The word genesis
means origin or beginning. The book of Genesis starts out with darkness and
chaos on the face of the deep. This was a spiritual darkness. The sun, moon and
stars were not created until the fourth day. God's first act on the first day
of creation was to separate His light from spiritual darkness. This establishes
the pattern of all God's future acts upon His creation.
Because Adam
and Eve fell into spiritual darkness, they lost man's first estate and were
expelled from the Garden of Eden and banned from the Tree of Life. At the time
of their expulsion, God gave them a promise of redemption--a promise of
restoration. God said to the subtle serpent, "And I will put enmity between
you and the woman, and between your seed and her Seed; He will bruise your head,
and you shall bruise His heel." (Genesis 3:15 MKJV)
Adam and Eve initially had
two sons, Cain and Abel. These two men are prototypes of mankind. Two distinct
types emerge. The seed of the serpent and the seed of the woman, the Godly and
ungodly, the righteous and wicked, Christ and Anti-Christ, the Son of God and
the son of perdition, the wheat and the tares, the sheep and the goats, the wise
and the foolish virgins, the son of the bondwoman and the son of the free woman.
In Abel and Cain we see the pilgrim and the city-builder.
We see the godly tendency toward servanthood in Abel; he became a keeper
of the flock. In Cain we discover the fleshly tendency to dominate the earth by
his own strength and ingenuity. One was a
nomad, following his herd in harmony with the earth. The other was fixed and
territorial--a tiller and planter of the cursed earth that insisted on growing
weeds and brambles.
It is widely
believed that Eve considered her firstborn, Cain, to be the promised seed spoken
of in Genesis 3:15. Alfred Edersheim explains,
Of
the two sons of Adam and Eve, Cain was the elder, and indeed, as we gather, the
first-born of all their children. Throughout antiquity, and in the East to this
day, proper names are regarded as significant of a deeper meaning. When Eve
called her first-born son Cain ('gotten,' or 'acquired'), she said, 'I
have gotten a man from Yahveh.' Apparently, she connected the birth of her son
with the immediate
fulfillment of the promise concerning the Seed, who was to bruise the
head of the serpent. This expectation was, if we may be allowed the comparison,
as natural on her part as that of the immediate return of our Lord by some of
the early Christians. It also showed how deeply this hope had sunk into her
heart, how lively was her faith in the fulfillment of the promise, and how
ardent her longing for it. But if such had been her views, they must have been
speedily disappointed. Perhaps for this very reason, or else because she had
been more fully informed, or on other grounds with which we are not acquainted,
the other son of Adam and Eve, mentioned in Scripture, was named Abel, that is
'breath,' or 'fading away.'1
We know the
story.
Cain was a
religious man. Like righteous Abel, he came to worship God. God showed favor on
Abel's offering. The obvious difference between his offering and Cain's was
the shedding of blood in an animal sacrifice. A less obvious difference was
Cain's inability to hear and follow God because of his heart condition. Cain brought his gifts and his offering to
Jehovah but his sacrifice was unacceptable because his heart was not in it. It
was not so much the nature of Abel's offering that God saw as acceptable, but
it was the heart in which he did it.
Note that God did not scold Cain for the type of offering, but the state of his
heart (Genesis 4:6 and 7). God showing favor on the heart and sacrifice of Abel
angered Cain so much that he killed his brother. History has been saturated with
the blood of those led by the Spirit, whose lives have been taken by others who
abide in the religious spirit of antichrist. God judged Cain as follows.
"And
now you are cursed more than the ground which opened its mouth to receive your
brother’s blood from your hand. When you till the ground, it will not again
give its strength to you. And you shall be
a vagabond (a rover or wanderer) and a fugitive
in the earth." And Cain said to Jehovah,
"My punishment is
greater than I can bear. Behold! You have driven me out from the face of the
earth today, and I shall be hidden from Your face. And I shall be a fugitive and
a vagabond in the earth, and it shall be that
anyone who finds me shall kill me." And Jehovah said to him, "Therefore whoever
kills Cain shall be avenged seven times." And Jehovah set a mark upon Cain so
that anyone who found him should not kill him. And Cain went out from the
presence of Jehovah and lived in the land of Nod, on the east of Eden. And Cain
knew his wife, and she conceived and bore Enoch. And he built a city, and called
the name of the city after the name of his son, Enoch. (Genesis 4:11-17 MKJV)
When Adam
and Eve fell, the earth was cursed. Now
that curse was placed on a man in greater degree. Cain was not just cursed, but
bitterly cursed beyond what was
placed upon the ground. Because of Cain's act of violence, there was a great
shift, an acceleration of sin that was unknown in God's creation before that
time.
