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Chapter 5
Cain and Abel Tested
[This chapter is based on Genesis 4:1-15.]
CAIN and Abel, the sons of Adam, differed widely in character. Abel had
a spirit of loyalty to God; he saw justice and mercy in the Creator's
dealings with the fallen race, and gratefully accepted the hope of
redemption. But Cain cherished feelings of rebellion, and murmured
against God because of the curse pronounced upon the earth and upon the
human race for Adam's sin. He permitted his mind to run in the same
channel that led to Satan's fall--indulging the desire for
self-exaltation and questioning the divine justice and authority.
These brothers were tested, as Adam had been tested before them, to
prove whether they would believe and obey the word of God. They were
acquainted with the provision made for the salvation of man, and
understood the system of offerings which God had ordained. They knew
that in these offerings they were to express faith in the Saviour whom
the offerings typified, and at the same time to acknowledge their total
dependence on Him for pardon; and they knew that by thus conforming to
the divine plan for their redemption, they were giving proof of their
obedience to the will of God. Without the shedding of blood there could
be no remission of sin; and they were to show their faith in the blood
of Christ as the promised atonement by offering the firstlings of the
flock in sacrifice. Besides this, the first fruits of the earth were to
be presented before the Lord as a thank offering.
The two brothers erected their altars alike, and each brought an
offering. Abel presented a sacrifice from the flock, in accordance with
the Lord's directions. "And the Lord had respect unto Abel and to his
offering." Fire flashed from heaven and consumed the sacrifice. But
Cain, disregarding the Lord's direct and explicit command, presented
only an offering of fruit. There was no token from heaven to show that
it was accepted. Abel pleaded with his brother to approach God in the
divinely prescribed way, but his entreaties only made Cain the more
determined to follow his own will. As the eldest, he felt above being
admonished by his brother, and despised his counsel.
Cain came before God with murmuring and infidelity in his heart in
regard to the promised sacrifice and the necessity of the sacrificial
offerings. His gift expressed no penitence for sin. He felt, as many now
feel, that it would be an acknowledgment of weakness to follow the exact
plan marked out by God, of trusting his salvation wholly to the
atonement of the promised Saviour. He chose the course of
self-dependence. He would come in his own merits. He would not bring the
lamb, and mingle its blood with his offering, but would present his
fruits, the products of his labor. He presented his offering as a favor
done to God, through which he expected to secure the divine approval.
Cain obeyed in building an altar, obeyed in bringing a sacrifice; but he
rendered only a partial obedience. The essential part, the recognition
of the need of a Redeemer, was left out.
So far as birth and religious instruction were concerned, these brothers
were equal. Both were sinners, and both acknowledged the claims of God
to reverence and worship. To outward appearance their religion was the
same up to a certain point, but beyond this the difference between the
two was great.
"By faith Abel offered unto God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain."
Hebrews 11:4. Abel grasped the great principles of redemption. He saw
himself a sinner, and he saw sin and its penalty, death, standing
between his soul and communion with God. He brought the slain victim,
the sacrificed life, thus acknowledging the claims of the law that had
been transgressed. Through the shed blood he looked to the future
sacrifice, Christ dying on the cross of Calvary; and trusting in the
atonement that was there to be made, he had the witness that he was
righteous, and his offering accepted.
Cain had the same opportunity of learning and accepting these truths as
had Abel. He was not the victim of an arbitrary purpose. One brother was
not elected to be accepted of God, and the other to be rejected. Abel
chose faith and obedience; Cain, unbelief and rebellion. Here the whole
matter rested.
Cain and Abel represent two classes that will exist in the world till
the close of time. One class avail themselves of the appointed sacrifice
for sin; the other venture to depend upon their own merits; theirs is a
sacrifice without the virtue of divine mediation, and thus it is not
able to bring man into favor with God. It is only through the merits of
Jesus that our transgressions can be pardoned. Those who feel no need of
the blood of Christ, who feel that without divine grace they can by
their own works secure the approval of God, are making the same mistake
as did Cain. If they do not accept the cleansing blood, they are under
condemnation. There is no other provision made whereby they can be
released from the thralldom of sin.
