A Treatise on the Posterity of Cain, the Man Wise in His own Conceit and on the Way in Which Cain Became an Exile.

 I. (1) And Cain went out from before the face of God, and dwelt in the land of Nod, opposite to Eden.[Ge 4:16.] Now we may raise the question whethe

 II. (5) And from whence does Cain go forth? is it from the palace of the ruler of the world? But what house of God can exist perceptible by the outwar

 III. (10) Accordingly God banished Adam but Cain went forth from his presence of his own accord Moses here showing to us the manner of each sort of

 IV. (12) Therefore punishment which is the chastiser of impious men, will await Cain who has now departed from before the face of God, but Moses will

 V. (14) At all events, he will now penetrate into the darkness where God Was.[Ex 20:13.] That is to say, into those unapproachable and invisible con

 VI. (17) On this account too, Abraham, when he had come unto the place which God had told him of, On the third day, looking up, saw the place afar Of

 VII. (22) It is worth while also to consider the wickedness into which a man who flies from the face of God is driven, since it is called a tempest. T

 VIII. (24) On this account it is written in the curses contained in scripture, Thou shalt never rest nor shall there be any rest for the sole of thy

 IX. (27) Let these men, then, hang by their appetites as by a halter but the wise Abraham, where he stands, comes near to God, who is also standing.

 X. (32) Having, therefore, now pointed out each variety, the tranquillity of the good man, and the state of agitation in which the bad man lives, let

 XI. (33) After he had said this he proceeds to say, And Cain knew his wife, and she conceived and bare Enoch and he built a city, and called the nam

 XII. (40) But as after Cain had begotten Enoch, one of the posterity of Seth is also subsequently called Enoch, it may be well to consider, whether th

 XIII. (44) Having, therefore, thus distinguished the indications intended to be afforded by the name of Enoch, let us now proceed in regular order to

 XIV. (49) And it may become us next to consider on what account this same man is represented as founding and building a city, for it is only a multitu

 XV. (52) Since, therefore, every city consists of houses and inhabitants, and laws, the houses, in Cain's case, are the reasons which he alleges to pr

 XVI. (54) And to such a pitch of accursed impiety have they gone, that not only do they attempt to raise up such cities by themselves, but they even c

 XVII. (59) This hill Jacob, the wrestler with God, in his agreements with Laban, calls a witness, showing in a most express manner, and in the form of

 XVIII. (63) On which principle also it is that he also calls Israel, who was the younger brother in point of time, the first born Son,[Ex 4:22.] jud

 XIX. (66) Now the son of Enoch is called Gaidad, [Ge 4:18.] which, being interpreted, means a flock of sheep, very consistently with what has gone bef

 XX. (69) On which account the son of Gaided is called Mehel, the name which, being interpreted, means, from the life of God. For since the flock is

 XXI. (73) What, then, follows a man who lives not in accordance with the will of God but the death of the soul? And this is named Methuselah, the inte

 XXII. (75) And Lamech took to himself two wives the name of the one was Adah, and the name of the other was Zillah.[Ge 4:19.] Everything which a wi

 XXIII. (78) Now it is not without a purpose that the differences between these persons are recorded by the lawgiver. For in the case of those who prac

 XXIV. (83) Do thou, therefore, O my mind, avoid Adah, who bears witness to evil things, and who is borne witness to on each of its attempts at such th

 XXV. (89) But it is not our creation that has established these boundaries, but reasons, which are older than we, or than any thing upon the earth an

 XXVI. (91) Perhaps, therefore, it is the right reason of our souls that he calls their father, and its companions and friends that he calls elders. Th

 XXVII. (94) For it is always the case that if a second impression is stamped upon any thing, the mark of any previous one is effaced. But the impressi

 XXVIII. (96) But a thing which is sacred is proved to be so by three witnesses, the middle number, education, and perfect number. On which account it

 XXIX. (98) Thus much it may be sufficient to say concerning him who changes and adulterates the ancient coinage, whom Moses also calls the father of

 XXX. (100) And Jacob's brother, he says, was Jubal, [Ge 4:21.] and the interpretation of this latter name is inclining, being symbolically speech ac

 XXXI. (103) Now this Jubal, says Moses, is the father who showed men the use of the psaltery and of the Harp.[Ge 4:21.] He in the strictest consis

 XXXII. (105) Perhaps, at all events, flutes and lyres, and similar instruments which utter melodies, are as far inferior to the music of nightingales

 XXXIII. (112) The descendants, therefore, of Adah, and what she herself is, have now been explained. Let us consider next the other wife of Lamech, Zi

 XXXIV. (116) Then Moses says, He was a hammer-beater and forger of brass and Iron:[Ge 4:22, where he is called Tubalcain.] for the soul of that man

 XXXV. (120) Moses proceeds to say, that Tubal's sister was Noeman, the interpretation of which name is fatness. For it follows that those who pursue

