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  • 00:00

    Hey everyone, welcome to Mythology Explained.

  • 00:03

    In today’s video, we’re going to discuss Cain: the first person to be born, as Adam

  • 00:08

    and Eve were created by God, not born in the traditional sense; the first person to murder

  • 00:14

    someone, his younger brother, Abel; a man cursed by God with the mark of Cain, which

  • 00:18

    would visit sevenfold the retribution upon anyone who perpetrated violence against Cain;

  • 00:25

    a man some versions claim is the son of Satan or another fallen angel; and a man who, in

  • 00:31

    one version, the one given in the Book of Adam and Eve, kills his brother so that he

  • 00:35

    can marry the more beautiful of their two sisters.

  • 00:39

    We’re going to begin by examining what is said about Cain in scripture, which, in this

  • 00:44

    video, will be the King James version of the Old and New Testament.

  • 00:48

    Following that, we’ll get into a little discussion about God rejecting Cain’s sacrifice

  • 00:54

    and Cain murdering his own brother.

  • 00:56

    Afterwards, we’re going to dive into several apocryphal works, examining details from each,

  • 01:02

    like demons and archons, that pertain to Cain.

  • 01:06

    And finally, we’re going to finish the video off with a more in-depth look at the Book

  • 01:10

    of Adam and Eve, which goes into great detail about the lives of Cain and Abel.

  • 01:15

    Let’s get into it.

  • 01:18

    After Adam and Eve were expelled from the Garden of Eden, they had two children together,

  • 01:22

    two sons: Cain, their first born, and Abel.

  • 01:26

    Cain worked the earth, a farmer, and Abel kept sheep, a shepherd.

  • 01:31

    Both of them made offerings to God, but not both of their offerings were accepted.

  • 01:36

    Cain offered up some of his harvest, and Abel offered up the first born lambs of his flock.

  • 01:42

    Cain’s offering was found wanting and rejected, while Abel’s was graciously accepted.

  • 01:48

    This put Cain, already a vessel for sin, in a dark mood, filling him with anger, to which

  • 01:54

    God responded: “If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted?

  • 01:59

    And if thou doest not well, sin lieth at the door.

  • 02:04

    And unto thee shall be his desire, and thou shalt rule over him.”

  • 02:09

    After these words, Cain and Abel talk, and later, Cain murders his brother in a field.

  • 02:14

    God confronts Cain, asking him where his brother is, and Cain says he doesn’t know: “Am

  • 02:19

    I my brother’s keeper?”

  • 02:21

    God says that Abel’s blood cries out from the earth and that Cain is now cursed by the

  • 02:26

    earth.

  • 02:27

    From then on, Cain became a fugitive and a vagabond.

  • 02:31

    He says that the punishment is more than he can bear and bewails that anyone who finds

  • 02:36

    him will kill him for his transgression.

  • 02:39

    God proclaims that anyone who harms Cain will have their offense visited back on them sevenfold,

  • 02:44

    and to ensure no one accidentally harmed Cain, he marks him so that all the world would know

  • 02:49

    him.

  • 02:50

    Cain became an exile, banished from the presence of God, and he came to dwell to the East of

  • 02:55

    Eden, in the land of Nod, where he and his wife had a son, Enoch; and they built a city

  • 03:01

    that they named after their son.

  • 03:04

    Why God rejected Cain’s offering isn’t delineated, but a popular belief stems from

  • 03:09

    the quality of each sacrifice, which, in turn, is symbolic of each brother’s character

  • 03:15

    and their faith in God, their dedication to the righteous path.

  • 03:19

    The first born of one’s flock is much more valuable than a generic portion of one’s

  • 03:24

    harvest, as it is not only the result of one’s labors, but something indispensable for future

  • 03:29

    prosperity, ensuring the continuation of the flock.

  • 03:33

    An equivalent offering on Cain’s part, perhaps, would have been a portion of the seed he intended

  • 03:38

    to plant the following year or to have burned and salted a swathe of his fields.

  • 03:44

    Because of this, Abel’s offering is a pledge of faith, placing himself, his life, and his

  • 03:49

    success in the hands of the Lord.

  • 03:52

    By comparison, what Cain offered was paltry, for it was but a meager showing from something

  • 03:58

    that would be produced each year; thus, it was not a gesture of faith, but more so a

  • 04:04

    halfhearted, performative gesture, a generic token, tantamount to going through the motions

  • 04:09

    of something only done because it was expected.

  • 04:12

    Basically, you get what you give: if you do right, you will benefit, and if you don’t,

  • 04:18

    sin will suffuse.

  • 04:20

    This idea is made clearer in the Tanakh, the Hebrew Bible, in which each offering is described

  • 04:25

    with greater detail, going further in highlighting the disparity between the two.