The class of worshipers who follow the example of Cain includes by far
the greater portion of the world; for nearly every false religion has
been based on the same principle--that man can depend upon his own
efforts for salvation. It is claimed by some that the human race is in
need, not of redemption, but of development--that it can refine,
elevate, and regenerate itself. As Cain thought to secure the divine
favor by an offering that lacked the blood of a sacrifice, so do these
expect to exalt humanity to the divine standard, independent of the
atonement. The history of Cain shows what must be the results. It shows
what man will become apart from Christ. Humanity has no power to
regenerate itself. It does not tend upward, toward the divine, but
downward, toward the satanic. Christ is our only hope. "There is none
other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved."
"Neither is there salvation in any other." Acts 4:12.
True faith, which relies wholly upon Christ, will be manifested by
obedience to all the requirements of God. From Adam's day to the present
time the great controversy has been concerning obedience to God's law.
In all ages there have been those who claimed a right to the favor of
God even while they were disregarding some of His commands. But the
Scriptures declare that by works is "faith made perfect;" and that,
without the works of obedience, faith "is dead." James 2:22, 17. He that
professes to know God, "and keepeth not His commandments, is a liar, and
the truth is not in him." 1 John 2:4.
When Cain saw that his offering was rejected, he was angry with the Lord
and with Abel; he was angry that God did not accept man's substitute in
place of the sacrifice divinely ordained, and angry with his brother for
choosing to obey God instead of joining in rebellion against Him.
Notwithstanding Cain's disregard of the divine command, God did not
leave him to himself; but He condescended to reason with the man who had
shown himself so unreasonable. And the Lord said unto Cain, "Why art
thou wroth? and why is thy countenance fallen?" Through an angel
messenger the divine warning was conveyed: "If thou doest well, shalt
thou not be accepted? And if thou doest not well, sin lieth at the
door." The choice lay with Cain himself. If he would trust to the merits
of the promised Saviour, and would obey God's requirements, he would
enjoy His favor. But should he persist in unbelief and transgression, he
would have no ground for complaint because he was rejected by the Lord.
But instead of acknowledging his sin, Cain continued to complain of the
injustice of God and to cherish jealousy and hatred of Abel. He angrily
reproached his brother, and attempted to draw him into controversy
concerning God's dealings with them. In meekness, yet fearlessly and
firmly, Abel defended the justice and goodness of God. He pointed out
Cain's error, and tried to convince him that the wrong was in himself.
He pointed to the compassion of God in sparing the life of their parents
when He might have punished them with instant death, and urged that God
loved them, or He would not have given His Son, innocent and holy, to
suffer the penalty which they had incurred. All this caused Cain's anger
to burn the hotter. Reason and conscience told him that Abel was in the
right; but he was enraged that one who had been wont to heed his counsel
should now presume to disagree with him, and that he could gain no
sympathy in his rebellion. In the fury of his passion he slew his
brother.
Cain hated and killed his brother, not for any wrong that Abel had done,
but "because his own works were evil, and his brother's righteous." 1
John 3:12. So in all ages the wicked have hated those who were better
than themselves. Abel's life of obedience and unswerving faith was to
Cain a perpetual reproof. "Everyone that doeth evil hateth the light,
neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved." John
3:20. The brighter the heavenly light that is reflected from the
character of God's faithful servants, the more clearly the sins of the
ungodly are revealed, and the more determined will be their efforts to
destroy those who disturb their peace.
The murder of Abel was the first example of the enmity that God had
declared would exist between the serpent and the seed of the
woman--between Satan and his subjects and Christ and His followers.
Through man's sin, Satan had gained control of the human race, but
Christ would enable them to cast off his yoke. Whenever, through faith
in the Lamb of God, a soul renounces the service of sin, Satan's wrath
is kindled. The holy life of Abel testified against Satan's claim that
it is impossible for man to keep God's law. When Cain, moved by the
spirit of the wicked one, saw that he could not control Abel, he was so
enraged that he destroyed his life. And wherever there are any who will
stand in vindication of the righteousness of the law of God, the same
spirit will be manifested against them. It is the spirit that through
all the ages has set up the stake and kindled the burning pile for the
disciples of Christ. But the cruelties heaped upon the follower of Jesus
are instigated by Satan and his hosts because they cannot force him to
submit to their control. It is the rage of a vanquished foe. Every
martyr of Jesus has died a conqueror. Says the prophet, "They overcame
him ["that old serpent, called the devil, and Satan"] by the blood of
the Lamb, and by the word of their testimony; and they loved not their
lives unto the death." Revelation 12:11, 9.
