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Cain said to Yahweh, "My punishment is greater than I can bear.
Verse Takeaways
1
Complaint, Not Repentance
Commentators unanimously observe that Cain's cry is not one of genuine repentance but of bitter complaint. He is more concerned with the severity of his suffering than the evil of his sin. Scholars like Matthew Henry and John Calvin point out that this reaction reveals a profound hardness of heart, a crucial lesson for believers on how to respond to correction and consequences.
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Genesis
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5
18th Century
Presbyterian
1. קין (qayin)—Cain, “spear-shaft,” and קנה (qanah)—“set up, establish, gain, buy,” contain the biliteral root …
19th Century
Anglican
My punishment (or my iniquity) is greater than I can bear. —Literally, than can be borne, or "forgi…
16th Century
Protestant
My punishment is greater, etc. Nearly all commentators agree that this is the language of desperation, because Cain, confounded by the jud…
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17th Century
Reformed Baptist
And Cain said to the Lord In the anguish of his spirit and the distress of his mind: my punishment is gr…
Malice in the heart ends in murder by the hands. Cain killed Abel, his own brother, his own mother's son, whom he should have loved; his younger br…