Page:Legends of Old Testament Characters.djvu/83

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VI.]
CAIN AND ABEL.
61

Tabari says that Cain was the first worshipper of fire. Eblis (Satan) appeared to him and told him that the reason of the acceptance of Abel's sacrifice was, that he had invoked the fire that fell on it and consumed it; Cain had not done this, and therefore fire had not come down on his oblation. Cain believed this, and adored fire, and taught his children to do the same.[1]

Cain, says Josephus, having wandered over the earth with his wife, settled in the land of Nod. But his punishment, so far from proving of advantage to him, proved only a stimulus to his violence and passion; and he increased his wealth by rapine, and he encouraged his children and friends to live by robbery and in luxury. He also corrupted the primitive simplicity in which men lived, by the introduction amongst them of weights and measures, by placing boundaries, and walling cities.[2]

John Malala says the same: "Cain was a tiller of the ground till he committed the crime of slaying his brother; after that, he lived by violence, his hand being against every man, and he invented and taught men the use of weights, measures, and boundaries."[3]

The passage in Genesis "Whosoever slayeth Cain, vengeance shall be taken on him seven-fold"[4] has been variously interpreted. Cosmas Indopleustes renders it thus, "Whosoever slayeth Cain will discharge seven vengeances;" that is, he will deliver him from those calamities to which he is subject when living.[5]

But Malaia renders it otherwise; he says it is to be thus understood: "Every murderer shall die for his sin, but thou who didst commit the first homicide, and art therefore the originator of this crime, shalt be punished seven-fold; that is, thou shalt undergo seven punishments." For Cain had committed seven crimes. First, he was guilty of envy; then, of treachery; thirdly, of murder; fourthly, of killing his brother; fifthly, this was the first murder ever committed; sixthly, he grieved his parents; and seventhly, Cain lied to God. Thus the sin of Cain was seven-fold; therefore seven-fold was his punishment. First, the earth was accursed on his account; secondly, he was sentenced to labour; thirdly, the earth was forbidden from yielding to him her strength; fourthly, he was

  1. Tabari, i. c. xix.
  2. Antiq. Judæ., lib. i. c. 2.
  3. Excerpta Chronologica, p. 2.
  4. Gen. iv. 15.
  5. Cosmas Indopleustes, Cosmographia, lib. v.