Cain the murderer was soon called to answer for his crime. "The Lord
said unto Cain, Where is Abel thy brother? And he said, I know not: Am I
my brother's keeper?" Cain had gone so far in sin that he had lost a
sense of the continual presence of God and of His greatness and
omniscience. So he resorted to falsehood to conceal his guilt.
Again the Lord said to Cain, "What hast thou done? The voice of thy
brother's blood crieth unto Me from the ground." God had given Cain an
opportunity to confess his sin. He had had time to reflect. He knew the
enormity of the deed he had done, and of the falsehood he had uttered to
conceal it; but he was rebellious still, and sentence was no longer
deferred. The divine voice that had been heard in entreaty and
admonition pronounced the terrible words: "And now art thou cursed from
the earth, which hath opened her mouth to receive thy brother's blood
from thy hand. When thou tillest the ground, it shall not henceforth
yield unto thee her strength; a fugitive and a vagabond shalt thou be in
the earth."
Notwithstanding that Cain had by his crimes merited the sentence of
death, a merciful Creator still spared his life, and granted him
opportunity for repentance. But Cain lived only to harden his heart, to
encourage rebellion against the divine authority, and to become the head
of a line of bold, abandoned sinners. This one apostate, led on by
Satan, became a tempter to others; and his example and influence exerted
their demoralizing power, until the earth became so corrupt and filled
with violence as to call for its destruction.
In sparing the life of the first murderer, God presented before the
whole universe a lesson bearing upon the great controversy. The dark
history of Cain and his descendants was an illustration of what would
have been the result of permitting the sinner to live on forever, to
carry out his rebellion against God. The forbearance of God only
rendered the wicked more bold and defiant in their iniquity. Fifteen
centuries after the sentence pronounced upon Cain, the universe
witnessed the fruition of his influence and example, in the crime and
pollution that flooded the earth. It was made manifest that the sentence
of death pronounced upon the fallen race for the transgression of God's
law was both just and merciful. The longer men lived in sin, the more
abandoned they became. The divine sentence cutting short a career of
unbridled iniquity, and freeing the world from the influence of those
who had become hardened in rebellion, was a blessing rather than a
curse.
Satan is constantly at work, with intense energy and under a thousand
disguises, to misrepresent the character and government of God. With
extensive, well-organized plans and marvelous power, he is working to
hold the inhabitants of the world under his deceptions. God, the One
infinite and all-wise, sees the end from the beginning, and in dealing
with evil His plans were far-reaching and comprehensive. It was His
purpose, not merely to put down the rebellion, but to demonstrate to all
the universe the nature of the rebellion. God's plan was unfolding,
showing both His justice and His mercy, and fully vindicating His wisdom
and righteousness in His dealings with evil.
The holy inhabitants of other worlds were watching with the deepest
interest the events taking place on the earth. In the condition of the
world that existed before the Flood they saw illustrated the results of
the administration which Lucifer had endeavored to establish in heaven,
in rejecting the authority of Christ and casting aside the law of God.
In those high-handed sinners of the antediluvian world they saw the
subjects over whom Satan held sway. The thoughts of men's hearts were
only evil continually. Genesis 6:5. Every emotion, every impulse and
imagination, was at war with the divine principles of purity and peace
and love. It was an example of the awful depravity resulting from
Satan's policy to remove from God's creatures the restraint of His holy
law.
By the facts unfolded in the progress of the great controversy, God will
demonstrate the principles of His rules of government, which have been
falsified by Satan and by all whom he has deceived. His justice will
finally be acknowledged by the whole world, though the acknowledgment
will be made too late to save the rebellious. God carries with Him the
sympathy and approval of the whole universe as step by step His great
plan advances to its complete fulfillment. He will carry it with Him in
the final eradication of rebellion. It will be seen that all who have
forsaken the divine precepts have placed themselves on the side of
Satan, in warfare against Christ. When the prince of this world shall be
judged, and all who have united with him shall share his fate, the whole
universe as witnesses to the sentence will declare, "Just and true are
Thy ways, Thou King of saints." Revelation 15:3.
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