  • 04:30

    Here’s the passage from the JPS Tanakh: “Cain brought an offering to the Lord from

  • 04:35

    the fruit of the soil; and Abel, for his part, brought the choicest of the firstlings of

  • 04:40

    his flock.”

  • 04:42

    Had Cain offered the best of his harvest, his offering, I’m guessing, would have been

  • 04:46

    accepted, but even then, because Abel’s offering impacted his future success, the

  • 04:51

    offerings of each brother still would not have been of equal value, as you can’t grow

  • 04:56

    your flock, let alone sustain it, if it isn’t being replenished with newborns.

  • 05:02

    As for why Cain murdered Abel, well, there doesn’t seem to be much to explain Here.

  • 05:07

    Cain Wasn’t a man imbued with virtue; rather, he was innately sinful and prone to all that

  • 05:13

    entailed, namely, greed, jealousy, and anger: he was jealous of Abel, whose offer was accepted,

  • 05:20

    and he was angry at God, who rejected his offer.

  • 05:23

    His jealousy and anger compounded into murderous intent, which resulted in Cain killing his

  • 05:28

    own brother.

  • 05:30

    In the New Testament, no additional information pertaining to Cain’s life is given.

  • 05:35

    The few times he is mentioned, his name is synonymous with sin and is used like a curse

  • 05:40

    to illustrate greed and wickedness.

  • 05:42

    Here are two examples: Jude 1:11

  • 05:46

    “Woe unto them!

  • 05:48

    For they have gone in the way of Cain, and ran greedily after the error of Balaam for

  • 05:54

    reward, and perished in the gainsaying of Core.”

  • 05:58

    John 3:12 “Not as Cain, who was of that wicked one,

  • 06:03

    and slew his brother.

  • 06:04

    And wherefore slew he him?

  • 06:06

    Because his own works were evil, and his brother’s righteous.”

  • 06:11

    Though there is little said about Cain in the New Testament, one line from John 3:12,

  • 06:15

    “who was of that wicked one”, has led to an interesting line of thought, which is

  • 06:20

    that Cain was actually the son of Satan or of a fallen angel, a notion given credence

  • 06:26

    by the use of the epithet “that wicked one” to describe Cain’s origins, either of his

  • 06:31

    birth or nature.

  • 06:33

    Perhaps the most prominent of the Christian commentators to espouse this was Tertullian,

  • 06:39

    Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus, in Latin, who was an early Christian theologian,

  • 06:45

    born sometime between 155 and 160, living until 220.

  • 06:51

    This idea is also considered and expanded upon in Jewish exegesis, such as the Targum

  • 06:57

    Jonathan, in which the serpent in the garden is identified with Samael, here called the

  • 07:02

    angel of death.

  • 07:04

    He sheds his serpent’s coils and reveals himself to Eve in his angelic form in the

  • 07:09

    Garden of Eden.

  • 07:10

    Later, when the birth of Cain is told, it is said that Eve, who is called Hava, desired

  • 07:15

    the angel.

  • 07:17

    That Samael was the serpent in the Garden, and that Eve was said to have desired the

  • 07:21

    Angel in connection with the verse in which Cain is conceived and born, seems to indicate

  • 07:25

    that Cain was a spawn of sin, not sired by Adam, the original progenitor and patriarch

  • 07:31

    of humanity.

  • 07:33

    Other works that discuss Cain include the Apocryphon of John, a second century Sethian

  • 07:39

    Gnostic work, the Hypostasis of the Archons, an exegesis written sometime in the third

  • 07:45

    or fourth century that uses the first six books of Genesis to express Gnostic mythology,

  • 07:52

    Pseudo-Philo, a first century Jewish work, and the Book of Jubilees, written about 100

  • 07:59

    BC.

  • 08:00

    In the Apocryphon of John, Eve is seduced by Yaldaboth, an evil deity depicted as a

  • 08:06

    lion-headed serpent.

  • 08:08

    In the Hypostasis of the Archons, Eve is taken against her will by a pair of Archons, entities

  • 08:14

    we’ll touch on presently.

  • 08:16

    In Gnosticism, as well as other religions similar to it, there are seven Archons, each

  • 08:21

    one connected to a planet.

  • 08:24

    They, including Yaldaboth, who is counted among their number, built the physical universe

  • 08:29

    to prevent souls from transcending to spiritual bliss.

  • 08:33

    The material plane is the prison, and the flesh each person is encased in is the shackles.

  • 08:39

    Pseudo-Philo recounts how Cain was 15 years old when he murdered his brother, going on

  • 08:45

    to detail Cain’s life following his escape from the Land of Nod, where he was exiled

  • 08:50

    to after taking his brother’s life.

  • 08:53

    Per this account, Cain sired six children.

