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Comparing Hebrew and Greek Views on God's Grace and Human Righteousness, Lecture notes of Law

The concept of God's grace in relation to human righteousness through the analysis of the biblical stories of Adam and Cain. It discusses the implications of these stories for the understanding of the vertical and horizontal dimensions of religion, as well as the development of cultic religion. Furthermore, it compares the Hebrew and Greek perspectives on God's nature and emotions, and the concept of grace.

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Download Comparing Hebrew and Greek Views on God's Grace and Human Righteousness and more Lecture notes Law in PDF only on Docsity! PARALLEL GUIDE 5 Cain and Abel Summary: Immediately after humanity’s expulsion from Eden, sin proliferates. This chapter continues the verse by verse approach, this time with the Cain and Abel story. Then it reviews the subsequent series of literary fragments that show sin pervading all creation. It ends by discussing the transcendence and immanence of God. Learning Objectives • Read Genesis 4:1-16 and 4:17-6:4 • Explain the meaning of the story of Cain and Abel • Tell why Enoch and Elijah became messianic figures • Understand the main point about God’s grace in relationship to human righteousness • Understand why Greek philosophy tends to speak of God as “without passions” and why this poses a problem for Christian theology Assignments to Deepen Your Understanding 1. In Hebrew poetry, “each verse consists of two statements, the second parallel to the first. The second half of the verse may repeat the same thought as the first half . . . or it may be some other kind of parallel thought.” Psalm 8:3-4 is an example. Write a four-verse poem about your understanding of the Cain and Abel story. Use the Hebrew poetic form described above. 2. Read Genesis 4:8-16 several times. Check the passage in other translations and look up the passage in a commentary. What did the passage mean to the author and what do scholars say about it? How does it fit in the context of the entire Book of Genesis? Preparing for Your Seminar Scripture can evoke memories. Notice what memories came to you as you were reading the chapter on Cain and Abel. Add them to the “Autobiography” section of your notebook. Decide how you might share your reaction to the chapter with the members of your group. Where do you see rivalry between siblings or competition between groups coveting the same land or the same promise? Identify places in our culture that parallel the Cain and Abel story. Chapter 5 CAIN AND ABEL The story of Cain and Abel shows sin, first described as a rebellion against God, immediately becoming the destruction of a fellow human being. The story itself is tied together with other fragments of tradition in a rather confusing way. The J writer has an overall intention: to show the spread of sin until the whole creation becomes infected with it. J puts together the sources more or less as they stood, not editing them into a smooth story which hangs together at all points. We see attached to the main account a second short account of Cain and a genealogy of his descendants which seems to have an etiological purpose, but we find tucked away in it a fragment of an ancient song which serves J’s purpose of showing the deepening of sin. Read Genesis 4:1-16 These first two verses set the stage for the story. Cain and Abel are born, and it is noted that Abel is a shepherd and Cain a farmer. The etymology (sources of words or meanings of words) of the name “Cain” is typical of J’s style. We find again and again the name of a person or place “explained,” though the explanation frequently does not appear to be strictly accurate. In this case, the name “Cain,” which means “spear” in Hebrew, is explained by a play on words: “I have gotten a man with the help of the Lord.” “Cain” (Hebrew, qayin) sounds something like the verb “to get” (Hebrew, qanah). The meaning of the name “Abel,” if it has any meaning, is not known, but it does sound like the Hebrew word for “futility,” and, as it turns out, Abel’s life is futile. The Main Story Cain is a farmer, one who tills the ground and plants crops, and Abel is a shepherd. This draws attention to the conflict between the ways of life of the settled farmer and the nomadic shepherd. Shepherds had to be always on the move (which is what “nomad” means: one who moves about, usually living in tents, rather than settling down in one spot and building a permanent dwelling). This was because grazing land was rather scarce in the ancient Near East, and sheep eat the grass down to the roots. Shepherds could stay in one spot until the sheep had eaten all the grass; then they had to move on to another site. Farmers did not like to have shepherds come to their area because sheep ruined the pasture land for cattle, and also because the way of life of the shepherd was different from that of the settled community. Genesis 4:1-2 Contests for the land between these two groups were frequent and often bloody. Sometimes a peaceable arrangement was made by which the nomads bought