the truth about cain and abel
Both men, you’ll remember, offer sacrifices to God. Cain’s is an offering of crops, whereas Abel offers a blood sacrifice. God likes Abel’s offering but rejects Cain’s. Cain, angry, kills Abel. Taken as a simple historical narrative, the story yields little. We don’t learn why God prefers flesh to fauna. God comes across as both bloodthirsty and ungrateful. The standard moral of the story? Don't kill your brother just because God doesn't like your prize-winning marrows. It’s only when we begin to speculate about the wider significance of the story that things get interesting. The anthropologist Rene Girard, for example, thinks that the story is about the original meaning and function of sacrifice, namely the channeling (and therefore the containment) of violence in human societies. As modern ethology has shown, thwarted violence always seeks a surrogate victim, and so in societies that (unlike ours) don’t have centralised, powerful, theoretically impartial judiciaries and police forces, acts of violence can lead to orgies of recrimination, intractable blood feuds, geometric escalations of bloodshed. Violence is like a plague, and in order to contain it, societies have treated those things associated with violence as taboo. Girard’s overwhelmingly powerful argument is that blood sacrifice, in all tribal societies throughout history, has served as a means by which communities’ pent-up violence can be discharged in a ritually contained manner. The positing of ‘gods’ as beneficiaries of the blood sacrifice essentially conceals the mundane functions of sacrifice from the community, and legitimises the operation. For Girard, the Cain and Abel story – irrespective of whether it refers to an actual historical event – captures the whole meaning of the sacrificial system: Cain’s sacrifice does not involve violence, and so it does not absorb his animosity towards his brother. His murder of Abel somehow necessitates the formal institution of the violence-limiting sacrificial cult that becomes Hebrew religion, and which God ordains in order to create social order. (Note that God later claims to hate these sacrifices, which supports the view that sacrifices were a necessary evil.) It could be that stories like that of Cain and Abel encapsulate seismic cultural shifts in microcosmic stories involving a small number of characters who may or may not have also been real historical people. When we try to force them (for non-biblically warranted reasons) to conform to a straightforwardly ‘historical’ model of truth, we rob them of their vast scope, just as we would if we argued that Jesus’s parables are all literally true. The irony is that a reading like Girard’s reveals the full historical significance of the bible passage rather than diminishes it. The story of Cain and Abel is (among many other things) the story of how Judaism – as a matter of historical fact – became, by necessity, and as an act of divine wisdom and mercy, a sacrificial religion. Look at the story of Abraham and Isaac that Christopher Hitchens finds so morally revolting. God asks Abraham to kill his own child to prove his faithfulness. Isaac is then put through a hideous ordeal of thinking his own father is going to stab him to death. What's not to like about that? True, we can read this as an instructive example of someone putting God first and demonstrating faith. But look: how would we really feel if a faithful, sane Christian at our church turned up one Sunday and confided in a shaky voice that that God had asked him to stab his son to death? Would we urge him to be faithful? Would we even think it possible that the man was right in believing that God wanted him to do this? Heaven forbid! We would tie the guy to a pew and call the police. What if, like the story of Cain and Abel, the story of Abraham and Isaac captures in capsule-form the truth (historical and otherwise) of a seismic shift in culture, a new stage in God’s relationship with humans? We know that many civilisations exalted human sacrifice over non-human sacrifice (even those that didn’t exalt human sacrifice have tended to ‘anthropomorphise’ the animals they sacrificed – see Girard again). What if the story of Abraham and Isaac describes the momentous revelation that came to the Jewish people, perhaps originally through a real man named Abraham, that the worthiness of a sacrifice depends not on what is killed, but on the inward, personal sacrifice made by the sacrificer? The story shows, in capsule form, the historic shift from a focus on the external form of worship to a focus on the internal motive - a shift that has developed throughout the history of the Jews. This was the momentous shift that served to preclude human sacrifice from Jewish religion. We fundamentalists believe that all scriptural stories are rooted in real encounters between God and real humans: to affirm this is just to affirm the Judeo-Christian tradition. But the historic changes that occur on the basis of these cataclysmic encounters can be captured in capsule form without diminishing their historicity. It’s a matter of literary convention. We can argue for the truth – and yes, the infallibility or inerrancy – of the bible without acting as though it’s nothing but straight reportage.
