Biblical Parallels Index – Bereshit 4/0

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Biblical Parallels Index – Bereshit 4

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Tension Between Brothers

The story of Kayin’s murder of Hevel is the first of many stories of tension between brothers in Sefer Bereshit, and the first story of fratricide in Tanakh.

Tools

  • Makbilot BaMikra lists other stories of fratricide in Tanakh, including Avimelekh and Avshalom's killing of their brothers, the former to ensure his power, the latter ostensibly an act of revenge against the rape of his sister, but perhaps also a play for power. Comparing the various stories gives insight into how sibling rivalry is often a quest for supremacy.

Articles / Lectures

  • In קנאת אחים בספר בראשית, R. Shlomo Brin explores the pattern of tensions between brothers in Sefer Bereshit, beginning with the narrative of Kayin and Hevel. He suggests that a comparison of the stories of sibling rivalry highlights that there is a progression towards better relationships as the book moves forward.1 Thus, though Sefer Bereshit opens with jealousy and fratricide, Sefer Shemot opens with a picture of sibling harmony, as Aharon, Moshe and Miryam work together.2

Adam and Kayin

The first two stories about man are tales of egregious sins of different sorts.

Tools

The Tanakh Lab3 demonstrates that one of the chapters that shares the most linguistic parallels to Bereshit 3 is Bereshit 4, perhaps hinting to the reader to compare the sins of Adam and Kayin. See here to compare the chapters.

Articles

  • In Religious Sin, Ethical Sin and the Punishment of Exile, Professor Yonatan Grossman notes the many parallels and contrasts between the stories of Adam’s sin in Bereshit 3 and Kayin’s sin in Bereshit 4. He suggests that these demonstrate that the Torah views interpersonal sins, represented by Kayin’s murder, as no less intrinsic to man’s relationship to God than Adam’s sin of direct disobedience to God. The parallels between Adam’s sin of disobedience toward God and Kayin’s sin of violence toward man indicate that the Torah demands both religious and ethical virtue, and that the punishment of exile is meted out for both types of sins.

Kayin and Korach

In each of the stories of Kayin's killing of Hevel and the rebellion of Korach, the "earth opens its mouth", in one case to swallow the blood of Hevel, in the other, to swallow the rebel leaders.

Sources

  • Bavli Sanhedrin 37b notes that these are the only two times that the earth opened its mouth, in one case for constructive purposes and in one case for evil.

Articles

  • In From Kayin to Korah: The Fellow Founders of Foment, R. Shlomo Zuckier compares the acts of Kayin and Korach.  Kayin seeks to kill his brother and thereby destroy his family, while Korach seeks to destroy the nationhood of Israel.  Both of these represent such a fundamental tearing of the social fabric that the earth itself splits open.4