grazing rights so that they could graze their sheep on the stubble that was left in the field after the harvest. Sometimes a settled culture would encourage nomads to come into the area to form a buffer zone between them and hostile neighbors. (This is apparently what happened in the case of the Hebrew tribes who were allowed to graze their flocks in the land of Goshen, east of the main Egyptian centers along the Nile. We read about this in the last section of Genesis, the story of Joseph.) Usually, however, such peaceful means were not found, and there was a conflict between the two groups. Genesis 4:3-7 The “offerings” which Cain and Abel make are obviously sacrifices. This means that by this time—that is, the time of the writer—people were relating to God by means of cultic activities. There was no cult—that is, no formal “religious” activity by means of which human beings and God are brought into relationship—in the garden. God walked in the garden and spoke directly to the man and the woman. The J writer does not explain how cultic worship began—this story is not about that issue. Its purpose is not to give a detailed history of human activity, putting in every point that would be required; instead, it tells us about the spread of sin. J shows in this story, for example, how sin moves from a human overreaching of the status of creature in an attempt to rival God, to the killing of one’s brother even in a religious setting. The farmer, Cain, offers some of his crop to YHWH; Abel offers YHWH the meat and fat (the fat was supposed to be especially desirable to God!) of the firstborn of his flock. By the time the J writer was telling this story, Israelite worship had long included both types of sacrifice—the “cereal offering” and the “meat offering.” (The Hebrews, who had been sheepherding nomads, had settled in Canaan and had blended their culture with the agricultural ways of life on the land.) The words used to describe the two offerings are the same ones which the sense of “humankind”—are closely related both as words and in reality), the curse upon the ground is made more intense than it was in the case of Adam. “You are cursed from the ground, which has opened its mouth to receive your brother’s blood from your hand. When you till the ground, it will no longer yield to you its strength.” Cain the farmer, already forced to till the ground “in the sweat of his face,” is now to do so with no reward. Furthermore, since he has denied community responsibility, he is now cut off from human community. He will be “a fugitive and a wanderer on the earth.” When Cain protests that he cannot bear this punishment, he includes another judgment which God had not stated. “Today you have driven me away from the soil; and I shall be hidden from your face; and I shall be a fugitive and a wanderer on the earth. . . .” From the time when Adam was expelled from the garden there was always the possibility that humankind might lose its relationship with God. The necessity for the development of cultic religion shows that the direct relationship with God that existed in the garden was gone. Now Cain believes that possibility has become fact for him—he has been sent away from the presence of God completely. When Cain speaks of the judgment that he be a wanderer, alone, with no community, he says, “. . . anyone who meets me will kill me.” In times before police forces protected citizens from one another, individuals were protected by what was called “the law of blood revenge.” Everyone was a member of some tribe, and there was usually some kind of sign that told which tribe one belonged to. Often this was a tattoo, the mark of the tribe. If one were alone on the desert and a group of strangers approached, the size and strength of the tribe one belonged to determined the individual’s safety. If a member of one tribe took the life of a person from another tribe, that tribe would take revenge. To be alone without a tribal mark would be the same as a death warrant. God gives Cain a mark for his protection. What is in mind here may well be a facial tattoo of a type later characteristic among the Kenites, the “descendants” of Cain. The “mark of Cain” is a sign of God’s protection—not, as popular legend has it, a sign of disgrace. It is a sign of God’s grace. Just as God clothes Adam and Eve as he sends them from the Garden, so God “clothes” Cain as he sends him to wander. God’s punishment—as depicted in this section of Genesis—is always softened by grace. In keeping with the law of blood revenge, God promises that the vengeance taken for Cain, should he be killed, will be seven times the offense. In later times the law of blood revenge was softened by the rule which prescribed “an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.” That is, only one eye for one eye, one tooth for one tooth—the revenge must be no greater than the offense. Those who remember Jesus’ words in the Sermon on the Mount in which he recites this rule and then goes on to say “resist not evil” often get the impression that what he was opposing was the harsh, cruel “law of the jungle.” In fact, the rule he cites was at the time the furthest