Cain's Rejected Offering: Interpretive Approaches to a Theological Problem

Research notes: 
13/12/2011 AS Reader checked 26/12/2011 SE
Reference type: 
Journal Article
Author(s): 
Byron, John
year: 
2008
Full title: 

Cain's Rejected Offering: Interpretive Approaches to a Theological Problem

Translated title: 
Journal / Book Title || Series Title: 
Journal for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha
Volume: 
18
Issue / Series Volume: 
1
Number of volumes: 
0
Series Title: 
Abbreviated Series Name: 
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Pages: 
3-22
Chapter: 
Work type: 
Abstract: 

The story of Cain and Abel records the first ever offering made to God. The question that quickly rises to the surface when reading Gen. 4.3-7 is: What was wrong with Cain's offering? Why did God reject it? God's seeming capriciousness in rejecting one sacrifice over the other creates a theological problem. The problem is compounded by Abel's murder. Since Cain's act of fratricide is precipitated by God's unexplained rejection of the sacrifice which resulted in Cain's anger, God becomes complicit in the act. These problems opened the door for ancient interpreters to expand and rework the story in a way that exonerated God of appearing capricious and, by extension, complicit in Abel's murder. This article traces the interpretive approaches used by Jewish and Christian exegetes to respond to a theological problem created by gaps in the narrative.

Notes: 
Language: 
Alternative title: 
JSP
Date: 
Hebrew bible: 
Book: 
Genesis
Chapter(s): 
4
Verse(s): 
Edition: 
Original Publication: 
Reprint edition: 
URL: 
http://jsp.sagepub.com/content/18/1/3.full.pdf+html
DOI: 
ISBN: 
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Call num: 
Label: 
15/09/2008
Record number: 
1 585