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Nephilim Pt.3
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Pt.3 Fallen angels, and their roll in mankind

Posted by: dthwraith  on: 2009-04-23 11:15:38 | Views: 104
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Very interesting. I agree, since I read it in the Bible years ago. Unanswered questions by many faiths: Why was God mad at Cain? What apple? (Eve was beguiled, that is physical.) If they were the first family, who was Cain afraid of outside the garden?
    Posted by:  Bernastar  on 2009-04-25 12:49:17 
    
Q.Why was God mad at Cain.

"Responce" A sacrifice is when you give something to God that you would have liked to keep for yourself. You give him your very best.

Cain brought some of the things he had grown. He brought some wheat, and grapes and figs and things like that, and he burned them on the altar to give to God. Abel brought the first lamb born to one of his sheep.

God was happy with Abel's gift, because he saw that Abel really wanted to please God and always do what God wanted.

But God knew that Cain wasn't so sure he wanted to do what God wanted. So God wasn't happy with Cain's gift.

    Posted by:  dthwraith  on 2009-04-25 17:52:38 
    
Q. Eve was beguiled, that is physical? "Responce" More like mental. be⋅guile   /bɪˈgaɪl/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [bi-gahyl]
–verb (used with object), -guiled, -guil⋅ing. 1. to influence by trickery, flattery, etc.; mislead; delude.
2. to take away from by cheating or deceiving (usually fol. by of): to be beguiled of money.
3. to charm or divert: a multitude of attractions to beguile the tourist.
4. to pass (time) pleasantly: beguiling the long afternoon with a good book.
    Posted by:  dthwraith  on 2009-04-25 17:57:11 
    
Q. What apple? "Responce" Despite the large number of cartoons and the almost universally accepted tradition, the Bible does not say that Eve ate an apple. Why then is it so popular to believe that she did?

Genesis most definitely records that she did eat the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. So why do people think of an apple? One reason is that the Latin word for evil is malum and the Latin word for apple is also malum.

In the fourth century AD, the word malum appeared in the Latin Vulgate translation of Genesis in the phrase ‘the tree of knowledge of good and evil’. From that time on people began to associate the apple with the fruit which Eve ate.

But Eve did not eat the fruit of the apple tree—she ate the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil.

    Posted by:  dthwraith  on 2009-04-25 18:03:31 
    
Q.who was Cain afraid of outside the garden? "Correction" Cain and Abel where never in the garden. "Responce" In Genesis 4:13-14, shortly after he killed his brother Abel, “Cain said to the LORD, ‘My punishment is more than I can bear. Today you are driving me from the land, and I will be hidden from your presence; I will be a restless wanderer on the earth, and whoever finds me will kill me.’” Who exactly was Cain afraid of? The only people the book of Genesis had mentioned to this point are Adam and Eve (Cain’s parents) and Abel (who was now dead). Who would possibly be a threat to Cain?

It is important to recognize that Cain and Abel were both full-grown adults at the time that Cain killed Abel. Both Cain and Abel were farmers, who tended to their own lands and flocks (Genesis 4:2-4). The Bible does not tell us how old Cain and Abel were, but they very likely could have been in their 30’s or 40’s or even hundreds of years old (Adam lived to be 970 years old). The Bible does not specifically mention Adam and Eve having any children between Abel and Seth (Genesis 4:25). However, it is highly unlikely that the two most perfect human beings in the history of the world, Adam and Eve, would not have any children over several decades. Adam and Eve had many children after Seth (Genesis 5:4), so why would they not also have had other children between Abel and Seth? The Bible does not say that Seth was Adam and Eve’s first child, or even first son, after Abel was killed. Rather, it states that Seth was born as a “replacement” for Abel. Genesis chapter 5 traces the genealogy of Seth. Prior to his death, Abel was likely the “chosen” son that would eventually produce the Messiah (Genesis 3:15). It is in this sense that Seth “replaced” Abel.

So, who was Cain afraid of? Cain was afraid of his own brothers, sisters, nephews, and nieces, who were already born and would be capable of seeking revenge. The fact that Cain had a wife (Genesis 4:17) is a further evidence that Adam and Eve had other children after Cain and Abel, but before Seth.
    Posted by:  dthwraith  on 2009-04-26 21:52:05 
    
So you don't believe that Cain was sired by Lucifer. I do. Yes, right the sons were not in the Garden of Eden, but in a protected area away from the rest of the population. Thank you.
    Posted by:  Bernastar  on 2009-05-02 18:06:41 
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