Ironically,
Cain chose to settle in the land of Nod, which translates from the Hebrew as
wandering.
No matter a man's spiritual state, he continues to be a wanderer on the
earth, searching for a place of rest. Instead
of coming back home to his father's house, Cain found rest in building an
empire after his own design. He built the first cities on earth for protection.
He thought he had escaped the punishment of God, but no matter the outward
appearance, he remained under the curse of being a fugitive and vagabond in the
earth. He exhibited a form of Godliness but denied and walked away from the
power of it.
The
wandering man always attempts to settle and build in hope of meeting his
insatiable need for rest. To his dismay, all his building only frustrates him
further. The righteous man who is
current with God is on a journey of certain completion and reward.
He has ceased from his own labors and entered into his Father's rest
(see Hebrews 4 ). He is no longer
driven by the need to build his own empire because he has found his place in an
eternal kingdom. He is now released
to explore the profound depths of his Creator.
Rather than bearing the burden of the builder or taskmaster, he is now
built together with other living stones into a habitation of God in the Spirit.
Great is the peace and rest of the man who forsakes the way of Cain to
enter the Father's rest.
The Jewish
historian, Flavius Josephus, explains the changes that occurred in the earth as
a direct result of Cain unleashing the sin that was crouching at the door.
On the
other hand, one who embraced the promises would consider himself a pilgrim and a
stranger in this earth, and both in heart and outward conduct show that he
believed in, and waited for, the fulfillment of the promise. We need scarcely
say that the one describes the history of Cain and of his race; the other that
of Abel, and afterwards of Seth and of his descendants. For around these two -
Cain and Seth - as their representatives, all the children of Adam would group
themselves according to their spiritual tendencies. . .Abel chose the
pilgrim-life, Cain that of settled possession and
enjoyment of earth.
On
the one hand we see nomadic shepherds, pilgrims
and sojourners, waiting for the
promised Seed and the full restoration of all things. Conversely we see wanders,
like Cain, seeking to find rest by tilling the ground and founding secure
cities.
Edersheim
continues:
The place
of Abel could not remain unfilled, if God’s purpose of mercy were to be
carried out. Accordingly He gave to Adam and Eve another son, whom his mother
significantly called "Seth," that is, "appointed," or rather
"compensation;" for God, said she, "hath appointed me ('compensated me
with') another seed instead of Abel, whom Cain slew." Before, however,
detailing the history of Seth and his descendants, Scripture traces that of Cain
to the fifth and sixth generations. Cain, as we know, had gone into the land of
"Nod"-- "wandering," flight, "unrest," - and there built a city,
which has been aptly described as the laying
of the first foundations of that kingdom in which "the spirit of the beast"
prevails (see Revelation chapters 17-19).
[Emphasis added]
Cain was the
first son of perdition, the prototype. The corrupt cities and governments of men
are our inheritance from him. Cain's way is the beast system.
What does
the way of Cain, who has been dead for all these years, have to do with us
today? Cain is dead but his ways are not! The division between the descendants
has continued down through history. The natures of these two brothers give us
insight to the relationships of men to this very day. This becomes evident as
the story continues.
The
Sons of God and the Daughters of Men
With Abel dead and Cain gone from the presence of God to
settle and build his own cities, we come to the birth of Seth.
Seth's name means appointed. Eve gave him that name because "God has appointed
another seed for me instead of Abel, whom Cain killed." Seth also had a son,
and he called his name Enosh (Greek Enos).
"Then men began to call upon the name
of the LORD" (Genesis 4:25-26 NKJV.
The marginal
reading of this verse is translated, "Then began men to call themselves by the
name of the Lord." We believe
this is the correct rendering. In the time of Enosh, the true followers of God
began to call themselves "the sons of God."
The other branch of Adam's family, the hedonistic descendants of Cain,
were the children of men. God later referred to them as flesh.
And
Jehovah said, My Spirit shall not always strive with man; in their erring he is flesh. And his days shall be a hundred and
twenty years. (Gen 6:3 LITV)
As
Adam Clark points out:
What
an awful character does God give of the inhabitants of the antediluvian world!
