Genesis 4
I.
From the story of Cain we gather the following thoughts:
I. Eve's disappointment at the birth of Cain should be a warning to
all mothers. Over-estimate of children may be traced sometimes to
extreme love for _them;_it may also arise on the part of parents from
an overweening estimat... [ Continue Reading ]
Genesis 4:3
Hebrews 11:4
We learn from our text:
I. That religion actuated men in the very earliest times. (1) Religion
as a principle was found in the members of the first human family. The
most prominent thing connected with Cain and Abel was their religion.
(2) All nations of men have practise... [ Continue Reading ]
Genesis 4:3
I. The first question to be asked is this: What did Cain and Abel know
about sacrifice? Although we should certainly have expected Moses to
inform us plainly if there had been a direct ordinance to Adam or his
sons concerning the offering of fruits or animals, we have no right to
expect... [ Continue Reading ]
Genesis 4:4
There are two things which distinguish the Bible from every other
book: the view it gives us of man, and the view it gives us of God.
The one is so human, the other so Divine; the one so exactly
consistent with what we ourselves see of man, the other so exactly
consistent with what we o... [ Continue Reading ]
Genesis 4:7
The key to the interpretation of these words is to remember that they
describe what happens after and because of wrong-doing. They are all
suspended on "If thou doest not well." The word translated here
"lieth" is employed only to express the _crouching_of an animal, and
frequently of a... [ Continue Reading ]
Genesis 4:8
Sin finds in the very constitution of the human mind the enginery of
its own retribution.
I. The very consciousness of sin is destructive of a sinner's peace.
II. Sin tends to develop sin.
III. The consciousness of guilt is always more or less painfully
attended with the apprehension... [ Continue Reading ]
Genesis 4:9
The feeling of our sonship to God in Christ is a topic which requires
to be constantly dwelt upon, because our conventional acceptance of
such a relationship is apt to be compatible with a life which has no
real apprehension of it.
I. Of the dangers which are partly rooted in our anima... [ Continue Reading ]
Genesis 4:26
Prayer is speaking to God on any subject, with any object, in any
place, and in any way.
I. Prayer so regarded is an instinct. It seems to be natural to man to
look upwards and address himself to his God. Even in the depth of lost
knowledge and depraved feeling, the instinct of prayer... [ Continue Reading ]