this inquiry was from God direct or made through Adam 162-163. | |||
f. | How Cain felt upon this inquiry 164. | |||
* | The result of sin to murderers and other sinners 165-166. | |||
* | An evil conscience the result of evil-doing 166. | |||
g. | How to understand the statement that Abel's blood crieth to heaven 167. | |||
* | How God's children are to comfort themselves when the world oppresses them and seemingly God refuses to help 168-171. | |||
h. | This inquiry is a sign of God's care for Abel 169. | |||
* | The blood of many Evangelical martyrs cry to the Papists 170. | |||
* | How God opportunely judges the afflictions of believers 171. | |||
* | Why God's vengeance does not immediately follow 172. | |||
i. | The time this inquiry occurred 173. | |||
* | God indeed has regard for the sufferings and tears of his children 174. | |||
* | How sinners can meet the judgments of God 174. | |||
4. | The miserable life Cain must have led after his punishment 175. | |||
B. | CAIN'S PUNISHMENT IN DETAIL. | |||
1. | The Church suffered. | |||
a. | How Cain's punishment and curse differed from Adam's 176-178. | |||
b. | Why Cain's person was cursed 178-179. | |||
* | The more Cain desired honor, the less he received 180. | |||
* | The beginning of both churches, the true and the false 181. | |||
* | Cain's whole posterity perished in sin 181. | |||
c. | How his curse and punishment were lightened 182. | |||
* | Whether any of Cain's posterity were saved, and holy 182. | |||
* | The way the heathen had part in the promise 182-185. | |||
* | The way Cain withheld his children from the true Church 185. | |||
2. | The Home suffered. | |||
a. | How this curse affected the earth 186-187. | |||
b. | Why Adam used such severe words in this curse 186. | |||
c. | How it caused the earth to be less fruitful 187. | |||
* | The difference between "Arez" and "Adama" 188. | |||
3. | The State suffered. | |||
* | What "No" and "Nod" mean, and how they differ 189-190. | |||
* | Cain's sin punished in three ways and in each the sin was mitigated 191-193. | |||
* | Cain a fugitive and a wanderer. | |||