advance of justice—let the punishment fit the crime. Cain goes to the land of Nod. “Nod” means “wandering” or “restlessness.” Verse 16 also says that he “went away from the presence of the LORD.” This probably reflects something of the situation at the time of the J writer. The Kenites were a people who, living on or near the borders of Israel, never really became a part of Israel. They lived on the desert’s edge, moving about as workers in metal, never marrying outside their own group. The Kenites were, according to the traditions of both Israel and themselves, the descendants of Cain. When we study the Book of Exodus, we see that they joined with the group of Hebrews who came out of Egypt and probably participated with them in the conquest of the land of Canaan. We also see that they were perhaps the ones who passed on the name “YHWH” to Moses as the name of the god they worshiped. The Kenites were something of a puzzle to Israel. They knew the God YHWH, but they were not part of the “people of God,” the people of Israel. They were wanderers, rather like present-day gypsies; they were cut off from the land, living on it but not really settling it. So this story of Cain going “away from the presence of the LORD” (YHWH) and living in the land of “wandering” (Nod) may show something of Israel’s understanding of the Kenites. This ends the story of Cain and Abel. The remainder of chapter 4 treats the person of Cain in an entirely different way. The story in these first sixteen verses is an account of the intensification of sin. We are supposed to feel the horror of what has happened to God’s creation, to humanity in its relations with God, and to the earth itself as a human being uses it to cover over the spilling of blood. At all points it is a religious offense that Cain has committed, most evil when it spoils God’s good creation. The Fragments Genesis 4:17-6:4 The Kenites, the “Song of Lamech,” the P Genealogy, and “the Sons of God”—these fragments are put together in a way that is very confusing if you are looking for a single, closely reasoned story plot. On the surface, it seems that the editor has simply taken another Cain tradition, added a little story to get another line of descent from Adam and Eve, tacked on the rest of the P account which brings P’s narrative from the creation story to Noah, and then—for some strange reason—added a story about divine beings mating with human women. When we remember the fact that the editing was rather loosely done, retaining repetitions from one source to another, we can accept that this has happened here. Beneath the appearance of looseness, the J writer’s main purpose—to show the deepening and spreading of sin—runs clearly through this section. We trace this underlying purpose as we look at these fragments. This fragment about Cain is completely separate from the story we have just considered. Cain is the ancestor of city-dwellers. The building of a city is an important landmark in the development of human culture. “Civilization” means life in a city (Latin, civitas). Putting aside for the moment the preceding story of Cain and Abel, in which Cain was a farmer and Abel a shepherd, this little fragment has Cain build a city and name it after his son Enoch. Then Enoch’s descendant, Lamech, has three sons. These sons are “the father of those who dwell in tents and have cattle,” “the father of all those who play the lyre and pipe,” and “the forger of all instruments of bronze and iron.” Here are three of the occupations that show the advance of human culture: shepherds, musicians, and blacksmiths. This is an etiological story, but it probably reflects also some ancient memories of the origins of city life. When we get to the story of Noah, we shall say more about the “cradle of civilization,” the city-states of the Tigris-Euphrates basin. This fragment probably preserves some form of memory of this ancient civilization to the east of Canaan. (The land of Nod was “east of Eden,” Gen. 4:16.) Connecting Cain with this ancient memory shows the Kenites as the founders of civilization. This, of course, does not agree at all with the view of the Kenites as gypsy-like nomads, but their skills in metalworking appear in this fragment in the person of Tubal-cain. It appears impossible to bring together the picture of the Kenites as nomads with them as city-builders on the basis of this story. Genesis 4:17-24 The underlying purpose of the J writer in telling the story can probably be seen, not in these etiological details, but in what occurs in verses 23 and 24. Almost hidden among the etiological stories is this very ancient poetic fragment, “The Song of Lamech”: Adah and Zillah, hear my voice, you wives of Lamech, listen to what I say: I have killed a man for wounding me, a young man for striking me. If Cain is avenged sevenfold, truly Lamech seventy-sevenfold. While we have this poem in front of us, let us notice one feature of Hebrew poetry: each verse consists of two statements, the second parallel to the first. The second half of the verse may repeat the same thought as the first half, as in the first two verses of this psalm. Or it may be some other kind