They were flesh, (verse 3,) wholly
sensual, the desires of the mind overwhelmed and lost in the desires of the
flesh, their souls no longer discerning
their high destiny, but ever minding earthly things, so that they were
sensualized, brutalized, and become flesh; incarnated so as not to retain God in
their knowledge, and they lived, seeking their portion in this life.3
The ultimate
corruption of the pre-flood race occurred when the lineage of Seth (the sons of
God) began to inter-marry the daughters of men (the offspring of Cain).
Edersheim amplified on this overt corruption of man when he wrote:
The
corruption of mankind reached its highest point when even the difference between
the Sethites and the Cainites became obliterated by intermarriages between the
two parties, and that from sensual motives. We read that "the sons of God saw
the daughters of men that they were fair; and they took them wives of all which
they chose." At that time the earth must have been in a great measure peopled,
and its state is thus described, "And God saw that the wickedness of man was
great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was
only evil continually."
In Genesis
chapter six, we are told how this intermingling brought on widespread trouble
and violence among the races. So
thorough was this corruption that God regretted having made man.
As a result,
God purposed to start over. He brought judgment on the earth in the form of a
great flood, saving only one righteous man and his family. This man's name was
Noah. His name speaks of his calling and destiny; because it means rest.
Nearly every child knows the story of how God saved the world through water. The
rainbow represents God's promise never to judge the earth by water again.
God began to
preserve purity by means of separation. By calling a people out unto Himself, He
preserved a remnant. The calling
out or exodus of a remnant from the corrupting influence of the world is God's
way of advancing His redemptive purposes.
The Post-Flood Revival and Continuation of "The Way of Cain"
After the
majority of mankind was destroyed by the flood, the remnant were sent out of the
safe haven of the ark.
So
God blessed Noah and his sons, and said to them: "Be fruitful and multiply,
and fill the earth." (Genesis 9:1, NKJV).
This
purified generation out of the loins of Noah was to be short lived, for we next
read of another rebellion. This time it was one of Noah's sons rebelling
against him as God’s righteous representative in that generation (Genesis
7:1).
And
Ham, the father of Canaan, saw the nakedness of his father, and told his two
brothers outside (Noah's tent).
But
Shem and Japheth took a garment and laid it upon both their shoulders and walked
backward and covered the nakedness of their father; and their faces were turned
away, so that they did not see their father's nakedness.
When Noah awoke from his wine, he knew what his youngest son had done to him. So he said, "Cursed be Canaan; A servant of servants He shall be to his brothers."
He
also said, "Blessed be the LORD, The God of Shem; And let Canaan be his
servant. May God enlarge Japheth, And let him dwell in the tents of Shem; And
let Canaan be his servant." (Genesis 9:22-27, NASB).
Hundreds of
years later, God judged the people of Canaan, the descendants of Ham, by the
hands of His righteous servants, because Canaan had become totally corrupted
with its hedonistic practices.
"We Will Revolt"
The next
stop on our walk through our common heritage is Ham's grandson, Nimrod, a
mighty hunter before the Lord. His name means we
will revolt. He was an empire
builder. The city he
built--Babylon--is a symbol of opposition to God. At Babel men refused to obey
God's command to go forth and fill the earth. Here for the first time, a man
took the way of Cain into corporate rebellion, founding the first kingdom.
The
Jerusalem Targum says of Nimrod,
And Kush
begat Nimrod: he began to be mighty in sin, and to rebel before the Lord in the
earth. He was a mighty rebel before the Lord; therefore it is said, From the day
that the world was created there hath not been as Nimrod, mighty in hunting, and
a rebel before the Lord. And the beginning of his kingdom was Bavel the Great.4
Nimrod was
filled with the same ambition and violence first found in Cain. He is the
epitome of fallen man's tendency to settle and build his own kingdom outside of God. From a worldly
standpoint, Nimrod was successful, heroic and popular.
In fact, "mighty one" is the same term used in Genesis 6:4 to
describe the Nephalim, the offspring of the unholy mixture of the sons of god
and the daughters of men. It
describes someone who is intentionally making himself famous by committing bold
and daring acts. Although the flood
rid the earth of all corrupted flesh, the spiritual forces behind that
corruption were again surfacing. (See
Gen 6:4, Num 13:33). Babel is a model of the continuing desire of man to settle
and build.
And
they said, "Come, let us build ourselves a city, and a tower whose top is
in the heavens; let us make a name for ourselves, lest we be scattered abroad
over the face of the whole earth." (Genesis 11:4, NKJV).
