Cain no doubt toiled to produce his offering. God accepted grain offerings later on in the law of Moses, and God makes no mention of the manner in which the offering was made. But some other verses help draw a clearer picture.... The implication here is that Cain lacked faith. Now compare this thought with this verse.... So it would seem that God did not look with any favor upon Cain himself, and not just his offering. As a loving father, God even tried to correct Cain.... The language here implies that Cain was not regularly doing good, but rather regularly doing bad deeds. So it runs much deeper than his offering of fruits and vegetables.
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Bob · Thursday at 04:21 AM 2 days