Why does God accept Abel’s offering but reject Cain’s—and what might the story be deliberately leaving unsaid?
Guest: Dr. Karolien Vermeulen. Genesis 4 tells one of the most famous—and troubling—stories in the Bible: the rivalry between Cain and Abel that ends in the first murder. But when we read the text carefully, the story raises more questions than answers. Why does God accept Abel’s offering but not Cain’s? Why does Cain become so angry? And what clues might the Hebrew text provide that readers often overlook?
In this episode, we explore the many ambiguities embedded in the story of Cain and Abel and consider how those narrative gaps shape the way the story works. A close reading of the language, names, and narrative structure of Genesis 4 reveals that the text may be deliberately inviting readers to wrestle with unresolved questions.
In this episode we discuss:
- Why the text is surprisingly ambiguous about the brothers’ offerings
- The significance of the names Cain and Abel
- What might explain Cain’s anger
- How the narrative leaves key motivations unstated
- What careful attention to the Hebrew wording reveals
Article referenced: Karolien Vermeulen, “Mind the Gap: Ambiguity in the Story of Cain and Abel,” Journal of Biblical Literature 133 (2014): 29–42.