So
the LORD scattered them abroad from there over the face of all the earth, and
they ceased building the city. (Genesis 11:8, NKJV).
Notice
there was a pseudo-unity from everyone speaking the same language.
They journeyed until they
came to the plain of Shinar, where they decided to settle.
They built a city with bricks, not with stones; this is significant in
itself. But for now let us focus on the mentality revealed in verse
four above.
Their first
efforts went toward building a city, and then building a tower.
Their stated purpose was to establish a legacy that would keep them
intact both generationally and geographically.
They were reverting back to the way of Cain, building cities and naming
those cities after themselves. Why
did they so quickly repeat the errors that eventually lead to global
destruction?
God confused
their languages and scattered man upon the face of the earth as a stop-gap
measure, before their rebellion reached its fullness. The very idea of kings and
kingdoms sprang out of the heart of Nimrod. God never intended men to build
city-states and appoint kings to rule over them. This was a direct affront
against Him as their only Righteous King.
The
following parable is a satire exposing the vanity of seeking a king.
Once the trees went forth to anoint a king over them, and they said to the olive tree, "Reign over us!"
But the olive tree said to them, "Shall I leave my fatness with which God and men are honored, and go to wave over the trees?"
Then the trees said to the fig tree, "You come, reign over us!"
But
the fig tree said to them, "Shall I leave my sweetness and my good fruit, and go
to wave over the trees?"
Then the trees said to the vine, "You come, reign over us!"
But the vine said to them, "Shall I leave my new wine, which cheers God and men, and go to wave over the trees?"
Finally all the trees said to the bramble, "You come, reign over us!”"
And
the bramble said to the trees, "If in truth you are anointing me as king over
you, come and take refuge in my shade." (Judges 9:8-15a, NASB).
All the
fruitful trees and vines that provided oil, good fruit and new wine to honor God
and men refused rule over the trees. To them, ruling was useless and demeaning.
But the bramble, which otherwise serves no useful purpose, agreed to rule over
the trees, setting only one condition."If in truth you are anointing me as king
over you, come and take refuge in my shade." The bramble has plenty of
thorns but little shade from the blistering sun. If you attempt to take refuge
under its covering, beware of its thorns.
Years later,
Israel wanted to come under the rule of the bramble. When the prophet Samuel was
of a ripe old age, Israel came seeking a king. Trusting God to govern them was
too fearful a thing, so they wanted to go the predictable way of the kings of
the Gentiles. In so doing, they rejected the rule and sovereignty of God. They
rejected God as their King. They would rather have a bramble rule over
them--Saul, a herder of asses. Israel preferred the governmental style of Cain
and Nimrod.
Then all the elders of Israel gathered together and came to Samuel at Ramah; and they said to him, "Behold, you have grown old, and your sons do not walk in your ways. Now appoint a king for us to judge us like all the nations."
But
the thing was displeasing in the sight of Samuel when they said, "Give us a
king to judge us." And Samuel prayed to the LORD.
And
the LORD said to Samuel, "Listen to the voice of the people in regard to all
that they say to you, for they have not rejected you, but they have rejected Me from being king over them.
Note here
that when Israel chose to have a mere man rule over them and be like the
idolatrous nations around them, God was displeased and equated their lust for a
king with serving other gods. The desire to have a king is tantamount to
idolatry, because both replace the rule or Lordship of the true King.
A Return to Theocracy, the Direct Rule of God
The
tempter's statement "you will be like God" reveals the true problem.
Seeking to be self-governing like God, is in itself the rejection of God's
kingdom and leads to nothing but corruption. When fallen men band together, they
multiply their rebellion and soulish power, leading to greater decadence. As man
consolidates his fleshly power, his government is bent toward degeneration and
slavery and is at enmity with the government of God.
The
government of man and the government of God oppose each other. (See Psalms
2:2-3) In the city of man, every new law is an increase of man's control and
tyranny, supplanting the sovereignty of God. Men may not intentionally set out
to do this, but it is the nature of their government, which originated in the
way of Cain. For God's kingdom to be fully advanced, God must first call a
remnant out unto Himself--a people governed by His Spirit (Romans 8:14 and19)
and called by His name--a people of another way.
Unfortunately, this remnant only wants to journey so far, and then build a tower. Such was the case with Israel. In Acts 7, Stephen rebukes the Jewish leaders for this very thing.