  • 08:56

    With the exception of Enoch, the only one of the six to be mentioned in the bible, the

  • 09:00

    other five children and their descendants went on to spread evil throughout the world.

  • 09:05

    Here, Cain lived to the very old age of 730.

  • 09:09

    Lastly, in the Book of Jubilees, Cain’s story is expanded upon, explaining how he

  • 09:15

    used a rock to bludgeon Abel to death and, later, how his instrument of murder became

  • 09:21

    the cause of his own death when his house caved in with him inside, stones crushing

  • 09:26

    him.

  • 09:27

    Here’s a passage from the Book of Jubilee that explains the concept of tools of murder

  • 09:31

    becoming the demise of their wielders: “with the instrument with which a man kills his

  • 09:36

    neighbor with the same shall he be killed; after the manner that he wounded him, in like

  • 09:41

    manner shall they deal with him.”

  • 09:44

    As well, there is a Talmudic tradition in which God makes a horn grow from Cain’s

  • 09:49

    head after he murders Abel, with Cain later being killed by Lamech, his own grandson.

  • 09:54

    We’re going to spend the rest of the video looking at Cain’s life as it is presented

  • 09:59

    in the Life of Adam and Eve, which is generally thought to have been written sometime in the

  • 10:03

    first century.

  • 10:04

    In this version, Eve first gives birth to twins, Cain and his sister Luluwa.

  • 10:10

    Cain, said to mean ‘hater’, was named so because he hated his sister while they

  • 10:15

    shared the warm dark of their mother’s womb, and Luluwa, said to mean ‘beautiful', was

  • 10:21

    so named because she was even more beautiful than her mother.

  • 10:24

    They conceived again, and later, Eve gave birth to another set of twins, Abel and his

  • 10:30

    sister Aklia.

  • 10:32

    Even as a young child, Cain was callous, selfish, and disobedient, frequently choosing not to

  • 10:38

    accompany his father and brother when they offered sacrifices to God.

  • 10:42

    First Satan came to Abel, but he was repelled when Abel prayed to God.

  • 10:47

    Following this failure, Satan approached Cain, telling him that his parents intended to marry

  • 10:52

    Cain’s beautiful sister to Abel because they loved him more, leaving him the younger

  • 10:57

    ugly sister to marry.

  • 10:59

    Satan then counsels Cain to kill his brother, which would allow him to Marry Luluwa instead.

  • 11:04

    Interestingly, in this account the vocations of each brother are switched, making Abel

  • 11:09

    the farmer and Cain the shepherd.

  • 11:12

    Brought to the altar by Adam, Abel’s offering is accepted because God perceived his heart

  • 11:17

    and the goodness therein, Cain’s, though, is rejected: he only offered a sacrifice to

  • 11:23

    placate his father, and when the sacrifice was made, his eyes were on the lamb, focused

  • 11:28

    on his own profit, his heart not open to God, instead filled with thoughts of greed and

  • 11:34

    violence.

  • 11:35

    When the boys were older, Cain 15 and Abel 12, Adam and Eve thought it was time for them

  • 11:41

    to take wives, deciding to marry Cain to Abel’s sister, and vice versa.

  • 11:46

    Satan finds Cain a second time, revealing the impending marital plans in-store for him,

  • 11:52

    telling Cain to do what he says; that if he does as instructed, the beautiful sister will

  • 11:57

    be his wife, and he will be showered in gifts.

  • 12:01

    After this, Cain promptly goes to the cave where Eve was, proceeding to beat and curse

  • 12:06

    his mother, a petty and cruel expression of acute displeasure about what his parents intended.

  • 12:13

    Subsequently, more sacrifices are made; Cain’s are rejected, Abel’s are accepted; and all

  • 12:19

    the while, hatred smoldered in Cain’s heart until it blazed, consumed by it, resolving

  • 12:25

    him to kill his brother.

  • 12:27

    Cain lures his brother into the fields by asking him to accompany him on a walk.

  • 12:32

    Once alone, far from their parents and sisters, Cain, who contrived the activity so that Abel

  • 12:38

    walked in front, attacks his brother from behind, brutalizing him with a walking staff.

  • 12:43

    Here’s the passage: “Then Cain came up to him, comforted him

  • 12:48

    with his words while walking a little behind him.

  • 12:51

    Then he ran up to him and beat him with the staff, blow after blow, until he was dazed.

  • 12:57

    But when Abel fell down on the ground and saw that his brother meant to kill him, he

  • 13:01

    said to Cain, “O, my brother, have pity on me.

  • 13:05

    By the breasts we have sucked, do not hit me!

  • 13:08

    By the womb that bore us and that brought us into the world, do not beat me to death

  • 13:12

    with that staff!