of parallel thought: in verse three of this psalm, vengeance is the motif which is paralleled in each half, but in the second half the vengeance is greatly increased. This poem was probably originally a song of boasting, preserved in a tradition about Cain and his descendants. J’s purpose in having it here—and possibly the reason for including this entire Cain-Kenite section is to lead up to this psalm—is to show the increase in sin. Blood revenge has run amuck! Lamech has killed a young man for merely hitting him. Then he boasts that the vengeance that God promised his ancestor Cain is not enough for him. Sevenfold is increased to seventy-sevenfold! So human society, even though it builds cities and advances in the skills and artistry of civilization, has fallen apart at the level of human life. Even the crude form of justice, which the law of blood revenge represents, has become so totally distorted by boasting and self-centeredness that no security is possible except for the very strong. We have moved from disobedience in Adam and Eve, to fratricide in Cain, to the breakdown of any limits on revenge in Lamech. The writer has brought in a genealogy from Cain leading up to the children of Lamech. In verse 25 it is as though no such genealogy existed. Cain is banished and Abel is dead. Both are removed. So Adam and Eve have a son whom they name Seth, and a very small fragment of a J genealogy from Seth is begun; then chapter 5, from the P writer, traces the human descent from Adam through Seth. These represent two different traditions which the compiler keeps, with no attempt to remove the contradictions. Enoch and Lamech appear in both genealogies. In verse 26, Enosh (not Enoch) is the son of Seth, and “at that time people began to invoke the name of the LORD” (YHWH). There has been a considerable amount of discussion about what that means. It is known that “YHWH” or “Yah” was a commonly used name for a god throughout the area of the ancient Near East. The name did not originally have the significance that it was to gain in the context of the covenant with Israel; before the covenant at Sinai it was simply a name for one god among many. Is the J writer saying here that YHWH, the God who was eventually to be the God of Israel, was the God of humankind in general in the time of “primeval history”—the shadowy days of ancient memory before the accurate historical memory of Israel emerged? In the unfolding of the Genesis story, worship of YHWH is gradually narrowed down to Israel; but YHWH is God, lord from the beginning, worshiped even from early times, as early as those of Adam’s grandson. This is why the J writer uses the name YHWH for God from the beginning. In the other tradition, which E and P follow, this name was not given until Moses’ meeting with God at the burning bush. Both traditions, in spite of this difference concerning the use of the name, agree that it is the same God who was from the beginning, and both agree that the special relationship between this God and humankind was narrowed to Israel from an earlier time when all humankind worshiped God. The narrowing was due to the increase in sin and the consequent alienation of most of humankind from God. Genesis 5:1-32 We noted in Chapter Three that the P story goes from the account of creation in Gen. 1:1-24 over to chapter 5, which brings the story of creation to Noah. We do not examine this genealogy in chapter 5 in any detail. The amazingly long lives of the people follow a rough pattern: people from Adam to Noah live longest; lives are somewhat shorter for those prior to Abraham, and shorter still for the patriarchs, until finally people live the usual seventy years. The only persons in the list we note are Enoch (mentioned in verses 18-24), Lamech, and Noah. Enoch and Lamech are listed in both the Cain genealogy of 4:17-22 and in this Seth genealogy; this indicates some connection between the two traditions. Enoch “walked with God; then he was no more, because God took him” (5:24). No one really knows what this text means. In the P version of the flood story we are told that Noah “walked with God,” apparently meaning that Noah was righteous. After the age of Noah, no mention is made of anyone “walking with God,” although the prophet Micah contrasts the empty sacrifices of a faithless people with the requirements of true faith: “He told you, O mortal, what is good; and what does the LORD require of you, but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?” (Micah 6:8). Abraham is described as walking before God. Is the intention in the cases of Enoch and Noah to show an unusual relationship between God and them? If so, nothing more is made of it in Enoch’s case, unless the next few words indicate it: “and he was no more, because God took him.” The words here are not difficult to translate, but the sentence is so brief, with no further development, that it is difficult to know what the writer is saying. Later ages interpreted this as meaning something like what happened to Elijah, the prophet. Elijah, after dropping his mantle to Elisha, went directly up to heaven in a
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