 XXXVI. (124) Therefore, concerning the wives of Lamech and his children, I think that enough has been said. Let us now consider what we may look upon

 XXXVII. (127) On which account it is said in Genesis, And a fountain went up from the earth, and watered all the face of the Earth.[Ge 2:6.] For sin

 XXXVIII. (130) And of what kind they are, he proceeds to show in a few words, deriving his explanation from the natural things of art for he introduc

 XXXIX. (132) But Rebekkah is found to give her pupil drink no longer by improvement, but by perfection. How so the law will tell us: For the damsel,

 XL. (134) Now of the four virtues, some are always virgins, and some from having been women become changed into virgins, as Sarah did For it had cea

 XLI. (136) But Rebekkah, says Moses, went down to the fountain to fill her pitcher, and came up again. For from what source is it natural for the

 XLII. (139) Most correctly, therefore, after the servant has said, Give me a little water to drink, does she make answer, not in the manner correspo

 XLIII. (142) On which account Moses says in another passage, Thou shalt lend a loan to him who asks you for one, as much as he requires, having regar

 XLIV. (146) Rebekkah, therefore, must be praised, who, in obedience to the injunctions of her father, having taken down the vessel of wisdom on her ar

 XLV. (153) And we must inquire the cause why the handmaid gave the servant drink from the fountain, but gave the camels water from the well. May it no

 XLVI. (158) This is the food of a soul which is inclined to the practice of virtue, to consider labour a very sweet thing instead of a bitter one, whi

 XLVII. (162) And why need I dwell on the subject more, going through each of the senses and animals separately? For this point has been long agreed up

 XLVIII. (165) But bulls, and rams, and goats, which Egypt holds in honour, and all other images of corruptible matter which, in report alone, are acco

 XLIX. (170) Therefore the mind having generated the foundation of good [...][there is again an hiatus in the text here. Mangey conjectures diago�ge�s,

 L. (172) But when Moses says here that Seth sprung up as another or different seed, he does not say from which it was different was it different from

 LI. (174) And consider the advances towards improvement made by the soul of the man who is eager for, and insatiable in, his craving after good things

 LII. (177) On which account Moses has separated his impious and obscure progeny from the whole of the divine company for he says, The Ammonites and

 LIII. (180) And the leader of this opinion is Onan the brother of the skin-wearing Er. For he, says the scripture, knowing that the seed would not

 LIV. (182) From which that priest and servant of the only good God, Phineas, rising up[--that wise regulator of all the corporeal words and expression

XI. (33) After he had said this he proceeds to say, "And Cain knew his wife, and she conceived and bare Enoch; and he built a city, and called the name of the city after the name of his son Enoch."[Ge 4:17.] Is it not here reasonable to raise the question, why Cain knew his wife? for there had been no birth of any one other woman since that of Eve who was formed out of the side of the man, until the woman who is here mentioned; (34) and if any one says that Cain took his sister to wife, putting the impiety of such a connection out of the question, he will speak falsely; for Moses represents the daughters of Adam as born late. What then are we to say? As I imagine, Moses here calls his wife opinion of impious reason which it forms about things, as crowds of those who have studied philosophy do: some of them introducing the same opinions into human life, and others introducing such as are wholly at variance with one another. (35) What then is the position of the impious man? Why, that the human mind is the measure of all things; which also they say that one of the ancient philosophers, Protagoras, used to employ, being a descendant of the folly of Cain. And from thence I conjecture that his wife, being known to him, brought forth Enoch; and the name Enoch being interpreted means, thy grace. (36) For if man is the measure of all things, then, also, all things are a grace and a free gift of the mind; so that we refer to the eye the grace of sight, to the ears that of hearing, and to each of the other external senses their appropriate object, and also to the speech and utterance do we attribute the power of speaking. And if we judge in this manner of these things, so also do we with respect to intelligence, in which ten thousand things are comprised, such as thoughts, perceptions, designs, meditations, conceptions, sciences, arts, dispositions, and a number of other faculties almost incalculable. (37) What is it then that the gravest philosophers, who have talked in the most grandiloquent manner about divine law and the honour due to God, have determined both to say and to allow to be said, If ye have in ye a mind which is equal to God, which regulating by its own power all the good and bad things which exist among men, occasionally mingles both in certain persons, and sometimes distributes both good and bad to some in an unalloyed state; (38) and if any one accuses you of impiety, make your defence with a good courage, saying that you have been brought up very admirably by your guide and teacher, Cain, who recommended you to honour the powers that are nearest in preference to that cause which was afar off, to whom you ought to attend for many other reasons, and most especially because he showed the power of his doctrine by very evident works, having conquered Abel the expounder of the opposite doctrine, and having removed and destroyed his doctrine as well as himself. (39) But in my opinion and in that of my friends, death in the company of the pious would be preferable to life with the impious; for those who die in the company of the pious everlasting life will receive, but everlasting death will be the portion of those who live in the other way.