Comments
Hebrews 11:17-19
By faith Abraham, when God tested him, offered Isaac as a sacrifice. He who had received the promises was about to sacrifice his one and only son, even though God had said to him, "It is through Isaac that your offspring will be reckoned." Abraham reasoned that God could raise the dead, and figuratively speaking, he did receive Isaac back from death.
NIV
We might also remember that God actually spoke to Abraham - He was in the presence of almighty God who had already given him a promise, which he believed. One of the reasons we need to stay very close to Scripture in our reasonings is to know what God's promises are. Most have conditions which we must respond to.
On one occasion I took an NIV Bible on vacation and read through it, marking everything I could find about what God has done for us and what He expects from us. It was a blessing to me and I gave it to my daughter in law who was struggling with the issue of eternal security.
That was several years ago and my son told me recently that she shared in their Bible study group that she is 100% sure of her salvation because of reading through the New Testament in the Bible "Mike's Mom marked for me."
Praise the Lord! There is nothing better than encouraging our children to read and know the Bible for themselves. God's Word will speak to hearts far better than all of our cleverly devised arguments.
..she shared in their Bible study group that she is 100% sure of her salvation because of reading through the New Testament in the Bible "Mike's Mom marked for me."
Re marking promises/expectations: I may just follow your example on that.
First I want to say, you need to change the contrast of the font to the screen. I really had to strain my eyes to read the post.
Actually I think Rene Girard in his book “Things Hidden Since The Foundation Of The World”, puts way to much human reasoning, anthropological philosophy and sociological slant on much of the scriptures and is so intent on “hidden” meanings he misses the obvious. “Strain on a knat and swallow a camel”.
First it is important to understand that Cain and Abel were twins. (Genesis 4:1), “conceived and bare Cain” (Genesis 4:2), “and she again bare his brother Abel”. Conceived once….bare twice. They were raised under the same tutelage of Adam. God is the one who brought the “sacrificial system” to man. After Adam and Eve had partaken of the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil (Gen 2:17/ 3:6) and their eyes were opened and they saw their nakedness (Genesis 3:10), God made covered them with the skins of animals..(Genesis 3:21) Unto Adam also and to his wife Eve did the LORD God make coats of skins and clothed them.” Those animal had to be sacrificed for the skins for those coats. God covered them with the blood. This was the first substitutionary sacrifice. God had already told them the consequences of their disobedience, (Genesis 2:17) “in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die”. In a spiritual since they did die, in that they were now separated from God by sin. And that “fallen nature” would now pass through Adams seed to the entire race. But they would have died “that day” physically too, except that God substituted the blood of the innocent to cover the sins of the guilty. “The life of the flesh is in the blood and I have given it to you upon the altar to make atonement for your souls: for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul.” (Leviticus 17:11). Three important truths point forward in time to the final sacrifice of the Messiah. One, the sacrifice is Gods, not man’s. Just as it was in the testing of Abraham on Mount Moriah, (Genesis 22:8) “God will supply himself a lamb for the sacrifice”,(John 1:29) “Behold, the lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world.”. Two, God, not man, ultimately does the sacrifice. Remember, Jesus said of his life in John 10:8, “No man taketh it from me, but I lay it down myself”.
Three, God does the covering, not man. (Romans 4:8) “Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sins are covered.”
Abel and Cain had been raised understanding the importance of this “substitutionary sacrifical system”. “It is the blood that maketh atonement.” No blood….No atonement.
I learned along time ago not to judge the parents by the behavior of the children. Two children raised under the same instruction, the same discipline, the same love, and yet they both decide to go in completely different directions. Abel follows Gods plan. Cain decides he will come to God with offerings from his own hands. He wants to earn his favor with God. But even then “by Grace are ye saved through faith”. God provided a means to enter into a relationship with him not through merit but by faith in his love and mercy…and through faith and adherence to his commandments, even though they did not understand them.
Thanks, Journeyman. I definitely agree with you (and Spurgeon!) there - and I very much look forward to the article. You have a great day too, and God bless.
Nick.