  • 13:13

    If you are set on killing me, take one of these large stones and kill me outright.”

  • 13:18

    Then Cain, the hard-hearted, and cruel murderer, took a large stone, and beat his brother’s

  • 13:23

    head with it until his brains oozed out, and he wallowed in his blood, before him.

  • 13:29

    And Cain was not sorry for what he had done.”

  • 13:33

    Cain immediately attempts to bury his brother’s mangled body, but the earth wouldn’t accept

  • 13:38

    it, rejecting it and spitting it out three times.

  • 13:41

    God, furious, knew what Cain had done, so He marked him in the way that was described

  • 13:46

    earlier in the video.

  • 13:48

    Cain returns to his parents in a sorry state, both pitiable and despicable: terrified, defiled,

  • 13:54

    and blood-soaked.

  • 13:56

    Upon learning of what transpired, a profound sorrow set into Adam and Eve, and Cain left,

  • 14:02

    never to reunite with his parents.

  • 14:04

    He took Luluwa, the older beautiful sister, with him, making her his wife and siring many

  • 14:10

    children by her.

  • 14:11

    Years after the death of Abel, Adam and Eve conceived one last time, a son, Seth, who

  • 14:18

    was good like Abel was good, yet greater in mind and body: intelligent, willful, tall,

  • 14:23

    handsome, and strong.

  • 14:25

    When Seth was grown, he married Cain’s twin sister, whom it was originally intended that

  • 14:30

    Cain should marry.

  • 14:32

    They had children, and Seth forbade them from spending time with Cain’s children, who

  • 14:37

    made their home to the West, below the place Cain murdered Abel years earlier, keeping

  • 14:42

    the two families separate.

  • 14:44

    Because Cain was cursed by God, he could find no peace, nor could he settle anywhere, forced

  • 14:50

    to wander from place to place.

  • 14:52

    Eventually, he came to visit one of his sons, Lamech, who was now blind and well into his

  • 14:58

    years.

  • 14:59

    Cain went out to the field, but unfortunately for him, Lamech, blind man that he was, mistook

  • 15:05

    him for a threat, thinking him a wild beast or robber.

  • 15:09

    He let loose an arrow, piercing Cain in the side, then followed up that shot with stone

  • 15:14

    from his sling.

  • 15:15

    Here’s the passage that describes Cain’s death:

  • 15:19

    “Then Lamech shot at Cain with his arrow and hit him in his side.

  • 15:24

    And Lamech struck him with a stone from his sling, and the stone struck his face and knocked

  • 15:29

    out both his eyes.

  • 15:31

    Then Cain fell dead instantly.

  • 15:34

    Then Lamech and the young Shepherd came up to him and found him lying on the ground.

  • 15:39

    And the young shepherd said to him, “It is Cain our grandfather, whom you have killed,

  • 15:43

    my lord!

  • 15:44

    Then Lamech grieved in bitterness and regret.

  • 15:47

    And he clapped his hands together and struck the head of the youth with his flat palm,

  • 15:53

    and the youth fell as if he were dead.

  • 15:55

    But Lamech thought the youth was pretending, so he took up a stone and struck him, and

  • 16:00

    smashed his head until he died [,perpetuating the sin of kinslaying].”

  • 16:06

    And that’s it for this video!

  • 16:07

    If you enjoy the content please LIKE the video and SUBSCRIBE to the channel.

  • 16:12

    As always, leave your video suggestions down below

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The example sentences of GNOSTICISM in videos (2 in total of 2)

in preposition or subordinating conjunction gnosticism proper noun, singular , as adverb well adverb as preposition or subordinating conjunction other adjective religions noun, plural similar adjective to to it personal pronoun , there existential there are verb, non-3rd person singular present seven cardinal number archons proper noun, singular , each determiner
to to put verb, base form it personal pronoun clearly adverb , theism noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction atheism noun, singular or mass address noun, singular or mass what wh-pronoun you personal pronoun believe verb, non-3rd person singular present while preposition or subordinating conjunction gnosticism noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction agnosticism noun, singular or mass

Use "gnosticism" in a sentence | "gnosticism" example sentences

How to use "gnosticism" in a sentence?

  • The perpetual enemy of faith in the true God is not atheism (the claim that there is no God), but rather Gnosticism (the claim that God is known).
    -Martin Buber-
  • In Gnosticism, the physical world did not ultimately matter - which meant physical suffering did not matter either. Seeking 'enlightenment' meant cultivating an attitude of detachment, even indifference.
    -Nancy Pearcey-

Definition and meaning of GNOSTICISM

What does "gnosticism mean?"

/ˈnästəˌsizəm/

noun
Religious orientation advocating gnosis as the way to release a person's spiritual element; considered heresy by Christian churches.