The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 6: Seth and Enoch
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To Adam was given another son, to be the inheritor of the
divine promise, the heir of the spiritual birthright. The name
Seth, given to this son, signified "appointed," or "compensation;"
"for," said the mother, "God hath appointed me another seed
instead of Abel, whom Cain slew." Seth was of more noble
stature than Cain or Abel, and resembled Adam more closely
than did his other sons. He was a worthy character, following
in the steps of Abel. Yet he inherited no more natural goodness
than did Cain. Concerning the creation of Adam it is said, "In
the likeness of God made He him;" but man, after the Fall,
"begat a son in his own likeness, after his image." While Adam
was created sinless, in the likeness of God, Seth, like Cain,
inherited the fallen nature of his parents. But he received also the
knowledge of the Redeemer and instruction in righteousness. By
divine grace he served and honored God; and he labored, as Abel
would have done, had he lived, to turn the minds of sinful men
to revere and obey their Creator.
"To Seth, to him also there was born a son; and he called his
name Enos: then began men to call upon the name of Jehovah."
The faithful had worshiped God before; but as men increased,
the distinction between the two classes became more marked.
There was an open profession of loyalty to God on the part of
one, as there was of contempt and disobedience on the part of the
other.
Before the Fall our first parents had kept the Sabbath, which
was instituted in Eden; and after their expulsion from Paradise
they continued its observance. They had tasted the bitter fruits
of disobedience, and had learned what every one that tramples
upon God's commandments will sooner or later learn—that the
divine precepts are sacred and immutable, and that the penalty of
transgression will surely be inflicted. The Sabbath was honored by [p. 81] all the children of Adam that remained loyal to God. But Cain
and his descendants did not respect the day upon which God had
rested. They chose their own time for labor and for rest, regardless
of Jehovah's express command.
Upon receiving the curse of God, Cain had withdrawn from
his father's household. He had first chosen his occupation as a
tiller of the soil, and he now founded a city, calling it after the
name of his eldest son. He had gone out from the presence of
the Lord, cast away the promise of the restored Eden, to seek his
possessions and enjoyment in the earth under the curse of sin,
thus standing at the head of that great class of men who worship
the god of this world. In that which pertains to mere earthly
and material progress, his descendants became distinguished. But
they were regardless of God, and in opposition to His purposes
for man. To the crime of murder, in which Cain had led the way,
Lamech, the fifth in descent, added polygamy, and, boastfully
defiant, he acknowledged God, only to draw from the avenging
of Cain an assurance of his own safety. Abel had led a pastoral
life, dwelling in tents or booths, and the descendants of Seth
followed the same course, counting themselves "strangers and
pilgrims on the earth," seeking "a better country, that is, an
heavenly." Hebrews 11:13, 16.
For some time the two classes remained separate. The race
of Cain, spreading from the place of their first settlement,
dispersed over the plains and valleys where the children of Seth had
dwelt; and the latter, in order to escape from their contaminating
influence, withdrew to the mountains, and there made their
home. So long as this separation continued, they maintained the
worship of God in its purity. But in the lapse of time they
ventured, little by little, to mingle with the inhabitants of the
valleys. This association was productive of the worst results. "The
sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair." The
children of Seth, attracted by the beauty of the daughters of
Cain's descendants, displeased the Lord by intermarrying with
them. Many of the worshipers of God were beguiled into sin by
the allurements that were now constantly before them, and they
lost their peculiar, holy character. Mingling with the depraved,
they became like them in spirit and in deeds; the restrictions of
the seventh commandment were disregarded, "and they took
them wives of all which they chose." The children of Seth went [p. 82] "in the way of Cain" (Jude 11); they fixed their minds upon
worldly prosperity and enjoyment and neglected the commandments
of the Lord. Men "did not like to retain God in their
knowledge;" they "became vain in their imaginations, and their
foolish heart was darkened." Romans 1:21. Therefore "God gave
them over to a mind void of judgment." Verse 28, margin. Sin
spread abroad in the earth like a deadly leprosy.
For nearly a thousand years Adam lived among men, a witness
to the results of sin. Faithfully he sought to stem the tide of
evil. He had been commanded to instruct his posterity in the way
of the Lord; and he carefully treasured what God had revealed to
him, and repeated it to succeeding generations. To his children
and children's children, to the ninth generation, he described
man's holy and happy estate in Paradise, and repeated the history
of his fall, telling them of the sufferings by which God had
taught him the necessity of strict adherence to His law, and
explaining to them the merciful provisions for their salvation. Yet
there were but few who gave heed to his words. Often he was met
with bitter reproaches for the sin that had brought such woe upon
his posterity.
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