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What Does
the Bible Say About Cain's Wife?
This question is
often sometimes thought to be among the "hard questions" pertaining to the
Bible. Because the Bible does not always address certain questions or issues
in black and white, many fault the Bible as being incomplete,
inconsequential, or full of mistakes. However, the Bible almost always
answers itself somewhere within its pages. The answer to this question
really is quite simple, and the obvious answer can be inferred from the text
of the Bible in Genesis, Chapters 4-5.
First, let's lay
some groundwork. In those days of human history, humans lived to be very
old. Most lived between 500 and 1000 years old. Adam lived 930 years and Eve
probably lived about the same amount of time. Because they lived as long as
they did, they had many other children aside from Cain, Abel and Seth. After
all, God had commanded them to "be fruitful and increase in number..."
(Genesis 1:28). The Bible even tells us plainly in Genesis 5:4: "(Adam) had
other sons and daughters." These other children would have settled in
various parts of that region. As there was no one else for them to marry,
they had to marry each other to propagate the human race. This intermarriage
would have been permissible by God back then since there were no other
people on earth.
Now back to the
original question: Who was Cain's wife? In Genesis 4:14, after Cain murders
Abel, he says to God "whoever finds me will kill me."
Obviously, by that time, there were already many other people living on the
earth. After he murdered Abel, Cain left and went to live in the land of
Nod, east of Eden (Genesis 4:16). It appears that it was there that he
married a wife--who may have been either a sister or another relative.
There is an
unsubstantiated theory that God may have "planted" other people on the earth
during this time, for the purpose of populating the earth. Because the
Bible makes it clear that we are all descended from Adam and Eve, and
are the "seed of Adam" this theory cannot be true. The early books in the
Old Testament make a point to trace lineages of whole peoples and races from
certain people who were of Adam's bloodline. Furthermore, the Bible is clear
that we are all born with Adam's sinful nature that Christ died to redeem us
from. (Please refer to Romans 5:12,17 and 1
Corinthians 15:21-22).
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1 John 5:12: He that hath the Son hath life; and he that hath not the
Son of God hath not life. 13: These things have I written unto you
that believe on the name of the Son of God; that ye may know that ye
have eternal life, and that ye may believe on the name of the Son of
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