The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 5: Cain and Abel Tested
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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." [p. 78]
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 [p. 79] 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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